6 research outputs found

    Chip Implementation with a Combined Wireless Temperature Sensor and Reference Devices Based on the DZTC Principle

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    This paper presents a novel CMOS wireless temperature sensor design in order to improve the sensitivity and linearity of our previous work on such devices. Based on the principle of CMOS double zero temperature coefficient (DZTC) points, a combined device is first created at the chip level with two voltage references, one current reference, and one temperature sensor. It was successfully fabricated using the 0.35 Ī¼m CMOS process. According to the chip results in a wide temperature range from āˆ’20 Ā°C to 120 Ā°C, two voltage references can provide temperature-stable outputs of 823 mV and 1,265 mV with maximum deviations of 0.2 mV and 8.9 mV, respectively. The result for the current reference gives a measurement of 23.5 Ī¼A, with a maximum deviation of 1.2 Ī¼A. The measurements also show that the wireless temperature sensor has good sensitivity of 9.55 mV/Ā°C and high linearity of 97%. The proposed temperature sensor has 4.15-times better sensitivity than the previous design. Moreover, to facilitate temperature data collection, standard wireless data transmission is chosen; therefore, an 8-bit successive-approximation-register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and a 433 MHz wireless transmitter are also integrated in this chip. Sensing data from different places can be collected remotely avoiding the need for complex wire lines

    Low-frequency noise in downscaled silicon transistors: Trends, theory and practice

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    By the continuing downscaling of sub-micron transistors in the range of few to one deca-nanometers, we focus on the increasing relative level of the low-frequency noise in these devices. Large amount of published data and models are reviewed and summarized, in order to capture the state-of-the-art, and to observe that the 1/area scaling of low-frequency noise holds even for carbon nanotube devices, but the noise becomes too large in order to have fully deterministic devices with area less than 10nmƗ10nm. The low-frequency noise models are discussed from the point of view that the noise can be both intrinsic and coupled to the charge transport in the devices, which provided a coherent picture, and more interestingly, showed that the models converge each to other, despite the many issues that one can find for the physical origin of each model. Several derivations are made to explain crossovers in noise spectra, variable random telegraph amplitudes, duality between energy and distance of charge traps, behaviors and trends for figures of merit by device downscaling, practical constraints for micropower amplifiers and dependence of phase noise on the harmonics in the oscillation signal, uncertainty and techniques of averaging by noise characterization. We have also shown how the unavoidable statistical variations by fabrication is embedded in the devices as a spatial ā€œfrozen noiseā€, which also follows 1/area scaling law and limits the production yield, from one side, and from other side, the ā€œfrozen noiseā€ contributes generically to temporal 1/f noise by randomly probing the embedded variations during device operation, owing to the purely statistical accumulation of variance that follows from cause-consequence principle, and irrespectively of the actual physical process. The accumulation of variance is known as statistics of ā€œinnovation varianceā€, which explains the nearly log-normal distributions in the values for low-frequency noise parameters gathered from different devices, bias and other conditions, thus, the origin of geometric averaging in low-frequency noise characterizations. At present, the many models generally coincide each with other, and what makes the difference, are the values, which, however, scatter prominently in nanodevices. Perhaps, one should make some changes in the approach to the low-frequency noise in electronic devices, to emphasize the ā€œstatistics behind the numbersā€, because the general physical assumptions in each model always fail at some point by the device downscaling, but irrespectively of that, the statistics works, since the low-frequency noise scales consistently with the 1/area law

    Analysis and design of low-power data converters

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    In a large number of applications the signal processing is done exploiting both analog and digital signal processing techniques. In the past digital and analog circuits were made on separate chip in order to limit the interference and other side effects, but the actual trend is to realize the whole elaboration chain on a single System on Chip (SoC). This choice is driven by different reasons such as the reduction of power consumption, less silicon area occupation on the chip and also reliability and repeatability. Commonly a large area in a SoC is occupied by digital circuits, then, usually a CMOS short-channel technological processes optimized to realize digital circuits is chosen to maximize the performance of the Digital Signal Proccessor (DSP). Opposite, the short-channel technology nodes do not represent the best choice for analog circuits. But in a large number of applications, the signals which are treated have analog nature (microphone, speaker, antenna, accelerometers, biopotential, etc.), then the input and output interfaces of the processing chip are analog/mixed-signal conversion circuits. Therefore in a single integrated circuit (IC) both digital and analog circuits can be found. This gives advantages in term of total size, cost and power consumption of the SoC. The specific characteristics of CMOS short-channel processes such as: ā€¢ Low breakdown voltage (BV) gives a power supply limit (about 1.2 V). ā€¢ High threshold voltage VTH (compared with the available voltage supply) fixed in order to limit the leakage power consumption in digital applications (of the order of 0.35 / 0.4V), puts a limit on the voltage dynamic, and creates many problems with the stacked topologies. ā€¢ Threshold voltage dependent on the channel length VTH = f(L) (short channel effects). ā€¢ Low value of the output resistance of the MOS (r0) and gm limited by speed saturation, both causes contribute to achieving a low intrinsic gain gmr0 = 20 to 26dB. ā€¢ Mismatch which brings offset effects on analog circuits. make the design of high performance analog circuits very difficult. Realizing lowpower circuits is fundamental in different contexts, and for different reasons: lowering the power dissipation gives the capability to reduce the batteries size in mobile devices (laptops, smartphones, cameras, measuring instruments, etc.), increase the life of remote sensing devices, satellites, space probes, also allows the reduction of the size and weight of the heat sink. The reduction of power dissipation allows the realization of implantable biomedical devices that do not damage biological tissue. For this reason, the analysis and design of low power and high precision analog circuits is important in order to obtain high performance in technological processes that are not optimized for such applications. Different ways can be taken to reduce the effect of the problems related to the technology: ā€¢ Circuital level: a circuit-level intervention is possible to solve a specific problem of the circuit (i.e. Techniques for bandwidth expansion, increase the gain, power reduction, etc.). ā€¢ Digital calibration: it is the highest level to intervene, and generally going to correct the non-ideal structure through a digital processing, these aims are based on models of specific errors of the structure. ā€¢ Definition of new paradigms. This work has focused the attention on a very useful mixed-signal circuit: the pipeline ADC. The pipeline ADCs are widely used for their energy efficiency in high-precision applications where a resolution of about 10-16 bits and sampling rates above hundreds of Mega-samples per second (telecommunication, radar, etc.) are needed. An introduction on the theory of pipeline ADC, its state of the art and the principal non-idealities that affect the energy efficiency and the accuracy of this kind of data converters are reported in Chapter 1. Special consideration is put on low-voltage low-power ADCs. In particular, for ADCs implemented in deep submicron technology nodes side effects called short channel effects exist opposed to older technology nodes where undesired effects are not present. An overview of the short channel effects and their consequences on design, and also power consuption reduction techniques, with particular emphasis on the specific techniques adopted in pipelined ADC are reported in Chapter 2. Moreover, another way may be undertaken to increase the accuracy and the efficiency of an ADC, this way is the digital calibration. In Chapter 3 an overview on digital calibration techniques, and furthermore a new calibration technique based on Volterra kernels are reported. In some specific applications, such as software defined radios or micropower sensor, some circuits should be reconfigurable to be suitable for different radio standard or process signals with different charateristics. One of this building blocks is the ADC that should be able to reconfigure the resolution and conversion frequency. A reconfigurable voltage-scalable ADC pipeline capable to adapt its voltage supply starting from the required conversion frequency was developed, and the results are reported in Chapter 4. In Chapter 5, a pipeline ADC based on a novel paradigm for the feedback loop and its theory is described

    SPATIAL TRANSFORMATION PATTERN DUE TO COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY IN KAMPONG HOUSE

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    ABSTRACT Kampung houses are houses in kampung area of the city. Kampung House oftenly transformed into others use as urban dynamics. One of the transfomation is related to the commercial activities addition by the house owner. It make house with full private space become into mixused house with more public spaces or completely changed into full public commercial building. This study investigate the spatial transformation pattern of the kampung houses due to their commercial activities addition. Site observations, interviews and questionnaires were performed to study the spatial transformation. This study found that in kampung houses, the spatial transformation pattern was depend on type of commercial activities and owner perceptions, and there are several steps of the spatial transformation related the commercial activity addition. Keywords: spatial transformation pattern; commercial activity; owner perception, kampung house; adaptabilit
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