81 research outputs found

    Ultra-Wideband CMOS Transceiver Front-End for Bio-Medical Radar Sensing

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    Since the Federal Communication Commission released the unlicensed 3.1-10.6 GHz frequency band for commercial use in early 2002, the ultra wideband (UWB) has developed from an emerging technology into a mainstream research area. The UWB technology, which utilizes wide spectrum, opens a new era of possibility for practical applications in radar sensing, one of which is the human vital sign monitoring. The aim of this thesis is to study and research the possibility of a new generation humanrespiration monitoring sensor using UWB radar technology and to develop a new prototype of UWB radar sensor for system-on-chip solutions in CMOS technology. In this thesis, a lowpower Gaussian impulse UWB mono-static radar transceiver architecture is presented. The UWB Gaussian pulse transmitter and receiver are implemented and fabricated using 90nm CMOS technology. Since the energy of low order Gaussian pulse is mostly condensed at lower frequency, in order to transmit the pulse in a very efficient way, higher order Gaussian derivative pulses are desired as the baseband signal. This motivates the advancement of the design into UWB high-order pulse transmitter. Both the Gaussian impulse UWB transmitter and Gaussian higher-order impulse UWB transmitter take the low-power and high-speed advantage of digital circuit to generate different waveforms. The measurement results are analyzed and discussed. This thesis also presents a low-power UWB mono-static radar transceiver architecture exploiting the full benefit of UWB bandwidth in radar sensing applications. The transceiver includes a full UWB band transmitter, an UWB receiver front-end, and an on-chip diplexer. The non-coherent UWB transmitter generates pulse modulated baseband signals at different carrier frequencies within the designated 3-10 GHz band using a digitally controlled pulse generator. The test shows the proposed radar transceiver can detect the human respiration pattern within 50 cm distance. The applications of this UWB radar sensing solution in commercialized standard CMOS technology include constant breathing pattern monitoring for gated radiation therapy, realtime monitoring of patients, and any other breathing monitoring. The research paves the way to wireless technology integration with health care and bio-sensor network

    Current reuse topology in UWB CMOS LNA

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    Hardware Development of an Ultra-Wideband System for High Precision Localization Applications

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    A precise localization system in an indoor environment has been developed. The developed system is based on transmitting and receiving picosecond pulses and carrying out a complete narrow-pulse, signal detection and processing scheme in the time domain. The challenges in developing such a system include: generating ultra wideband (UWB) pulses, pulse dispersion due to antennas, modeling of complex propagation channels with severe multipath effects, need for extremely high sampling rates for digital processing, synchronization between the tag and receivers’ clocks, clock jitter, local oscillator (LO) phase noise, frequency offset between tag and receivers’ LOs, and antenna phase center variation. For such a high precision system with mm or even sub-mm accuracy, all these effects should be accounted for and minimized. In this work, we have successfully addressed many of the above challenges and developed a stand-alone system for positioning both static and dynamic targets with approximately 2 mm and 6 mm of 3-D accuracy, respectively. The results have exceeded the state of the art for any commercially available UWB positioning system and are considered a great milestone in developing such technology. My contributions include the development of a picosecond pulse generator, an extremely wideband omni-directional antenna, a highly directive UWB receiving antenna with low phase center variation, an extremely high data rate sampler, and establishment of a non-synchronized UWB system architecture. The developed low cost sampler, for example, can be easily utilized to sample narrow pulses with up to 1000 GS/s while the developed antennas can cover over 6 GHz bandwidth with minimal pulse distortion. The stand-alone prototype system is based on tracking a target using 4-6 base stations and utilizing a triangulation scheme to find its location in space. Advanced signal processing algorithms based on first peak and leading edge detection have been developed and extensively evaluated to achieve high accuracy 3-D localization. 1D, 2D and 3D experiments have been carried out and validated using an optical reference system which provides better than 0.3 mm 3-D accuracy. Such a high accuracy wireless localization system should have a great impact on the operating room of the future

    LOW-POWER IMPULSE-RADIO ULTRA-WIDEBAND TECHNIQUES FOR BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS.

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Ultra Wideband

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    Ultra wideband (UWB) has advanced and merged as a technology, and many more people are aware of the potential for this exciting technology. The current UWB field is changing rapidly with new techniques and ideas where several issues are involved in developing the systems. Among UWB system design, the UWB RF transceiver and UWB antenna are the key components. Recently, a considerable amount of researches has been devoted to the development of the UWB RF transceiver and antenna for its enabling high data transmission rates and low power consumption. Our book attempts to present current and emerging trends in-research and development of UWB systems as well as future expectations

    Microwave Instrument for Human Vital Signs Detection and Monitoring

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    The Design of Low Power Ultra-Wideband Transceiver

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Ultra-Wideband Transceiver Design And Optimization

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    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2015. Major: Electrical Engineering. Advisor: Ramesh Harjani. 1 computer file (PDF); xiii, 128 pages.The technology landscape has quickly changed over the last few years. Developments in personal area networks, IC technology, DSP processing and bio-medical devices have enabled the integration of short range communication into low cost personal health care solutions. Newer technologies and solutions are being developed to cater to the personal operating space(POS) and body area networks(BAN). Health care is driving towards using multiple sensor and therapeutic nodes inside the POS. Technology has enabled remote patient care where the patient has low cost on-body wearables that allow the patient/physician to access vital signs without the patient physically visiting the clinic. Big semiconductor giants want to move into the wearable health monitor space. Along with the developments in fitness based health wearables, there has been a lot of interest towards developing BAN devices catering to the 'mission-critical' wearables and implants. Hearing aids, EKG monitors, neurostimulators are some examples. This work explores the use of the 802.15 ulta wideband (UWB) standard for designing a radio to operate in the a wireless sensor network in the BAN. The specific application targeted is a hearing aid. However, the design in this work is capable of working in a low power low range application with the ability to have multiple data rates ranging from a few kHz to 10's of MHz. The first radio designed by Marconi using spark-gap transmitters was an impulse radio (IR). The IR UWB technology boasts of low power, low cost, high data rates, multiple channels, simultaneous networking, the ability to carry information through obstacles that more limited bandwidths cannot, and also potentially lower complexity hardware design. The inherent timing accuracy associated with the technology gives UWB transmissions immunity to multipath fading and are hence make them more suitable for a cluttered indoor environment. The key difference with the traditional narrowband transceiver is that instead of using continuous wave (CW) transmission, impulses in time are used. The timing accuracy associated with these impulses require synchronization in time, rather than synchronization in frequency for carrier-based CW systems. A complete fully integrated system is presented in thesis. This work presents a low-power noncoherent IR UWB transceiver operating at 5GHz in 0.13um CMOS. A fully-digital transmitter generates a shaped output pulse of 1GHz 3-dB bandwidth. DLLs provide a PVT-tolerant time-step resolution of 1ns over the entire symbol period and regulate the pulse generator center frequency. The transmitter outputs -31dBm (0.88pJ/pulse at 1Mpulse/s) with a dynamic (energy) efficiency of 16pJ/pulse. The transmit out pulse is FCC part 15 compliant over process voltage and temperature (PVT) variations. The transmitter is semi-compliant with IEEE 802.15.6 and IEEE 802.15.4 standards and will become completely compliant with minor modifications. The receiver presented in this work is a non-coherent energy detect IR UWB receiver. The receiver has an on-chip transformer preceding the LNA, which is followed by a super-regenerative amplifier (SRA), envelope detector, sample-and-holds, and a bank of comparators. The design is SRA based energy-detection receiver. Measured results show a receiver efficiency of 0.32nJ/bit at 20.8Mb/s and operation with inputs as low as -70dBm. The SRA based energy-detection receiver utilizes early/late detection for a two-step baseband synchronization algorithm. An integrated solution to the issue of synchronization is also proposed. The system proposed is capable of synchronization and tracking control. The system in this work utilizes early/late detection for a two-step baseband synchronization algorithm. The algorithm is implemented in Matlab and the time to synchronization is observed to be between 250us to a few couple of ms. Measurements have also been made using the receiver and manually implementing the algorithm. This work addresses all aspects time synchronization in an IR transceiver. The initial mismatch is addressed by two methods. Beyond the initial synchronization, the system presented in this system is also capable of tracking. This would mean that once the transceiver has been synchronized, the timing generation would continue to track the phase and the frequency changes depending upon crystal drift over time or movement between the receiver and the transmitter. A test was also performed on the complete transceiver system with two radios talking to each other over a highly attenuated wired channel

    UWB Pulse Radar for Human Imaging and Doppler Detection Applications

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    We were motivated to develop new technologies capable of identifying human life through walls. Our goal is to pinpoint multiple people at a time, which could pay dividends during military operations, disaster rescue efforts, or assisted-living. Such system requires the combination of two features in one platform: seeing-through wall localization and vital signs Doppler detection. Ultra-wideband (UWB) radar technology has been used due to its distinct advantages, such as ultra-low power, fine imaging resolution, good penetrating through wall characteristics, and high performance in noisy environment. Not only being widely used in imaging systems and ground penetrating detection, UWB radar also targets Doppler sensing, precise positioning and tracking, communications and measurement, and etc. A robust UWB pulse radar prototype has been developed and is presented here. The UWB pulse radar prototype integrates seeing-through imaging and Doppler detection features in one platform. Many challenges existing in implementing such a radar have been addressed extensively in this dissertation. Two Vivaldi antenna arrays have been designed and fabricated to cover 1.5-4.5 GHz and 1.5-10 GHz, respectively. A carrier-based pulse radar transceiver has been implemented to achieve a high dynamic range of 65dB. A 100 GSPS data acquisition module is prototyped using the off-the-shelf field-programmable gate array (FPGA) and analog-to-digital converter (ADC) based on a low cost solution: equivalent time sampling scheme. Ptolemy and transient simulation tools are used to accurately emulate the linear and nonlinear components in the comprehensive simulation platform, incorporated with electromagnetic theory to account for through wall effect and radar scattering. Imaging and Doppler detection examples have been given to demonstrate that such a “Biometrics-at-a-glance” would have a great impact on the security, rescuing, and biomedical applications in the future

    DEVELOPMENT OF AN UWB RADAR SYSTEM

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    An ultra-wideband radar system is built at the University of Tennessee with the goal to develop a ground penetrating radar (GPR). The radar is required to transmit and receive a very narrow pulse signal in the time domain. The bistatic radar transmits a pulse through an ultrawide spiral antenna and receives the pulse by a similar antenna. Direct sampling is used to improve the performance of the impulse radar allowing up to 1.5 GHz of bandwidth to be used for signal processing and target detection with high resolution. Using direct sampling offers a less complex system design than traditional lower sample rate, super-heterodyne systems using continuous wave or step frequency methods while offering faster results than conventional equivalent time sampling techniques that require multiple data sets and significant post-processing. These two points are particularly important for a system that may be used in the field in potentially dangerous environments. Direct sampling radar systems, while still frequency limited, are continually improving their upper frequencies boundaries due to more power efficient, higher sampling rate analog to digital converters (ADCs) which relates directly to better subsurface resolution for potential target detection
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