12 research outputs found

    Design of a low power transmitter for UWB applications

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    Design and Implementation of a Low‐Power Wireless Respiration Monitoring Sensor

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    Wireless devices for monitoring of respiration activities can play a major role in advancing modern home-based health care applications. Existing methods for respiration monitoring require special algorithms and high precision filters to eliminate noise and other motion artifacts. These necessitate additional power consuming circuitry for further signal conditioning. This dissertation is particularly focused on a novel approach of respiration monitoring based on a PVDF-based pyroelectric transducer. Low-power, low-noise, and fully integrated charge amplifiers are designed to serve as the front-end amplifier of the sensor to efficiently convert the charge generated by the transducer into a proportional voltage signal. To transmit the respiration data wirelessly, a lowpower transmitter design is crucial. This energy constraint motivates the exploration of the design of a duty-cycled transmitter, where the radio is designed to be turned off most of the time and turned on only for a short duration of time. Due to its inherent duty-cycled nature, impulse radio ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) transmitter is an ideal candidate for the implementation of a duty-cycled radio. To achieve better energy efficiency and longer battery lifetime a low-power low-complexity OOK (on-off keying) based impulse radio ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) transmitter is designed and implemented using standard CMOS process. Initial simulation and test results exhibit a promising advancement towards the development of an energy-efficient wireless sensor for monitoring of respiration activities

    Wireless wire - ultra-low-power and high-data-rate wireless communication systems

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    With the rapid development of communication technologies, wireless personal-area communication systems gain momentum and become increasingly important. When the market gets gradually saturated and the technology becomes much more mature, new demands on higher throughput push the wireless communication further into the high-frequency and high-data-rate direction. For example, in the IEEE 802.15.3c standard, a 60-GHz physical layer is specified, which occupies the unlicensed 57 to 64 GHz band and supports gigabit links for applications such as wireless downloading and data streaming. Along with the progress, however, both wireless protocols and physical systems and devices start to become very complex. Due to the limited cut-off frequency of the technology and high parasitic and noise levels at high frequency bands, the power consumption of these systems, especially of the RF front-ends, increases significantly. The reason behind this is that RF performance does not scale with technology at the same rate as digital baseband circuits. Based on the challenges encountered, the wireless-wire system is proposed for the millimeter wave high-data-rate communication. In this system, beamsteering directional communication front-ends are used, which confine the RF power within a narrow beam and increase the level of the equivalent isotropic radiation power by a factor equal to the number of antenna elements. Since extra gain is obtained from the antenna beamsteering, less front-end gain is required, which will reduce the power consumption accordingly. Besides, the narrow beam also reduces the interference level to other nodes. In order to minimize the system average power consumption, an ultra-low power asynchronous duty-cycled wake-up receiver is added to listen to the channel and control the communication modes. The main receiver is switched on by the wake-up receiver only when the communication is identified while in other cases it will always be in sleep mode with virtually no power consumed. Before transmitting the payload, the event-triggered transmitter will send a wake-up beacon to the wake-up receiver. As long as the wake-up beacon is longer than one cycle of the wake-up receiver, it can be captured and identified. Furthermore, by adopting a frequency-sweeping injection locking oscillator, the wake-up receiver is able to achieve good sensitivity, low latency and wide bandwidth simultaneously. In this way, high-data-rate communication can be achieved with ultra-low average power consumption. System power optimization is achieved by optimizing the antenna number, data rate, modulation scheme, transceiver architecture, and transceiver circuitries with regards to particular application scenarios. Cross-layer power optimization is performed as well. In order to verify the most critical elements of this new approach, a W-band injection-locked oscillator and the wake-up receiver have been designed and implemented in standard TSMC 65-nm CMOS technology. It can be seen from the measurement results that the wake-up receiver is able to achieve about -60 dBm sensitivity, 10 mW peak power consumption and 8.5 µs worst-case latency simultaneously. When applying a duty-cycling scheme, the average power of the wake-up receiver becomes lower than 10 µW if the event frequency is 1000 times/day, which matches battery-based or energy harvesting-based wireless applications. A 4-path phased-array main receiver is simulated working with 1 Gbps data rate and on-off-keying modulation. The average power consumption is 10 µW with 10 Gb communication data per day

    SILICON TERAHERTZ ELECTRONICS: CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS FOR FUTURE APPLICATIONS

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    The terahertz frequency bands are gaining increasing attention these days for the potential applications in imaging, sensing, spectroscopy, and communication. These applications can be used in a wide range of fields, such as military, security, biomedical analysis, material science, astronomy, etc. Unfortunately, utilizing these frequency bands is very challenging due to the notorious ”terahertz gap”. Consequently, current terahertz systems are very bulky and expensive, sometimes even require cryogenic conditions. Silicon terahertz electronics now becomes very attractive, since it can achieve significantly lower cost and make portable consumer terahertz devices feasible. However, due to the limited device fmax and low breakdown voltage, signal generation and processing on silicon platform in this frequency range is challenging. This thesis aims to tackle these challenges and implement high-performance terahertz systems. First of all, the devices are investigated under the terahertz frequency range and optimum termination conditions for maximizing the efficacy of the devices is derived. Then, novel passive surrounding networks are designed to provide the devices with the optimal termination conditions to push the performances of the terahertz circuit blocks. Finally, the high-performance circuit blocks are used to build terahertz systems, and system-level innovations are also proposed to push the state of the art forward. In Chapter 2, using a device-centric bottom-up design method, a 210-GHz harmonic oscillator is designed. With the parasitic tuning mechanism, a wide frequency tuning range is achieved without using lossy varactors. A passive network based on the return-path gap coupler and self-feeding structure is also designed to provide optimal terminations for the active devices to maximize the harmonic power generation. Fabricated with a 0.13-um SiGe BiCMOS process, the oscillator is highly compact with a core size of only 290x95 um2. The output frequency can be tuned from 197.5 GHz to 219.7 GHz, which is around 10.6% compared to the center frequency. It also achieves a peak output power and dc-to-RF efficiency of 1.4 dBm and 2.4%, respectively. The measured output phase noise at 1 MHz offset is -87.5 dBc/Hz. The high power, wide tuning range, low phase noise, as well as compact size, make this oscillator very suitable for terahertz systems integration. In Chapter 3, the design of a 320-GHz fully-integrated terahertz imaging system is described. The system is composed of a phase-locked high-power transmitter and a coherent high-sensitivity subharmonic-mixing receiver, which are fabricated using a 0.13-um SiGe BiCMOS technology. To enhance the imaging sensitivity, a heterodyne coherent detection scheme is utilized. To obtain frequency coherency, fully-integrated phase-locked loops are implemented on both the transmitter and receiver chips. According to the measurement, consuming a total dc power of 605 mW, the transmitter chip achieves a peak radiated power of 2 mW and a peak EIRP of 21.1 dBm. The receiver chip achieves an equivalent incoherent responsivity of more than 7.26 MV/W and a sensitivity of 70.1 pW under an integration bandwidth of 1 kHz, with a total dc power consumption of 117 mW. The achieved sensitivity with this proposed coherent imaging transceiver is around ten times better compared with other state-of-the-art incoherent imagers. In Chapter 4, a spatial-orthogonal ASK transmitter architecture for high-speed terahertz wireless communication is presented. The self-sustaining oscillator-based transmitter architecture has an ultra-compact size and excellent power efficiency. With the proposed high-speed constant-load switch, significantly reduced modulation loss is achieved. Using polarization diversity and multi-level modulation, the throughput is largely enhanced. Array configuration is also adopted to enhance the link budget for higher signal quality and longer communication range. Fabricated in a 0.13-um SiGe BiCMOS technology, the 220-GHz transmitter prototype achieves an EIRP of 21 dBm and dc-to- THz-radiation efficiency of 0.7% in each spatial channel. A 24.4-Gb/s total data rate over a 10-cm communication range is demonstrated. With an external Teflon lens system, the demonstrated communication range is further extended to 52 cm. Compared with prior art, this prototype demonstrates much higher transmitter efficiency. In Chapter 5, an entirely-on-chip frequency-stabilization feedback mechanism is proposed, which avoids the use of both frequency dividers and off-chip references, achieving much lower system integration cost and power consumption. Using this mechanism, a 301.7-to-331.8-GHz source prototype is designed in a 0.13-um SiGe BiCMOS technology. According to the measurement, the source consumes a dc power of only 51.7 mW. The output phase noise is -71.1 and -75.2 dBc/Hz at 100 kHz and 1 MHz offset, respectively. A -13.9-dBm probed output power is also achieved. Overall, the prototype source demonstrates the largest output frequency range and lowest power consumption while achieving comparable phase noise and output power performances with respect to the state of the art. All the designs demonstrated in this thesis achieve good performances and push the state of the art forward, paving the way for implementation of more sophisticated terahertz circuits and systems for future applications

    Biomedical Engineering

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    Biomedical engineering is currently relatively wide scientific area which has been constantly bringing innovations with an objective to support and improve all areas of medicine such as therapy, diagnostics and rehabilitation. It holds a strong position also in natural and biological sciences. In the terms of application, biomedical engineering is present at almost all technical universities where some of them are targeted for the research and development in this area. The presented book brings chosen outputs and results of research and development tasks, often supported by important world or European framework programs or grant agencies. The knowledge and findings from the area of biomaterials, bioelectronics, bioinformatics, biomedical devices and tools or computer support in the processes of diagnostics and therapy are defined in a way that they bring both basic information to a reader and also specific outputs with a possible further use in research and development

    Double smart energy harvesting system for self-powered industrial IoT

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    312 p. 335 p. (confidencial)Future factories would be based on the Industry 4.0 paradigm. IndustrialInternet of Things (IIoT) represent a part of the solution in this field. Asautonomous systems, powering challenges could be solved using energy harvestingtechnology. The present thesis work combines two alternatives of energy input andmanagement on a single architecture. A mini-reactor and an indoor photovoltaiccell as energy harvesters and a double power manager with AC/DC and DC/DCconverters controlled by a low power single controller. Furthermore, theaforementioned energy management is improved with artificial intelligencetechniques, which allows a smart and optimal energy management. Besides, theharvested energy is going to be stored in a low power supercapacitor. The workconcludes with the integration of these solutions making IIoT self-powered devices.IK4 Teknike
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