77 research outputs found

    Millimeter and Sub-Millimeter Wave Integrated Active Frequency Down-Converters

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    In recent years, the increasing amount of data transmission, the need for automotive radars, and standoff imaging for security applications are the main factors that accelerate research in the millimeter and sub-millimeter wave frequency ranges. The semiconductor industries have continuously developed their processes, which have opened up opportunities for manufacturing monolithically integrated circuits up to a few hundred GHz, based on transistor technologies. In this thesis, a 100 nm GaAs mHEMT technology, a 250 nm InP DHBT technology, and a 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology, which show a typical ft / fmax of 200/300 GHz, 375/650 GHz, and 250/400 GHz, respectively, are verified for analog circuit design. In the above mentioned applications, the frequency mixer is one of the most important components. Consequently, a study of millimeter/submillimeter wave mixers is important for the choice of technology and topology. Aiming for either the next generation of high-speed communication or standoff imaging applications, different mixer topologies are studied, designed and fabricated as candidates for further integration in receivers. The presented mixer topologies include the self-oscillating mixer, the resistive FET mixer, the Gilbert mixer, and the transconductance mixer. All these topologies have been realized in given technologies, and cover the frequencies around ~145 GHz, ~220 GHz, and ~340 GHz. The designed 340 GHz Gilbert mixer with IF buffer amplifier and on-chip patch array antenna demonstrated the first fully integrated receiver in HBT technology at such high frequencies as well as a reasonable noise figure of 17 dB. A novel 110~170 GHz transconductance mixer is characterized in ×1, ×2, ×3, and ×4 harmonic mixing modes, which allows for flexibility in the overall system design. Apart from the mixer designs, a transceiver, which operates as an amplifier for transmitting and simultaneously as a down-converting mixer for receiving, is designed for the frequency range of 110~170 GHz, aiming for sub-cm resolution in multipixel standoff imaging systems. It is successfully demonstrated in a FMCW radar setup for distance measurements

    Millimeter-Wave Super-Regenerative Receivers for Wireless Communication and Radar

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    Today’s world is becoming increasingly automated and interconnected with billions of smart devices coming online, leading to a steep rise in energy consumption from small microelectronics. This coincides with an urgent push to transform global energy production to green energies, causing disruptions and energy shortages, and making the case for efficient energy use ever more pressing. Two major areas where high growth is expected are the fields of wireless communication and radar sensors. Millimeter-wave frequency bands are planned for fifth-generation (5G) and sixth-generation (6G) cellular communication standards, as well as automotive frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar systems for driving assistance and automation. Fast silicon-based technologies enable these advances by operating at high maximum frequencies, such as the silicon-germanium (SiGe) heterojunction bipolar transistor (HBT) technologies. However, even the fastest transistors suffer from low and energy expensive gains at millimeter-wave frequencies. Rather than incremental improvements in circuit efficiency using conventional approaches, a disruptive revolution for green microelectronics could be enabled by exploring the low-power benefits of the super-regenerative receiver for some applications. The super-regenerative receiver uses a regenerative oscillator circuit to increase the gain by positive feedback, through coupling energy from the output back into the input. Careful bias and control of the circuit enables a very large gain from a small number of transistors and a very low energy dissipation. Thus, the super-regenerative oscillator could be used to replace amplifier circuits in high data rate wireless communication systems, or as active reflectors to increase the range of FMCW radar systems, greatly reducing the power consumption. The work in this thesis presents fundamental scientific research into the topic of energy-efficient millimeter-wave super-regenerative receivers for use in civilian wireless communication and radar applications. This research work covers the theory, analysis, and simulations, all the way up to the proof of concept, hardware realization, and experimental characterization. Analysis and modeling of regenerative oscillator circuits is presented and used to improve the understanding of the circuit operation, as well as design goals according to the specific application needs. Integrated circuits are investigated and characterized as a proof of concept for a high data rate wireless communication system operating between 140–220 GHz, and an automotive radar system operating at 60 GHz. Amplitude and phase regeneration capabilities for complex modulation are investigated, and principles for spectrum characterization are derived. The circuits are designed and fabricated in a 130 nm SiGe HBT technology, combining bipolar and complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (BiCMOS) transistors. To prove the feasibility of the research concepts, the work achieves a wireless communication link at 16 Gbit/s over 20 cm distance with quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM), which is a world record for the highest data rate ever reported in super-regenerative circuits. This was powered by a super-regenerative oscillator circuit operating at 180 GHz and providing 58 dB of gain. Energy efficiency is also considerably high, drawing 8.8 mW of dc power consumption, which corresponds to a highly efficient 0.6 pJ/bit. Packaging and module integration innovations were implemented for the system experiments, and additional broadband circuits were investigated to generate custom quench waveforms to further enhance the data rate. For radar active reflectors, a regenerative gain of 80 dB is achieved at 60 GHz from a single circuit, which is the best in its frequency range, despite a low dc power consumption of 25 mW

    SiGe-based broadband and high suppression frequency doubler ICs for wireless communications

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    制度:新 ; 報告番号:甲3419号 ; 学位の種類:博士(工学) ; 授与年月日:2011/9/15 ; 早大学位記番号:新574

    Active Backscattering Positioning System Using Innovative Harmonic Oscillator Tags for Future Internet of Things: Theory and Experiments

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    RÉSUMÉ D'ici 2020, l'Internet des objets (IoT) permettra probablement de créer 25 milliards d'objets connectés, 44 ZB de données et de débloquer 11 000 milliards de dollars d’opportunités commerciales. Par conséquent, ce sujet a suscité d’énormes intérêts de recherche dans le monde académique entier. L'une des technologies clés pour l'IoT concerne le positionnement physique intérieur précis. Le principal objectif dans ce domaine est le développement d'un système de positionnement intérieur avec une grande précision, une haute résolution, un fonctionnement à plusieurs cibles, un faible coût, un faible encombrement et une faible consommation d'énergie. Le système de positionnement intérieur conventionnel basé sur les technologies de Wi-Fi ou d'identification par radiofréquence (RFID) ne peut répondre à ces exigences. Principalement parce que leur appareil et leur signal ne sont pas conçus spécialement pour atteindre les objectifs visés. Les chercheurs ont découvert qu'en mettant en oeuvre de différents types de modulation sur les étiquettes, le radar à onde continue (CW) et ses dérivés deviennent des solutions prometteuses. Les activités de recherche présentées dans cette thèse sont menées dans le but de développer des systèmes de positionnement en intérieur bidimensionnel (2-D) à plusieurs cibles basées sur des étiquettes actives à rétrodiffusion harmonique avec une technique à onde continue modulée en fréquence (FMCW). Les contributions de cette thèse peuvent être résumées comme suit: Tout d'abord, la conception d'un circuit actif harmonique, plus spécifiquement une classe d'oscillateurs harmoniques innovants utilisée comme composant central des étiquettes actives dans notre système, implique une méthodologie de conception de signal de grande taille et des installations de caractérisation. L’analyseur de réseau à grand signal (LSNA) est un instrument émergent basé sur les fondements théoriques du cadre de distorsion polyharmonique (PHD). Bien qu'ils soient disponibles dans le commerce depuis 2008, des organismes de normalisation et de recherche tels que l’Institut national des normes et de la technologie (NIST) des États-Unis travaillent toujours à la mise au point d'un standard largement reconnu permettant d'évaluer et de comparer leurs performances. Dans ce travail, un artefact de génération multi-harmonique pour la vérification LSNA est développé. C'est un dispositif actif capable de générer les 5 premières harmoniques d'un signal d'entrée avec une réponse ultra-stables en amplitude et en phase, quelle que soit la variation de l'impédance de la charge.----------ABSTRACT By 2020, the internet of things (IoT) will probably enable 25 billion connected objects, create 44 ZB data and unlock 11 trillion US dollar business opportunities. Therefore, this topic has been attracting tremendous research interests in the entire academic world. One of the key enabling technologies for IoT is concerned with accurate indoor physical positioning. The development of such an indoor positioning system with high accuracy, high resolution, multitarget operation, low cost, small footprint, and low power consumption is the major objective in this area. The conventional indoor positioning system based on WiFi or radiofrequency identification (RFID) technology cannot fulfill these requirements mainly because their device and signal are not purposely designed for achieving the targeted goals. Researchers have found that by implementing different types of modulation on the tags, continuous-wave (CW) radar and its derivatives become promising solutions. The research activities presented in this Ph.D. thesis are carried out towards the goal of developing multitarget two-dimensional (2-D) indoor positioning systems based on harmonic backscattering active tags together with a frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) technique. Research contributions of this thesis can be summarized as follows: First of all, the design of a harmonic active circuit, more specifically, a class of innovative harmonic oscillators used as the core component of active tags in our system, involves a large signal design methodology and characterization facilities. The large signal network analyzer (LSNA) is an emerging instrument based on the theoretical foundation for the Poly-Harmonic Distortion (PHD) framework. Although they have been commercially available since 2008, standard and research organizations such as the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the US are still working towards a widely-recognized standard to evaluate and cross-reference their performances. In this work, a multi-harmonic generation artifact for LSNA verification is developed. It is an active device that can generate the first 5 harmonics of an input signal with ultra-stable amplitude and phase response regardless of the load impedance variation

    Noncontact Vital Signs Detection

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    Human health condition can be accessed by measurement of vital signs, i.e., respiratory rate (RR), heart rate (HR), blood oxygen level, temperature and blood pressure. Due to drawbacks of contact sensors in measurement, non-contact sensors such as imaging photoplethysmogram (IPPG) and Doppler radar system have been proposed for cardiorespiratory rates detection by researchers.The UWB pulse Doppler radars provide high resolution range-time-frequency information. It is bestowed with advantages of low transmitted power, through-wall capabilities, and high resolution in localization. However, the poor signal to noise ratio (SNR) makes it challenging for UWB radar systems to accurately detect the heartbeat of a subject. To solve the problem, phased-methods have been proposed to extract the phase variations in the reflected pulses modulated by human tiny thorax motions. Advance signal processing method, i.e., state space method, can not only be used to enhance SNR of human vital signs detection, but also enable the micro-Doppler trajectories extraction of walking subject from UWB radar data.Stepped Frequency Continuous Wave (SFCW) radar is an alternative technique useful to remotely monitor human subject activities. Compared with UWB pulse radar, it relieves the stress on requirement of high sampling rate analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and possesses higher signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) in vital signs detection. However, conventional SFCW radar suffers from long data acquisition time to step over many frequencies. To solve this problem, multi-channel SFCW radar has been proposed to step through different frequency bandwidths simultaneously. Compressed sensing (CS) can further reduce the data acquisition time by randomly stepping through 20% of the original frequency steps.In this work, SFCW system is implemented with low cost, off-the-shelf surface mount components to make the radar sensors portable. Experimental results collected from both pulse and SFCW radar systems have been validated with commercial contact sensors and satisfactory results are shown

    실시간 근거리 영상화를 위한 MIMO 역합성 개구 레이더 시스템

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    학위논문(박사) -- 서울대학교대학원 : 공과대학 전기·정보공학부, 2022. 8. 남상욱.Microwave and millimeter wave (micro/mmW) imaging systems have advantages over other imaging systems in that they have penetration properties over non-metallic structures and non-ionization. However, these systems are commercially applicable in limited areas. Depending on the quality and size of the images, a system can be expensive and images cannot be provided in real-time. To overcome the challenges of the current micro/mmW imaging system, it is critical to suggest a new system concept and prove its potential benefits and hazards by demonstrating the testbed. This dissertation presents Ku1DMIC, a wide-band micro/mmW imaging system using Ku-band and 1D-MIMO array, which can overcome the challenges above. For cost-effective 3D imaging capabilities, Ku1DMIC uses 1D-MIMO array configuration and inverse synthetic aperture radar (ISAR) technique. At the same time, Ku1DMIC supports real-time data acquisition through a system-level design of a seamless interface with frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar. To show the feasibility of 3D imaging with Ku1DMIC and its real-time capabilities, an accelerated imaging algorithm, 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA, is proposed and demonstrated. The detailed contributions of the dissertation are as follows. First, this dissertation presents Ku1DMIC – a Ku-band MIMO frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) radar experimental platform with real-time 2D near-field imaging capabilities. The proposed system uses Ku-band to cover the wider illumination area given the limited number of antennas and uses a fast ramp and wide-band FMCW waveform for rapid radar data acquisition while providing high-resolution images. The key design aspect behind the platform is stability, reconfigurability, and real-time capabilities, which allows investigating the exploration of the system’s strengths and weaknesses. To satisfy the design aspect, a digitally assisted platform is proposed and realized based on an AMD-Xilinx UltraScale+ Radio Frequency System on Chip (RFSoC). The experimental investigation for real-time 2D imaging has proved the ability of video-rate imaging at around 60 frames per second. Second, a waveform digital pre-distortion (DPD) method and calibration method are proposed to enhance the image quality. Even if a clean FMCW waveform is generated with the aid of the optimized waveform generator, the signal will inevitably suffer from distortion, especially in the RF subsystem of the platform. In near-field imaging applications, the waveform DPD is not effective at suppressing distortion in wide-band FMCW radar systems. To solve this issue, the LO-DPD architecture and binary search based DPD algorithm are proposed to make the waveform DPD effective in Ku1DMIC. Furthermore, an image-domain optimization correction method is proposed to compensate for the remaining errors that cannot be eliminated by the waveform DPD. For robustness to various unwanted signals such as noise and clutter signals, two regularized least squares problems are applied and compared: the generalized Tikhonov regularization and the total variation (TV) regularization. Through various 2D imaging experiments, it is confirmed that both methods can enhance the image quality by reducing the sidelobe level. Lastly, the research is conducted to realize real-time 3D imaging by applying the ISAR technique to Ku1DMIC. The realization of real-time 3D imaging using 1D-MIMO array configuration is impactful in that this configuration can significantly reduce the costs of the 3D imaging system and enable imaging of moving objects. To this end, the signal model for the 1D-MIMO-ISAR configuration is presented, and then the 1D-MIMO-ISAR range stacking algorithm (RSA) is proposed to accelerate the imaging reconstruction process. The proposed 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA can reconstruct images within hundreds of milliseconds while maintaining almost the same image quality as the back-projection algorithm, bringing potential use for real-time 3D imaging. It also describes strategies for setting ROI, considering the real-world situations in which objects enter and exit the field of view, and allocating GPU memory. Extensive simulations and experiments have demonstrated the feasibility and potential benefits of 1D-MIMO-IASR configuration and 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA.마이크로파 및 밀리미터파(micro/mmW) 영상화 시스템은 비금속 구조 및 비이온화에 비해 침투 특성이 있다는 점에서 다른 이미징 시스템에 비해 장점이 있다. 그러나 이러한 시스템은 제한된 영역에서만 상업적으로 적용되고 있다. 이미지의 품질과 크기에 따라 시스템이 매우 고가일 수 있으며 이미지를 실시간으로 제공할 수 없는 현황이다. 현재의 micro/mmW 이미징 시스템의 문제를 극복하려면 새로운 시스템 개념을 제안하고 테스트베드를 시연하여 잠재적인 이점과 위험을 입증하는 것이 중요하다. 본 논문에서는 Ku-band와 1D-MIMO 어레이를 이용한 광대역 micro/mmW 이미징 시스템인 Ku1DMIC를 제안하여 위와 같은 문제점을 극복할 수 있다. 비용 효율적인 3차원 영상화 기능을 위해 Ku1DMIC는 1D-MIMO 배열 기술과 ISAR(Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar) 기술을 사용한다. 동시에 Ku1DMIC는 주파수 변조 연속파 (FMCW) 레이더와의 원활한 인터페이스의 시스템 수준 설계를 통해 실시간 데이터 수집을 지원한다. Ku1DMIC를 사용한 3차원 영상화의 구현 및 실시간 기능의 가능성을 보여주기 위해, 2차원 영상화를 위한 1D-MIMO RSA과 3차원 영상화를 위한 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA가 제안되고 Ku1DMIC에서 구현된다. 따라서, 본 학위 논문의 주요 기여는 Ku-band 1D-MIMO 배열 기반 영상화 시스템 프로토타입을 개발 및 테스트하고, ISAR 기반 3차원 영상화 기능을 검사하고, 실시간 3차원 영상화 가능성을 조사하는 것이다. 이에 대한 세부적인 기여 항목은 다음과 같다. 첫째, 실시간 2D 근거리장 이미징 기능을 갖춘 Ku 대역 MIMO 주파수 변조 연속파(FMCW) 레이더 실험 플랫폼인 Ku1DMIC를 제시한다. 제안하는 시스템은 제한된 수의 안테나에서 더 넓은 조명 영역을 커버하기 위해 Ku 대역을 사용하고 고해상도 이미지를 제공하면서 빠른 레이더 데이터 수집을 위해 고속 램프 및 광대역 FMCW 파형을 사용한다. 플랫폼의 핵심 설계 원칙은 안정성, 재구성 가능성 및 실시간 기능으로 시스템의 강점과 약점을 광범위하게 탐색한다. 설계 원칙을 만족시키기 위해 AMD-Xilinx UltraScale+ RFSoC(Radio Frequency System on Chip)를 기반으로 디지털 지원 플랫폼을 제안하고 구현한다. 실시간 2D 이미징에 대한 실험적 조사는 초당 약 60프레임에서 비디오 속도 이미징의 능력을 입증했다. 둘째, 영상 품질 향상을 위한 파형 디지털 전치왜곡(DPD) 방법과 보정 방법을 제안한다. 최적화된 파형 발생기의 도움으로 깨끗한 FMCW 파형이 생성되더라도 특히 플랫폼의 RF 하위 시스템에서 신호는 필연적으로 왜곡을 겪게된다. 근거리 영상화 응용 분야에서는 파형 DPD는 광대역 FMCW 레이더 시스템의 왜곡을 억제하는 데 효과적이지 않다. 이 문제를 해결하기 위해 Ku1DMIC에서 파형 DPD가 유효하도록 LO-DPD 아키텍처와 이진 탐색 기반 DPD 알고리즘을 제안한다. 또한, 파형 DPD로 제거할 수 없는 나머지 오류를 보상하기 위해 이미지 영역 최적화 보정 방법을 제안한다. 노이즈 및 클러터 신호와 같은 다양한 원치 않는 신호에 대한 견고성을 위해 일반화된 Tikhonov 정규화 및 전체 변동(TV) 정규화라는 두 가지 정규화된 최소 자승 문제를 적용 후 비교한다. 다양한 2차원 영상화 실험을 통해 두 방법 모두 부엽 레벨을 줄여 화질을 향상시킬 수 있음을 확인한다. 마지막으로, ISAR 기법을 2차원 영상 플랫폼에 적용하여 실시간 3차원 영상을 구현하기 위한 연구를 진행한다. 1D-MIMO-ISAR 구성에서 실시간 3D 이미징의 구현은 이러한 구성이 3D 이미징 시스템의 비용을 크게 줄일 수 있다는 점에서 영향력이 있다. 따라서 이 논문에서는 1D-MIMO-ISAR 구성에 대한 이미징 재구성을 가속화하기 위해 1D-MIMO-ISAR 범위 스태킹 알고리즘(RSA)을 제안한다. 제안된 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA는 널리 알려진 Back-Projection 알고리즘과 거의 동일한 이미지 품질을 유지하면서도 수백 밀리초 이내에 이미지를 재구성함으로써 실시간 영상화에 대한 가능성을 보여준다. 또한 물체가 시야에 들어오고 나가는 실제 상황을 고려하기 위한 ROI 설정, 그리고 메모리 할당에 대한 전략을 설명한다. 광범위한 시뮬레이션과 실험을 통해 1D-MIMO-IASR 구성 및 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA의 가능성과 잠재적 이점을 확인한다.1 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 Microwave and millimeter-wave imaging 1 1.2 Imaging with radar system 2 1.3 Challenges and motivation 5 1.4 Outline of the dissertation 8 2 FUNDAMENTAL OF TWO-DIMENSIONAL IMAGING USING A MIMO RADAR 9 2.1 Signal model 9 2.2 Consideration of waveform 12 2.3 Image reconstruction algorithm 16 2.3.1 Back-projection algorithm 16 2.3.2 1D-MIMO range-migration algorithm 20 2.3.3 1D-MIMO range stacking algorithm 27 2.4 Sampling criteria and resolution 31 2.5 Simulation results 36 3 MIMO-FMCW RADAR IMPLEMENTATION WITH 16 TX - 16 RX ONE- DIMENSIONAL ARRAYS 46 3.1 Wide-band FMCW waveform generator architecture 46 3.2 Overall system architecture 48 3.3 Antenna and RF transceiver module 53 3.4 Wide-band FMCW waveform generator 55 3.5 FPGA-based digital hardware design 63 3.6 System integration and software design 71 3.7 Testing and measurement 75 3.7.1 Chirp waveform measurement 75 3.7.2 Range profile measurement 77 3.7.3 2-D imaging test 79 4 METHODS OF IMAGE QUALITY ENHANCEMENT 84 4.1 Signal model 84 4.2 Digital pre-distortion of chirp signal 86 4.2.1 Proposed DPD hardware system 86 4.2.2 Proposed DPD algorithm 88 4.2.3 Measurement results 90 4.3 Robust calibration method for signal distortion 97 4.3.1 Signal model 98 4.3.2 Problem formulation 99 4.3.3 Measurement results 105 5 THREE-DIMENSIONAL IMAGING USING 1-D ARRAY SYSTEM AND ISAR TECHNIQUE 110 5.1 Formulation for 1D-MIMO-ISAR RSA 111 5.2 Algorithm implementation 114 5.3 Simulation results 120 5.4 Experimental results 122 6 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK 127 6.1 Conclusions 127 6.2 Future work 129 6.2.1 Effects of antenna polarization in the Ku-band 129 6.2.2 Forward-looking near-field ISAR configuration 130 6.2.3 Estimation of the movement errors in ISAR configuration 131 Abstract (In Korean) 145 Acknowlegement 148박

    GigaHertz Symposium 2010

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