42 research outputs found
Ultra-Wideband CMOS Transceiver Front-End for Bio-Medical Radar Sensing
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
Design and Implementation of a Low‐Power Wireless Respiration Monitoring Sensor
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
Doctor of Philosophy
dissertationSince the late 1950s, scientists have been working toward realizing implantable devices that would directly monitor or even control the human body's internal activities. Sophisticated microsystems are used to improve our understanding of internal biological processes in animals and humans. The diversity of biomedical research dictates that microsystems must be developed and customized specifically for each new application. For advanced long-term experiments, a custom designed system-on-chip (SoC) is usually necessary to meet desired specifications. Custom SoCs, however, are often prohibitively expensive, preventing many new ideas from being explored. In this work, we have identified a set of sensors that are frequently used in biomedical research and developed a single-chip integrated microsystem that offers the most commonly used sensor interfaces, high computational power, and which requires minimum external components to operate. Included peripherals can also drive chemical reactions by setting the appropriate voltages or currents across electrodes. The SoC is highly modular and well suited for prototyping in and ex vivo experimental devices. The system runs from a primary or secondary battery that can be recharged via two inductively coupled coils. The SoC includes a 16-bit microprocessor with 32 kB of on chip SRAM. The digital core consumes 350 μW at 10 MHz and is capable of running at frequencies up to 200 MHz. The integrated microsystem has been fabricated in a 65 nm CMOS technology and the silicon has been fully tested. Integrated peripherals include two sigma-delta analog-to-digital converters, two 10-bit digital-to-analog converters, and a sleep mode timer. The system also includes a wireless ultra-wideband (UWB) transmitter. The fullydigital transmitter implementation occupies 68 x 68 μm2 of silicon area, consumes 0.72 μW static power, and achieves an energy efficiency of 19 pJ/pulse at 200 MHz pulse repetition frequency. An investigation of the suitability of the UWB technology for neural recording systems is also presented. Experimental data capturing the UWB signal transmission through an animal head are presented and a statistical model for large-scale signal fading is developed
Ultra Wideband Impulse Radio Superregenerative Reception
Postprint (published version
Radio-frequency integrated-circuit design for CMOS single-chip UWB systems
Low cost, a high-integrated capability, and low-power consumption are the basic requirements for ultra wide band (UWB) system design in order for the system to be adopted in various commercial electronic devices in the near future. Thus, the highly integrated transceiver is trended to be manufactured by companies using the latest silicon based complimentary metal-oxide-silicon (CMOS) processes. In this dissertation, several new structural designs are proposed, which provide solutions for some crucial RF blocks in CMOS for UWB for commercial applications. In this dissertation, there is a discussion of the development, as well as an illustration, of a fully-integrated ultra-broadband transmit/receive (T/R) switch which uses nMOS transistors with deep n-well in a standard 0.18-μm CMOS process. The new CMOS T/R switch exploits patterned-ground-shield on-chip inductors together with MOSFET’s parasitic capacitances in order to synthesize artificial transmission lines which result in low insertion loss over an extremely wide bandwidth. Within DC-10 GHz, 10-18 GHz, and 18-20 GHz, the developed CMOS T/R switch exhibits insertion loss of less than 0.7, 1.0 and 2.5 dB and isolation between 32-60 dB, 25-32 dB, and 25-27 dB, respectively. The measured 1-dB power compression point and input third-order intercept point reach as high as 26.2 and 41 dBm, respectively. Further, there is a discussion and demonstration of a tunable Carrier-based Time-gated UWB transmitter in this dissertation which uses a broadband multiplier, a novel fully integrated single pole single throw (SPST) switch designed by the CMOS process, where a tunable instantaneous bandwidth from 500 MHz to 4 GHz is exhibited by adjusting the width of the base band impulses in time domain. The SPST switch utilizes the synthetic transmission line concept and multiple reflections technique in order to realize a flat insertion loss less than 1.5 dB from 3.1 GHz to 10.6 GHz and an extremely high isolation of more than 45 dB within this frequency range. A fully integrated complementary LC voltage control oscillator (VCO), designed with a tunable buffer, operates from 4.6 GHz to 5.9 GHz. The measurement results demonstrate that the integrated VCO has a very low phase noise of –117 dBc/ Hz at 1 MHz offset. The fully integrated VCO achieves a very high figure of merit (FOM) of 183.5 using standard CMOS process while consuming 4 mA DC current
Ultra-Wideband Transceiver with Error Correction for Cortical Interfaces in NanometerCMOS Process
This dissertation reports a high-speed wideband wireless transmission solution for the tight power constraints of cortical interface application. The proposed system deploysImpulse Radio Ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) technique to achieve very high-rate communication. However, impulse radio signals suffer from significant attenuation within the body,and power limitations force the use of very low-power receiver circuits which introduce additional noise and jitter. Moreover, the coils’ self-resonance has to be suppressed to minimize the pulse distortion and inter-symbol interference, adding significant attenuation. To compensate these losses, an Error correction code (ECC) layer is added for functioning reliably to the system. The performance evaluation is made by modeling a pair of physically fabricated coils, and the results show that the ECC is essential to obtain the system’s reliability.
Furthermore, the gm/ID methodology, which is based on the complete exploration ofall inversion regions that the transistors are biased, is studied and explored for optimizingthe system at the circuit-level. Specific focuses are on the RF blocks: the low noise am-plifier (LNA) and the injection-locked voltage controlled oscillator (IL-VCO). Through the analytical deduction of the circuit’s features as the function of the gm/ID for each transistor, it is possible to select the optimum operating region for the circuit to achieve the target specification. Other circuit blocks, including the phase shifter, frequency divider,mixer, etc. are also described and analyzed. The prototype is fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS(Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor) process
UWB pulse generation for GPR applications
In this work, we present a low-complexity, and low cost ultra-wideband (UWB) pulse generators for GPR applications. Here we have implemented two UWB pulse generator circuits. The first pulse generator uses a simple common emitter amplifier followed by RC high-pass filter to generate the Gaussian pulse directly. The circuit provides a Gaussian pulse when activated by a square wave of an external trigger signal and also the pulse width duration tunability by varying the frequency. Using this circuit topology we can achieve 200ns Gaussian pulse. The second UWB pulse generator is based on the avalanche transistor. This pulse generator also provides a Gaussian pulse when activated by a square wave of an external trigger signal. And when activated with 3 kHz square wave, it generates 11ns duration Gaussian pulse
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Power-efficient Circuit Architectures for Receivers Leveraging Nanoscale CMOS
Cellular and mobile communication markets, together with CMOS technology scaling, have made complex systems-on-chip integrated circuits (ICs) ubiquitous. Moving towards the internet of things that aims to extend this further requires ultra-low power and efficient radio communication that continues to take advantage of nanoscale CMOS processes. At the heart of this lie orthogonal challenges in both system and circuit architectures of current day technology.
By enabling transceivers at center frequencies ranging in several tens of GHz, modern CMOS processes support bandwidths of up to several GHz. However, conventional narrowband architectures cannot directly translate or trade-off these speeds to lower power consumption. Pulse-radio UWB (PR-UWB), a fundamentally different system of communication enables this trade-off by bit-level duty-cycling i.e., power-gating and has emerged as an alternative to conventional narrowband systems to achieve better energy efficiency. However, system-level challenges in the implementation of transceiver synchronization and duty-cycling have remained an open challenge to realize the ultra-low power numbers that PR-UWB promises. Orthogonally, as CMOS scaling continues,
approaching 28nm and 14nm in production digital processes, the key transistor characteristics have rapidly changed. Changes in supply voltage, intrinsic gain and switching speeds have rendered conventional analog circuit design techniques obsolete, since they do not scale well with the digital backend engines that dictate scaling. Consequently, circuit architectures that employ time-domain processing and leverage the faster switching speeds have become attractive. However, they are fundamentally limited by their inability to support linear domain-to-domain conversion and hence, have remained un-suited to high-performance applications.
Addressing these requirements in different dimensions, two pulse-radio UWB receiver and a continuous-time filter silicon prototypes are presented in this work. The receiver prototypes focus on system level innovation while the filter serves as a demonstration vehicle for novel circuit architectures developed in this work. The PR-UWB receiver prototypes are implemented in a 65nm LP CMOS technology and are fully integrated solutions. The first receiver prototype is a compact UWB receiver front end operating at 4.85GHz that is aggressively duty-cycled. It occupies an active area of only 0.4 mm², thanks to the use of few inductors and RF G_m-C filters and incorporates an automatic-threshold-recovery-based demodulator for digitization. The prototype achieves a sensitivity of -88dBm at a data rate of 1Mbps (for a BER of 10^-3), while achieving the lowest energy consumption gradient (dP/df_data=450pJ/bit) amongst other receivers operating in the lower UWB band, for the same sensitivity.
However, this prototype is limited by idle-time power consumption (e.g., bias) and lacks synchronization capability. A fully self-duty-cycled and synchronized UWB pulse-radio receiver SoC targeted at low-data-rate communication is
presented as the second prototype. The proposed architecture builds on the automatic-threshold-recovery-based demodulator to achieve synchronization using an all-digital clock and data recovery loop. The SoC synchronizes with the incoming pulse stream from the transmitter and duty-cycles itself. The SoC prototype achieves a -79.5dBm, 1Mbps-normalized sensitivity for a >5X improvement over the state of the art in power consumption (375pJ/bit), thanks to aggressive signal path and bias circuit duty-cycling. The SoC is fully integrated to achieve RF-in to bit-out operation and can interface with off-chip, low speed digital components.
Finally, switched-mode signal processing, a signal processing paradigm that enables the design of highly linear, power-efficient feedback amplifiers is presented. A 0.6V continuous-time filter prototype that demonstrates the advantages of this technique is presented in a 65nm GP CMOS process. The filter draws 26.2mW from the supply while operating at a full-scale that is 73% of the V_dd, a bandwidth of 70MHz and a peak signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of 55.8dB. This represents a 2-fold improvement in full-scale and a 10-fold improvement in the bandwidth over state-of-the-art filter implementations, while demonstrating excellent linearity and signal-to-noise ratio. To sum up, innovations spanning both system and circuit architectures that leverage the speeds of nanoscale CMOS processes to enable power-efficient solutions to next-generation wireless receivers are presented in this work
Ultra Wideband
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