26 research outputs found

    Multi-channel ultra-low-power receiver architecture for body area networks

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-91).In recently published integrated medical monitoring systems, a common thread is the high power consumption of the radio compared to the other system components. This observation is indicative of a natural place to attempt a reduction in system power. Narrowband receivers in-particular can enjoy significant power reduction by employing high-Q bulk acoustic resonators as channel select filters directly at RF, allowing down-stream analog processing to be simplified, resulting in better energy efficiency. But for communications in the ISM bands, it is important to employ multiple frequency channels to permit frequency-division-multiplexing and provide frequency diversity in the face of narrowband interferers. The high-Q nature of the resonators means that frequency tuning to other channels in the same band is nearly impossible; hence, a new architecture is required to address this challenge. A multi-channel ultra-low power OOK receiver for Body Area Networks (BANs) has been designed and tested. The receiver multiplexes three Film Bulk Acoustic Resonators (FBARs) to provide three channels of frequency discrimination, while at the same time offering competitive sensitivity and superior energy efficiency in this class of BAN receivers. The high-Q parallel resonance of each resonator determines the passband. The resonator's Q is on the order of 1000 and its center frequency is approximately 2.5 GHz, resulting in a -3 dB bandwidth of roughly 2.5 MHz with a very steep rolloff. Channels are selected by enabling the corresponding LNA and mixer pathway with switches, but a key benefit of this architecture is that the switches are not in series with the resonator and do not de-Q the resonance. The measured 1E-3 sensitivity is -64 dBm at 1 Mbps for an energy efficiency of 180 pJ/bit. The resonators are packaged beside the CMOS using wirebonds for the prototype.by Phillip Michel Nadeau.S.M

    Modulation Scheme Analysis for Low-Power Leadless Pacemaker Synchronization Based on Conductive Intracardiac Communication

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    Conductive intracardiac communication (CIC) has been demonstrated as a promising concept for the synchronization of multi-chamber leadless cardiac pacemakers (LLPMs). To meet the 2–5 μ W power budget of a LLPM, highly specialized CIC-transceivers, which make optimal use of the cardiac communication channel, need to be developed. However, a detailed investigation of the optimal communication parameters for CIC-based LLPM synchronization is missing so far. This work analyzes the intracardiac communication performance of two low-power modulation techniques, namely On-Off-Keying (OOK) and Manchester-encoded baseband transmission (BB-MAN), as a function of the transmitted bit-energy. The bit error rate (BER) of a prototype dual-chamber LLPM was determined both in simulation and in-vitro experiments on porcine hearts. A BER of 1e − 4 was achieved with a median bit-energy in the range of 3-16 pJ (interquartile range: 4-15 pJ) for data rates from 75-500 kbps and a receiver input noise density of 7 nV/ √Hz . Both modulation schemes showed comparable performance, with BB-MAN having a slight bit-energy advantage (1-2 dB at 150-500 kbps) under equalized transceiver characteristics. This study demonstrates that reliable CIC-based LLPM synchronization is feasible at transmitted power levels < 10 nW under realistic channel conditions and receiver noise performance. Therefore, modulation techniques such, as BB-MAN or OOK, are preferable over recently proposed alternatives, such as pulse position modulation or conductive impulse signaling, since they can be realized with fewer hardware resources and smaller bandwidth requirements. Ultimately, a baseband communication approach might be favored over OOK, due to the more efficient cardiac signal transmission and reduced transceiver complexity

    RF Integrated Circuits for Energy Autonomous Sensor Nodes.

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    The exponential growth in the semiconductor industry has enabled computers to pervade our everyday lives, and as we move forward many of these computers will have form factors much smaller than a typical laptop or smartphone. Sensor nodes will soon be deployed ubiquitously, capable of capturing information of their surrounding environment. The next step is to connect all these different nodes together into an entire interconnected system. This “Internet of Things” (IoT) vision has incredible potential to change our lives commercially, societally, and personally. The backbone of IoT is the wireless sensor node, many of which will operate under very rigorous energy constraints with small batteries or no batteries at all. It has been shown that in sensor nodes, radio communication is one of the biggest bottlenecks to ultra-low power design. This research explores ways to reduce energy consumption in radios for wireless sensor networks, allowing them to run off harvested energy, while maintaining qualities that will allow them to function in a real world, multi-user environment. Three different prototypes have been designed demonstrating these techniques. The first is a sensitivity-reduced nanowatt wake-up radio which allows a sensor node to actively listen for packets even when the rest of the node is asleep. CDMA codes and interference rejection reduce the potential for energy-costly false wake-ups. The second prototype is a full transceiver for a body-worn EKG sensor node. This transceiver is designed to have low instantaneous power and is able to receive 802.15.6 Wireless Body Area Network compliant packets. It uses asymmetric communication including a wake-up receiver based on the previous design, UWB transmitter and a communication receiver. The communication receiver has 10 physical channels to avoid interference and demodulates coherent packets which is uncommon for low power radios, but dictated by the 802.15.6 standard. The third prototype is a long range transceiver capable of >1km communication range in the 433MHz band and able to interface with an existing commercial radio. A digitally assisted baseband demodulator was designed which enables the ability to perform bit-level as well as packet-level duty cycling which increases the radio's energy efficiency.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110432/1/nerobert_1.pd

    A Multi-Mode ULP Receiver Based on an Injection-Locked Oscillator for IoT Applications

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    This paper presents an ultra-low-power receiver based on the injection-locked oscillator (ILO), which is compatible with multiple modulation schemes such as on-off keying (OOK), binary frequency-shift keying (BFSK), and differential binary phase-shift keying (DBPSK). The receiver has been fabricated in 0.18-μm CMOS technology and operates in the ISM band of 2.4 GHz. A simple envelope detection can be used even for the demodulation of BFSK and DBPSK signals due to the conversion capability of the ILO from the frequency and phase to the amplitude. In the proposed receiver, a Q-enhanced single-ended-to-differential amplifier is employed to provide high-gain amplification as well as narrow band-pass filtering, which improves the sensitivity and selectivity of the receiver. In addition, a gain-control loop is formed in the receiver to maintain constant lock range and hence frequency-to-amplitude conversion ratio for the varying power of the BFSK-modulated receiver input signal. The receiver achieves the sensitivity of -87, -85, and -82 dBm for the OOK, BFSK, and DBPSK signals respectively at the data rate of 50 kb/s and the BER lower than 0.1% while consuming the power of 324 μW in total.1

    Signal-Processing-Driven Integrated Circuits for Energy Constrained Microsystems.

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    The exponential growth in IC technology has enabled low-cost and increasingly capable wireless sensor nodes which provide a promising way forward to realize the vision of a trillion connected sensors in the next decade. However there are still many design challenges ahead to make these sensor nodes small,low-cost,secure,reliable and energy-efficient to name a few. Since the wireless nodes are expected to operate on a limited energy source or in some cases on harvested energy, the energy consumption of each building block is of prime importance to prolong the life of a sensor node. It has been found that the radio communication when active has been one of the highest power consuming modules on a sensor node. Low-energy protocols, e.g. processing the raw sensor data on-node, are more energy efficient for some applications as compared to transmitting the raw data over a wireless channel to a cloud server. In this thesis we explore signal processing techniques to realize a low power radio solution for wireless communication. Two prototype chips have been designed and their performance has been evaluated. The first prototype chip exploits compressed sensing for Ultra-Wide-Band (UWB) communication. UWB signals typically require a high ADC sampling rate in the receiver which results in high power consumption. Compressed sensing is demonstrated to relax the ADC sampling rate to save power. The second prototype chip exploits the sensitivity vs. power trade-off in a radio receiver to achieve iso-performance at lower power consumption and the time-varying wireless channel characteristics are used to adapt the sampling frequency of the receiver based on the SNR/Link quality of the communication channel, saving power, while maintaining the desired system performance. It is envisioned that embedded machine learning will play a key role in the integration of sensory data with prior knowledge for distributed intelligent sensing which might enable reduced wireless network traffic to a cloud server. A Near-Threshold hardware accelerator for arbitrary Bayesian network was designed for clique-tree message passing algorithm used for probabilistic inference. The hardware accelerator was benchmarked by the mid-size ALARM Bayesian network with total energy consumption of 76nJ for 250µS execution time.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/107130/1/oukhan_1.pd

    A Low-Power BFSK/OOK Transmitter for Wireless Sensors

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    In recent years, significant improvements in semiconductor technology have allowed consistent development of wireless chipsets in terms of functionality and form factor. This has opened up a broad range of applications for implantable wireless sensors and telemetry devices in multiple categories, such as military, industrial, and medical uses. The nature of these applications often requires the wireless sensors to be low-weight and energy-efficient to achieve long battery life. Among the various functions of these sensors, the communication block, used to transmit the gathered data, is typically the most power-hungry block. In typical wireless sensor networks, transmission range is below 10 meters and required radiated power is below 1 milliwatt. In such cases, power consumption of the frequency-synthesis circuits prior to the power amplifier of the transmitter becomes significant. Reducing this power consumption is currently the focus of various research endeavors. A popular method of achieving this goal is using a direct-modulation transmitter where the generated carrier is directly modulated with baseband data using simple modulation schemes. Among the different variations of direct-modulation transmitters, transmitters using unlocked digitally-controlled oscillators and transmitters with injection or resonator-locked oscillators are widely investigated because of their simple structure. These transmitters can achieve low-power and stable operation either with the help of recalibration or by sacrificing tuning capability. In contrast, phase-locked-loop-based (PLL) transmitters are less researched. The PLL uses a feedback loop to lock the carrier to a reference frequency with a programmable ratio and thus achieves good frequency stability and convenient tunability. This work focuses on PLL-based transmitters. The initial goal of this work is to reduce the power consumption of the oscillator and frequency divider, the two most power-consuming blocks in a PLL. Novel topologies for these two blocks are proposed which achieve ultra-low-power operation. Along with measured performance, mathematical analysis to derive rule-of-thumb design approaches are presented. Finally, the full transmitter is implemented using these blocks in a 130 nanometer CMOS process and is successfully tested for low-power operation

    Energy-Efficient Wireless Circuits and Systems for Internet of Things

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    As the demand of ultra-low power (ULP) systems for internet of thing (IoT) applications has been increasing, large efforts on evolving a new computing class is actively ongoing. The evolution of the new computing class, however, faced challenges due to hard constraints on the RF systems. Significant efforts on reducing power of power-hungry wireless radios have been done. The ULP radios, however, are mostly not standard compliant which poses a challenge to wide spread adoption. Being compliant with the WiFi network protocol can maximize an ULP radio’s potential of utilization, however, this standard demands excessive power consumption of over 10mW, that is hardly compatible with in ULP systems even with heavy duty-cycling. Also, lots of efforts to minimize off-chip components in ULP IoT device have been done, however, still not enough for practical usage without a clean external reference, therefore, this limits scaling on cost and form-factor of the new computer class of IoT applications. This research is motivated by those challenges on the RF systems, and each work focuses on radio designs for IoT applications in various aspects. First, the research covers several endeavors for relieving energy constraints on RF systems by utilizing existing network protocols that eventually meets both low-active power, and widespread adoption. This includes novel approaches on 802.11 communication with articulate iterations on low-power RF systems. The research presents three prototypes as power-efficient WiFi wake-up receivers, which bridges the gap between industry standard radios and ULP IoT radios. The proposed WiFi wake-up receivers operate with low power consumption and remain compatible with the WiFi protocol by using back-channel communication. Back-channel communication embeds a signal into a WiFi compliant transmission changing the firmware in the access point, or more specifically just the data in the payload of the WiFi packet. With a specific sequence of data in the packet, the transmitter can output a signal that mimics a modulation that is more conducive for ULP receivers, such as OOK and FSK. In this work, low power mixer-first receivers, and the first fully integrated ultra-low voltage receiver are presented, that are compatible with WiFi through back-channel communication. Another main contribution of this work is in relieving the integration challenge of IoT devices by removing the need for external, or off-chip crystals and antennas. This enables a small form-factor on the order of mm3-scale, useful for medical research and ubiquitous sensing applications. A crystal-less small form factor fully integrated 60GHz transceiver with on-chip 12-channel frequency reference, and good peak gain dual-mode on-chip antenna is presented.PHDElectrical and Computer EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162975/1/jaeim_1.pd
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