47 research outputs found

    Low-Power and Programmable Analog Circuitry for Wireless Sensors

    Get PDF
    Embedding networks of secure, wirelessly-connected sensors and actuators will help us to conscientiously manage our local and extended environments. One major challenge for this vision is to create networks of wireless sensor devices that provide maximal knowledge of their environment while using only the energy that is available within that environment. In this work, it is argued that the energy constraints in wireless sensor design are best addressed by incorporating analog signal processors. The low power-consumption of an analog signal processor allows persistent monitoring of multiple sensors while the device\u27s analog-to-digital converter, microcontroller, and transceiver are all in sleep mode. This dissertation describes the development of analog signal processing integrated circuits for wireless sensor networks. Specific technology problems that are addressed include reconfigurable processing architectures for low-power sensing applications, as well as the development of reprogrammable biasing for analog circuits

    Low-Power and Programmable Analog Circuitry for Wireless Sensors

    Get PDF
    Embedding networks of secure, wirelessly-connected sensors and actuators will help us to conscientiously manage our local and extended environments. One major challenge for this vision is to create networks of wireless sensor devices that provide maximal knowledge of their environment while using only the energy that is available within that environment. In this work, it is argued that the energy constraints in wireless sensor design are best addressed by incorporating analog signal processors. The low power-consumption of an analog signal processor allows persistent monitoring of multiple sensors while the device\u27s analog-to-digital converter, microcontroller, and transceiver are all in sleep mode. This dissertation describes the development of analog signal processing integrated circuits for wireless sensor networks. Specific technology problems that are addressed include reconfigurable processing architectures for low-power sensing applications, as well as the development of reprogrammable biasing for analog circuits

    Communication and energy delivery architectures for personal medical devices

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-232).Advances in sensor technologies and integrated electronics are revolutionizing how humans access and receive healthcare. However, many envisioned wearable or implantable systems are not deployable in practice due to high energy consumption and anatomically-limited size constraints, necessitating large form-factors for external devices, or eventual surgical re-implantation procedures for in-vivo applications. Since communication and energy-management sub-systems often dominate the power budgets of personal biomedical devices, this thesis explores alternative usecases, system architectures, and circuit solutions to reduce their energy burden. For wearable applications, a system-on-chip is designed that both communicates and delivers power over an eTextiles network. The transmitter and receiver front-ends are at least an order of magnitude more efficient than conventional body-area networks. For implantable applications, two separate systems are proposed that avoid reimplantation requirements. The first system extracts energy from the endocochlear potential, an electrochemical gradient found naturally within the inner-ear of mammals, in order to power a wireless sensor. Since extractable energy levels are limited, novel sensing, communication, and energy management solutions are proposed that leverage duty-cycling to achieve enabling power consumptions that are at least an order of magnitude lower than previous work. Clinical measurements show the first system demonstrated to sustain itself with a mammalian-generated electrochemical potential operating as the only source of energy into the system. The second system leverages the essentially unlimited number of re-charge cycles offered by ultracapacitors. To ease patient usability, a rapid wireless capacitor charging architecture is proposed that employs a multi-tapped secondary inductive coil to provide charging times that are significantly faster than conventional approaches.by Patrick Philip Mercier.Ph.D

    Developing Energy Harvest Efficient Strategies with Microbial Fuel Cells

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, thinking of energetic efficiency is to determine how to decrease consumption and to reuse resources. This is a major concern when addressing hydric resources. The consumption of drinking water is seeing an unaffordable growth and, although most of it is replenished to the environment, the water quality is affected by pollutants and impurities. As such, using wastewater, a by-product of our routine and way of life, as resource is an asset. Even more when thinking about the heightened energy costs of a wastewater treatment station. The hypotheses of this work show how to achieve this goal by using microbial fuel cells. The organic composition of this water increases its energy production potential, where the bacterial metabolism can be used to, simultaneously, produce energy and help to clean the water. This document is divided in 5 chapters. The strategic positioning of the theme happens in chapter 1. Chapter 2 explains how the main elements of microbial fuel cell technology can work and determine its operation. In chapter 3, the power management systems used with microbial fuel cells are presented and discussed, with the identification of optimization strategies. The second-to-last chapter corresponds to the experimental results discussion and validation, while focusing improved energy production efficiencies. The outputs of this chapter pilot the future work analysis on chapter 5, together with the main conclusions and research trends. The validity and usefulness of this work is cleared with an application example.Pensar em economia energética é, hoje, considerar soluções para a redução de consumo e reutilização de recursos. Esta preocupação é importante ao examinar a utilização dos recursos hídricos. O consumo de água potável está a crescer insustentavelmente e, apesar de grande parte desse consumo ser restituído ao meio ambiente, a qualidade da água é afetada por poluentes ou impurezas. A utilização de água residual, um produto da nossa rotina e qualidade de vida, como um recurso é, por isso, uma mais valia. É ainda mais evidente ao considerar os elevados consumos energéticos de uma estação de tratamento de água residual. As hipóteses abordadas neste trabalho mostram como é possível atingir este objetivo usando células microbianas de combustível. A composição orgânica desta água faz com que o seu potencial energético possa ser explorado, usando o metabolismo bacteriano para produzir energia e, simultaneamente, auxiliar na limpeza da água. Este documento está dividido em 5 capítulos. O posicionamento do tema ocorre no capítulo 1. O capítulo 2 observa os principais elementos da tecnologia das células microbianas de combustível, permitindo compreender o seu funcionamento e conhecer que variáveis afetam o seu funcionamento. No capítulo 3 são apresentadas as tipologias de abordagem à gestão energética para esta pilha bacteriológica, discutindo-se as vantagens e otimizações de cada sistema. O penúltimo capítulo corresponde à exploração de resultados experimentais e à validação de hipóteses, orientadas para a maior eficiência energética. Surgem assim recomendações que servirão para guiar os trabalhos futuros, discutidos no capítulo final. Este, o capítulo 5, conta ainda com a apresentação das principais conclusões e das tendências de pesquisa. O trabalho termina com um exemplo de aplicação que solidifica a validade e utilidade da aplicação desta tecnologia

    ULTRA LOW POWER FSK RECEIVER AND RF ENERGY HARVESTER

    Get PDF
    This thesis focuses on low power receiver design and energy harvesting techniques as methods for intelligently managing energy usage and energy sources. The goal is to build an inexhaustibly powered communication system that can be widely applied, such as through wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Low power circuit design and smart power management are techniques that are often used to extend the lifetime of such mobile devices. Both methods are utilized here to optimize power usage and sources. RF energy is a promising ambient energy source that is widely available in urban areas and which we investigate in detail. A harvester circuit is modeled and analyzed in detail at low power input. Based on the circuit analysis, a design procedure is given for a narrowband energy harvester. The antenna and harvester co-design methodology improves RF to DC energy conversion efficiency. The strategy of co-design of the antenna and the harvester creates opportunities to optimize the system power conversion efficiency. Previous surveys have found that ambient RF energy is spread broadly over the frequency domain; however, here it is demonstrated that it is theoretically impossible to harvest RF energy over a wide frequency band if the ambient RF energy source(s) are weak, owing to the voltage requirements. It is found that most of the ambient RF energy lies in a series of narrow bands. Two different versions of harvesters have been designed, fabricated, and tested. The simulated and measured results demonstrate a dual-band energy harvester that obtains over 9% efficiency for two different bands (900MHz and 1800MHz) at an input power as low as -19dBm. The DC output voltage of this harvester is over 1V, which can be used to recharge the battery to form an inexhaustibly powered communication system. A new phase locked loop based receiver architecture is developed to avoid the significant conversion losses associated with OOK architectures. This also helps to minimize power consumption. A new low power mixer circuit has also been designed, and a detailed analysis is provided. Based on the mixer, a low power phase locked loop (PLL) based receiver has been designed, fabricated and measured. A power management circuit and a low power transceiver system have also been co-designed to provide a system on chip solution. The low power voltage regulator is designed to handle a variety of battery voltage, environmental temperature, and load conditions. The whole system can work with a battery and an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) as a sensor node of a WSN network

    Advanced Energy Harvesting Technologies

    Get PDF
    Energy harvesting is the conversion of unused or wasted energy in the ambient environment into useful electrical energy. It can be used to power small electronic systems such as wireless sensors and is beginning to enable the widespread and maintenance-free deployment of Internet of Things (IoT) technology. This Special Issue is a collection of the latest developments in both fundamental research and system-level integration. This Special Issue features two review papers, covering two of the hottest research topics in the area of energy harvesting: 3D-printed energy harvesting and triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs). These papers provide a comprehensive survey of their respective research area, highlight the advantages of the technologies and point out challenges in future development. They are must-read papers for those who are active in these areas. This Special Issue also includes ten research papers covering a wide range of energy-harvesting techniques, including electromagnetic and piezoelectric wideband vibration, wind, current-carrying conductors, thermoelectric and solar energy harvesting, etc. Not only are the foundations of these novel energy-harvesting techniques investigated, but the numerical models, power-conditioning circuitry and real-world applications of these novel energy harvesting techniques are also presented

    Analog Compressive Sensing for Multi-Channel Neural Recording: Modeling and Circuit Level Implementation

    Get PDF
    RÉSUMÉ Dans cette thèse, nous présentons la conception d’un implant d’enregistrement neuronal multicanaux avec un échantillonnage compressé mis en oeuvre avec un procédé de fabrication CMOS à 65 nm. La réduction de la technologie a˙ecte à la baisse les paramètres des amplificateurs neuronaux couplés en AC, comme la fréquence de coupure basse, en raison de l’e˙et de canal court des transistors MOS. Nous analysons la fréquence de coupure basse et nous constatons que l’origine de ce problème, dans les technologies avancées, est la diminution de l’impédance d’entrée de l’amplificateur opérationnel de transconductance (OTA) en raison de la fuite d’oxyde de grille à l’entrée des OTA. Nous proposons deux solutions pour réduire la fréquence de coupure basse sans augmenter la valeur des condensateurs de rétroaction de l’étage d’entrée. La première solution est appelée rétroaction positive croisée et la deuxième solution utilise des PMOS à oxyde épais dans la paire de l’entrée di˙érentielle de l’OTA. Il est à noter que pour compresser le signal neuronal, nous utilisons le CS dans le domaine analogique. Pour la réalisation, un intégrateur à capacité commutée est requis. Les paramètres non idéaux de l’OTA utilisé dans cet intégrateur, tels que le gain fini, la bande passante, la vitesse de balayage et le changement rapide de la sortie. Toutes ces imperfections induisent des erreurs et réduisent le rapport signal sur bruit (SNR) total. Nous avons simulé ces imperfections sur Matlab et Simulink pour définir les spécifications de l’OTA requis. Aussi, pour concevoir les circuits analogiques correspondant aux interfaces neuronales requises, tels qu’un amplificateur neuronal, une référence de tension compacte et à faible consommation d’énergie est requise. Nous avons proposé une référence de tension de faible consommation d’énergie sans utiliser le transistor bipolaire parasite de la technologie CMOS pour diminuer la surface de silicium requise. Finalement, nous avons complété l’encodeur de CS et un convertisseur analogique-numérique à approximation successive (SAR ADC) requis pour la chaine d’enregistrement des signaux neuronaux dans ce projet.----------ABSTRACT In this thesis we present the design of a multi-channel neural recording implant with analog compressive sensing (CS) in 65 nm process. Scaling down technology demotes the parameters of AC-coupled neural amplifiers, such as increasing the low-cuto˙ frequency due to the short-channel e˙ects of MOS transistors. We analyze the low-cuto˙ frequency and find that the main reason of this problem in advanced technologies is decreasing the input resistance of the operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) due to the gate oxide static current leakage in the input of the OTA. In advanced technologies, the gate oxide is thin and some electrons can penetrate to the channel and cause DC current leakage. We proposed two solutions to reduce the low-cuto˙ frequency without increasing the value of the feedback capacitors of the front-end neural amplifier. The first solution is called cross-coupled positive feedback, and the second solution is utilizing thick-oxide PMOS transistors in the input di˙erential pair of the OTA. Compress the neural signal, we utilized the CS method in analog domain. For its implementation, a switched-capacitor integrator is required. Non-ideal specifications of OTA of CS integrator such as finite gain, bandwidth, slew rate and output swing induce error and reduce the total signal to noise ratio (SNR). We simulated these non-idealities in Matlab and Simulink and extracted the specification of the required OTA. Also, to design analog circuits such as neural amplifier a low power and compact voltage reference is required. We implemented a low-power band-gap reference without utilizing parasitic bipolar transis-tor to decrease the silicon area. At the end, we completed the CS encoder and successive approximation architecture analog-to-digital converter (SAR ADC)

    Development of a Portable and Easy-to-Use EEG System to be Employed in Emergency Situations

    Get PDF
    This thesis describes the development and evaluation of two portable devices intended for the recording of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in emergency situations. The topic originated from the EEG in Emergency Medicine (EEGEM) project, which seeks to develop the necessary technology and methodology that will help reduce the cost, the preparation time, and the overall complexity associated with EEG nowadays. The work contained herein builds upon the results obtained during previous Master theses that were completed in this project in order to obtain two systems that can be used in to investigate the feasibility and clinical value of EEG in emergency medicine (EM). Before starting the work, a thorough investigation of the EEG signal, which included its origins and its diagnostic potential, was carried out. Existing instrumentation was analyzed as well as factors that influence the quality of the recording. Since the EEG is an established diagnostic tool, it was necessary to follow existing recording guidelines. The recording guidelines of the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (ACNS) were summarized and employed in the design stages of this study. A review of commercial EEG recorders and quick application EEG caps revealed the absence of an integrated solution for recording this signal in EM. Two systems were developed, one that is able to measure 1 channel of EEG while the other can measure six. The 1-channel system's particularity is that it allows a person's EEG to be displayed on a standard electrocardiogram (ECG) monitor. It features a high input impedance, low noise amplifier that increases the EEG signal's amplitude in order to allow it to be displayed on an ECG monitor. The amount of amplification is dynamically adjusted depending on the peak-to-peak amplitude of the EEG signal. After every gain change, the EEG recording is temporarily interrupted and a sinusoidal signal with an amplitude equivalent to 100 μV at the current gain level is outputted. The user interface is made up of a red, green and blue (RGB) light-emitting diode (LED) unit and a capacitive button that starts/stops the recording. The 6-channel system interfaces with a computer and consists of three parts: a wire-less EEG (WEEG) recording device, a quick-application cap, and recording software that runs on a computer. The WEEG device is able to measure 6 channels of EEG and tri-axial acceleration for the identification of movement artifacts. The recorded data is transmitted to a measurement computer by means of a 2.4 GHz wireless protocol. The author worked with the group from the Department of Automation Science and Engineering (ASE) that developed the previous versions of the device in order to reduce the size of the system and to improve its integration with the measurement computer. An initial prototype of a quick-application electrode cap for out-of-hospital measurements that can be performed by non-EEG specialists was designed by M.Sc. Salmi. It was made up of easily sterilizeable materials that were also elastic. Due to its many straps and adjustment points as well as the floating electrode leads, the band was not easy to apply. This study reports a simplified version of the cap that possesses only two attachment points and can be easily applied even with the patient in the supine position. Also, in the present version, the electrode leads are firmly attached to the cap. The past version of the recording software, which was developed by M.Sc. Pänkälä, had only basic functionality. It displayed the EEG signals, stored them, and allowed the WEEG device to be configured and patient information to be saved. Digital low-pass filtering of the displayed data, the ability to control the vertical sensitivity as well as the time scale, automatic uploading of the recorded file, and an implementation of the aEEG algorithm were added during this thesis. Also, information about the recording can now be stored together with the recorded signals. Furthermore, the software's us-ability was improved by means of a simple graphical user interface (GUI), which makes all functions easily accessible. During the evaluation of the two prototype systems, the electrical and software performance were ascertained. In the electrical tests, the operating time of the device, the common mode rejection (CMR), the frequency response, the noise level, and the signal to noise ratio (SNR) of the two systems were measured. In order to assess the reliability of the software of the two systems, both static and functional tests were conducted. The results obtained from the testing of the systems indicate that they offer similar performance to those offered by commercial EEG recording systems. This demonstrates that they can be used to investigate the clinical indications of EEG in EM. /Kir1

    Proceedings of the 6th Annual Summer Conference: NASA/USRA University Advanced Design Program

    Get PDF
    The NASA/USRA University Advanced Design Program is a unique program that brings together NASA engineers, students, and faculty from United States engineering schools by integrating current and future NASA space/aeronautics engineering design projects into the university curriculum. The Program was conceived in the fall of 1984 as a pilot project to foster engineering design education in the universities and to supplement NASA's in-house efforts in advanced planning for space and aeronautics design. Nine universities and five NASA centers participated in the first year of the pilot project. The study topics cover a broad range of potential space and aeronautics projects that could be undertaken during a 20 to 30 year period beginning with the deployment of the Space Station Freedom scheduled for the mid-1990s. Both manned and unmanned endeavors are embraced, and the systems approach to the design problem is emphasized

    Vision 21: Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in the Era of Cyberspace

    Get PDF
    The symposium Vision-21: Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in the Era of Cyberspace was held at the NASA Lewis Research Center on March 30-31, 1993. The purpose of the symposium was to simulate interdisciplinary thinking in the sciences and technologies which will be required for exploration and development of space over the next thousand years. The keynote speakers were Hans Moravec, Vernor Vinge, Carol Stoker, and Myron Krueger. The proceedings consist of transcripts of the invited talks and the panel discussion by the invited speakers, summaries of workshop sessions, and contributed papers by the attendees
    corecore