9 research outputs found

    System and Circuit Design Techniques for Silicon-based Multi-band/Multi-standard Receivers

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    Today, the advances in Complementary MetalOxideSemiconductor (CMOS) technology have guided the progress in the wireless communications circuits and systems area. Various new communication standards have been developed to accommodate a variety of applications at different frequency bands, such as cellular communications at 900 and 1800 MHz, global positioning system (GPS) at 1.2 and 1.5 GHz, and Bluetooth andWiFi at 2.4 and 5.2 GHz, respectively. The modern wireless technology is now motivated by the global trend of developing multi-band/multistandard terminals for low-cost and multifunction transceivers. Exploring the unused 10-66 GHz frequency spectrum for high data rate communication is also another trend in the wireless industry. In this dissertation, the challenges and solutions for designing a multi-band/multistandard mobile device is addressed from system-level analysis to circuit implementation. A systematic system-level design methodology for block-level budgeting is proposed. The system-level design methodology focuses on minimizing the power consumption of the overall receiver. Then, a novel millimeter-wave dual-band receiver front-end architecture is developed to operate at 24 and 31 GHz. The receiver relies on a newly introduced concept of harmonic selection that helps to reduce the complexity of the dual-band receiver. Wideband circuit techniques for millimeterwave frequencies are also investigated and new bandwidth extension techniques are proposed for the dual-band 24/31 GHz receiver. These new techniques are applied for the low noise amplifier and millimeter-wave mixer resulting in the widest reported operating bandwidth in K-band, while consuming less power consumption. Additionally, various receiver building blocks, such as a low noise amplifier with reconfigurable input matching network for multi-band receivers, and a low drop-out regulator with high power supply rejection are analyzed and proposed. The low noise amplifier presents the first one with continuously reconfigurable input matching network, while achieving a noise figure comparable to the wideband techniques. The low drop-out regulator presented the first one with high power supply rejection in the mega-hertz frequency range. All the proposed building blocks and architecture in this dissertation are implemented using the existing silicon-based technologies, and resulted in several publications in IEEE Journals and Conferences

    Power-Efficient and High-Performance Cicruit Techniques for On-Chip Voltage Regulation and Low-Voltage Filtering

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    This dissertation focuses on two projects. The first one is a power supply rejection (PSR) enhanced with fast settling time (TS) bulk-driven feedforward (BDFF) capacitor-less (CL) low-dropout (LDO) regulator. The second project is a high bandwidth (BW) power adjustable low-voltage (LV) active-RC 4th -order Butterworth low pass filter (LPF). As technology improves, faster and more accurate LDOs with high PSR are going to be required for future on-chip applications and systems.The proposed BDFF CL-LDO will accomplish an improved PSR without degrading TS. This would be achieved by injecting supply noise through the pass device’s bulk terminal in order to cancel the supply noise at the output. The supply injection will be achieved by creating a feedforward path, which compared to feedback paths, that doesn’t degrade stability and therefore allows for faster dynamic performance. A high gain control loop would be used to maintain a high accuracy and dc performance, such as line/load regulation. The proposed CL-LDO will target a PSR better than – 90 dB at low frequencies and – 60 dB at 1 MHz for 50 mA of load current (IvL). The CL-LDO will target a loop gain higher than 90 dB, leading to an improved line and load regulation, and unity-gain frequency (UGF) higher than 20 MHz, which will allow a TS faster than 500 ns. The CL-LDO is going to be fabricated in a CMOS 130 nm technology; consume a quiescent current (IQ) of less than 50 μA; for a dropout voltage of 200 mV and an IvL of 50 mA. As technology scales down, speed and performance requirements increase for on-chip communication systems that reflect the current demand for high speed data-oriented applications. However, in small technologies, it becomes harder to achieve high gain and high speed at the same time because the supply voltage (VvDvD) decreases leaving no room for conventional high gain CMOS structures. The proposed active-RC LPF will accomplish a LV high BW operation that would allow such disadvantages to be overcome. The LPF will be implemented using an active RC structure that allows for the high linearity such communication systems demand. In addition, built-in BW and power configurability would address the demands for increased flexibility usually required in such systems. The proposed LV LPF will target a configurable cut-off frequency (ƒо) of 20/40/80/160 MHz with tuning capabilities and power adjustability for each ƒо. The filter will be fabricated in a CMOS 130 nm technology. The filter characteristics are as following: 4th -order, active-RC, LPF, Butterworth response, VDD = 0.6 V, THD higher than 40 dB and a third-order input intercept point (IIP3) higher than 10 dBm

    Integrated Circuits for Programming Flash Memories in Portable Applications

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    Smart devices such as smart grids, smart home devices, etc. are infrastructure systems that connect the world around us more than before. These devices can communicate with each other and help us manage our environment. This concept is called the Internet of Things (IoT). Not many smart nodes exist that are both low-power and programmable. Floating-gate (FG) transistors could be used to create adaptive sensor nodes by providing programmable bias currents. FG transistors are mostly used in digital applications like Flash memories. However, FG transistors can be used in analog applications, too. Unfortunately, due to the expensive infrastructure required for programming these transistors, they have not been economical to be used in portable applications. In this work, we present low-power approaches to programming FG transistors which make them a good candidate to be employed in future wireless sensor nodes and portable systems. First, we focus on the design of low-power circuits which can be used in programming the FG transistors such as high-voltage charge pumps, low-drop-out regulators, and voltage reference cells. Then, to achieve the goal of reducing the power consumption in programmable sensor nodes and reducing the programming infrastructure, we present a method to program FG transistors using negative voltages. We also present charge-pump structures to generate the necessary negative voltages for programming in this new configuration

    Ultra-Low Power Transmitter and Power Management for Internet-of-Things Devices

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    Two of the most critical components in an Internet-of-Things (IoT) sensing and transmitting node are the power management unit (PMU) and the wireless transmitter (Tx). The desire for longer intervals between battery replacements or a completely self-contained, battery-less operation via energy harvesting transducers and circuits in IoT nodes demands highly efficient integrated circuits. This dissertation addresses the challenge of designing and implementing power management and Tx circuits with ultra-low power consumption to enable such efficient operation. The first part of the dissertation focuses on the study and design of power management circuits for IoT nodes. This opening portion elaborates on two different areas of the power management field: Firstly, a low-complexity, SPICE-based model for general low dropout (LDO) regulators is demonstrated. The model aims to reduce the stress and computation times in the final stages of simulation and verification of Systems-on-Chip (SoC), including IoT nodes, that employ large numbers of LDOs. Secondly, the implementation of an efficient PMU for an energy harvesting system based on a thermoelectric generator transducer is discussed. The PMU includes a first-in-its-class LDO with programmable supply noise rejection for localized improvement in the suppression. The second part of the dissertation addresses the challenge of designing an ultra- low power wireless FSK Tx in the 900 MHz ISM band. To reduce the power consumption and boost the Tx energy efficiency, a novel delay cell exploiting current reuse is used in a ring-oscillator employed as the local oscillator generator scheme. In combination with an edge-combiner PA, the Tx showed a measured energy efficiency of 0.2 nJ/bit and a normalized energy efficiency of 3.1 nJ/(bit∙mW) when operating at output power levels up to -10 dBm and data rates of 3 Mbps. To close this dissertation, the implementation of a supply-noise tolerant BiCMOS ring-oscillator is discussed. The combination of a passive, high-pass feedforward path from the supply to critical nodes in the selected delay cell and a low cost LDO allow the oscillator to exhibit power supply noise rejection levels better than –33 dB in experimental results

    Design of a Programmable Passive SoC for Biomedical Applications Using RFID ISO 15693/NFC5 Interface

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    Low power, low cost inductively powered passive biotelemetry system involving fully customized RFID/NFC interface base SoC has gained popularity in the last decades. However, most of the SoCs developed are application specific and lacks either on-chip computational or sensor readout capability. In this paper, we present design details of a programmable passive SoC in compliance with ISO 15693/NFC5 standard for biomedical applications. The integrated system consists of a 32-bit microcontroller, a sensor readout circuit, a 12-bit SAR type ADC, 16 kB RAM, 16 kB ROM and other digital peripherals. The design is implemented in a 0.18 μ m CMOS technology and used a die area of 1.52 mm × 3.24 mm. The simulated maximum power consumption of the analog block is 592 μ W. The number of external components required by the SoC is limited to an external memory device, sensors, antenna and some passive components. The external memory device contains the application specific firmware. Based on the application, the firmware can be modified accordingly. The SoC design is suitable for medical implants to measure physiological parameters like temperature, pressure or ECG. As an application example, the authors have proposed a bioimplant to measure arterial blood pressure for patients suffering from Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

    Conception d'un réseau de plots configurables multifonctions analogiques et numériques combiné à un réseau de distribution de puissance intégrés à l'échelle de la tranche de silicium

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    RÉSUMÉ De nos jours, les systèmes électroniques sont en constante croissance en taille et en complexité. Cette complexité combinée à la réduction du temps de mise en marché rendant le design de systèmes électroniques un grand défi pour les designers. Une plateforme de prototypage a récemment été introduite afin de s’attaquer toutes ces contraintes à la fois. Cette plateforme s’appuie sur l’implémentation d’un circuit configurable à l’échelle d’une tranche de silicium complète de 200mm de diamètre. Cette surface est recouverte d’une mer de plots conducteurs configurables appelés NanoPads. Ces NanoPads sont suffisamment petits pour supporter des billes d’un diamètre de 250 μm et d’un espacement de 500 μm et sont regroupés en matrices de 4×4 pour former des Cellules, qui sont à leur tour assemblées en Réticules de 32×32. Ces Réticules sont ensuite photo-répétés sur toute la surface d’une tranche de silicium et sont interconnectés entre eux pour former le WaferIC. Cet arrangement particulier de plots conducteurs configurables permet à un usager de déposer sur la surface active du WaferIC les circuits intégrés constituant un système électronique, sans tenir en compte l’orientation spatiale de ces derniers, de créer un schéma d’interconnexions, de distribution la puissance et de débuter le prototypage du système en question. Une version préliminaire a été fabriquées et testées avec succès et permet d’alimenter des circuits -intégrés et de configurer le WaferIC pour les interconnecter. Cette thèse par articles présente une nouvelle version du WaferIC avec une nouvelle proposition de distribution de la puissance avec une approche de maîtres-esclaves qui met en valeur l’utilisation de plusieurs rails d’alimentation afin d’améliorer le rendement énergétique. Il est également mis de l’avant un réseau très dense de convertisseurs analogique-numérique (CAN) et numérique-analogique (CNA) de plus de 300k éléments, tolérant aux défectuosités et aux défauts de fabrication. Ce réseau de CAN-CNA permet d’améliorer le WaferIC avec la transmission de signaux analogiques, en plus des signaux numériques. Ce manuscrit comporte trois articles : un publié chez « Springer Science & Business Media Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing », un publié chez « IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I : Regular Papers » et finalement un soumis chez « IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration ».----------ABSTRACT Nowadays, electronic systems are in constant growth, size and complexity; combined with time to market it makes a challenge for electronic system designers. A prototyping platform has been recently introduced and addresses all those constraints at once. This platform is based on an active 200 mm in diameter wafer-scale circuit, which is covered with a set of small configurable and conductive pads called NanoPads. These NanoPads are designed to be small enough to support any integrated-circuit μball of a 250 μm diameter and 500 μm of pitch. They are assembled in a 4×4 matrix, forming a Unit-Cell, which are grouped in a Reticle-Image of 32×32. These Reticle-Images are photo-repeated over the entire surface of a 200 mm in diameter wafer and are interconnected together using interreticle stitching. This active wafer-scale circuit is called a WaferIC. This particular topology and distribution of NanoPads allows an electronic system designer to manually deposit any integrated-circuit (IC) on the active alignment insensitive surface of the WaferIC, to build the netlist linking all the ICs, power-up the systems and start the prototyping of the system. In this manuscript-based thesis, we present an improved version of the WaferIC with a novel approach for the power distribution network with a master-slave topology, which makes the use of embedded dual-power-rail voltage regulators in order to improve the power efficiency and decrease thermal dissipation. We also propose a default-tolerant network of analog to digital (ADC) and digital to analog (DAC) converters of more than 300k. This ADC-DAC network allows the WaferIC to not only support digital ICs but also propagate analog signals from one NanoPad to another. This thesis includes 3 papers : one submission to "Springer Science & Business Media Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing", one submission to "IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I : Regular Papers" and finally one submission to "IEEE Transactions on Very Large-Scale Integration". These papers propose novel architectures of dualrail voltage regulators, configurable analog buffers and configurable voltage references, which can be used as a DAC. A novel approach for a power distribution network and the integration of all the presented architectures is also proposed with the fabrication of a testchip in CMOS 0.18 μm technology, which is a small-scale version of the WaferIC

    Digital-based analog processing in nanoscale CMOS ICs for IoT applications

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    The Internet-of-Things (IoT) concept has been opening up a variety of applications, such as urban and environmental monitoring, smart health, surveillance, and home automation. Most of these IoT applications require more and more power/area efficient Complemen tary Metal–Oxide–Semiconductor (CMOS) systems and faster prototypes (lower time-to market), demanding special modifications in the current IoT design system bottleneck: the analog/RF interfaces. Specially after the 2000s, it is evident that there have been significant improvements in CMOS digital circuits when compared to analog building blocks. Digital circuits have been taking advantage of CMOS technology scaling in terms of speed, power consump tion, and cost, while the techniques running behind the analog signal processing are still lagging. To decrease this historical gap, there has been an increasing trend in finding alternative IC design strategies to implement typical analog functions exploiting Digital in-Concept Design Methodologies (DCDM). This idea of re-thinking analog functions in digital terms has shown that Analog ICs blocks can also avail of the feature-size shrinking and energy efficiency of new technologies. This thesis deals with the development of DCDM, demonstrating its compatibility for Ultra-Low-Voltage (ULV) and Power (ULP) IoT applications. This work proves this state ment through the proposing of new digital-based analog blocks, such as an Operational Transconductance Amplifiers (OTAs) and an ac-coupled Bio-signal Amplifier (BioAmp). As an initial contribution, for the first time, a silicon demonstration of an embryonic Digital-Based OTA (DB-OTA) published in 2013 is exhibited. The fabricated DB-OTA test chip occupies a compact area of 1,426 µm2 , operating at supply voltages (VDD) down to 300 mV, consuming only 590 pW while driving a capacitive load of 80pF. With a Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) lower than 5% for a 100mV input signal swing, its measured small-signal figure of merit (FOMS) and large-signal figure of merit (FOML) are 2,101 V −1 and 1,070, respectively. To the best of this thesis author’s knowledge, this measured power is the lowest reported to date in OTA literature, and its figures of merit are the best in sub-500mV OTAs reported to date. As the second step, mainly due to the robustness limitation of previous DB-OTA, a novel calibration-free digital-based topology is proposed, named here as Digital OTA (DIG OTA). A 180-nm DIGOTA test chip is also developed exhibiting an area below the 1000 µm2 wall, 2.4nW power under 150pF load, and a minimum VDD of 0.25 V. The proposed DIGOTA is more digital-like compared with DB-OTA since no pseudo-resistor is needed. As the last contribution, the previously proposed DIGOTA is then used as a building block to demonstrate the operation principle of power-efficient ULV and ultra-low area (ULA) fully-differential, digital-based Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA), suitable for microscale biosensing applications (BioDIGOTA) such as extreme low area Body Dust. Measured results in 180nm CMOS confirm that the proposed BioDIGOTA can work with a supply voltage down to 400 mV, consuming only 95 nW. The BioDIGOTA layout occupies only 0.022 mm2 of total silicon area, lowering the area by 3.22X times compared to the current state of the art while keeping reasonable system performance, such as 7.6 Noise Efficiency Factor (NEF) with 1.25 µVRMS input-referred noise over a 10 Hz bandwidth, 1.8% of THD, 62 dB of the common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) and 55 dB of power supply rejection ratio (PSRR). After reviewing the current DCDM trend and all proposed silicon demonstrations, the thesis concludes that, despite the current analog design strategies involved during the analog block development

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort
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