1,129 research outputs found

    Ultra-Low Power Wake Up Receiver For Medical Implant Communications Service Transceiver

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    This thesis explores the specific requirements and challenges for the design of a dedicated wake-up receiver for medical implant communication services equipped with a novel “uncertain-IF†architecture combined with a high – Q filtering MEMS resonator and a free running CMOS ring oscillator as the RF LO. The receiver prototype, implements an IBM 0.18μm mixed-signal 7ML RF CMOS technology and achieves a sensitivity of -62 dBm at 404MHz while consuming \u3c100 μW from a 1 V supply

    Reliable high-data rate body-centric wireless communication

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    Design and implementation of textile antennas and wearable systems with high body-antenna isolation

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    Antenna Systems

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    This book offers an up-to-date and comprehensive review of modern antenna systems and their applications in the fields of contemporary wireless systems. It constitutes a useful resource of new material, including stochastic versus ray tracing wireless channel modeling for 5G and V2X applications and implantable devices. Chapters discuss modern metalens antennas in microwaves, terahertz, and optical domain. Moreover, the book presents new material on antenna arrays for 5G massive MIMO beamforming. Finally, it discusses new methods, devices, and technologies to enhance the performance of antenna systems

    Modelling and characterisation of antennas and propagation for body-centric wireless communication

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    PhDBody-Centric Wireless Communication (BCWC) is a central point in the development of fourth generation mobile communications. The continuous miniaturisation of sensors, in addition to the advancement in wearable electronics, embedded software, digital signal processing and biomedical technologies, have led to a new concept of usercentric networks, where devices can be carried in the user’s pockets, attached to the user’s body or even implanted. Body-centric wireless networks take their place within the personal area networks, body area networks and body sensor networks which are all emerging technologies that have a broad range of applications such as healthcare and personal entertainment. The major difference between BCWC and conventional wireless systems is the radio channel over which the communication takes place. The human body is a hostile environment from radio propagation perspective and it is therefore important to understand and characterise the effect of the human body on the antenna elements, the radio channel parameters and hence the system performance. This is presented and highlighted in the thesis through a combination of experimental and electromagnetic numerical investigations, with a particular emphasis to the numerical analysis based on the finite-difference time-domain technique. The presented research work encapsulates the characteristics of the narrowband (2.4 GHz) and ultra wide-band (3-10 GHz) on-body radio channels with respect to different digital phantoms, body postures, and antenna types hence highlighting the effect of subject-specific modelling, static and dynamic environments and antenna performance on the overall body-centric network. The investigations covered extend further to include in-body communications where the radio channel for telemetry with medical implants is also analysed by considering the effect of different digital phantoms on the radio channel characteristics. The study supports the significance of developing powerful and reliable numerical modelling to be used in conjunction with measurement campaigns for a comprehensive understanding of the radio channel in body-centric wireless communication. It also emphasises the importance of considering subject-specific electromagnetic modelling to provide a reliable prediction of the network performance

    Low power CMOS IC, biosensor and wireless power transfer techniques for wireless sensor network application

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    The emerging field of wireless sensor network (WSN) is receiving great attention due to the interest in healthcare. Traditional battery-powered devices suffer from large size, weight and secondary replacement surgery after the battery life-time which is often not desired, especially for an implantable application. Thus an energy harvesting method needs to be investigated. In addition to energy harvesting, the sensor network needs to be low power to extend the wireless power transfer distance and meet the regulation on RF power exposed to human tissue (specific absorption ratio). Also, miniature sensor integration is another challenge since most of the commercial sensors have rigid form or have a bulky size. The objective of this thesis is to provide solutions to the aforementioned challenges

    Récepteur Sans-Fil à Basse Consommation et à Modulation Mixte FSK-ASK pour les Dispositifs Médicaux

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    RÉSUMÉ Les émetteurs-récepteurs radiofréquences (RF) offrent le lien de communications le plus commun afin de mettre au point des dispositifs médicaux implantables dédiés aux interfaces homme-machines. La surveillance en continu des paramètres biologiques des patients nécessite un module de communication sans-fil capable de garantir un échange de données rapide, en temps réel, à faible puissance tout en étant implémenté dans un espace physique réduit. La consommation de puissance des dispositifs implantables joue un rôle important dans les durées de vie des batteries qui nécessitent une chirurgie pour leur remplacement, à moins qu’une technique de transfert de puissance sans-fil soit utilisée pour recharger la batterie ou alimenter l’implant a travers les tissus humains. Dans ce projet, nous avons conçu, implémenté et testé un récepteur RF à faible puissance et haut-débit de données opérant entre 902 et 928 MHz qui est la bande industrielle-scientifiquemédicale (Industrial, Scientific and Medical) d’Amérique du Nord. Ce récepteur fait partie d’un système de communication bidirectionnel dédié à l’interface sans-fil des dispositifs électroniques implantables et bénéficie d’une nouvelle technique de conversion de modulation par déplacement de fréquence (FSK) en Modulation par déplacement d’amplitude (ASK). Toutes les phases de conception et d’implémentation de la topologie adoptée pour les récepteurs RF sont survolées et discutées dans cette thèse. Les différents étages de circuits sont conçus selon une étude analytique fondée de la modulation FSK et ASK utilisées, ce qui permettra une amélioration des performances notamment le débit de transmission des données et la consommation de puissance. Tous les circuits sont réalisés de façon à ce que la consommation totale et la surface de silicium à réserver soient le minimum possible. Un oscillateur avec verrouillage par injection (Injection-Looked Oscillator - ILO) de faible puissance est réalisé pour assurer la conversion des signaux ASK en FSK. Une combinaison des avantages des deux architectures de modulation d’amplitude et de fréquence, pour les circuits d’émetteurrécepteur sans fil, a été réalisé avec le système proposé. Un module incluant un récepteur de réveil (Wake up) est ajouté afin d’optimiser la consommation totale du circuit en mettant tous les blocs à l’arrêt. Nous avons réalisé un récepteur de réveil RF compact et à faible coût, permettant de très faible niveaux de consommation d’énergie, une bonne sensibilité et une meilleure tolérance aux interférences. Le design est basé sur une topologie homodyne à détection d’enveloppe permettant une transposition directe du signal RF modulé en amplitude en un signal en bande de base. Cette architecture nécessite une architecture peu encombrante à intégrer qui élimine le problème des fréquences image pour la même topologie avec une modulation de fréquence.---------- ABSTRACT ISM band transceiver using a wake-up bloc for wireless body area networks (WBANs) wearable and implantable medical devices is proposed. The system achieves exceptionally low-power consumption and allows a high-data rate by combining the advantages of Frequency-Shift-Keying (FSK) and Amplitude-Shift- Keying (ASK) modulation techniques. The transceiver employs FSK modulation at a data rate of 8 Mbit/s to establish RF link among the medical device and a control unit. Transmitter (Tx) includes a new efficient FSK modulation scheme which offer up to 20 Mb/s of data-rate and dissipates around 0.084 nJ/b. The design of the proposed oscillator achieves variable frequency from 300 kHz to 8 MHz by adjusting the transistors geometry, the on-chip control signal and the tuning capacitors. In the transmitter path, the high-quality LOs Inand Quadrature-phase (I and Q) outputs are produced using a very low-power fully integrated integer-N frequency synthesizer. The architecture of the receiver is inspired from the super-regenerative receiver (SRR) topology which can be used to design a transceiver that is suitable for ASK modulation. In fact, this architecture is based mainly on envelope detection scheme which remove the need to process the carrier phase to reduce the complexity of integrated design. It has been shown too, that the envelope detection scheme is more robust to phase noise than the coherent scheme. The integrated receiver uses on a new FSK-to-ASK conversion technique. The conversion feature that we adopt in the main receiver design is based on the fact that the incident frequency of converter could be differentiated by the amplitude of output signal, which conducts to the frequency-to-amplitude conversion. Thanks to the injection locking oscillator (ILO). the new design of converter is located between the LNA as first part and the envelope detector as second part to benefit from the injection-locking isolation. On-Off-keying (OOK) fully passive wake-up circuit (WuRx) with energy harvesting from Radio Frequency (RF) link is used to optimize the power issipation of the RF transceiver in order to meet the low power requirement. The WuRx operates at the ISM 902–928 MHz. A high efficiency differential rectifier behaves as voltage multiplier. It generates the envelope of the input signal and provides the supply voltage for the rest of blocks including a low-power comparator and reference generators

    Miniaturized Microwave Devices and Antennas for Wearable, Implantable and Wireless Applications

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    This thesis presents a number of microwave devices and antennas that maintain high operational efficiency and are compact in size at the same time. One goal of this thesis is to address several miniaturization challenges of antennas and microwave components by using the theoretical principles of metamaterials, Metasurface coupling resonators and stacked radiators, in combination with the elementary antenna and transmission line theory. While innovating novel solutions, standards and specifications of next generation wireless and bio-medical applications were considered to ensure advancement in the respective scientific fields. Compact reconfigurable phase-shifter and a microwave cross-over based on negative-refractive-index transmission-line (NRI-TL) materialist unit cells is presented. A Metasurface based wearable sensor architecture is proposed, containing an electromagnetic band-gap (EBG) structure backed monopole antenna for off-body communication and a fork shaped antenna for efficient radiation towards the human body. A fully parametrized solution for an implantable antenna is proposed using metallic coated stacked substrate layers. Challenges and possible solutions for off-body, on-body, through-body and across-body communication have been investigated with an aid of computationally extensive simulations and experimental verification. Next, miniaturization and implementation of a UWB antenna along with an analytical model to predict the resonance is presented. Lastly, several miniaturized rectifiers designed specifically for efficient wireless power transfer are proposed, experimentally verified, and discussed. The study answered several research questions of applied electromagnetic in the field of bio-medicine and wireless communication.Comment: A thesis submitted for the degree of Ph

    Advanced CMOS Integrated Circuit Design and Application

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    The recent development of various application systems and platforms, such as 5G, B5G, 6G, and IoT, is based on the advancement of CMOS integrated circuit (IC) technology that enables them to implement high-performance chipsets. In addition to development in the traditional fields of analog and digital integrated circuits, the development of CMOS IC design and application in high-power and high-frequency operations, which was previously thought to be possible only with compound semiconductor technology, is a core technology that drives rapid industrial development. This book aims to highlight advances in all aspects of CMOS integrated circuit design and applications without discriminating between different operating frequencies, output powers, and the analog/digital domains. Specific topics in the book include: Next-generation CMOS circuit design and application; CMOS RF/microwave/millimeter-wave/terahertz-wave integrated circuits and systems; CMOS integrated circuits specially used for wireless or wired systems and applications such as converters, sensors, interfaces, frequency synthesizers/generators/rectifiers, and so on; Algorithm and signal-processing methods to improve the performance of CMOS circuits and systems

    24 GHZ frequency modulation continuous wave radar front end system on substrate

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    Introduction -- Front-end system design -- Radar antenna design -- SIW/SIC mixers and surface-volume integration -- Integration of system-on-substrate and system experiments -- Conclusion and future work
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