368 research outputs found

    Electronics for Sensors

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    The aim of this Special Issue is to explore new advanced solutions in electronic systems and interfaces to be employed in sensors, describing best practices, implementations, and applications. The selected papers in particular concern photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) and silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) interfaces and applications, techniques for monitoring radiation levels, electronics for biomedical applications, design and applications of time-to-digital converters, interfaces for image sensors, and general-purpose theory and topologies for electronic interfaces

    Low-power current-mode ADC for CMOS sensor IC

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    A low-energy current-mode algorithmic pipelined ADC targeted for use in distributed sensor networks is presented. The individual nodes combine sensing, computation and communications into an extremely small volume. The nodes operate with very low duty cycle due to limited energy. Ideally these sensor networks will be massive in size and dense in order to promote redundancy. In addition the networks will be collectively intelligent and adaptive. To achieve these goals, distributed sensor networks will require very small,inexpensive nodes that run for long periods of time on very little energy. One component of such network nodes is an A/D converter. An ADC acts as a crucial interface between the sensed environment and the sensor network as a whole. The work presented here focuses on moderate resolution, and moderate speed, but ultra-low-power ADCs. The 6 bit current-mode algorithmic pipelined ADC reported here consumes 8 pJ/bit samples at 0.65V supply and 130 kS/s. The current was chosen as the information carrying quantity instead of voltage as it is more favorable for low-voltage and low-power applications. The reference current chosen was 150nA. All the blocks are using transistors operating in subthreshold or weak inversion region of operation, to work in low-voltage and low current supply. The DNL and INL plots are given in simulation results section. The area of the overall ADC was 0.046 mm2 only

    Battery Energy Storage Emulation for Power System Applications

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    The concept of energy storage for power systems has received increasingly more attention in recent decades, and the growing penetration of renewable energy sources has only escalated demand for it. Energy storage systems are excellent for balancing generation and load, for suppressing power fluctuations, and for providing other ancillary services to the grid. The Hardware Testbed (HTB) is a novel converter-based grid emulator created for studying the needs associated with high renewable penetration, but the system currently lacks a battery storage emulator. Thus, this work documents the development of a battery energy storage system (BESS) emulator for the HTB. The BESS emulator includes internal battery models for Lithium Ion, Lead Acid, and Vanadium redox flow battery technologies. The emulated BESS contains a two-stage power electronics interface using a DC-DC converter and a boost rectifier separated by a DC link. Controllers for active power output, reactive power output, and DC link voltage are designed for the power electronics interface, and application-specific control loops for primary frequency regulation, inertia emulation, and voltage support are also added. The models and control for this emulated BESS are implemented on a digital signal processor that controls one voltage source inverter on the HTB as if it were the BESS’s boost rectifier. Consequently, the voltage source inverter mimics the behavior of a BESS at its point of common coupling with the HTB’s power system. The BESS emulator is simulated and then tested experimentally on the HTB, and all of its control functions demonstrate correct operation. The BESS emulator’s primary frequency regulation and inertia emulation functions nearly eliminate the system frequency swing following a step change in load, and the voltage support keeps the BESS terminal voltage at a safer level following the disturbances. These three support functions are concluded to be capable of simultaneous operation, which allows the BESS emulator to support the HTB’s power system in multiple ways at the same time. In the future, the BESS emulator can be used on the HTB to study how battery storage can be used to support renewables and other dynamic power system needs

    Advances and Technologies in High Voltage Power Systems Operation, Control, Protection and Security

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    The electrical demands in several countries around the world are increasing due to the huge energy requirements of prosperous economies and the human activities of modern life. In order to economically transfer electrical powers from the generation side to the demand side, these powers need to be transferred at high-voltage levels through suitable transmission systems and power substations. To this end, high-voltage transmission systems and power substations are in demand. Actually, they are at the heart of interconnected power systems, in which any faults might lead to unsuitable consequences, abnormal operation situations, security issues, and even power cuts and blackouts. In order to cope with the ever-increasing operation and control complexity and security in interconnected high-voltage power systems, new architectures, concepts, algorithms, and procedures are essential. This book aims to encourage researchers to address the technical issues and research gaps in high-voltage transmission systems and power substations in modern energy systems

    A Low-Power, Reconfigurable, Pipelined ADC with Automatic Adaptation for Implantable Bioimpedance Applications

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    Biomedical monitoring systems that observe various physiological parameters or electrochemical reactions typically cannot expect signals with fixed amplitude or frequency as signal properties can vary greatly even among similar biosignals. Furthermore, advancements in biomedical research have resulted in more elaborate biosignal monitoring schemes which allow the continuous acquisition of important patient information. Conventional ADCs with a fixed resolution and sampling rate are not able to adapt to signals with a wide range of variation. As a result, reconfigurable analog-to-digital converters (ADC) have become increasingly more attractive for implantable biosensor systems. These converters are able to change their operable resolution, sampling rate, or both in order convert changing signals with increased power efficiency. Traditionally, biomedical sensing applications were limited to low frequencies. Therefore, much of the research on ADCs for biomedical applications focused on minimizing power consumption with smaller bias currents resulting in low sampling rates. However, recently bioimpedance monitoring has become more popular because of its healthcare possibilities. Bioimpedance monitoring involves injecting an AC current into a biosample and measuring the corresponding voltage drop. The frequency of the injected current greatly affects the amplitude and phase of the voltage drop as biological tissue is comprised of resistive and capacitive elements. For this reason, a full spectrum of measurements from 100 Hz to 10-100 MHz is required to gain a full understanding of the impedance. For this type of implantable biomedical application, the typical low power, low sampling rate analog-to-digital converter is insufficient. A different optimization of power and performance must be achieved. Since SAR ADC power consumption scales heavily with sampling rate, the converters that sample fast enough to be attractive for bioimpedance monitoring do not have a figure-of-merit that is comparable to the slower converters. Therefore, an auto-adapting, reconfigurable pipelined analog-to-digital converter is proposed. The converter can operate with either 8 or 10 bits of resolution and with a sampling rate of 0.1 or 20 MS/s. Additionally, the resolution and sampling rate are automatically determined by the converter itself based on the input signal. This way, power efficiency is increased for input signals of varying frequency and amplitude

    34th Midwest Symposium on Circuits and Systems-Final Program

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    Organized by the Naval Postgraduate School Monterey California. Cosponsored by the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society. Symposium Organizing Committee: General Chairman-Sherif Michael, Technical Program-Roberto Cristi, Publications-Michael Soderstrand, Special Sessions- Charles W. Therrien, Publicity: Jeffrey Burl, Finance: Ralph Hippenstiel, and Local Arrangements: Barbara Cristi

    Modular multilevel converter with embedded batteries as a motor controller.

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    This thesis details the design of the control system and hardware for a prototype of the new inverter topology the modular multilevel converter with embedded batteries for electric vehicle applications. Within this topology, the battery cells incorporated within the battery pack are directly integrated into the motor controller/ power converter by replacing the individual module capacitors with batteries. Since the batteries are directly connected to the module switching circuit, the batteries can be individually balanced using the same technique as an active battery management system, without the need for external energy-shunting hardware. A control algorithm for balancing the embedded batteries without affecting the motor control scheme with significantly unbalanced battery cells is presented and discussed. A multilevel space vector modulation scheme using the abc-reference frame for the selection of space vectors is developed. Initial testing of both the simulation model and prototype was carried out using a static RL load to test the PWM scheme and battery SOC balancing scheme. A Field-oriented control scheme was then designed and implemented for controlling a salient pole surface-mounted PMSM. The performance of the converter as a motor controller was assessed in terms of ability to balance the SOC of the embedded module batteries and total harmonic distortion over the course of the operating torque-speed range. Simulation of the control system on simulated hardware has been carried out in MATLAB; these simulation results verify the theoretical analysis. Then further verified and analysed using the developed laboratory-scale embedded battery MMC prototype

    Applications of Power Electronics:Volume 2

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    Instrumentation of CdZnTe detectors for measuring prompt gamma-rays emitted during particle therapy

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    Background: The irradiation of cancer patients with charged particles, mainly protons and carbon ions, has become an established method for the treatment of specific types of tumors. In comparison with the use of X-rays or gamma-rays, particle therapy has the advantage that the dose distribution in the patient can be precisely controlled. Tissue or organs lying near the tumor will be spared. A verification of the treatment plan with the actual dose deposition by means of a measurement can be done through range assessment of the particle beam. For this purpose, prompt gamma-rays are detected, which are emitted by the affected target volume during irradiation. Motivation: The detection of prompt gamma-rays is a task related to radiation detection and measurement. Nuclear applications in medicine can be found in particular for in vivo diagnosis. In that respect the spatially resolved measurement of gamma-rays is an essential technique for nuclear imaging, however, technical requirements of radiation measurement during particle therapy are much more challenging than those of classical applications. For this purpose, appropriate instruments beyond the state-of-the-art need to be developed and tested for detecting prompt gamma-rays. Hence the success of a method for range assessment of particle beams is largely determined by the implementation of electronics. In practice, this means that a suitable detector material with adapted readout electronics, signal and information processing, and data interface must be utilized to solve the challenges. Thus, the parameters of the system (e.g. segmentation, time or energy resolution) can be optimized depending on the method (e.g. slit camera, time-of-flight measurement or Compton camera). Regardless of the method, the detector system must have a high count rate capability and a large measuring range (>7 MeV). For a subsequent evaluation of a suitable method for imaging, the mentioned parameters may not be restricted by the electronics. Digital signal processing is predestined for multipurpose tasks, and, in terms of the demands made, the performance of such an implementation has to be determined. Materials and methods: In this study, the instrumentation of a detector system for prompt gamma-rays emitted during particle therapy is limited to the use of a cadmium zinc telluride (CdZnTe, CZT) semiconductor detector. The detector crystal is divided into an 8x8 pixel array by segmented electrodes. Analog and digital signal processing are exemplarily tested with this type of detector and aims for application of a Compton camera to range assessment. The electronics are implemented with commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components. If applicable, functional units of the detector system were digitalized and implemented in a field-programmable gate array (FPGA). An efficient implementation of the algorithms in terms of timing and logic utilization is fundamental to the design of digital circuits. The measurement system is characterized with radioactive sources to determine the measurement dynamic range and resolution. Finally, the performance is examined in terms of the requirements of particle therapy with experiments at particle accelerators. Results: A detector system based on a CZT pixel detector has been developed and tested. Although the use of an application-specific integrated circuit is convenient, this approach was rejected because there was no circuit available which met the requirements. Instead, a multichannel, compact, and low-noise analog amplifier circuit with COTS components has been implemented. Finally, the 65 information channels of a detector are digitized, processed and visualized. An advanced digital signal processing transforms the traditional approaches of nuclear electronics in algorithms and digital filter structures for an FPGA. With regard to the characteristic signals (e.g. varying rise times, depth-dependent energy measurement) of a CZT pixel detector, it could be shown that digital pulse processing results in a very good energy resolution (~2% FWHM at 511 keV), as well as permits a time measurement in the range of some tens of nanoseconds. Furthermore, the experimental results have shown that the dynamic range of the detector system could be significantly improved compared to the existing prototype of the Compton camera (~10 keV..7 MeV). Even count rates of ~100 kcps in a high-energy beam could be ultimately processed with the CZT pixel detector. But this is merely a limit of the detector due to its volume, and not related to electronics. In addition, the versatility of digital signal processing has been demonstrated with other detector materials (e.g. CeBr3). With foresight on high data throughput in a distributed data acquisition from multiple detectors, a Gigabit Ethernet link has been implemented as data interface. Conclusions: To fully exploit the capabilities of a CZT pixel detector, a digital signal processing is absolutely necessary. A decisive advantage of the digital approach is the ease of use in a multichannel system. Thus with digitalization, a necessary step has been done to master the complexity of a Compton camera. Furthermore, the benchmark of technology shows that a CZT pixel detector withstands the requirements of measuring prompt gamma-rays during particle therapy. The previously used orthogonal strip detector must be replaced by the pixel detector in favor of increased efficiency and improved energy resolution. With the integration of the developed digital detector system into a Compton camera, it must be ultimately proven whether this method is applicable for range assessment in particle therapy. Even if another method is more convenient in a clinical environment due to practical considerations, the detector system of that method may benefit from the shown instrumentation of a digital signal processing system for nuclear applications.:1. Introduction 1.1. Aim of this work 2. Analog front-end electronics 2.1. State-of-the-art 2.2. Basic design considerations 2.2.1. CZT detector assembly 2.2.2. Electrical characteristics of a CZT pixel detector 2.2.3. High voltage biasing and grounding 2.2.4. Signal formation in CZT detectors 2.2.5. Readout concepts 2.2.6. Operational amplifier 2.3. Circuit design of a charge-sensitive amplifier 2.3.1. Circuit analysis 2.3.2. Charge-to-voltage transfer function 2.3.3. Input coupling of the CSA 2.3.4. Noise 2.4. Implementation and Test 2.5. Results 2.5.1. Test pulse input 2.5.2. Pixel detector 2.6. Conclusion 3. Digital signal processing 3.1. Unfolding-synthesis technique 3.2. Digital deconvolution 3.2.1. Prior work 3.2.2. Discrete-time inverse amplifier transfer function 3.2.3. Application to measured signals 3.2.4. Implementation of a higher order IIR filter 3.2.5. Conclusion 3.3. Digital pulse synthesis 3.3.1. Prior work 3.3.2. FIR filter structures for FPGAs 3.3.3. Optimized fixed-point arithmetic 3.3.4. Conclusion 4. Data interface 4.1. State-of-the-art 4.2. Embedded Gigabit Ethernet protocol stack 4.3. Implementation 4.3.1. System overview 4.3.2. Media Access Control 4.3.3. Embedded protocol stack 4.3.4. Clock synchronization 4.4. Measurements and results 4.4.1. Throughput performance 4.4.2. Synchronization 4.4.3. Resource utilization 4.5. Conclusion 5. Experimental results 5.1. Digital pulse shapers 5.1.1. Spectroscopy application 5.1.2. Timing applications 5.2. Gamma-ray spectroscopy 5.2.1. Energy resolution of scintillation detectors 5.2.2. Energy resolution of a CZT pixel detector 5.3. Gamma-ray timing 5.3.1. Timing performance of scintillation detectors 5.3.2. Timing performance of CZT pixel detectors 5.4. Measurements with a particle beam 5.4.1. Bremsstrahlung Facility at ELBE 6. Discussion 7. Summary 8. ZusammenfassungHintergrund: Die Bestrahlung von Krebspatienten mit geladenen Teilchen, vor allem Protonen oder Kohlenstoffionen, ist mittlerweile eine etablierte Methode zur Behandlung von speziellen Tumorarten. Im Vergleich mit der Anwendung von Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlen hat die Teilchentherapie den Vorteil, dass die Dosisverteilung im Patienten präziser gesteuert werden kann. Dadurch werden um den Tumor liegendes Gewebe oder Organe geschont. Die messtechnische Verifikation des Bestrahlungsplans mit der tatsächlichen Dosisdeposition kann über eine Reichweitenkontrolle des Teilchenstrahls erfolgen. Für diesen Zweck werden prompte Gammastrahlen detektiert, die während der Bestrahlung vom getroffenen Zielvolumen emittiert werden. Fragestellung: Die Detektion von prompten Gammastrahlen ist eine Aufgabenstellung der Strahlenmesstechnik. Strahlenanwendungen in der Medizintechnik finden sich insbesondere in der in-vivo Diagnostik. Dabei ist die räumlich aufgelöste Messung von Gammastrahlen bereits zentraler Bestandteil der nuklearmedizinischen Bildgebung, jedoch sind die technischen Anforderungen der Strahlendetektion während der Teilchentherapie im Vergleich mit klassischen Anwendungen weitaus anspruchsvoller. Über den Stand der Technik hinaus müssen für diesen Zweck geeignete Instrumente zur Erfassung der prompten Gammastrahlen entwickelt und erprobt werden. Die elektrotechnische Realisierung bestimmt maßgeblich den Erfolg eines Verfahrens zur Reichweitenkontrolle von Teilchenstrahlen. Konkret bedeutet dies, dass ein geeignetes Detektormaterial mit angepasster Ausleseelektronik, Signal- und Informationsverarbeitung sowie Datenschnittstelle zur Problemlösung eingesetzt werden muss. Damit können die Parameter des Systems (z. B. Segmentierung, Zeit- oder Energieauflösung) in Abhängigkeit der Methode (z.B. Schlitzkamera, Flugzeitmessung oder Compton-Kamera) optimiert werden. Unabhängig vom Verfahren muss das Detektorsystem eine hohe Ratenfestigkeit und einen großen Messbereich (>7 MeV) besitzen. Für die anschließende Evaluierung eines geeigneten Verfahrens zur Bildgebung dürfen die genannten Parameter durch die Elektronik nicht eingeschränkt werden. Eine digitale Signalverarbeitung ist für universelle Aufgaben prädestiniert und die Leistungsfähigkeit einer solchen Implementierung soll hinsichtlich der gestellten Anforderungen bestimmt werden. Material und Methode: Die Instrumentierung eines Detektorsystems für prompte Gammastrahlen beschränkt sich in dieser Arbeit auf die Anwendung eines Cadmiumzinktellurid (CdZnTe, CZT) Halbleiterdetektors. Der Detektorkristall ist durch segmentierte Elektroden in ein 8x8 Pixelarray geteilt. Die analoge und digitale Signalverarbeitung wird beispielhaft mit diesem Detektortyp erprobt und zielt auf die Anwendung zur Reichweitenkontrolle mit einer Compton-Kamera. Die Elektronik wird mit seriengefertigten integrierten Schaltkreisen umgesetzt. Soweit möglich, werden die Funktionseinheiten des Detektorsystems digitalisiert und in einem field-programmable gate array (FPGA) implementiert. Eine effiziente Umsetzung der Algorithmen in Bezug auf Zeitverhalten und Logikverbrauch ist grundlegend für den Entwurf der digitalen Schaltungen. Das Messsystem wird mit radioaktiven Prüfstrahlern hinsichtlich Messbereichsdynamik und Auflösung charakterisiert. Schließlich wird die Leistungsfähigkeit hinsichtlich der Anforderungen der Teilchentherapie mit Experimenten am Teilchenbeschleuniger untersucht. Ergebnisse: Es wurde ein Detektorsystem auf Basis von CZT Pixeldetektoren entwickelt und erprobt. Obwohl der Einsatz einer anwendungsspezifischen integrierten Schaltung zweckmäßig wäre, wurde dieser Ansatz zurückgewiesen, da kein verfügbarer Schaltkreis die Anforderungen erfüllte. Stattdessen wurde eine vielkanalige, kompakte und rauscharme analoge Verstärkerschaltung mit seriengefertigten integrierten Schaltkreisen aufgebaut. Letztendlich werden die 65 Informationskanäle eines Detektors digitalisiert, verarbeitet und visualisiert. Eine fortschrittliche digitale Signalverarbeitung überführt die traditionellen Ansätze der Nuklearelektronik in Algorithmen und digitale Filterstrukturen für einen FPGA. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die digitale Pulsverarbeitung in Bezug auf die charakteristischen Signale (u.a. variierende Anstiegszeiten, tiefenabhängige Energiemessung) eines CZT Pixeldetektors eine sehr gute Energieauflösung (~2% FWHM at 511 keV) sowie eine Zeitmessung im Bereich von einigen 10 ns ermöglicht. Weiterhin haben die experimentellen Ergebnisse gezeigt, dass der Dynamikbereich des Detektorsystems im Vergleich zum bestehenden Prototyp der Compton-Kamera deutlich verbessert werden konnte (~10 keV..7 MeV). Nach allem konnten auch Zählraten von >100 kcps in einem hochenergetischen Strahl mit dem CZT Pixeldetektor verarbeitet werden. Dies stellt aber lediglich eine Begrenzung des Detektors aufgrund seines Volumens, nicht jedoch der Elektronik, dar. Zudem wurde die Vielseitigkeit der digitalen Signalverarbeitung auch mit anderen Detektormaterialen (u.a. CeBr3) demonstriert. Mit Voraussicht auf einen hohen Datendurchsatz in einer verteilten Datenerfassung von mehreren Detektoren, wurde als Datenschnittstelle eine Gigabit Ethernet Verbindung implementiert. Schlussfolgerung: Um die Leistungsfähigkeit eines CZT Pixeldetektors vollständig auszunutzen, ist eine digitale Signalverarbeitung zwingend notwendig. Ein entscheidender Vorteil des digitalen Ansatzes ist die einfache Handhabbarkeit in einem vielkanaligen System. Mit der Digitalisierung wurde ein notwendiger Schritt getan, um die Komplexität einer Compton-Kamera beherrschbar zu machen. Weiterhin zeigt die Technologiebewertung, dass ein CZT Pixeldetektor den Anforderungen der Teilchentherapie für die Messung prompter Gammastrahlen stand hält. Der bisher eingesetzte Streifendetektor muss zugunsten einer gesteigerten Effizienz und verbesserter Energieauflösung durch den Pixeldetektor ersetzt werden. Mit der Integration des entwickelten digitalen Detektorsystems in eine Compton-Kamera muss abschließend geprüft werden, ob dieses Verfahren für die Reichweitenkontrolle in der Teilchentherapie anwendbar ist. Auch wenn sich herausstellt, dass ein anderes Verfahren unter klinischen Bedingungen praktikabler ist, so kann auch dieses Detektorsystem von der gezeigten Instrumentierung eines digitalen Signalverarbeitungssystems profitieren.:1. Introduction 1.1. Aim of this work 2. Analog front-end electronics 2.1. State-of-the-art 2.2. Basic design considerations 2.2.1. CZT detector assembly 2.2.2. Electrical characteristics of a CZT pixel detector 2.2.3. High voltage biasing and grounding 2.2.4. Signal formation in CZT detectors 2.2.5. Readout concepts 2.2.6. Operational amplifier 2.3. Circuit design of a charge-sensitive amplifier 2.3.1. Circuit analysis 2.3.2. Charge-to-voltage transfer function 2.3.3. Input coupling of the CSA 2.3.4. Noise 2.4. Implementation and Test 2.5. Results 2.5.1. Test pulse input 2.5.2. Pixel detector 2.6. Conclusion 3. Digital signal processing 3.1. Unfolding-synthesis technique 3.2. Digital deconvolution 3.2.1. Prior work 3.2.2. Discrete-time inverse amplifier transfer function 3.2.3. Application to measured signals 3.2.4. Implementation of a higher order IIR filter 3.2.5. Conclusion 3.3. Digital pulse synthesis 3.3.1. Prior work 3.3.2. FIR filter structures for FPGAs 3.3.3. Optimized fixed-point arithmetic 3.3.4. Conclusion 4. Data interface 4.1. State-of-the-art 4.2. Embedded Gigabit Ethernet protocol stack 4.3. Implementation 4.3.1. System overview 4.3.2. Media Access Control 4.3.3. Embedded protocol stack 4.3.4. Clock synchronization 4.4. Measurements and results 4.4.1. Throughput performance 4.4.2. Synchronization 4.4.3. Resource utilization 4.5. Conclusion 5. Experimental results 5.1. Digital pulse shapers 5.1.1. Spectroscopy application 5.1.2. Timing applications 5.2. Gamma-ray spectroscopy 5.2.1. Energy resolution of scintillation detectors 5.2.2. Energy resolution of a CZT pixel detector 5.3. Gamma-ray timing 5.3.1. Timing performance of scintillation detectors 5.3.2. Timing performance of CZT pixel detectors 5.4. Measurements with a particle beam 5.4.1. Bremsstrahlung Facility at ELBE 6. Discussion 7. Summary 8. Zusammenfassun
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