77 research outputs found

    Millimeter-Scale and Energy-Efficient RF Wireless System

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    This dissertation focuses on energy-efficient RF wireless system with millimeter-scale dimension, expanding the potential use cases of millimeter-scale computing devices. It is challenging to develop RF wireless system in such constrained space. First, millimeter-sized antennae are electrically-small, resulting in low antenna efficiency. Second, their energy source is very limited due to the small battery and/or energy harvester. Third, it is required to eliminate most or all off-chip devices to further reduce system dimension. In this dissertation, these challenges are explored and analyzed, and new methods are proposed to solve them. Three prototype RF systems were implemented for demonstration and verification. The first prototype is a 10 cubic-mm inductive-coupled radio system that can be implanted through a syringe, aimed at healthcare applications with constrained space. The second prototype is a 3x3x3 mm far-field 915MHz radio system with 20-meter NLOS range in indoor environment. The third prototype is a low-power BLE transmitter using 3.5x3.5 mm planar loop antenna, enabling millimeter-scale sensors to connect with ubiquitous IoT BLE-compliant devices. The work presented in this dissertation improves use cases of millimeter-scale computers by presenting new methods for improving energy efficiency of wireless radio system with extremely small dimensions. The impact is significant in the age of IoT when everything will be connected in daily life.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147686/1/yaoshi_1.pd

    Communication and energy delivery architectures for personal medical devices

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    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

    Wirelessly-Powered CMOS Front End for Locomotive IC Applications

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    The steady leaps in miniaturization made in the realm of integrated circuit (IC) design has opened up prospects for a vast number of interesting possibilities. One of the possibilities is the idea of a locomotive integrated circuit. Unlike a typical IC that is soldered on a printed circuit board (PCB), locomotive ICs can be untethered and free to move around its environment. Recent research has demonstrated locomotive ICs that can potentially be used for non-invasive medical procedures including precise drug delivery targeted to speciïŹc problematic region of the body. Recent research has demonstrated locomotion using a variety of schemes including using electrolytic bubbles and manipulation of Lorentz force in a uniform magnetic ïŹeld. In this work a wireless front end for a locomotive IC that relies on surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices is explored. A SAW device is a piezoelectric material that converts electrical stimulus into mechanical vibrations. For this work, the SAW device has been designed speciïŹcally to enable the mechanical vibration generated by electrical stimulation at 177MHz to potentially actuate motion. This work demonstrates a complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) front end IC implemented in 180nm process that can potentially be used for locomo-tion by means of electrical excitation of a SAW device with an on-chip PLL frequency synthesizer. The energy required to power the IC is obtained through resonant wire-less power transfer between a pair of PCB inductor coils. The IC also contains power conditioning blocks that rectify the alternating voltage across the receiver inductor coil and generates a regulated DC voltage that powers the PLL frequency synthe-sizer. The entire proposed locomotive system consisting of PCB receiver coil, CMOS IC and SAW device ïŹts inside an area of 1.5cmX1.9cm

    Investigation of high bandwith biodevices for transcutaneous wireless telemetry

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    PhD ThesisBIODEVICE implants for telemetry are increasingly applied today in various areas applications. There are many examples such as; telemedicine, biotelemetry, health care, treatments for chronic diseases, epilepsy and blindness, all of which are using a wireless infrastructure environment. They use microelectronics technology for diagnostics or monitoring signals such as Electroencephalography or Electromyography. Conceptually the biodevices are defined as one of these technologies combined with transcutaneous wireless implant telemetry (TWIT). A wireless inductive coupling link is a common way for transferring the RF power and data, to communicate between a reader and a battery-less implant. Demand for higher data rate for the acquisition data returned from the body is increasing, and requires an efficient modulator to achieve high transfer rate and low power consumption. In such applications, Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) modulation has advantages over other schemes, and double the symbol rate with respect to Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) over the same spectrum band. In contrast to analogue modulators for generating QPSK signals, where the circuit complexity and power dissipation are unsuitable for medical purposes, a digital approach has advantages. Eventually a simple design can be achieved by mixing the hardware and software to minimize size and power consumption for implantable telemetry applications. This work proposes a new approach to digital modulator techniques, applied to transcutaneous implantable telemetry applications; inherently increasing the data rate and simplifying the hardware design. A novel design for a QPSK VHDL modulator to convey a high data rate is demonstrated. Essentially, CPLD/FPGA technology is used to generate hardware from VHDL code, and implement the device which performs the modulation. This improves the data transmission rate between the reader and biodevice. This type of modulator provides digital synthesis and the flexibility to reconfigure and upgrade with the two most often languages used being VHDL and Verilog (IEEE Standard) being used as hardware structure description languages. The second objective of this thesis is to improve the wireless coupling power (WCP). An efficient power amplifier was developed and a new algorithm developed for auto-power control design at the reader unit, which monitors the implant device and keeps the device working within the safety regulation power limits (SAR). The proposed system design has also been modeled and simulated with MATLAB/Simulink to validate the modulator and examine the performance of the proposed modulator in relation to its specifications.Higher Education Ministry in Liby

    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

    RĂ©cepteur Sans-Fil Ă  Basse Consommation et Ă  Modulation Mixte FSK-ASK pour les Dispositifs MĂ©dicaux

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    RÉSUMÉ Les Ă©metteurs-rĂ©cepteurs radiofrĂ©quences (RF) offrent le lien de communications le plus commun afin de mettre au point des dispositifs mĂ©dicaux implantables dĂ©diĂ©s aux interfaces homme-machines. La surveillance en continu des paramĂštres biologiques des patients nĂ©cessite un module de communication sans-fil capable de garantir un Ă©change de donnĂ©es rapide, en temps rĂ©el, Ă  faible puissance tout en Ă©tant implĂ©mentĂ© dans un espace physique rĂ©duit. La consommation de puissance des dispositifs implantables joue un rĂŽle important dans les durĂ©es de vie des batteries qui nĂ©cessitent une chirurgie pour leur remplacement, Ă  moins qu’une technique de transfert de puissance sans-fil soit utilisĂ©e pour recharger la batterie ou alimenter l’implant a travers les tissus humains. Dans ce projet, nous avons conçu, implĂ©mentĂ© et testĂ© un rĂ©cepteur RF Ă  faible puissance et haut-dĂ©bit de donnĂ©es opĂ©rant entre 902 et 928 MHz qui est la bande industrielle-scientifiquemĂ©dicale (Industrial, Scientific and Medical) d’AmĂ©rique du Nord. Ce rĂ©cepteur fait partie d’un systĂšme de communication bidirectionnel dĂ©diĂ© Ă  l’interface sans-fil des dispositifs Ă©lectroniques implantables et bĂ©nĂ©ficie d’une nouvelle technique de conversion de modulation par dĂ©placement de frĂ©quence (FSK) en Modulation par dĂ©placement d’amplitude (ASK). Toutes les phases de conception et d’implĂ©mentation de la topologie adoptĂ©e pour les rĂ©cepteurs RF sont survolĂ©es et discutĂ©es dans cette thĂšse. Les diffĂ©rents Ă©tages de circuits sont conçus selon une Ă©tude analytique fondĂ©e de la modulation FSK et ASK utilisĂ©es, ce qui permettra une amĂ©lioration des performances notamment le dĂ©bit de transmission des donnĂ©es et la consommation de puissance. Tous les circuits sont rĂ©alisĂ©s de façon Ă  ce que la consommation totale et la surface de silicium Ă  rĂ©server soient le minimum possible. Un oscillateur avec verrouillage par injection (Injection-Looked Oscillator - ILO) de faible puissance est rĂ©alisĂ© pour assurer la conversion des signaux ASK en FSK. Une combinaison des avantages des deux architectures de modulation d’amplitude et de frĂ©quence, pour les circuits d’émetteurrĂ©cepteur sans fil, a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ© avec le systĂšme proposĂ©. Un module incluant un rĂ©cepteur de rĂ©veil (Wake up) est ajoutĂ© afin d’optimiser la consommation totale du circuit en mettant tous les blocs Ă  l’arrĂȘt. Nous avons rĂ©alisĂ© un rĂ©cepteur de rĂ©veil RF compact et Ă  faible coĂ»t, permettant de trĂšs faible niveaux de consommation d’énergie, une bonne sensibilitĂ© et une meilleure tolĂ©rance aux interfĂ©rences. Le design est basĂ© sur une topologie homodyne Ă  dĂ©tection d’enveloppe permettant une transposition directe du signal RF modulĂ© en amplitude en un signal en bande de base. Cette architecture nĂ©cessite une architecture peu encombrante Ă  intĂ©grer qui Ă©limine le problĂšme des frĂ©quences image pour la mĂȘme topologie avec une modulation de frĂ©quence.---------- 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

    Power Management Techniques for Supercapacitor Based IoT Applications

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    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. January 2018. Major: Electrical Engineering. Advisor: Ramesh Harjani. 1 computer file (PDF); xi, 89 pages.The emerging internet of things (IoT) technology will connect many untethered devices, e.g. sensors, RFIDs and wearable devices, to improve health lifestyle, automotive, smart buildings, etc. This thesis proposes one typical application of IoT: RFID for blood temperature monitoring. Once the blood is donated and sealed in a blood bag, it is required to be stored in a certain temperature range (+2~+6°C for red cell component) before distribution. The proposed RFID tag is intended to be attached to the blood bag and continuously monitor the environmental temperature during transportation and storage. When a reader approaches, the temperature data is read out and the tag is fully recharged wirelessly within 2 minutes. Once the blood is distributed, the tag can be reset and reused again. Such a biomedical application has a strong aversion to toxic chemicals, so a batteryless design is required for the RFID tag. A passive RFID tag, however, cannot meet the longevity requirement for the monitoring system (at least 1 week). The solution of this thesis is using a supercapacitor (supercap) instead of a battery as the power supply, which not only lacks toxic heavy metals, but also has quicker charge time (~1000x over batteries), larger operating temperature range (-40~+65°C), and nearly infinite shelf life. Although nearly perfect for this RFID application, a supercap has its own disadvantages: lower energy density (~30x smaller than batteries) and unstable output voltage. To solve the quick charging and long lasting requirements of the RFID system, and to overcome the intrinsic disadvantages of supercaps, an overall power management solution is proposed in this thesis. A reconfigurable switched-capacitor DC-DC converter is proposed to convert the unstable supercap's voltage (3.5V~0.5V) to a stable 1V output voltage efficiently to power the subsequent circuits. With the help of the 6 conversion ratios (3 step-ups, 3 step-downs), voltage protection techniques, and low power designs, the converter can extract 98% of the stored energy from the supercap, and increase initial energy by 96%. Another switched-inductor buck-boost converter is designed to harvest the ambient RF energy to charge the supercap quickly. Because of the variation of the reader distance and incident wave angle, the input power level also has large fluctuation (5uW~5mW). The harvester handles this large power range by a power estimator enhanced MPPT controller with an adaptive integration capacitor array. Also, the contradiction between low power and high tracking speed is improved by adaptive MPPT frequency

    Biomedical Engineering

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    Biomedical engineering is currently relatively wide scientific area which has been constantly bringing innovations with an objective to support and improve all areas of medicine such as therapy, diagnostics and rehabilitation. It holds a strong position also in natural and biological sciences. In the terms of application, biomedical engineering is present at almost all technical universities where some of them are targeted for the research and development in this area. The presented book brings chosen outputs and results of research and development tasks, often supported by important world or European framework programs or grant agencies. The knowledge and findings from the area of biomaterials, bioelectronics, bioinformatics, biomedical devices and tools or computer support in the processes of diagnostics and therapy are defined in a way that they bring both basic information to a reader and also specific outputs with a possible further use in research and development
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