7 research outputs found

    Towards Very Large Scale Analog (VLSA): Synthesizable Frequency Generation Circuits.

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    Driven by advancement in integrated circuit design and fabrication technologies, electronic systems have become ubiquitous. This has been enabled powerful digital design tools that continue to shrink the design cost, time-to-market, and the size of digital circuits. Similarly, the manufacturing cost has been constantly declining for the last four decades due to CMOS scaling. However, analog systems have struggled to keep up with the unprecedented scaling of digital circuits. Even today, the majority of the analog circuit blocks are custom designed, do not scale well, and require long design cycles. This thesis analyzes the factors responsible for the slow scaling of analog blocks, and presents a new design methodology that bridges the gap between traditional custom analog design and the modern digital design. The proposed methodology is utilized in implementation of the frequency generation circuits – traditionally considered analog systems. Prototypes covering two different applications were implemented. The first synthesized all-digital phase-locked loop was designed for 400-460 MHz MedRadio applications and was fabricated in a 65 nm CMOS process. The second prototype is an ultra-low power, near-threshold 187-500 kHz clock generator for energy harvesting/autonomous applications. Finally, a digitally-controlled oscillator frequency resolution enhancement technique is presented which allows reduction of quantization noise in ADPLLs without introducing spurs.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109027/1/mufaisal_1.pd

    RF Integrated Circuits for Energy Autonomous Sensor Nodes.

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    The exponential growth in the semiconductor industry has enabled computers to pervade our everyday lives, and as we move forward many of these computers will have form factors much smaller than a typical laptop or smartphone. Sensor nodes will soon be deployed ubiquitously, capable of capturing information of their surrounding environment. The next step is to connect all these different nodes together into an entire interconnected system. This “Internet of Things” (IoT) vision has incredible potential to change our lives commercially, societally, and personally. The backbone of IoT is the wireless sensor node, many of which will operate under very rigorous energy constraints with small batteries or no batteries at all. It has been shown that in sensor nodes, radio communication is one of the biggest bottlenecks to ultra-low power design. This research explores ways to reduce energy consumption in radios for wireless sensor networks, allowing them to run off harvested energy, while maintaining qualities that will allow them to function in a real world, multi-user environment. Three different prototypes have been designed demonstrating these techniques. The first is a sensitivity-reduced nanowatt wake-up radio which allows a sensor node to actively listen for packets even when the rest of the node is asleep. CDMA codes and interference rejection reduce the potential for energy-costly false wake-ups. The second prototype is a full transceiver for a body-worn EKG sensor node. This transceiver is designed to have low instantaneous power and is able to receive 802.15.6 Wireless Body Area Network compliant packets. It uses asymmetric communication including a wake-up receiver based on the previous design, UWB transmitter and a communication receiver. The communication receiver has 10 physical channels to avoid interference and demodulates coherent packets which is uncommon for low power radios, but dictated by the 802.15.6 standard. The third prototype is a long range transceiver capable of >1km communication range in the 433MHz band and able to interface with an existing commercial radio. A digitally assisted baseband demodulator was designed which enables the ability to perform bit-level as well as packet-level duty cycling which increases the radio's energy efficiency.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110432/1/nerobert_1.pd

    Low-Power Wake-Up Receivers

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    The Internet of Things (IoT) is leading the world to the Internet of Everything (IoE), where things, people, intelligent machines, data and processes will be connected together. The key to enter the era of the IoE lies in enormous sensor nodes being deployed in the massively expanding wireless sensor networks (WSNs). By the year of 2025, more than 42 billion IoT devices will be connected to the Internet. While the future IoE will bring priceless advantages for the life of mankind, one challenge limiting the nowadays IoT from further development is the ongoing power demand with the dramatically growing number of the wireless sensor nodes. To address the power consumption issue, this dissertation is motivated to investigate low-power wake-up receivers (WuRXs) which will significantly enhance the sustainability of the WSNs and the environmental awareness of the IoT. Two proof-of-concept low-power WuRXs with focuses on two different application scenarios have been proposed. The first WuRX, implemented in a cost-effective 180-nm CMOS semiconductor technology, operates at 401−406-MHz band. It is a good candidate for application scenarios, where both a high sensitivity and an ultra-low power consumption are in demand. Concrete use cases are, for instance, medical implantable applications or long-range communications in rural areas. This WuRX does not rely on a further assisting semiconductor technology, such as MEMS which is widely used in state-of-the-art WuRXs operating at similar frequencies. Thus, this WuRX is a promising solution to low-power low-cost IoT. The second WuRX, implemented in a 45-nm RFSOI CMOS technology, was researched for short-range communication applications, where high-density conventional IoT devices should be installed. By investigation of the WuRX for operation at higher frequency band from 5.5 GHz to 7.5 GHz, the nowadays ever more over-traffic issues that arise at low frequency bands such as 2.4 GHz can be substantially addressed. A systematic, analytical research route has been carried out in realization of the proposed WuRXs. The thesis begins with a thorough study of state-of-the-art WuRX architectures. By examining pros and cons of these architectures, two novel architectures are proposed for the WuRXs in accordance with their specific use cases. Thereon, key WuRX parameters are systematically analyzed and optimized; the performance of relevant circuits is modeled and simulated extensively. The knowledge gained through these investigations builds up a solid theoretical basis for the ongoing WuRX designs. Thereafter, the two WuRXs have been analytically researched, developed and optimized to achieve their highest performance. Proof-of-concept circuits for both the WuRXs have been fabricated and comprehensively characterized under laboratory conditions. Finally, measurement results have verified the feasibility of the design concept and the feasibility of both the WuRXs

    Automated Channel Assessment for Single Chip MedRadio Transceivers

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    Modern implantable and body worn medical devices leverage wireless telemetry to improve patient experience and expand therapeutic options. Wireless medical devices are subject to a unique set of regulations in which monitoring of the available frequency spectrum is a requirement. To this end, implants use software protocols to assess the in-band activity to determine which channel should be used. These software protocols take valuable processing time and possibly degrade the operational lifetime of the battery. Implantable medical devices often take advantage of a single chip transceiver as the physical layer for wireless communications. Embedding the channel assessment task in the transceiver hardware would free the limited resources of the microprocessor. This thesis proposes hardware modifications to existing transceiver architectures which would provide an automated channel assessment means for implantable medical devices. The results are applicable beyond medical device applications and could be employed to benefit any low-power, wireless, battery-operated equipment

    Digitally-assisted, ultra-low power circuits and systems for medical applications

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-225).In recent years, trends in the medical industry have created a growing demand for a variety of implantable medical devices. At the same time, advances in integrated circuits techniques, particularly in CMOS, have opened possibilities for advanced implantable systems that are very small and consume minimal energy. Minimizing the volume of medical implants is important as it allows for less invasive procedures and greater comfort to patients. Minimizing energy consumption is imperative as batteries must last at least a decade without replacement. Two primary functions that consume energy in medical implants are sensor interfaces that collect information from biomedical signals, and radios that allow the implant to communicate with a base-station outside of the body. The general focus of this work was the development of circuits and systems that minimize the size and energy required to carry out these two functions. The first part of this work focuses on laying down the theoretical framework for an ultra-low power radio, including advances to the literature in the area of super-regeneration. The second part includes the design of a transceiver optimized for medical implants, and its implementation in a CMOS process. The final part describes the design of a sensor interface that leverages novel analog and digital techniques to reduce the system's size and improve its functionality. This final part was developed in conjunction with Marcus Yip.by Jose L. Bohorquez.Ph.D

    Design and implementation of an RF CMOS differential LNA for 403MHz applications

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