2,459 research outputs found

    Ultra-Wideband CMOS Transceiver Front-End for Bio-Medical Radar Sensing

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    Since the Federal Communication Commission released the unlicensed 3.1-10.6 GHz frequency band for commercial use in early 2002, the ultra wideband (UWB) has developed from an emerging technology into a mainstream research area. The UWB technology, which utilizes wide spectrum, opens a new era of possibility for practical applications in radar sensing, one of which is the human vital sign monitoring. The aim of this thesis is to study and research the possibility of a new generation humanrespiration monitoring sensor using UWB radar technology and to develop a new prototype of UWB radar sensor for system-on-chip solutions in CMOS technology. In this thesis, a lowpower Gaussian impulse UWB mono-static radar transceiver architecture is presented. The UWB Gaussian pulse transmitter and receiver are implemented and fabricated using 90nm CMOS technology. Since the energy of low order Gaussian pulse is mostly condensed at lower frequency, in order to transmit the pulse in a very efficient way, higher order Gaussian derivative pulses are desired as the baseband signal. This motivates the advancement of the design into UWB high-order pulse transmitter. Both the Gaussian impulse UWB transmitter and Gaussian higher-order impulse UWB transmitter take the low-power and high-speed advantage of digital circuit to generate different waveforms. The measurement results are analyzed and discussed. This thesis also presents a low-power UWB mono-static radar transceiver architecture exploiting the full benefit of UWB bandwidth in radar sensing applications. The transceiver includes a full UWB band transmitter, an UWB receiver front-end, and an on-chip diplexer. The non-coherent UWB transmitter generates pulse modulated baseband signals at different carrier frequencies within the designated 3-10 GHz band using a digitally controlled pulse generator. The test shows the proposed radar transceiver can detect the human respiration pattern within 50 cm distance. The applications of this UWB radar sensing solution in commercialized standard CMOS technology include constant breathing pattern monitoring for gated radiation therapy, realtime monitoring of patients, and any other breathing monitoring. The research paves the way to wireless technology integration with health care and bio-sensor network

    SiGe-based broadband and high suppression frequency doubler ICs for wireless communications

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    制度:新 ; 報告番号:甲3419号 ; 学位の種類:博士(工学) ; 授与年月日:2011/9/15 ; 早大学位記番号:新574

    A Millimeter-Wave Coexistent RFIC Receiver Architecture in 0.18-µm SiGe BiCMOS for Radar and Communication Systems

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    Innovative circuit architectures and techniques to enhance the performance of several key BiCMOS RFIC building blocks applied in radar and wireless communication systems operating at the millimeter-wave frequencies are addressed in this dissertation. The former encapsulates the development of an advanced, low-cost and miniature millimeter-wave coexistent current mode direct conversion receiver for short-range, high-resolution radar and high data rate communication systems. A new class of broadband low power consumption active balun-LNA consisting of two common emitters amplifiers mutually coupled thru an AC stacked transformer for power saving and gain boosting. The active balun-LNA exhibits new high linearity technique using a constant gm cell transconductance independent of input-outputs variations based on equal emitters’ area ratios. A novel multi-stages active balun-LNA with innovative technique to mitigate amplitude and phase imbalances is proposed. The new multi-stages balun-LNA technique consists of distributed feed-forward averaging recycles correction for amplitude and phase errors and is insensitive to unequal paths parasitic from input to outputs. The distributed averaging recycles correction technique resolves the amplitude and phase errors residuals in a multi-iterative process. The new multi-stages balun-LNA averaging correction technique is frequency independent and can perform amplitude and phase calibrations without relying on passive lumped elements for compensation. The multi-stage balun-LNA exhibits excellent performance from 10 to 50 GHz with amplitude and phase mismatches less than 0.7 dB and 2.86º, respectively. Furthermore, the new multi-stages balun-LNA operates in current mode and shows high linearity with low power consumption. The unique balun-LNA design can operates well into mm-wave regions and is an integral block of the mm-wave radar and communication systems. The integration of several RFIC blocks constitutes the broadband millimeter-wave coexistent current mode direct conversion receiver architecture operating from 22- 44 GHz. The system and architectural level analysis provide a unique understanding into the receiver characteristics and design trade-offs. The RF front-end is based on the broadband multi-stages active balun-LNA coupled into a fully balanced passive mixer with an all-pass in-phase/quadrature phase generator. The trans-impedance amplifier converts the input signal current into a voltage gain at the outputs. Simultaneously, the high power input signal current is channelized into an anti-aliasing filter with 20 dB rejection for out of band interferers. In addition, the dissertation demonstrates a wide dynamic range system with small die area, cost effective and very low power consumption

    A Millimeter-Wave Coexistent RFIC Receiver Architecture in 0.18-µm SiGe BiCMOS for Radar and Communication Systems

    Get PDF
    Innovative circuit architectures and techniques to enhance the performance of several key BiCMOS RFIC building blocks applied in radar and wireless communication systems operating at the millimeter-wave frequencies are addressed in this dissertation. The former encapsulates the development of an advanced, low-cost and miniature millimeter-wave coexistent current mode direct conversion receiver for short-range, high-resolution radar and high data rate communication systems. A new class of broadband low power consumption active balun-LNA consisting of two common emitters amplifiers mutually coupled thru an AC stacked transformer for power saving and gain boosting. The active balun-LNA exhibits new high linearity technique using a constant gm cell transconductance independent of input-outputs variations based on equal emitters’ area ratios. A novel multi-stages active balun-LNA with innovative technique to mitigate amplitude and phase imbalances is proposed. The new multi-stages balun-LNA technique consists of distributed feed-forward averaging recycles correction for amplitude and phase errors and is insensitive to unequal paths parasitic from input to outputs. The distributed averaging recycles correction technique resolves the amplitude and phase errors residuals in a multi-iterative process. The new multi-stages balun-LNA averaging correction technique is frequency independent and can perform amplitude and phase calibrations without relying on passive lumped elements for compensation. The multi-stage balun-LNA exhibits excellent performance from 10 to 50 GHz with amplitude and phase mismatches less than 0.7 dB and 2.86º, respectively. Furthermore, the new multi-stages balun-LNA operates in current mode and shows high linearity with low power consumption. The unique balun-LNA design can operates well into mm-wave regions and is an integral block of the mm-wave radar and communication systems. The integration of several RFIC blocks constitutes the broadband millimeter-wave coexistent current mode direct conversion receiver architecture operating from 22- 44 GHz. The system and architectural level analysis provide a unique understanding into the receiver characteristics and design trade-offs. The RF front-end is based on the broadband multi-stages active balun-LNA coupled into a fully balanced passive mixer with an all-pass in-phase/quadrature phase generator. The trans-impedance amplifier converts the input signal current into a voltage gain at the outputs. Simultaneously, the high power input signal current is channelized into an anti-aliasing filter with 20 dB rejection for out of band interferers. In addition, the dissertation demonstrates a wide dynamic range system with small die area, cost effective and very low power consumption

    A 0.18µm CMOS UWB wireless transceiver for medical sensing applications

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    Recently, there is a new trend of demand of a biomedical device that can continuously monitor patient’s vital life index such as heart rate variability (HRV) and respiration rate. This desired device would be compact, wearable, wireless, networkable and low-power to enable proactive home monitoring of vital signs. This device should have a radar sensor portion and a wireless communication link all integrated in one small set. The promising technology that can satisfy these requirements is the impulse radio based Ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) technology. Since Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released the 3.1GHz-10.6GHz frequency band for UWB applications in 2002 [1], IR-UWB has received significant attention for applications in target positioning and wireless communications. IR-UWB employs extremely narrow Gaussian monocycle pulses or any other forms of short RF pulses to represent information. In this project, an integrated wireless UWB transceiver for the 3.1GHz-10.6GHz IR-UWB medical sensor was developed in the 0.18µm CMOS technology. This UWB transceiver can be employed for both radar sensing and communication purposes. The transceiver applies the On-Off Keying (OOK) modulation scheme to transmit short Gaussian pulse signals. The transmitter output power level is adjustable. The fully integrated UWB transceiver occupies a core area of 0.752mm^2 and the total die area of 1.274mm^2 with the pad ring inserted. The transceiver was simulated with overall power consumption of 40mW for radar sensing. The receiver is very sensitive to weak signals with a sensitivity of -73.01dBm. The average power of a single pulse is 9.8µW. The pulses are not posing any harm to human tissues. The sensing resolution and the target positioning precision are presumably sufficient for heart movement detection purpose in medical applications. This transceiver can also be used for high speed wireless data communications. The data transmission rate of 200 Mbps was achieved with an overall power consumption of 57mW. A combination of sensing and communications can be used to build a low power sensor

    Développement d'une architecture innovante de récepteur radar à 77 GHz et démonstration en CMOS 28 nm FDSOI

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    Grâce à sa capacité à détecter des cibles éloignées malgré une mauvaise visibilité, le radar automobile à 77 GHz joue un rôle important dans l'aide à la conduite. L'utilisation des fréquences millimétriques offre une bonne résolution et une importante capacité d'intégration des circuits. C'est aussi un défi car il faut satisfaire un cahier des charges exigeant sur le bruit et la linéarité du récepteur. Les technologies SiGe BiCMOS ont été les premières utilisées pour la conception de récepteurs radar à 77 GHz. De bons résultats ont été obtenus en se basant sur des architectures utilisant des mélangeurs actifs. Cependant l'utilisation des technologie BiCMOS se traduisait par une consommation élevée, une faible capacité d'intégration et des coûts de production importants. Récemment, l'intégration des procédés CMOS menant à l'augmentation des fréquences de transition rend ces technologies plus attractives pour les applications nécessitant un faible coût et la cointégration de plusieurs fonctions au sein d'une même puce. La littérature sur les récepteurs radars en technologie CMOS à 77 GHz montre que les architectures inspirées par les technologies BiCMOS ne sont pas pertinentes pour cette application. Le but de cette thèse et de montrer que l'utilisation de techniques propres aux technologie CMOS comme l'échantillonnage et l'utilisation de portes logiques permet d'obtenir de très bonnes performances. Dans ce travail, deux nouvelles architectures de récepteurs radars basées sur le principe d'échantillonnage sont proposées. La première architecture est basée sur un mélangeur passif échantillonné qui permet d'obtenir un très bon compromis bruit/linéarité. La seconde exploite les propriétés des mélangeurs sous-échantillonnés afin utiliser une fréquence d'OL trois fois inférieure à la fréquence RF offrant ainsi de très intéressantes simplifications au niveau de la chaîne de distribution du signal d'OL du récepteur. Le contexte de cette étude est expliqué dans le 1er chapitre qui présente les exigences de conception liées à l'application radar et fourni une analyse de l'état de l'art des récepteurs à 77 GHZ. Le chapitre suivant décrit le principe de fonctionnement et l'implémentation d'un mélangeur échantillonné à 77 GHz en technologie CMOS 28- nm FDSOI. Une topologie de mélangeur sous-échantillonné utilisant une fréquence d'OL de 26 GHz pour convertir des signaux RF autour de 77 GHz est ensuite détaillée dans le chapitre 3. Le chapitre 4 conclut cette étude en détaillant l'intégration des mélangeurs étudiés dans les chapitres précédents avec un amplificateur faible bruit dans différents récepteurs radars. Ces architectures de récepteurs basées sur l'échantillonnage sont ensuite comparées entre elles et avec l'état de l'art montrant ainsi leurs avantages et inconvénients. Les résultats de cette comparaison confirment l'intérêt des techniques d'échantillonnage pour la conversion de fréquence dans le cadre de l'application radar.With its ability to detect distant targets under harsh visibility conditions, the 77 GHz automotive radar plays a key role in driving safety. Using mm-wave frequencies allow a good range resolution, a better circuit integration and a wide modulation bandwidth. This is also a challenge for circuit designers who must fulfill stringent requirements especially on the receiver front-end. First 77 GHz radar receivers were manufactured with SiGe BiCMOS processes benefiting from the high transition frequency and high breakdown voltage of Hetero-junction Bipolar Transistors (HBT). Good results have been achieved with active-mixer-based architectures, but these technologies suffer from high power consumptions, limited integration capacity and large production cost. More recently, the scaling down of CMOS processes (coming together with the increase of the transition frequency of the transistors) makes CMOS a good candidate for 77 GHz circuit design, especially when cost target requires single chip solutions. The literature related to CMOS radar receivers highlights that receivers based on BiCMOS architectures generally show poor performances. The aim of this work is to demonstrate that using CMOS specific technics such as sampling and the use of high-speed digital gates should enhance the performance of the receivers. In this work, two innovative radar receiver architectures based on the sampling principle are proposed. The first one shows that this principle can be extended to millimeter wave frequencies to benefit from a very good noise/linearity trade-off. While the second one uses this principle to converts a 77 GHz RF signal by using a 26 GHz LO frequency thus simplifying the LO distribution chain of the receiver. The background of this study is introduced in the chapter 1 presenting the design trade-off related to the 77 GHz radar receiver and provides a review of the existing solutions. The following chapter describes the sampling mixer principle and the implementation of a 77 GHz sampling mixer in 28-nm FDSOI CMOS technology. Then, a sub- sampling mixer topology allowing to convert an RF signal around 77 GHz using a 26 GHz LO frequency is detailed in the chapter 3. The chapter 4 draws the conclusion of this study by showing the implementation of the two proposed sampling-based mixers with a low noise amplifier in 77 GHz front ends. These receiver architectures are compared with the state of the art highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the proposed solutions. The results of this study demonstrates that using sampling for down conversion can be convenient to address millimeter-wave frequency applications
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