12 research outputs found

    Development and characterization of subsystems for a 2.45 GHz RFID research environment

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, the Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) technology is a very fast emerging and developing technology with a wide range of applications in different fields. Due to the technological progress, the number of applications has increased enormously, leading to the creation of many different standards in several distinct frequency bands for supporting these applications. The majority of this standards are not compatible with each other and moreover, there is not an unique UHF band standard worldwide. For this reason, a possible solution to achieve a compatible RFID system around the world is by means of the 2.45 GHz microwave ISM band. More and more this 2.45 GHz RFID band is considered and currently there are systems working at this frequency. This thesis describes the design and the implementation of a frontend for a 2.45 GHz RFID testbed. Inside the document, relevant RFID basics and the assumed regulations are discussed. The system concept designed is explained and selected elements are tested and optimized. The development of the transmitter and receiver board is described and finally for both boards the characterization and the measurements results are shown

    Realization Limits of Impulse-Radio UWB Indoor Localization Systems

    Get PDF
    In this work, the realization limits of an impulse-based Ultra-Wideband (UWB) localization system for indoor applications have been thoroughly investigated and verified by measurements. The analysis spans from the position calculation algorithms, through hardware realization and modeling, up to the localization experiments conducted in realistic scenarios. The main focus was put on identification and characterization of limiting factors as well as developing methods to overcome them

    Digital ADCs and ultra-wideband RF circuits for energy constrained wireless applications by Denis Clarke Daly.

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-183).Ongoing advances in semiconductor technology have enabled a multitude of portable, low power devices like cellular phones and wireless sensors. Most recently, as transistor device geometries reach the nanometer scale, transistor characteristics have changed so dramatically that many traditional circuits and architectures are no longer optimal and/or feasible. As a solution, much research has focused on developing 'highly digital' circuits and architectures that are tolerant of the increased leakage, variation and degraded voltage headrooms associated with advanced CMOS processes. This thesis presents several highly digital, mixed-signal circuits and architectures designed for energy constrained wireless applications. First, as a case study, a highly digital, voltage scalable flash ADC is presented. The flash ADC, implemented in 0.18 [mu]m CMOS, leverages redundancy and calibration to achieve robust operation at supply voltages from 0.2 V to 0.9 V. Next, the thesis expands in scope to describe a pulsed, noncoherent ultra-wideband transceiver chipset, implemented in 90 nm CMOS and operating in the 3-to-5 GHz band. The all-digital transmitter employs capacitive combining and pulse shaping in the power amplifier to meet the FCC spectral mask without any off-chip filters. The noncoherent receiver system-on-chip achieves both energy efficiency and high performance by employing simple amplifier and ADC structures combined with extensive digital calibration. Finally, the transceiver chipset is integrated in a complete system for wireless insect flight control.(cont.) Through the use of a flexible PCB and 3D die stacking, the total weight of the electronics is kept to 1 g, within the carrying capacity of an adult Manduca sexta moth. Preliminary wireless flight control of a moth in a wind tunnel is demonstrated.Ph.D

    45-nm SOI CMOS Bluetooth Electrochemical Sensor for Continuous Glucose Monitoring

    Get PDF
    Due to increasing rates of diabetes, non-invasive glucose monitoring systems will become critical to improving health outcomes for an increasing patient population. Bluetooth integration for such a system has been previously unattainable due to the prohibitive energy consumption. However, enabling Bluetooth allows for widespread adoption due to the ubiquity of Bluetooth-enabled mobile devices. The objective of this thesis is to demonstrate the feasibility of a Bluetooth-based energy-harvesting glucose sensor for contact-lens integration using 45~nm silicon-on-insulator (SOI) complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. The proposed glucose monitoring system includes a Bluetooth transmitter implemented as a two-point closed loop PLL modulator, a sensor potentiostat, and a 1st-order incremental delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter (IADC). This work details the complete system design including derivation of top-level specifications such as glucose sensing range, Bluetooth protocol timing, energy consumption, and circuit specifications such as carrier frequency range, output power, phase-noise performance, stability, resolution, signal-to-noise ratio, and power consumption. Three test chips were designed to prototype the system, and two of these were experimentally verified. Chip 1 includes a partial implementation of a phase-locked-loop (PLL) which includes a voltage-controlled-oscillator (VCO), frequency divider, and phase-frequency detector (PFD). Chip 2 includes the design of the sensor potentiostat and IADC. Finally, Chip 3 combines the circuitry of Chip 1 and Chip 2, along with a charge-pump, loop-filter and power amplifier to complete the system. Chip 1 DC power consumption was measured to be 204.8~μ\muW, while oscillating at 2.441 GHz with an output power PoutP_{out} of -35.8 dBm, phase noise at 1 MHz offset L(1 MHz)L(1\text{ MHz}) of -108.5 dBc/Hz, and an oscillator figure of merit (FOM) of 183.44dB. Chip 2 achieves a total DC power consumption of 5.75~μ\muW. The system has a dynamic range of 0.15~nA -- 100~nA at 10-bit resolution. The integral non-linearity (INL) and differential non-linearity (DNL) of the IADC were measured to be -6~LSB/±\pm0.3~LSB respectively with a conversion time of 65.56~ms. This work achieves the best duty-cycled DC power consumption compared to similar glucose monitoring systems, while providing sufficient performance and range using Bluetooth

    Ultra-Low-Power Uwb Impulse Radio Design: Architecture, Circuits, And Applications

    Full text link
    Recent advances in home healthcare, environmental sensing, and low power computing have created a need for wireless communication at very low power for low data rate applications. Due to higher energy/bit requirements at lower data -rate, achieving power levels low enough to enable long battery lifetime (~10 years) or power-harvesting supplies have not been possible with traditional approaches. Dutycycled radios have often been proposed in literature as a solution for such applications due to their ability to shut off the static power consumption at low data rates. While earlier radio nodes for such systems have been proposed based on a type of sleepwake scheduling, such implementations are still power hungry due to large synchronization uncertainty (~1[MICRO SIGN]s). In this dissertation, we utilize impulsive signaling and a pulse-coupled oscillator (PCO) based synchronization scheme to facilitate a globally synchronized wireless network. We have modeled this network over a widely varying parameter space and found that it is capable of reducing system cost as well as providing scalability in wireless sensor networks. Based on this scheme, we implemented an FCC compliant, 3-5GHz, timemultiplexed, dual-band UWB impulse radio transceiver, measured to consume only 20[MICRO SIGN]W when the nodes are synchronized for peer-peer communication. At the system level the design was measured to consume 86[MICRO SIGN]W of power, while facilitating multi- hop communication. Simple pulse-shaping circuitry ensures spectral efficiency, FCC compliance and ~30dB band-isolation. Similarly, the band-switchable, ~2ns turn-on receiver implements a non-coherent pulse detection scheme that facilitates low power consumption with -87dBm sensitivity at 100Kbps. Once synchronized the nodes exchange information while duty-cycling, and can use any type of high level network protocols utilized in packet based communication. For robust network performance, a localized synchronization detection scheme based on relative timing and statistics of the PCO firing and the timing pulses ("sync") is reported. No active hand-shaking is required for nodes to detect synchronization. A self-reinforcement scheme also helps maintain synchronization even in the presence of miss-detections. Finally we discuss unique ways to exploit properties of pulse coupled oscillator networks to realize novel low power event communication, prioritization, localization and immediate neighborhood validation for low power wireless sensor applications

    Design of a 2.4 Ghz BAW-Based CMOS Transmitter

    Get PDF
    In recent years, bulk acoustic wave resonators (BAW) in combination with RF circuits have shown a big potential in achieving the low-power consumption and miniaturization level required to address wireless sensor nodes (WSN) applications. A lot of work has been focused on the receiver side, by integrating BAW resonators with low noise amplifiers (LNA) and in frequency synthesis with the design of BAW-based local oscillators, most of them working at fixed frequency due to their limited tuning range. At the architectural level, this has forced the implementation of several single channel transceivers. This thesis aims at exploring the use of BAW resonators in the transmitter, proposing an architecture capable of taking full advantage of them. The main objective is to develop a transmitter for WSN multi-channel applications able to cover the whole 2.4 GHz ISM band and enable the compatibility with wide-spread standards like Bluetooth and Bluetooth Low Energy. Typical transmissions should thus range from low data rates (typically tens of kb/s) to medium data rates (1 Mb/s), with FSK and GFSK modulation schemes, should be centered on any of the channels provided by these standards and cover a maximum transmission range of some tens of meters. To achieve these targets and circumvent the limited tuning range of the BAW oscillator, an up-conversion transmitter using wide IF is used. The typical spurs problems related to this transmitter architecture are addressed by using a combined suppression based on SSB mixing and selective amplification. The latter is achieved by cointegration of a high efficiency power amplifier with BAW resonators, which allows performing spurs filtering while preserving the efficiency. In particular the selective amplifier is designed by including in the PA analysis the BAW resonator parameters, which allows integrating the BAW filter into the passive network loading the amplifier, participating in the drain voltage shaping. Finally, the frequency synthesis section uses a fractional division plus LC PLL filtering and further integer division to generate the IF signals and exploit the very-low BAW oscillator phase noise. The transmitter has been integrated in a 0.18 µm standard digital CMOS technology. It allows addressing the whole 80 MHz wide 2.4 GHz ISM band. The unmodulated RF frequency carrier demonstrates a very-low phase noise of –136 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset. The IF spurs are maintained lower than –48 dBc, satisfying the international regulations for output power up to 10 dBm without the use of any quadrature error compensation in the transmitter. This is achieved thanks to the rejection provided by the SSB mixer and the selective amplifier, which can reach drain efficiency of up to 24% with integrated inductances, including the insertion losses of the BAW filter. The transmitter consumes 35.3 mA at the maximum power of 5.4 dBm under 1.6 V (1.2 V for the PA), while transmitting a 1 Mb/s GFSK signal and complying with both Bluetooth and Bluetooth Low Energy relative and absolute spectrum requirements

    Nonlinear Processes in Hot Sodium Vapors and Sodium Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensates for Entanglement Generation

    Get PDF
    The primary purpose of this thesis is to study the generation of quantum entanglement via nonlinear processes in hot sodium vapors and ultracold sodium spinor Bose-Einstein condensates. The creation of entanglement can induce quantum squeezing. Such squeezing has important applications for metrology with quantum-enhanced precision beyond the classical limit, known as quantum-enhanced sensing. In this thesis, I present my research on generating quantum entangled states of light in hot atomic vapors via four-wave mixing and generating quantum entangled atoms in ultracold spinor Bose-Einstein condensates via spin-mixing dynamics. Non-degenerate four-wave mixing (4WM) in a hot atomic vapor cell has been shown to be an effective method to produce quantum entangled states of light. Most of the recent work on entangled states of light has focused on Rb and Cs in the near infrared regime. Generating entangled light near the Na resonance at 589 nm is challenging but beneficial for interfacing with cold gases and atomic sensors based on Na. I present our investigation on 4WM in a double-Lambda configuration on the Doppler-broadened D1 line of Na. The construction and characterization of a 4WM apparatus to generate entangled light via hot sodium vapor is introduced. The calculation of susceptibilities in the presence of the light fields and 4WM gain is presented. Experimentally, we characterized the 4WM gain and noise properties of the intensity difference between the generated beams of light. In addition, I discuss directions to boost 4WM gain and reduce absorption loss, including a new design of a stainless steel vapor cell and application of saturated absorption light. The squeezed states of light generated by 4WM can be used to enhance the signal-to-noise ratio of atom number measurements of our sodium spinor Bose-Einstein condensates, where entangled states of atoms can be created via spin-mixing. A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a novel state of matter where identical bosonic particles occupy the same quantum state below an ultracold critical temperature. I present our experimental system for an all-optical production of sodium spinor BECs. We verify that the matter wave coherence of the BEC, where particles share the same quantum wave function and phase, can be extended to the internal spin degrees of freedom in a spin-1 BEC by observing coherent spin-exchange collisions. Spin-exchange collisions in F=1 spinor BECs, where two atoms with magnetic quantum number m_F=0 collide and change into a pair with m_F=+/-1, are useful to implement matter-wave quantum optics in spin space, such as quantum-enhanced interferometry, because the collisions generate entanglement and they can be precisely controlled using microwave dressing. We demonstrate control of the coherent spin evolution by controlling initial states and using microwave dressing fields during the evolution process to apply quenches. Using these control methods, we experimentally investigate atomic interferometry based on spin-exchange collisions in the regime of long evolution times where the Bogoliubov and truncated Wigner approximations break down, and compare the results with our numerical simulations. The results of our atomic interferometry experiments are promising and suggest a pathway to achieve quantum-enhanced sensitivities and/or enhanced sensitivities given the nonlinear nature of our measurements

    Applications of Power Electronics:Volume 2

    Get PDF

    Topical Workshop on Electronics for Particle Physics

    Get PDF
    The purpose of the workshop was to present results and original concepts for electronics research and development relevant to particle physics experiments as well as accelerator and beam instrumentation at future facilities; to review the status of electronics for the LHC experiments; to identify and encourage common efforts for the development of electronics; and to promote information exchange and collaboration in the relevant engineering and physics communities

    Communication and energy delivery architectures for personal medical devices

    Get PDF
    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
    corecore