61 research outputs found

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort

    A New Technique for the Design of Multi-Phase Voltage Controlled Oscillators

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    © 2017 World Scientific Publishing Company.In this work, a novel circuit structure for second-harmonic multi-phase voltage controlled oscillator (MVCO) is presented. The proposed MVCO is composed of (Formula presented.) ((Formula presented.) being an integer number and (Formula presented.)2) identical inductor–capacitor ((Formula presented.)) tank VCOs. In theory, this MVCO can provide 2(Formula presented.) different phase sinusoidal signals. A six-phase VCO based on the proposed structure is designed in a TSMC 0.18(Formula presented.)um CMOS process. Simulation results show that at the supply voltage of 0.8(Formula presented.)V, the total power consumption of the six-phase VCO circuit is about 1(Formula presented.)mW, the oscillation frequency is tunable from 2.3(Formula presented.)GHz to 2.5(Formula presented.)GHz when the control voltage varies from 0(Formula presented.)V to 0.8(Formula presented.)V, and the phase noise is lower than (Formula presented.)128(Formula presented.)dBc/Hz at 1(Formula presented.)MHz offset frequency. The proposed MVCO has lower phase noise, lower power consumption and more outputs than other related works in the literature.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    CMOS ring oscillator delay cell performance: a comparative study

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    A common voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) architecture used in the phase locked loop (PLL) is the ring oscillator (RO). RO consist of number of inverters cascaded together as the input of the first stage connected to the output of the last stage. It is important to design the RO to be work at desired frequency depend on application with low power consumption. This paper presents a review the performance evaluation of different delay cell topologies the implemented in the ring oscillator. The various topologies analyzed includes current starved delay cell, differential delay cell and current follower cell. Performance evaluation includes frequency range, frequency stability, phase noise and power consumption had been reviewed and comparison of different topologies has been discussed. It is observed that starved current delay cell have lower power consumption and the different of the frequency range is small as compared to other type of delay cell

    Design of 5.1 GHz ultra-low power and wide tuning range hybrid oscillator

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    The objective of the proposed work is to demonstrate the use of a hybrid approach for the design of a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) which can lead to higher performance. The performance is improved in terms of the tuning range, frequency of oscillation, voltage swing, and power consumption. The proposed hybrid VCO is designed using an active load common source amplifier and current starved inverter that are cascaded alternatively to achieve low power consumption. The proposed VCO achieves a measured phase noise of -74 dBc/Hz and a figure of merit (FOM) of -152.6 dBc/Hz at a 1 MHz offset when running at 5.1 GHz frequency. The hybrid current starved-current starved VCO (CS-CS VCO) consumes a power of 289 ”W using a 1.8 V supply and attains a wide tuning range of 96.98%. Hybrid VCO is designed using 0.09 ”m complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology. To justify the robustness, reliability, and scalability of the circuit different corner analysis is performed through 500 runs of Monte-Carlo simulation

    Ultra-Low Power Transmitter and Power Management for Internet-of-Things Devices

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    Two of the most critical components in an Internet-of-Things (IoT) sensing and transmitting node are the power management unit (PMU) and the wireless transmitter (Tx). The desire for longer intervals between battery replacements or a completely self-contained, battery-less operation via energy harvesting transducers and circuits in IoT nodes demands highly efficient integrated circuits. This dissertation addresses the challenge of designing and implementing power management and Tx circuits with ultra-low power consumption to enable such efficient operation. The first part of the dissertation focuses on the study and design of power management circuits for IoT nodes. This opening portion elaborates on two different areas of the power management field: Firstly, a low-complexity, SPICE-based model for general low dropout (LDO) regulators is demonstrated. The model aims to reduce the stress and computation times in the final stages of simulation and verification of Systems-on-Chip (SoC), including IoT nodes, that employ large numbers of LDOs. Secondly, the implementation of an efficient PMU for an energy harvesting system based on a thermoelectric generator transducer is discussed. The PMU includes a first-in-its-class LDO with programmable supply noise rejection for localized improvement in the suppression. The second part of the dissertation addresses the challenge of designing an ultra- low power wireless FSK Tx in the 900 MHz ISM band. To reduce the power consumption and boost the Tx energy efficiency, a novel delay cell exploiting current reuse is used in a ring-oscillator employed as the local oscillator generator scheme. In combination with an edge-combiner PA, the Tx showed a measured energy efficiency of 0.2 nJ/bit and a normalized energy efficiency of 3.1 nJ/(bit∙mW) when operating at output power levels up to -10 dBm and data rates of 3 Mbps. To close this dissertation, the implementation of a supply-noise tolerant BiCMOS ring-oscillator is discussed. The combination of a passive, high-pass feedforward path from the supply to critical nodes in the selected delay cell and a low cost LDO allow the oscillator to exhibit power supply noise rejection levels better than –33 dB in experimental results

    Energy-Efficient Wireless Connectivity and Wireless Charging For Internet-of-Things (IoT) Applications

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    During the recent years, the Internet-of-Things (IoT) has been rapidly evolving. It is indeed the future of communication that has transformed Things of the real world into smarter devices. To date, the world has deployed billions of “smart” connected things. Predictions say there will be 10’s of billions of connected devices by 2025 and in our lifetime we will experience life with a trillion-node network. However, battery lifespan exhibits a critical barrier to scaling IoT devices. Replacing batteries on a trillion-sensor scale is a logistically prohibitive feat. Self-powered IoT devices seems to be the right direction to stand up to that challenge. The main objective of this thesis is to develop solutions to achieve energy-efficient wireless-connectivity and wireless-charging for IoT applications. In the first part of the thesis, I introduce ultra-low power radios that are compatible with the Bluetooth Low-Energy (BLE) standard. BLE is considered as the preeminent protocol for short-range communications that support transmission ranges up to 10’s of meters. Number of low power BLE transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) architectures have been designed, fabricated and tested in different planar CMOS and FinFET technologies. The low power operation is achieved by combining low power techniques in both the network and physical layers, namely: backchannel communication, duty-cycling, open-loop transmission/reception, PLL-less architectures, and mixer-first architectures. Further novel techniques have been proposed to further reduce the power the consumption of the radio design, including: a fast startup time and low startup energy crystal oscillators, an antenna-chip co-design approach for quadrature generation in the RF path, an ultra-low power discrete-time differentiator-based Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying (GFSK) demodulation scheme, an oversampling GFSK modulation/demodulation scheme for open loop transmission/reception and packet synchronization, and a cell-based design approach that allows automation in the design of BLE digital architectures. The implemented BLE TXs transmit fully-compliant BLE advertising packet that can be received by commercial smartphone. In the second part of the thesis, I introduce passive nonlinear resonant circuits to achieve wide-band RF energy harvesting and robust wireless power transfer circuits. Nonlinear resonant circuits modeled by the Duffing nonlinear differential equation exhibit interesting hysteresis characteristics in their frequency and amplitude responses that are exploited in designing self-adaptive wireless charging systems. In the magnetic-resonance wireless power transfer scenario, coupled nonlinear resonators are proposed to maintain the power transfer level and efficiency over a range of coupling factors without active feedback control circuitry. Coupling factor depends on the transmission distance, lateral, and angular misalignments between the charging pad and the device. Therefore, nonlinear resonance extends the efficient charging zones of a wireless charger without the requirement for a precise alignment.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169842/1/omaratty_1.pd

    Ultra Low Power FM-UWB Transceiver for High-Density Wireless Sensor Networks

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    The WiseSkin project aims to provide a non-invasive solution for restoration of a natural sense of touch to persons using prosthetic limbs. By embedding sensor nodes into the silicone coating of the prosthesis, which acts as a sensory skin, WiseSkin targets to provide improved gripping, manipulation and mobility for amputees. Flexibility, freedom of movement and comfort demand unobtrusive, highly miniaturized, low-power sensing capabilities built into the artificial skin, which is then integrated with a sensory feedback system. Wireless communication between the sensor nodes provides more flexibility, better scalability and robustness compared to wired solution, and is therefore a preferred approach for WiseSkin. Design of an RF transceiver tailored for the specific needs of WiseSkin is the topic of this work. The properties of FM ultra-wide band (FM-UWB) modulation make it a good candidate for High-Density Wireless Sensor Networks (HD-WSN). The proposed FM-UWB receivers take advantage of short range to reduce power consumption, and exploit robustness of this wideband modulation scheme. The LNA, identified as the biggest consumer, is removed and signal is directly converted to dc, where amplification and demodulation are performed. Owing to 500 MHz bandwidth, frequency offset and phase noise can be tolerated, and a low-power, free-running ring oscillator can be used to generate the LO signal. The receiver is referred to as an approximate zero-IF receiver. Two receiver architectures are studied. The first one performs quadrature downconversion, and owing to the demodulator linearity, provides the multi-user capability. In the second receiver, quadrature demodulation is replaced by the single-ended one. Due to the nature of the demodulator, sensitivity degrades, and multiple FM-UWB signals cannot be resolved, but the consumption is almost halved compared to the first receiver. The proposed approach is verified through two integrations, both in a standard 65 nm bulk CMOS process. In the first run, a standalone quadrature receiver was integrated. Power consumption of 423 uW was measured, while achieving -70 dBm sensitivity. Good narrow-band interference rejection and multiuser capability with up to 4 FM-UWB channels could be achieved. In the second run, a full transceiver is integrated, with both quadrature and single-ended receivers and a transmitter, all sharing a single IO pad, without the need for any external passive components or switches. The quadrature receiver, with on-chip baseband processing and multi-user support, in this case consumes 550 uW, with a sesensitivity of -68 dBm. The low power receiver consumes 267 uW, and provides -57 dBm sensitivity, at a single FM-UWB channel. The implemented trantransmitter transmits a 100 kb/s FM-UWB signal at -11.4 dBm, while drawing 583 uW from the 1 V supply. The on-chip clock recovery allows reference frequency offset up to 8000 ppm. Since state of the art on-chip RC oscillators can provide below 2100 ppm across the temperature range of interest, the implemented transceiver demonstrates the feasibility of a fully integrated FM-UWB radio with no need for a quartz reference or any external components. In addition, the transceiver can tolerate up to 3 dBm narrow-band interferer at 2.4 GHz. Such a strong signal can be used to remotely power the sensor nodes inside the artificial skin and enable a truly wirelessWiseSkin solution

    Design of Fully-Integrated High-Resolution Radars in CMOS and BiCMOS Technologies

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    The RADAR, acronym that stands for RAdio Detection And ranging, is a device that uses electromagnetic waves to detect the presence and the distance of an illuminated target. The idea of such a system was presented in the early 1900s to determine the presence of ships. Later on, with the approach of World War II, the radar gained the interest of the army who decided to use it for defense purposes, in order to detect the presence, the distance and the speed of ships, planes and even tanks. Nowadays, the use of similar systems is extended outside the military area. Common applications span from weather surveillance to Earth composition mapping and from flight control to vehicle speed monitoring. Moreover, the introduction of new ultrawideband (UWB) technologies makes it possible to perform radar imaging which can be successfully used in the automotive or medical field. The existence of a plenty of known applications is the reason behind the choice of the topic of this thesis, which is the design of fully-integrated high-resolution radars. The first part of this work gives a brief introduction on high resolution radars and describes its working principle in a mathematical way. Then it gives a comparison between the existing radar types and motivates the choice of an integrated solution instead of a discrete one. The second part concerns the analysis and design of two CMOS high-resolution radar prototypes tailored for the early detection of the breast cancer. This part begins with an explanation of the motivations behind this project. Then it gives a thorough system analysis which indicates the best radar architecture in presence of impairments and dictates all the electrical system specifications. Afterwards, it describes in depth each block of the transceivers with particular emphasis on the local oscillator (LO) generation system which is the most critical block of the designs. Finally, the last section of this part presents the measurement results. In particular, it shows that the designed radar operates over 3 octaves from 2 to 16GHz, has a conversion gain of 36dB, a flicker-noise-corner of 30Hz and a dynamic range of 107dB. These characteristics turn into a resolution of 3mm inside the body, more than enough to detect even the smallest tumor. The third and last part of this thesis focuses on the analysis and design of some important building blocks for phased-array radars, including phase shifter (PHS), true time delay (TTD) and power combiner. This part begins with an exhaustive introduction on phased array systems followed by a detailed description of each proposed lumped-element block. The main features of each block is the very low insertion loss, the wideband characteristic and the low area consumption. Finally, the major effects of circuit parasitics are described followed by simulation and measurement results

    Radiation Tolerant Electronics, Volume II

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    Research on radiation tolerant electronics has increased rapidly over the last few years, resulting in many interesting approaches to model radiation effects and design radiation hardened integrated circuits and embedded systems. This research is strongly driven by the growing need for radiation hardened electronics for space applications, high-energy physics experiments such as those on the large hadron collider at CERN, and many terrestrial nuclear applications, including nuclear energy and safety management. With the progressive scaling of integrated circuit technologies and the growing complexity of electronic systems, their ionizing radiation susceptibility has raised many exciting challenges, which are expected to drive research in the coming decade.After the success of the first Special Issue on Radiation Tolerant Electronics, the current Special Issue features thirteen articles highlighting recent breakthroughs in radiation tolerant integrated circuit design, fault tolerance in FPGAs, radiation effects in semiconductor materials and advanced IC technologies and modelling of radiation effects
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