25 research outputs found

    SUSTAINABLE ENERGY HARVESTING TECHNOLOGIES – PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

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    Chapter 8: Energy Harvesting Technologies: Thick-Film Piezoelectric Microgenerato

    Wideband Watt-Level Spatial Power-Combined Power Amplifier in SiGe BiCMOS Technology for Efficient mm-Wave Array Transmitters

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    The continued demand for high-speed wireless communications is driving the development of integrated high-power transmitters at millimeter wave (mm-Wave) frequencies. Si-based technologies allow achieving a high level of integration but usually provide insufficient generated RF power to compensate for the increased propagation and material losses at mm-Wave bands due to the relatively low breakdown voltage of their devices. This problem can be reduced significantly if one could combine the power of multiple active devices on each antenna element. However, conventional on-chip power combining networks have inherently high insertion losses reducing transmitter efficiency and limiting its maximum achievable output power.This work presents a non-conventional design approach for mm-Wave Si-based Watt-level power amplifiers that is based on novel power-combining architecture, where an array of parallel custom PA-cells suited on the same chip is interfaced to a single substrate integrated waveguide (to be a part of an antenna element). This allows one to directly excite TEm0 waveguide modes with high power through spatial power combining functionality, obviating the need for intermediate and potentially lossy on-chip power combiners. The proposed solution offers wide impedance bandwidth (50%) and low insertion losses (0.4 dB), which are virtually independent from the number of interfaced PA-cells. The work evaluates the scalability bounds of the architecture as well as discusses the critical effects of coupled non-identical PA-cells, which are efficiently reduced by employing on-chip isolation load resistors.The proposed architecture has been demonstrated through an example of the combined PA with four differential cascode PA-cells suited on the same chip, which is flip-chip interconnected to the combiner placed on a laminate. This design is implemented in a 0.25 um SiGe BiCMOS technology. The PA-cell has a wideband performance (38.6%) with both high peak efficiency (30%) and high saturated output power (24.9 dBm), which is the highest reported output power level obtained without the use of circuit-level power combining in Si-based technologies at Ka-band. In order to achieve the optimal system-level performance of the combined PA, an EM-circuit-thermal optimization flow has been proposed, which accounts for various multiphysics effects occurring in the joint structure. The final PA achieves the peak PAE of 26.7% in combination with 30.8 dBm maximum saturated output power, which is the highest achievable output power in practical applications, where the 50-Ohms load is placed on a laminate. The high efficiency (>20%) and output power (>29.8 dBm) over a wide frequency range (30%) exceed the state-of-the-art in Si-based PAs

    Wireless Terahertz Communications: Optoelectronic Devices and Signal Processing

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    Novel THz device concepts and signal processing schemes are introduced and experimentally confirmed. Record-high data rates are achieved with a simple envelope detector at the receiver. Moreover, a THz communication system using an optoelectronic receiver and a photonic local oscillator is shown for the first time, and a new class of devices for THz transmitters and receivers is investigated which enables a monolithic co-integration of THz components with advanced silicon photonic circuits

    Conformal antenna-based wireless telemetry system for capsule endoscopy

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    Capsule endoscopy for imaging the gastrointestinal tract is an innovative tool for carrying out medical diagnosis and therapy. Additional modalities beyond optical imaging would enhance current capabilities at the expense of denser integration, due to the limited space available within the capsule. We therefore need new designs and technologies to increase the smartness of the capsules for a given volume. This thesis presents the design, manufacture and performance characterisation of a helical antenna placed conformally outside an endoscopic capsule, and the characterisation in-silico, in-vitro and in-vivo of the telemetry system in alive and euthanised pigs. This method does not use the internal volume of the capsule, but does use an extra coating to protect the antenna from the surrounding tissue and maintain biocompatibility for safe use inside the human body. The helical antenna, radiating at 433 MHz with a bandwidth of 20 MHz within a muscle-type tissue, presents a low gain and efficiency, which is typical for implantable and ingestible medical devices. Telemetry capsule prototypes were simulated, manufactured and assembled with the necessary internal electronics, including a commercially available transceiver unit. Thermistors were embedded into each capsule shell, to record any temperature increase in the tissue surrounding the antenna during the experiments. A temperature increase of less than 1°C was detected for the tissue surrounding the antenna. The process of coating the biocompatible insulation layer over the full length of the capsule is described in detail. Data transmission programmes were established to send programmed data packets to an external receiver. The prototypes radiated at different power levels ranging from -10 to 10 dBm, and all capsules demonstrated a satisfactory performance at a data rate of 16 kbps during phantom and in-vivo experiments. Data transmission was achieved with low bit-error rates below 10-5. A low signal strength of only -54 dBm still provided effective data transfer, irrespective of the orientation and location of the capsule, and this successfully demonstrated the feasibility of the system

    InP DHBT MMIC Power Amplifiers for Millimeter-Wave Applications

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    Advanced Trends in Wireless Communications

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    Physical limitations on wireless communication channels impose huge challenges to reliable communication. Bandwidth limitations, propagation loss, noise and interference make the wireless channel a narrow pipe that does not readily accommodate rapid flow of data. Thus, researches aim to design systems that are suitable to operate in such channels, in order to have high performance quality of service. Also, the mobility of the communication systems requires further investigations to reduce the complexity and the power consumption of the receiver. This book aims to provide highlights of the current research in the field of wireless communications. The subjects discussed are very valuable to communication researchers rather than researchers in the wireless related areas. The book chapters cover a wide range of wireless communication topics
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