146 research outputs found

    Techniques for Wideband All Digital Polar Transmission

    Get PDF
    abstract: Modern Communication systems are progressively moving towards all-digital transmitters (ADTs) due to their high efficiency and potentially large frequency range. While significant work has been done on individual blocks within the ADT, there are few to no full systems designs at this point in time. The goal of this work is to provide a set of multiple novel block architectures which will allow for greater cohesion between the various ADT blocks. Furthermore, the design of these architectures are expected to focus on the practicalities of system design, such as regulatory compliance, which here to date has largely been neglected by the academic community. Amongst these techniques are a novel upconverted phase modulation, polyphase harmonic cancellation, and process voltage and temperature (PVT) invariant Delta Sigma phase interpolation. It will be shown in this work that the implementation of the aforementioned architectures allows ADTs to be designed with state of the art size, power, and accuracy levels, all while maintaining PVT insensitivity. Due to the significant performance enhancement over previously published works, this work presents the first feasible ADT architecture suitable for widespread commercial deployment.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    On-Chip Analog Circuit Design Using Built-In Self-Test and an Integrated Multi-Dimensional Optimization Platform

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, the rapid development of system-on-chip (SoC) market introduces tremendous complexity into the integrated circuit (IC) design. Meanwhile, the IC fabrication process is scaling down to allow higher density of integration but makes the chips more sensitive to the process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations. A successful IC product not only imposes great pressure on the IC designers, who have to handle wider variations and enforce more design margins, but also challenges the test procedure, leading to more check points and longer test time. To relax the designers’ burden and reduce the cost of testing, it is valuable to make the IC chips able to test and tune itself to some extent. In this dissertation, a fully integrated in-situ design validation and optimization (VO) hardware for analog circuits is proposed. It implements in-situ built-in self-test (BIST) techniques for analog circuits. Based on the data collected from BIST, the error between the measured and the desired performance of the target circuit is evaluated using a cost function. A digital multi-dimensional optimization engine is implemented to adaptively adjust the analog circuit parameters, seeking the minimum value of the cost function and achieving the desired performance. To verify this concept, study cases of a 2nd/4th active-RC band-pass filter (BPF) and a 2nd order Gm-C BPF, as well as all BIST and optimization blocks, are adopted on-chip. Apart from the VO system, several improved BIST techniques are also proposed in this dissertation. A single-tone sinusoidal waveform generator based on a finite-impulse-response (FIR) architecture, which utilizes an optimization algorithm to enhance its spur free dynamic range (SFDR), is proposed. It achieves an SFDR of 59 to 70 dBc from 150 to 850 MHz after the optimization procedure. A low-distortion current-steering two-tone sinusoidal signal synthesizer based on a mixing-FIR architecture is also proposed. The two-tone synthesizer extends the FIR architecture to two stages and implements an up-conversion mixer to generate the two tones, achieving better than -68 dBc IM3 below 480 MHz LO frequency without calibration. Moreover, an on-chip RF receiver linearity BIST methodology for continuous and discrete-time hybrid baseband chain is proposed. The proposed receiver chain implements a charge-domain FIR filter to notch the two excitation signals but expose the third order intermodulation (IM3) tones. It simplifies the linearity measurement procedure–using a power detector is enough to analyze the receiver’s linearity. Finally, a low cost fully digital built-in analog tester for linear-time-invariant (LTI) analog blocks is proposed. It adopts a time-to-digital converter (TDC) to measure the delays corresponded to a ramp excitation signal and is able to estimate the pole or zero locations of a low-pass LTI system

    Broadband Direct RF Digitization Receivers

    Full text link

    Transceiver architectures and sub-mW fast frequency-hopping synthesizers for ultra-low power WSNs

    Get PDF
    Wireless sensor networks (WSN) have the potential to become the third wireless revolution after wireless voice networks in the 80s and wireless data networks in the late 90s. This revolution will finally connect together the physical world of the human and the virtual world of the electronic devices. Though in the recent years large progress in power consumption reduction has been made in the wireless arena in order to increase the battery life, this is still not enough to achieve a wide adoption of this technology. Indeed, while nowadays consumers are used to charge batteries in laptops, mobile phones and other high-tech products, this operation becomes infeasible when scaled up to large industrial, enterprise or home networks composed of thousands of wireless nodes. Wireless sensor networks come as a new way to connect electronic equipments reducing, in this way, the costs associated with the installation and maintenance of large wired networks. To accomplish this task, it is necessary to reduce the energy consumption of the wireless node to a point where energy harvesting becomes feasible and the node energy autonomy exceeds the life time of the wireless node itself. This thesis focuses on the radio design, which is the backbone of any wireless node. A common approach to radio design for WSNs is to start from a very simple radio (like an RFID) adding more functionalities up to the point in which the power budget is reached. In this way, the robustness of the wireless link is traded off for power reducing the range of applications that can draw benefit form a WSN. In this thesis, we propose a novel approach to the radio design for WSNs. We started from a proven architecture like Bluetooth, and progressively we removed all the functionalities that are not required for WSNs. The robustness of the wireless link is guaranteed by using a fast frequency hopping spread spectrum technique while the power budget is achieved by optimizing the radio architecture and the frequency hopping synthesizer Two different radio architectures and a novel fast frequency hopping synthesizer are proposed that cover the large space of applications for WSNs. The two architectures make use of the peculiarities of each scenario and, together with a novel fast frequency hopping synthesizer, proved that spread spectrum techniques can be used also in severely power constrained scenarios like WSNs. This solution opens a new window toward a radio design, which ultimately trades off flexibility, rather than robustness, for power consumption. In this way, we broadened the range of applications for WSNs to areas in which security and reliability of the communication link are mandatory

    New techniques in television to provide research in three-dimensional real-time or near real-time imagery and reduced cost systems for teleconferencing and educational uses, part 1

    Get PDF
    The results are presented of a continuing research and development program the objective of which is to develop a reduced bandwidth television system and a technique for television transmission of holograms. The result of the former is a variable frame rate television system, the operation of which was demonstrated for both black-and-white and color signals. This system employs a novel combination of the inexpensive mass storage capacity of a magnetic disc with the reliability of a digital system for time expansion and compression. Also reported are the results of a theoretical analysis and preliminary feasibility experiment of an innovative system for television transmission of holograms using relatively conventional TV equipment along with a phase modulated reference wave for production of the original interference pattern

    Applied Measurement Systems

    Get PDF
    Measurement is a multidisciplinary experimental science. Measurement systems synergistically blend science, engineering and statistical methods to provide fundamental data for research, design and development, control of processes and operations, and facilitate safe and economic performance of systems. In recent years, measuring techniques have expanded rapidly and gained maturity, through extensive research activities and hardware advancements. With individual chapters authored by eminent professionals in their respective topics, Applied Measurement Systems attempts to provide a comprehensive presentation and in-depth guidance on some of the key applied and advanced topics in measurements for scientists, engineers and educators

    Data Acquisition Applications

    Get PDF
    Data acquisition systems have numerous applications. This book has a total of 13 chapters and is divided into three sections: Industrial applications, Medical applications and Scientific experiments. The chapters are written by experts from around the world, while the targeted audience for this book includes professionals who are designers or researchers in the field of data acquisition systems. Faculty members and graduate students could also benefit from the book

    Applications of Power Electronics:Volume 2

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore