275 research outputs found

    Modern Applications in Optics and Photonics: From Sensing and Analytics to Communication

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    Optics and photonics are among the key technologies of the 21st century, and offer potential for novel applications in areas such as sensing and spectroscopy, analytics, monitoring, biomedical imaging/diagnostics, and optical communication technology. The high degree of control over light fields, together with the capabilities of modern processing and integration technology, enables new optical measurement systems with enhanced functionality and sensitivity. They are attractive for a range of applications that were previously inaccessible. This Special Issue aims to provide an overview of some of the most advanced application areas in optics and photonics and indicate the broad potential for the future

    Low Power Resonant Rotary Global Clock Distribution Network Design

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    Along with the increasing complexity of the modern very large scale integrated (VLSI) circuit design, the power consumption of the clock distribution network in digital integrated circuits is continuously increasing. In terms of power and clock skew, the resonant clock distribution network has been studied as a promising alternative to the conventional clock distribution network. Resonant clock distribution network, which works based on adiabatic switching principles, provides a complete solution for on-chip clock generation and distribution for low-power and low-skew clock network designs for high-performance synchronous VLSI circuits.This dissertation work aims to develop the global clock distribution network for one kind of resonant clocking technologies: The resonant rotary clocking technology. The following critical aspects are addressed in this work: (1) A novel rotary oscillator array (ROA) topology is proposed to solve the signal rotation direction uniformity problem, in order to support the design of resonant rotary clocking based low-skew clock distribution network; (2) A synchronization scheme is proposed to solve the large scale rotary clocking generation circuit synchronization problem; (3) A low-skew rotary clock distribution network design methodology is proposed with frequency, power and skew optimizations; (4) A resonant rotary clocking based physical design flow is proposed, which can be integrated in the current mainstream IC design flow; (5) A dynamic rotary frequency divider is proposed for dynamic frequency scaling applications. Experimental and theoretical results show: (1) The efficiency of the proposed methodology in the construction of low-skew, low-power resonant rotary clock distribution network. (2) The effectiveness of the dynamic rotary frequency divider in extending the operating frequency range of the low-power resonant rotary based applications.Ph.D., Electrical Engineering -- Drexel University, 201

    Micro motion amplification – A Review

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    Many motion-active materials have recently emerged, with new methods of integration into actuator components and systems-on-chip. Along with established microprocessors, interconnectivity capabilities and emerging powering methods, they offer a unique opportunity for the development of interactive millimeter and micrometer scale systems with combined sensing and actuating capabilities. The amplification of nanoscale material motion to a functional range is a key requirement for motion interaction and practical applications, including medical micro-robotics, micro-vehicles and micro-motion energy harvesting. Motion amplification concepts include various types of leverage, flextensional mechanisms, unimorphs, micro-walking /micro-motor systems, and structural resonance. A review of the research state-of-art and product availability shows that the available mechanisms offer a motion gain in the range of 10. The limiting factor is the aspect ratio of the moving structure that is achievable in the microscale. Flexures offer high gains because they allow the application of input displacement in the close vicinity of an effective pivotal point. They also involve simple and monolithic fabrication methods allowing combination of multiple amplification stages. Currently, commercially available motion amplifiers can provide strokes as high as 2% of their size. The combination of high-force piezoelectric stacks or unimorph beams with compliant structure optimization methods is expected to make available a new class of high-performance motion translators for microsystems

    Ring-Based Resonant Standing Wave Oscillators for 3D Clocking Applications

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    Ring-based resonant standing wave oscillators have been shown to be a useful clocking tech-nique that can distribute and generate a high frequency, low skew, low power, and stable clock signal. By using through-silicon-vias, this type of standing wave oscillator can be used to gener-ate the clocking scheme for 3D integrated circuits. In this thesis, we propose the use of such 3D standing wave oscillators and show how independent 3D oscillators in different stacks can syn-chronize through the use of a redistribution layer stub. Inter-chip clock synchronization is then accomplished without the need for a PLL. In addition, we propose the first 3D ring-based resonant standing wave oscillator bootstrap and reset circuit to initialize and stop oscillation. Using a 3D ring-based resonant standing wave oscillator, we propose a ring-based data fabric for 3D stacked DRAM and compare the results with existing approaches such as High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) or Wide I/O memory. We show that our Memory Architecture using a Ring-based Scheme (MARS) can provide the increases in speed necessary to overcome current memory bottlenecks, and can scale effectively as future 3D stacks become larger. Our MARS can trade off power, throughput, and latency to match different application requirements. By using a narrow bus, and connecting it to all channels, the MARS8 can provide an alternative memory configuration with ∼ 6.9× lower power consumption than HBM, and ∼ 2.7× faster speeds than Wide I/O. Using multiple ring topologies in the same stack, the channel count can double from 8 to 16, and then to 32. This is possible since MARS uses about 4× fewer TSVs per channel than HBM or Wide I/O. This provides speeds up to ∼ 4.2× faster than traditional HBM. This scalable architecture allows higher throughput and faster system performance for next-generation DRAM. The MARS topology proposed in this thesis can be used in a variety of computing systems, from lightweight IoT to large-scale data centers

    RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications

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    While mobile phones enjoy the largest production volume ever of any consumer electronics products, the demands they place on radio-frequency (RF) transceivers are particularly aggressive, especially on integration with digital processors, low area, low power consumption, while being robust against process-voltage-temperature variations. Since mobile terminals inherently operate on batteries, their power budget is severely constrained. To keep up with the ever increasing data-rate, an ever-decreasing power per bit is required to maintain the battery lifetime. The RF oscillator is the second most power-hungry block of a wireless radio (after power amplifiers). Consequently, any power reduction in an RF oscillator will greatly benefit the overall power efficiency of the cellular transceiver. Moreover, the RF oscillators' purity limits the transceiver performance. The oscillator's phase noise results in power leakage into adjacent channels in a transmit mode and reciprocal mixing in a receive mode. On the other hand, the multi-standard and multi-band transceivers that are now trending demand wide tuning range oscillators. However, broadening the oscillator’s tuning range is usually at the expense of die area (cost) or phase noise. The main goal of this book is to bring forth the exciting and innovative RF oscillator structures that demonstrate better phase noise performance, lower cost, and higher power efficiency than currently achievable. Technical topics discussed in RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications include: Design and analysis of low phase-noise class-F oscillators Analyze a technique to reduce 1/f noise up-conversion in the oscillators Design and analysis of low power/low voltage oscillators Wide tuning range oscillators Reliability study of RF oscillators in nanoscale CMO

    SciTech News- 68(4)-2014

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    Columns and Reports From the Editor 5 SciTech News Call for Articles 5 Conference Report, Diane K. Foster International Student Travel Award Recipient 8 Conference Report, S. Kirk Cabeen Travel Stipend Award Recipient 9 Conference Report, Bonnie Hilditch International Librarian Award Recipient 11 Conference Report, IEEE Continuing Education Award Recipient 19 Division News Science-Technology Division 6 Chemistry Division 14 Engineering Division 17 Call for Nominations & Applications Bonnie Hilditch International Librarian Award 13 IEEE Continuing Education Stipend 20 Engineering Librarian of the Year Award 21 SPIE Digital Library Student Travel Stipend 22 Reviews Sci-Tech Book News Reviews 23 Advertisements Annual Reviews 3 IEEE

    Sonic and Photonic Crystals

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    Sonic/phononic crystals termed acoustic/sonic band gap media are elastic analogues of photonic crystals and have also recently received renewed attention in many acoustic applications. Photonic crystals have a periodic dielectric modulation with a spatial scale on the order of the optical wavelength. The design and optimization of photonic crystals can be utilized in many applications by combining factors related to the combinations of intermixing materials, lattice symmetry, lattice constant, filling factor, shape of the scattering object, and thickness of a structural layer. Through the publications and discussions of the research on sonic/phononic crystals, researchers can obtain effective and valuable results and improve their future development in related fields. Devices based on these crystals can be utilized in mechanical and physical applications and can also be designed for novel applications as based on the investigations in this Special Issue

    RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications

    Get PDF
    While mobile phones enjoy the largest production volume ever of any consumer electronics products, the demands they place on radio-frequency (RF) transceivers are particularly aggressive, especially on integration with digital processors, low area, low power consumption, while being robust against process-voltage-temperature variations. Since mobile terminals inherently operate on batteries, their power budget is severely constrained. To keep up with the ever increasing data-rate, an ever-decreasing power per bit is required to maintain the battery lifetime. The RF oscillator is the second most power-hungry block of a wireless radio (after power amplifiers). Consequently, any power reduction in an RF oscillator will greatly benefit the overall power efficiency of the cellular transceiver. Moreover, the RF oscillators' purity limits the transceiver performance. The oscillator's phase noise results in power leakage into adjacent channels in a transmit mode and reciprocal mixing in a receive mode. On the other hand, the multi-standard and multi-band transceivers that are now trending demand wide tuning range oscillators. However, broadening the oscillator’s tuning range is usually at the expense of die area (cost) or phase noise. The main goal of this book is to bring forth the exciting and innovative RF oscillator structures that demonstrate better phase noise performance, lower cost, and higher power efficiency than currently achievable. Technical topics discussed in RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications include: Design and analysis of low phase-noise class-F oscillators Analyze a technique to reduce 1/f noise up-conversion in the oscillators Design and analysis of low power/low voltage oscillators Wide tuning range oscillators Reliability study of RF oscillators in nanoscale CMO
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