13,191 research outputs found

    Near-Zero-Power Temperature Sensing via Tunneling Currents Through Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Transistors.

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    Temperature sensors are routinely found in devices used to monitor the environment, the human body, industrial equipment, and beyond. In many such applications, the energy available from batteries or the power available from energy harvesters is extremely limited due to limited available volume, and thus the power consumption of sensing should be minimized in order to maximize operational lifetime. Here we present a new method to transduce and digitize temperature at very low power levels. Specifically, two pA current references are generated via small tunneling-current metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) that are independent and proportional to temperature, respectively, which are then used to charge digitally-controllable banks of metal-insulator-metal (MIM) capacitors that, via a discrete-time feedback loop that equalizes charging time, digitize temperature directly. The proposed temperature sensor was integrated into a silicon microchip and occupied 0.15 mm2 of area. Four tested microchips were measured to consume only 113 pW with a resolution of 0.21 °C and an inaccuracy of ±1.65 °C, which represents a 628× reduction in power compared to prior-art without a significant reduction in performance

    An Ultra-Low-Power Oscillator with Temperature and Process Compensation for UHF RFID Transponder

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    This paper presents a 1.28MHz ultra-low-power oscillator with temperature and process compensation. It is very suitable for clock generation circuits used in ultra-high-frequency (UHF) radio-frequency identification (RFID) transponders. Detailed analysis of the oscillator design, including process and temperature compensation techniques are discussed. The circuit is designed using TSMC 0.18ÎŒm standard CMOS process and simulated with Spectre. Simulation results show that, without post-fabrication calibration or off-chip components, less than ±3% frequency variation is obtained from –40 to 85°C in three different process corners. Monte Carlo simulations have also been performed, and demonstrate a 3σ deviation of about 6%. The power for the proposed circuitry is only 1.18”W at 27°C

    Ultra-Low-Power Wake-up Clock Design for SoC Applications

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    This thesis studies how to design an ultra-low-power wake-up clock circuit for SoCapplications that essentially consists of a resistor based reference circuit, switched-capacitor branch, an ultra-low-power amplifier, a VCO and a non-overlapping clockphase generator circuit. The circuit is designed in 180-nm CMOS technology usingCAD software for circuit design, layout design, pre and post-layout simulations.At first, a brief study of different clock-generation circuit architectures is made,wherein their merits and de-merits are discussed. This is followed by a study ofan ultra-low-power amplifier, ring-oscillator-based VCO, non-overlapping clockcircuits, the bias generation circuit and the current reference circuit. Additionally,a reference current chopping technique that further improves temperature stabilityis also described. Later, the report discusses the design and simulations of theactual implementation. Analysis of the design with regards to power consumption,temperature stability and layout area are carried out. The circuit operates at8.254kHz consuming 70.4nW with a temperature stability of 7.35ppm/◩C in thetemperature range of -40◩C to 75◩C. The final layout takes an area of 0.153mm2.The final design is analysed for its functionality at various process, voltage andtemperature corners. Future improvements in the current design are also discussedat the end of this report

    Ultra Low Power Circuits for Internet of Things and Deep Learning Accelerator Design with In-Memory Computing

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    Collecting data from environment and converting gathered data into information is the key idea of Internet of Things (IoT). Miniaturized sensing devices enable the idea for many applications including health monitoring, industrial sensing, and so on. Sensing devices typically have small form factor and thus, low battery capacity, but at the same time, require long life time for continuous monitoring and least frequent battery replacement. This thesis introduces three analog circuit design techniques featuring ultra-low power consumption for such requirements: (1) An ultra-low power resistor-less current reference circuit, (2) A 110nW resistive frequency locked on-chip oscillator as a timing reference, (3) A resonant current-mode wireless power receiver and battery charger for implantable systems. Raw data can be efficiently transformed into useful information using deep learning. However deep learning requires tremendous amount of computation by its nature, and thus, an energy efficient deep learning hardware is highly demanded to fully utilize this algorithm in various applications. This thesis also presents a pulse-width based computation concept which utilizes in-memory computing of SRAM.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144173/1/myungjun_1.pd

    Nanosecond channel-switching exact optical frequency synthesizer using an optical injection phase-locked loop (OIPLL)

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    Experimental results are reported on an optical frequency synthesizer for use in dynamic dense wavelength-division-multiplexing networks, based on a tuneable laser in an optical injection phase-locked loop for rapid wavelength locking. The source combines high stability (50 dB), narrow linewidth (10 MHz), and fast wavelength switching (<10 ns)
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