6 research outputs found
Organic fluid mixtures as working fluids for the trilateral flash cycle system
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:DX88213 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Survey of robustness enhancement techniques for wireless systems-on-a-chip and study of temperature as observable for process variations
Built-in test and on-chip calibration features are becoming essential for reliable wireless connectivity of next generation devices suffering from increasing process
variations in CMOS technologies. This paper contains an overview of contemporary self-test and performance enhancement
strategies for single-chip transceivers. In general, a trend has emerged to combine several techniques involving process variability monitoring, digital calibration,
and tuning of analog circuits. Special attention is directed towards the investigation of temperature as an observable
for process variations, given that thermal coupling through the silicon substrate has recently been demonstrated as mechanism to monitor the performances of analog circuits.
Both Monte Carlo simulations and experimental results are presented in this paper to show that circuit-level specifications exhibit correlations with silicon surface temperature changes. Since temperature changes can be measured with
efficient on-chip differential temperature sensors, a conceptual outline is given for the use of temperature sensors as
alternative process variation monitors.Peer Reviewe
A Heterodyne method for the thermal observation of the electrical behavior of high-frequency integrated circuits
The observation of spectral components of the power dissipated by devices and circuits in integrated circuits (IC) by temperature measurements is limited by the bandwidth of either the temperature transducer or the intrinsic cut-off frequency provided by the thermal coupling inside the chip. In this paper, we use a heterodyne method to observe the high-frequency behavior of circuits and devices by means of low-frequency lock-in temperature measurements. As experimental results, two applications of the technique are presented: detection of hot spots in ICs activated by high-frequency electrical signals and the observation of the frequency response of an integrated resistor through temperature measurements. The heterodyne method has been used in this paper with four different measurement techniques: embedded differential BiCMOS temperature sensor, laser reflectometer, laser interferometer and internal IR laser deflection meter
Strategies for built-in characterization testing and performance monitoring of analog RF circuits with temperature measurements
This paper presents two approaches to characterize RF circuits with built-in differential temperature measurements, namely the homodyne and heterodyne methods. Both non-invasive methods are analyzed theoretically and discussed with regard to the respective trade-offs associated with practical off-chip methodologies as well as on-chip measurement scenarios. Strategies are defined to extract the center frequency and 1 dB compression point of a narrow-band LNA operating around 1 GHz. The proposed techniques are experimentally demonstrated using a compact and efficient on-chip temperature sensor for built-in test purposes that has a power consumption of 15 μW and a layout area of 0.005 mm2 in a 0.25 μm CMOS technology. Validating results from off-chip interferometer-based temperature measurements and conventional electrical characterization results are compared with the on-chip measurements, showing the capability of the techniques to estimate the center frequency and 1 dB compression point of the LNA with errors of approximately 6%
and 0.5 dB, respectively
A Heterodyne method for the thermal observation of the electrical behavior of high-frequency integrated circuits
The observation of spectral components of the power dissipated by devices and circuits in integrated circuits (IC) by temperature measurements is limited by the bandwidth of either the temperature transducer or the intrinsic cut-off frequency provided by the thermal coupling inside the chip. In this paper, we use a heterodyne method to observe the high-frequency behavior of circuits and devices by means of low-frequency lock-in temperature measurements. As experimental results, two applications of the technique are presented: detection of hot spots in ICs activated by high-frequency electrical signals and the observation of the frequency response of an integrated resistor through temperature measurements. The heterodyne method has been used in this paper with four different measurement techniques: embedded differential BiCMOS temperature sensor, laser reflectometer, laser interferometer and internal IR laser deflection meter
Strategies for built-in characterization testing and performance monitoring of analog RF circuits with temperature measurements
This paper presents two approaches to characterize RF circuits with built-in differential temperature measurements, namely the homodyne and heterodyne methods. Both non-invasive methods are analyzed theoretically and discussed with regard to the respective trade-offs associated with practical off-chip methodologies as well as on-chip measurement scenarios. Strategies are defined to extract the center frequency and 1 dB compression point of a narrow-band LNA operating around 1 GHz. The proposed techniques are experimentally demonstrated using a compact and efficient on-chip temperature sensor for built-in test purposes that has a power consumption of 15 μW and a layout area of 0.005 mm2 in a 0.25 μm CMOS technology. Validating results from off-chip interferometer-based temperature measurements and conventional electrical characterization results are compared with the on-chip measurements, showing the capability of the techniques to estimate the center frequency and 1 dB compression point of the LNA with errors of approximately 6% and 0.5 dB, respectively