Browsing by Subject "transmitter"
Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item CMOS Integrated Circuit Design for Ultra-Wideband Transmitters and Receivers(2010-10-12) Xu, RuiUltra-wideband technology (UWB) has received tremendous attention since the FCC license release in 2002, which expedited the research and development of UWB technologies on consumer products. The applications of UWB range from ground penetrating radar, distance sensor, through wall radar to high speed, short distance communications. The CMOS integrated circuit is an attractive, low cost approach for implementing UWB technology. The improving cut-off frequency of the transistor in CMOS process makes the CMOS circuit capable of handling signal at multi-giga herz. However, some design challenges still remain to be solved. Unlike regular narrow band signal, the UWB signal is discrete pulse instead of continuous wave (CW), which results in the occupancy of wide frequency range. This demands that UWB front-end circuits deliver both time domain and frequency domain signal processing over broad bandwidth. Witnessing these technique challenges, this dissertation aims at designing novel, high performance components for UWB signal generation, down-conversion, as well as accurate timing control using low cost CMOS technology. We proposed, designed and fabricated a carrier based UWB transmitter to facilitate the discrete feature of the UWB signal. The transmitter employs novel twostage -switching to generate carrier based UWB signal. The structure not only minimizes the current consumption but also eliminates the use of a UWB power amplifier. The fabricated transmitter is capable of delivering tunable UWB signal over the complete 3.1GHz -10.6GHz UWB band. By applying the similar two-stage switching approach, we were able to implement a novel switched-LNA based UWB sampling receiver frontend. The proposed front-end has significantly lower power consumption compared to previously published design while keep relatively high gain and low noise at the same time. The designed sampling mixer shows unprecedented performance of 9-12dB voltage conversion gain, 16-25dB noise figure, and power consumption of only 21.6mW(with buffer) and 11.7mW(without buffer) across dc to 3.5GHz with 100M-Hz sampling frequency. The implementation of a precise delay generator is also presented in the dissertation. It relies on an external reference clock to provide accurate timing against process, supply voltage and temperature variation through a negative feedback loop. The delay generator prototype has been verified having digital programmability and tunable delay step resolution. The relative delay shift from desired value is limited to within 0.2%.Item Design and implementation of a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter(2009-05-15) Paul, SuganthPower Consumption in VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated) circuits is currently a major issue in the semiconductor industry. Power is a first order design constraint in many applications. Several of these applications need extreme low power but do not need high speed. Sub-threshold circuit design can be used in these cases, but at such a low supply voltage these circuits exhibit an exponential sensitivity to process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations. In this thesis we implement and test a robust sub-threshold design flow which uses circuit level PVT compensation to stabilize circuit performance. This is done by dynamic modulation of the delay of a representative signal in the circuit and then phase locking it with an external reference signal. We design and fabricate a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter chip. The transmitter is specified to transmit baseband signals up to a data rate of 32kbps over a distance of 1000m. In addition to the sub-threshold implementation, we implement the BFSK transmitter using a standard cell methodology on the same die operating at super-threshold voltages on a different voltage domain. Experiments using the fabricated die show that the sub-threshold circuit consumes 19.4x lower power than the traditional standard cell based implementation.Item Design of a Low Power 70MHz-110MHz Harmonic Rejection Filter with Class-AB Output Stage(2011-08-08) Huang, ShanAn FM transmitter becomes the new feature in recent portable electronic development. A low power, integrable FM transmitter filter IC is required to meet the demand of FM transmitting feature. A low pass filter using harmonic rejection technique along with a low power class-AB output buffer is designed to meet the current market requirements on the FM transmitter chip. A harmonic rejection filter is designed to filter FM square wave signal from 70MHz to 110MHz into FM sine wave signal. Based on Fourier series, the harmonic rejection technique adds the phase shifted square waves to achieve better THD and less high frequency harmonics. The phase shifting is realized through a frequency divider, and the summation is implemented through a current summation circuit. A RC low pass filter with automatic tuning is designed to further attenuate unwanted harmonics. In this work, the filter's post layout simulation shows -53dB THD and harmonics above 800MHz attenuation of -99dB. The power consumption of the filter is less than 0.7mW. Output buffer stage is implemented through a resistor degenerated transconductor and a class-AB amplifier. Feedforward frequency compensation is applied to compensate the output class-AB stage, which extends the amplifier's operating bandwidth. A fully balanced class-AB driver is proposed to unleash the driving capability of common source output transistors. The output buffer reaches -43dB THD at 110MHz with 0.63Vpp output swing and drives 1mW into 50 load. The power consumption of the output buffer is 7.25mW. By using harmonic rejection technique, this work realizes the 70MHz-110MHz FM carrier filtering using TSMC 0.18um nominal process. Above 800MHz harmonics are attenuated to below -95dB. With 1.2V supply, the total power consumption including output buffer is 7.95mW. The total die area is 0.946mm2.Item Energy Harvesting for Self-Powered Wireless Sensors(2012-02-14) Wardlaw, JasonA wireless sensor system is proposed for a targeted deployment in civil infrastructures (namely bridges) to help mitigate the growing problem of deterioration of civil infrastructures. The sensor motes are self-powered via a novel magnetic shape memory alloy (MSMA) energy harvesting material and a low-frequency, low-power rectifier multiplier (RM). Experimental characterizations of the MSMA device and the RM are presented. A study on practical implementation of a strain gauge sensor and its application in the proposed sensor system are undertaken and a low-power successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter (SAR ADC) is presented. The SAR ADC was fabricated and laboratory characterizations show the proposed low-voltage topology is a viable candidate for deployment in the proposed sensor system. Additionally, a wireless transmitter is proposed to transmit the SAR ADC output using on-off keying (OOK) modulation with an impulse radio ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) transmitter (TX). The RM and SAR ADC were fabricated in ON 0.5 micrometer CMOS process. An alternative transmitter architecture is also presented for use in the 3-10GHz UWB band. Unlike the IR-UWB TX described for the proposed wireless sensor system, the presented transmitter is designed to transfer large amounts of information with little concern for power consumption. This second method of data transmission divides the 3-10GHz spectrum into 528MHz sub-bands and "hops" between these sub-bands during data transmission. The data is sent over these multiple channels for short distances (?3-10m) at data rates over a few hundred million bits per second (Mbps). An UWB TX is presented for implementation in mode-I (3.1-4.6GHz) UWB which utilizes multi-band orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) to encode the information. The TX was designed and fabricated using UMC 0.13 micrometer CMOS technology. Measurement results and theoretical system level budgeting are presented for the proposed UWB TX.