The impact of signal regeneration on the DWDM system's power efficiency using 10 Gbps NRZ-OOK

Author(s):  
Deniss Pavlovs ◽  
Vjaceslavs Bobrovs ◽  
Girts Ivanovs ◽  
Peteris Gavars
Proceedings ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 13
Author(s):  
Yixuan Sun ◽  
Stephen Beeby

This paper presents the COMSOL simulations of magnetically coupled resonant wireless power transfer (WPT), using simplified coil models for embroidered planar two-coil and four-coil systems. The power transmission of both systems is studied and compared by varying the separation, rotation angle and misalignment distance at resonance (5 MHz). The frequency splitting occurs at short separations from both the two-coil and four-coil systems, resulting in lower power transmission. Therefore, the systems are driven from 4 MHz to 6 MHz to analyze the impact of frequency splitting at close separations. The results show that both systems had a peak efficiency over 90% after tuning to the proper frequency to overcome the frequency splitting phenomenon at close separations below 10 cm. The four-coil design achieved higher power efficiency at separations over 10 cm. The power efficiency of both systems decreased linearly when the axial misalignment was over 4 cm or the misalignment angle between receiver and transmitter was over 45 degrees.


2019 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayashree Ratnam ◽  
Sabita Mali

AbstractThe paper investigates the impact of Rayleigh-distributed statistical behavior of peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) associated with a pre-clipped signal on the performance metrics of a direct current-biased optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (DCO-OFDM) system. The analytical model for the system takes into consideration a pre-clipped and dc-shifted baseband OFDM signal, driving an optical source over its linear operating range. The model employs a bias-scaling factor, which is heuristically varied over the entire range (0 to 1) to examine improvement in overall power efficiency. Further, it utilizes the cumulative distribution function (CDF) of the pre-clipped signal to get a weighted estimate of the available signal power within the clipped PAPR. The model also takes into consideration the clipping noise effects due to limited linearity of the optical source during electrical-to-optical conversion of baseband OFDM signal. Using this model, the paper aims to arrive at a realistic estimate of the system behavior in terms of bit error rate, electrical power-efficiency and spectral efficiency. Using theoretical simulation results, for a given set of operating parameters viz., signal power, PAPR, bias-scaling factor, modulation order and sub-carrier count, the paper examines the trade-offs involved in optimizing the performance metrics over appropriate dynamic range of the DCO-OFDM transmitter.


Author(s):  
Amin Abedini ◽  
Saeed Onsorynezhad ◽  
Fengxia Wang

Frequency up-conversion is an effective way to increase the output power from a piezoelectric beam, which converts the ambient low-frequency vibration to the resonant vibration of the piezoelectric energy harvesters (PEH) to achieve high electric power output. Frequency up-conversion technologies are realized via impact or non-impact magnetic force to mediate the interaction between the driving beam and the generating beam. Most studies focus on the either linear model prediction or experimental verification of the linear analysis. Few, if any, study the effects of the impact induced nonlinear phenomena on power generation efficiency. In this work, we investigate how to use discontinuous theory to improve the power efficiency of the frequency up-conversion process caused by impacts. The energy harvesting performance of a piezoelectric beam in interaction with a softer beam in periodic motion is studied. The discontinuous dynamical system theory is applied to this problem to study the piezoelectric behavior under periodic motions and its bifurcations. The beams are modeled with two spring-mass-damper systems, and the analytical model of the piezoelectric beam is created based on the linear mechanical-electrical constitutive law of the piezoelectric material, and the linear elastic constitutive law of the substrate. Based on the theoretical model, the analytical solution of the output power is derived in terms of the vibration amplitude, frequency, and the electrical load. The soft beam is subjected to a sinusoidal base excitation, and the impacts of the more flexible beam excite the piezoelectric beam. The performance of the energy harvesting of period one and period two motions have been studied and bifurcation trees for impact velocities, times, displacements and harvested power versus the frequency of the base excitation are obtained.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 1930029 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amin Abedini ◽  
Saeed Onsorynezhad ◽  
Fengxia Wang

Frequency up-conversion has been proved to be an effective approach to increase the output power of a piezoelectric energy harvester (PEH). The proposed system can convert low-frequency vibration from ambient sources to the resonant vibration of the PEH hence can improve the output power efficiency. Frequency up-conversion technologies are introduced via impact or nonimpact magnetic forces to initiate the repeated free oscillations of the piezoelectric generator. No matter impact- or nonimpact-driven PEHs, most studies focus on either finite element simulation or experimental demonstration of PEHs electric power generations. Few, if any, study the effects of the impact-induced discontinuous dynamics on power generation efficiency. In this work, the energy harvesting performance of a piezoelectric beam upon interaction with a softer driving beam was studied. The discontinuous dynamics behind this impact-driven PEH was investigated, and strategies exploited to further improve the power efficiency of the frequency up-conversion process. Based on the linear elastic and linear mechanical-electrical constitutive laws, the lumped parameter models were built for both the driving beam and the piezoelectric driven beam. The numerical solution of the output power is obtained based on the vibration amplitude, frequency, and the electrical load. The soft beam is subjected to a sinusoidal base excitation, and the piezoelectric beam was excited via impacting with the soft driving beam. Based on the discontinuous dynamics theory, the performance of the energy harvesting of the impact-driven system was studied for period-1 and period-2 motions. Based on the stability and bifurcation analysis of periodic solutions, bifurcation diagrams of impact velocities, times, displacements and harvested power versus the frequency of the base excitation were also obtained, and compared to the power generation of a piezoelectric beam with base excitation.


2022 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaeun Lee ◽  
Kyungmi Noh ◽  
Wonjae Ji ◽  
Tayfun Gokmen ◽  
Seyoung Kim

Recent progress in novel non-volatile memory-based synaptic device technologies and their feasibility for matrix-vector multiplication (MVM) has ignited active research on implementing analog neural network training accelerators with resistive crosspoint arrays. While significant performance boost as well as area- and power-efficiency is theoretically predicted, the realization of such analog accelerators is largely limited by non-ideal switching characteristics of crosspoint elements. One of the most performance-limiting non-idealities is the conductance update asymmetry which is known to distort the actual weight change values away from the calculation by error back-propagation and, therefore, significantly deteriorates the neural network training performance. To address this issue by an algorithmic remedy, Tiki-Taka algorithm was proposed and shown to be effective for neural network training with asymmetric devices. However, a systematic analysis to reveal the required asymmetry specification to guarantee the neural network performance has been unexplored. Here, we quantitatively analyze the impact of update asymmetry on the neural network training performance when trained with Tiki-Taka algorithm by exploring the space of asymmetry and hyper-parameters and measuring the classification accuracy. We discover that the update asymmetry level of the auxiliary array affects the way the optimizer takes the importance of previous gradients, whereas that of main array affects the frequency of accepting those gradients. We propose a novel calibration method to find the optimal operating point in terms of device and network parameters. By searching over the hyper-parameter space of Tiki-Taka algorithm using interpolation and Gaussian filtering, we find the optimal hyper-parameters efficiently and reveal the optimal range of asymmetry, namely the asymmetry specification. Finally, we show that the analysis and calibration method be applicable to spiking neural networks.


Author(s):  
Juan David Diazgranados-Garzón ◽  
Juan Camilo Romero-Bravo ◽  
Loraine Isabel Navarro-Estrada ◽  
Rafael De Jesús Castillo-Sierra ◽  
Jose Daniel Soto-Ortiz ◽  
...  

This paper summarizes the impact of particulate material on solar-panel performance for systems located in the Colombian Caribbean Region. First, the dirt/particles are identified and classified; and then, their effect in the reduction of solar panel efficiency has been estimated at most of 6% during the times of the day with the maximum solar radiation. It has been found that the impact decreases exponentially for other hours during the day, which implies that dirt effect becomes negligible on the electric power available. The study reveals that the effect of dirt/particles is significant from a clean solar panel to one with light accumulation, but rapidly diminishes as accumulation changes from light to heavy. Thus, it is suggested that once some dirt accumulates on the panel, a cleaning procedure can wait until the particle accumulation is heavy without sacrificing efficiency excessively. The results of the study become a tool to estimate the trade-offs between power efficiency of photovoltaic systems and financial viability of those projects. Hence, inverters can be chosen such that they can limit the amount of electric power while minimizing the stochastic nature of solar radiation and the dirt/particle effect. The analysis presented starts through a complete Multivariate Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) considering three fundamental factors: dirt/particles, solar radiation and day.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry Kozyrev ◽  
Aleksandr Ometov ◽  
Dmitri Moltchanov ◽  
Vladimir Rykov ◽  
Dmitry Efrosinin ◽  
...  

Today, the number of interconnected Internet of Things (IoT) devices is growing tremendously followed by an increase in the density of cellular base stations. This trend has an adverse effect on the power efficiency of communication, since each new infrastructure node requires a significant amount of energy. Numerous enablers are already in place to offload the scarce cellular spectrum, thus allowing utilization of more energy-efficient short-range radio technologies for user content dissemination, such as moving relay stations and network-assisted direct connectivity. In this work, we contribute a new mathematical framework aimed at analyzing the impact of network offloading on the probabilistic characteristics related to the quality of service and thus helping relieve the energy burden on infrastructure network deployments.


Author(s):  
L. Mangani ◽  
E. Casartelli ◽  
G. Romanelli ◽  
Magnus Fischer ◽  
A. Gadda ◽  
...  

Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is a fundamental tool for the aerodynamic development in industrial applications. In the usual approach structural deformation due to aerodynamic and thermal loads is often neglected. However, in some cases, where power efficiency is the ultimate goal, an accurate prediction of the structure-flow interaction is essential. This is particularly true for trim and flutter analysis of aircrafts, helicopter and turbomachinery blades. Particularly, turbomachinery trim and flutter predictions still represent a challenge due to phenomena like rotor-stator interaction, separations and shock waves. The usual time-linearised, frequency-domain strategies can be inadequate when this kind of strong non-linear phenomena occur in the flow, making necessary full non-linear time-domain simulations or the harmonic balance technique. Beside flutter, another important aspect, not yet adequately investigated, is the trim analysis, which is fundamental for an accurate steady simulation that aims to consider static blade elasticity for the performance evaluation of turbomachines. Moreover, alongside the obvious contribution given by centrifugal loads to the blade deformation, a not less important source of blade displacement is the thermal effect due to the heat exchanged between the solid and the fluid domains. In particular, for some geometries and operating conditions, thermal effects can be more important than centrifugal effects for the blade deformations. Considering multiple sources of blade deformation (elastic, centrifugal and thermal) in a what is often called “multiphysics” approach is nowadays more and more important, if the goal of the analysis is geometry optimization. To achieve this, next to result’s accuracy also computational efficiency is required, when hundreds of aeroelastic simulations have to be performed in a typical optimization loop. Modern GPUs can be exploited to pursue this goal thanks to their high peak computational power available at relatively low costs and low power consumption with respect to the usual CPUs. In this paper a pioneer work describing the impact of static deformation due to blade elasticity, thermal and centrifugal effects on the performances and power efficiency will be provided. Alongside with accurate results, computational efficiency is taken into account. The purpose of this article is to show the architecture of a GPU-accelerated Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) solver for compressible viscous flows. The proposed approach is validated with a typical industrial case, i.e. a turbocharger transonic centrifugal-compressor provided by ABB. The effects of trimmed solutions on the most important integral quantities (i.e. mass flow, characteristic curves, mass-averaged outflow profiles) are investigated and a comparison with pure aerodynamic results is provided. Due to the high blade stiffness and thus the very small displacements obtained with the trim solutions, for the particular case presented in the paper the aeroelastic solutions basically provide nearly the same results as the pure aerodynamic solutions.


1996 ◽  
Vol 07 (02) ◽  
pp. 223-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
GARY YEAP ◽  
ANDREAS WILD

The paper is a survey of the current status of research and practices in various disciplines of low-power VLSI developments. After briefly discussing the rationale of the contemporary focus on low-power design, it presents the metrics and techniques used to assess the merits of the various solutions proposed for improved energy efficiency. The requirements to be fulfilled by process technologies and device structures are reviewed as well as several promising circuit design styles and ad hoc design techniques. The impact of the design automation tools is analyzed with a special emphasis on physical design and logic synthesis. A review of various architectural trade-offs, including power management, parallelism and pipelining, synchronous versus asynchronous architectures and dataflow transformations are covered, followed by a brief discussion of the impact of the system definition, software and algorithms to the overall power efficiency. Emerging semiconductor technologies and device structures are discussed and the paper is concluded with the trends and research topics for the future.


2009 ◽  
Vol 17 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 59-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Rico ◽  
Alex Ramirez ◽  
Mateo Valero

There is a clear industrial trend towards chip multiprocessors (CMP) as the most power efficient way of further increasing performance. Heterogeneous CMP architectures take one more step along this power efficiency trend by using multiple types of processors, tailored to the workloads they will execute. Programming these CMP architectures has been identified as one of the main challenges in the near future, and programming heterogeneous systems is even more challenging. High-level programming models which allow the programmer to identify parallel tasks, and the runtime management of the inter-task dependencies, have been identified as a suitable model for programming such heterogeneous CMP architectures. In this paper we analyze the performance of Cell Superscalar, a task-based programming model for the Cell Broadband Engine Architecture, in terms of its scalability to higher number of on-chip processors. Our results show that the low performance of the PPE component limits the scalability of some applications to less than 16 processors. Since the PPE has been identified as the limiting element, we perform a set of simulation studies evaluating the impact of out-of-order execution, branch prediction and larger caches on the task management overhead. We conclude that out-of-order execution is a very desirable feature, since it increases task management performance by 50%. We also identify memory latency as a fundamental aspect in performance, while the working set is not that large. We expect a significant performance impact if task management would run using a fast private memory to store the task dependency graph instead of relying on the cache hierarchy.


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