scholarly journals A CMOS Quadrature Signal Generator for Impedance Spectroscopy Measurement Systems

Author(s):  
Alejandro Márquez Marzal ◽  
Nicolás Medrano Marqués ◽  
Belén Calvo López ◽  
Pedro A. Martínez Martínez

A CMOS fully integrated quadrature signal generator for on-chip impedance spectroscopy (IS) applications is presented. Frequency can be digitally tuned from 5 to 350 kHz with 12-bit resolution. Power consumption is 0.77 mW and active area is 0.129 mm2. Its suitability for the target application is validated with a Randles test impedance cell modelling a protein.

Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 563
Author(s):  
Jorge Pérez-Bailón ◽  
Belén Calvo ◽  
Nicolás Medrano

This paper presents a new approach based on the use of a Current Steering (CS) technique for the design of fully integrated Gm–C Low Pass Filters (LPF) with sub-Hz to kHz tunable cut-off frequencies and an enhanced power-area-dynamic range trade-off. The proposed approach has been experimentally validated by two different first-order single-ended LPFs designed in a 0.18 µm CMOS technology powered by a 1.0 V single supply: a folded-OTA based LPF and a mirrored-OTA based LPF. The first one exhibits a constant power consumption of 180 nW at 100 nA bias current with an active area of 0.00135 mm2 and a tunable cutoff frequency that spans over 4 orders of magnitude (~100 mHz–152 Hz @ CL = 50 pF) preserving dynamic figures greater than 78 dB. The second one exhibits a power consumption of 1.75 µW at 500 nA with an active area of 0.0137 mm2 and a tunable cutoff frequency that spans over 5 orders of magnitude (~80 mHz–~1.2 kHz @ CL = 50 pF) preserving a dynamic range greater than 73 dB. Compared with previously reported filters, this proposal is a competitive solution while satisfying the low-voltage low-power on-chip constraints, becoming a preferable choice for general-purpose reconfigurable front-end sensor interfaces.


2016 ◽  
Vol 168 ◽  
pp. 1655-1658 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Pérez-Bailón ◽  
A. Márquez ◽  
B. Calvo ◽  
N. Medrano ◽  
P.A. Martínez ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 1382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Márquez ◽  
Jorge Pérez-Bailón ◽  
Belén Calvo ◽  
Nicolás Medrano ◽  
Pedro Martínez

Author(s):  
A. Ferrerón Labari ◽  
D. Suárez Gracia ◽  
V. Viñals Yúfera

In the last years, embedded systems have evolved so that they offer capabilities we could only find before in high performance systems. Portable devices already have multiprocessors on-chip (such as PowerPC 476FP or ARM Cortex A9 MP), usually multi-threaded, and a powerful multi-level cache memory hierarchy on-chip. As most of these systems are battery-powered, the power consumption becomes a critical issue. Achieving high performance and low power consumption is a high complexity challenge where some proposals have been already made. Suarez et al. proposed a new cache hierarchy on-chip, the LP-NUCA (Low Power NUCA), which is able to reduce the access latency taking advantage of NUCA (Non-Uniform Cache Architectures) properties. The key points are decoupling the functionality, and utilizing three specialized networks on-chip. This structure has been proved to be efficient for data hierarchies, achieving a good performance and reducing the energy consumption. On the other hand, instruction caches have different requirements and characteristics than data caches, contradicting the low-power embedded systems requirements, especially in SMT (simultaneous multi-threading) environments. We want to study the benefits of utilizing small tiled caches for the instruction hierarchy, so we propose a new design, ID-LP-NUCAs. Thus, we need to re-evaluate completely our previous design in terms of structure design, interconnection networks (including topologies, flow control and routing), content management (with special interest in hardware/software content allocation policies), and structure sharing. In CMP environments (chip multiprocessors) with parallel workloads, coherence plays an important role, and must be taken into consideration.


Author(s):  
Jorge Pérez Bailón ◽  
Jaime Ramírez-Angulo ◽  
Belén Calvo ◽  
Nicolás Medrano

This paper presents a Variable Gain Amplifier (VGA) designed in a 0.18 μm CMOS process to operate in an impedance sensing interface. Based on a transconductance-transimpedance (TC-TI) approach with intermediate analog-controlled current steering, it exhibits a gain ranging from 5 dB to 38 dB with a constant bandwidth around 318 kHz, a power consumption of 15.5 μW at a 1.8 V supply and an active area of 0.021 mm2.


Nanophotonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 937-945
Author(s):  
Ruihuan Zhang ◽  
Yu He ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Shaohua An ◽  
Qingming Zhu ◽  
...  

AbstractUltracompact and low-power-consumption optical switches are desired for high-performance telecommunication networks and data centers. Here, we demonstrate an on-chip power-efficient 2 × 2 thermo-optic switch unit by using a suspended photonic crystal nanobeam structure. A submilliwatt switching power of 0.15 mW is obtained with a tuning efficiency of 7.71 nm/mW in a compact footprint of 60 μm × 16 μm. The bandwidth of the switch is properly designed for a four-level pulse amplitude modulation signal with a 124 Gb/s raw data rate. To the best of our knowledge, the proposed switch is the most power-efficient resonator-based thermo-optic switch unit with the highest tuning efficiency and data ever reported.


Author(s):  
Fabio Aquilino ◽  
Francesco G. Della Corte ◽  
Letizia Fragomeni ◽  
Massimo Merenda ◽  
Fabio Zito

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