scholarly journals Design Techniques for Low-Power and Low-Voltage Bandgaps

Electricity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-284
Author(s):  
Edoardo Barteselli ◽  
Luca Sant ◽  
Richard Gaggl ◽  
Andrea Baschirotto

Reverse bandgaps generate PVT-independent reference voltages by means of the sums of pairs of currents over individual matched resistors: one (CTAT) current is proportional to VEB; the other one (PTAT) is proportional to VT (Thermal voltage). Design guidelines and techniques for a CMOS low-power reverse bandgap reference are presented and discussed in this paper. The paper explains firstly how to design the components of the bandgap branches to minimize circuit current. Secondly, error amplifier topologies are studied in order to reveal the best one, depending on the operation conditions. Finally, a low-voltage bandgap in 65 nm CMOS with 5 ppm/°C, with a DC PSR of −91 dB, with power consumption of 5.2 μW and with an area of 0.0352 mm2 developed with these techniques is presented.

Author(s):  
Somesh Rajain ◽  
Chetan Shingala ◽  
Ekata Mehul

The large emission of Carbon dioxide (CO2) is not only affecting our ecology but also affecting human life. In schools, offices, factory and crowded railway/bus stations i.e crowded places with insufficient ventilations CO2 affects human life most. In a closed environment like school, If CO2 level starts raising above 700 parts per million (ppm) people will feel objectionable body odors and as it increase further people will feel very uncomfortable, dizzy and have headache etc. Our goal is to reduce CO2 emission and lower global warming. In Semiconductor Industry as the digital technology grows, the functionality of our electronics devices (For example: - Mobile phone, PC’s, home appliances etc) is constantly improves and mean while the demand for electronic devices to be more environment friendly is increasing. So we have to design systems with Low power consumption to curtail down green house gas emission as well as low power design are also a requirement of today’s market. The usage of mobile device in all kinds of applications is increasing day by day. These applications and corresponding devices also have their power requirements. The demand for mobile consumer device has made the power management the number one consideration in today‘s system design. To increase battery life, system chip designer needs to adopt an aggressive power management technique which includes multi voltage Design Island, power gating, dynamic voltage, frequency scaling, clock gating etc in the system. Adding all these greatly complicates the verification for the chip. Normally the designer neglects the implementation of power saving techniques due to the tradeoff between power reduction and verification costs. The costs become more important in terms of business, which leads to more power consumption. Those details can still be implemented provided we use right kind of tools & techniques that are also combined with design experience. In this chapter the focus is to firstly describe low power design techniques, its verification challenges and its solutions followed by the case study. It also guides for the selection of programmable device & RTL Core design criteria. To make green electronics devices we have to design system with low power design techniques.


Author(s):  
Ming-Cheng Liu ◽  
Paul C.-P. Chao ◽  
Soh Sze Khiong

In this paper a low power all-digital clock and data recovery (ADCDR) with 1Mhz frequency has been proposed. The proposed circuit is designed for optical receiver circuit on the battery-less photovoltaic IoT (Internet of Things) tags. The conventional RF receiver has been replaced by the visible light optical receiver for battery-less IoT tags. With this proposed ADCDR a low voltage, low power consumption & tiny IoT tags can be fabricated. The proposed circuit achieve the maximum bandwidth of 1MHz, which is compatible with the commercial available LED and light sensor. The proposed circuit has been fabricated in TSMC 0.18um 1P6M standard CMOS process. Experimental results show that the power consumption of the optical receiver is approximately 5.58uW with a supply voltage of 1V and the data rate achieves 1Mbit/s. The lock time of the ADCDR is 0.893ms with 3.31ns RMS jitter period.


Author(s):  
G. Biancuzzi ◽  
T. Lemke ◽  
F. Goldschmidtboeing ◽  
O. Ruthmann ◽  
H.-J. Schrag ◽  
...  

The German Artificial Sphincter System (GASS) project aims at the development of an implantable sphincter prosthesis driven by a micropump. During the last few years the feasibility of the concept has been proven. At present our team’s effort is focused on the compliance to safety regulations and on a very low power consumption of the system as a whole. Therefore a low-voltage multilayer piezoactuator has been developed to reduce the driving voltage of the micropump from approximately 300 Vpp to 40 Vpp. Doing so, the driving voltage is within the limits set by the regulations for active implants. The operation of the micropump at lower voltages, achieved using multilayer piezoactuators, has already resulted in a much better power efficiency. Nevertheless, in order to further reduce power consumption, we have also developed an innovative driving technique that we are going to describe and compare to other driving systems. A direct switching circuit has been developed where the buffer capacitor of the step-up converter has been replaced by the equivalent capacitance of the actuator itself. This avoids the switching of the buffer capacitor to the actuator, which would result in a very low efficiency. Usually, a piezoactuator needs a bipolar voltage drive to achieve maximum displacement. In our concept, the voltage inversion across the actuator is done using an h-bridge circuit, allowing the employment of one step-up converter only. The charge stored in the actuator is then partially recovered by means of a step-down converter which stores back the energy at the battery voltage level. The power consumption measurements of our concept are compared to a conventional driving output stage and also with inductive charge recovery circuits. In particular, the main advantage, compared to the latter systems, consists in the small inductors needed for the power converter. Other charge recovery techniques require very big inductors in order to have a significant power reduction with the capacitive loads we use in our application. With our design we will be able to achieve approximately 55% reduction in power consumption compared to the simplest conventional driver and 15% reduction compared to a charge recovery driver.


Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 1429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Fa Lin ◽  
Cheng-Yu Chan ◽  
Shao-Wei Yu

In this paper, a novel latch-adder based multiplier design, targeting low voltage and low power IoT applications is presented. It employs a semi-dynamic (dynamic circuit with static keeper circuit) full adder design which efficiently incorporates the level sensitive latch circuit with the adder cell. Latch circuit control signals are generated by a chain of delay cell circuits. They are applied to each row of the adder array. This row-wise alignment ensures an orderly procedure, while successfully removing spurious switching resulting in reduced power consumption. Due to the delay cell circuit of our design is also realized by using full adder. Therefore, it is unnecessary to adjust the transistor sizes of the delay cell circuit deliberately. Post-layout simulation results on 8 × 8 multiplier design show that the proposed design has the lowest power consumption of all design candidates. The total power consumption saving compared to conventional array multiplier designs is up to 38.6%. The test chip measurement shows successful operations of our design down to 0.41 V with a power consumption of only 427 nW with a maximum frequency 500 KHz.


1999 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Kubota ◽  
H. Washio ◽  
K. Maeda ◽  
M. Hijikigawa ◽  
S. Yamazaki

2013 ◽  
Vol 596 ◽  
pp. 195-198
Author(s):  
Nobukazu Takai ◽  
Ken Murakami ◽  
Haruo Kobayashi

In this paper, a high frequency ring oscillator with low power consumption is proposed.The proposed ring oscillator is based on GRO by applying boot strap technique. Simulation resultsindicate that the FoM(Power Consumption/Oscillation Frequency) of the proposed ring oscillator isless than that of the conventional ring oscillator.


In this paper, different type of level shifter circuits, that can able to convert the sub-threshold level to superthreshold level signals are discussed. To develop the ultra- low static power consumption circuit designs such a way to switch on the transistor for a low voltage levels. To enhance the switching speed and minimize the dynamic power consumption, by incorporating the CMOS –inverter buffer circuit at the output side to improve the energy efficiently. These energy harvesting design techniques provides endless energy supply to electronic systems that are remotely located areas. More number of devices are controlled by IoT (Internet of Things) to perform the operation by remote sensing.


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