Design and CMOS Implementation of a Low Power System-on-Chip Integrated Circuit

2011 ◽  
Vol 121-126 ◽  
pp. 755-759
Author(s):  
Hao Lin Gu ◽  
Wei Wei Shan ◽  
Yun Fan Yu ◽  
Yin Chao Lu

A low power 32-bit microcontroller using different kinds of low-power techniques to adapt to the dynamically changing performance demands and power consumption constraints of battery powered applications is designed and tested. Four power domains and six power modes are designed to fulfill low-power targets and meet different functional requirements. Varieties of low power methods such as dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), multiple supply voltages (MSV), power gating (PG) and so on are applied. A novel zero steady-state current POR circuit which makes excellent performance in the chip’s OFF mode is also integrated. The SoC occupies 20 mm2 in a 0.18 um, 1.8 V nominal-supply, CMOS process. Test results show that the microcontroller works normally at the frequency of 70MHz and performs well in different power modes. Yet it only consumes 1.67μA leakage current in the OFF mode.

2014 ◽  
Vol 513-517 ◽  
pp. 3844-3849
Author(s):  
Hai Peng Zhang ◽  
Shao Dan Yang ◽  
Ya Dong Yin ◽  
De Jun Wang

An implementation method of a power supply on-chip (PSOC) was presented for low power digital integrated circuit (IC) applications in this paper. The PSOC consists of a main power supply and a backup low power dissipation power supply, which is featured of micro-standby power consumption and fast switching. The PSOC was designed according to the design rules of SMIC 0.18μm CMOS process and validated both through simulation and silicon verification. The active area is about 0.035mm2 in fact. Post-layout simulation results indicate that output voltage of the PSOC is regulable in the range of 1.52~2.5V as input voltage is in the range of 2.0~3.6V, in which output of the main power supply is regulable in the range of 1.75~ 1.84V. The maximum quiescent current of main power supply is 16.23μA, while the maximum quiescent current of standby power is only 0.552μA. Experimental results indicate that the PSOC is capable of providing energy for the system digital IC implementation. Its power switching time is less than 148μs at the load capacitance of CL =56nF.


Author(s):  
Miloš Krstic ◽  
Xin Fan ◽  
Eckhard Grass ◽  
Luca Benini ◽  
M. R. Kakoee ◽  
...  

In this paper the authors present the concept and evaluation results of a complex GALS ASIC demonstrator in 40 nm CMOS process. This chip, named Moonrake, compares synchronous and GALS synchronization technology in a homogeneous experimental setting: same baseline designs, same manufacturing process, same die. The chip validates GALS technology for both point-to-point and network-centric on-chip communications, demonstrating its potentials for different applications. The design analysis, measurement and test results confirm the potential of GALS approach for the scaled technologies, showing the significant benefits in respect to area, power, and EMI when it comes to the complex system implementation. Furthermore, 91% of the tests performed on the GALS network-on-chip test structures completed successfully, validating the timing robustness of new area and latency-efficient synchronization schemes and proving that the design flow for GALS synchronization technology can be implemented by means of mainstream industrial tools.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 1042
Author(s):  
Peiqing Han ◽  
Zhaofeng Zhang ◽  
Yajun Xia ◽  
Niansong Mei

A low-power dual-mode receiver is presented for ultra-high-frequency (UHF) radio frequency identification (RFID) systems. The reconfigurable architecture of the tag is proposed to be compatible with low-power and high-sensitivity operating modes. The read range of RFID system and the lifetime of the tag are increased by photovoltaic, thermoelectric and RF energy-harvesting topology. The receiver is implemented in a 0.18-μm standard CMOS process and occupies an active area of 0.65 mm × 0.7 mm. For low-power mode, the tag is powered by the rectifier and the sensitivity is −18 dBm. For high-sensitivity mode, the maximum PCE of the fully on-chip energy harvester is 46.5% with over 1-μW output power and the sensitivity is −40 dBm with 880 nW power consumption under the supply voltage of 0.8 V.


2017 ◽  
Vol 02 (04) ◽  
pp. 1750005
Author(s):  
Oscar Alonso ◽  
Angel Diéguez ◽  
Sebastian Schostek ◽  
Marc O. Schurr

This paper addresses the circuit implementation challenges resulting from the integration of a therapeutic clip in a magnetically maneuverable wireless capsule intended for colonoscopy. To deal with the size constraints typical of a capsule endoscope, an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) has been designed specifically to habilitate the release of the therapeutic clip. The ASIC is a complete System on Chip (SoC) that incorporates a circuit for the low power release of the clip, thus overcoming the limitations of the power supply system. With a size of 14[Formula: see text]mm2, the ASIC can be incorporated in practically any capsule endoscope, consuming only an idle-state power of 1.5[Formula: see text]mW.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (09) ◽  
pp. 1340015 ◽  
Author(s):  
YAJING ZHANG ◽  
WENGAO LU ◽  
GUANNAN WANG ◽  
ZHONGJIAN CHEN ◽  
YACONG ZHANG

A readout integrated circuit (ROIC) of infrared focal plane array (IRFPA) with low power and low noise is presented in this paper. It consists of a 384 × 288 pixel array and column-level A/D conversion circuits. The proposed system has high resolution because of the odd–even Analog to Digital Conversion (ADC) structure, containing correlated switches design, multi-Vth amplifier design and high speed high resolution comparator design including latch-stage. Designed and simulated in 0.35-μm CMOS process, this high performance ROIC achieves 81.24 dB SNR at 8.64 KS/s consuming 98 mW under 5 V voltage supply, resulting in an ENOB of 13.2-bit.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khuram Shehzad ◽  
Deeksha Verma ◽  
Danial Khan ◽  
Qurat Ain ◽  
Muhammad Basim ◽  
...  

This paper presents an energy-efficient low power 10-b 8-MS/s asynchronous successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital (ADC) converter. An inverted common-mode charge recovery technique is proposed to reduce the switching energy and to improve the linearity of the digital-to-analog converter (DAC). The proposed switching technique consumes only 149 CVREF2 switching energy for the 10-bit case. A rail-to-rail dynamic latch comparator is implemented with adaptive power control for better power efficiency. Additionally, to optimize the power consumption and performance of the logic part, a modified asynchronous type SAR control logic with digitally controllable delay cells is adopted. An on-chip reference voltage generator is also designed with an ADC core for practical use. The structure is realized using 55-nm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) process technology. The proposed architecture achieves an effective number of bits (ENOB) of 9.56 bits and a signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) level of 59.3 dB with a sampling rate of 8 MS/s at measurement level. The whole architecture consumes only 572 µW power when a power supply of 1 V is applied.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (06) ◽  
pp. 2050085
Author(s):  
Ji Kwang Kim ◽  
Jung Hwan Oh ◽  
Gwan Beom Hwang ◽  
Oh Seong Gwon ◽  
Seung Eun Lee

In wearable devices, power consumption is a serious issue since wearable devices must maintain the power-on state at any time. In healthcare system, a variety of signal processing operations occupy a large portion of overall workload because it has periodic and heavy computational workloads. In this paper, we propose a low-power System on Chip (SoC) architecture for wearable healthcare devices. In order to reduce power consumption of processor, we design a hardware accelerator that handles signal processing and provides computation offloading. Furthermore, to minimize the area and maximize the performance of the accelerator, we optimize the operation bit-width by analyzing the frequency response. The low-power healthcare SoC was fabricated with 0.11[Formula: see text][Formula: see text]m CMOS process. Finally, we measured the power consumption of our chip and verified the applicability of the digital filter accelerator, which reduces the energy consumption for embedded processor.


Circuit World ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-41
Author(s):  
Deepak Balodi ◽  
Arunima Verma ◽  
Ananta Govindacharyulu Paravastu

Purpose The paper aims to present the novel design approach for a low power LC-voltage-controlled oscillators (VCO) design with low phase noise that too targeted at the most sought band of Bluetooth applications. Owing to their crucial role in a wide variety of modern applications, VCO and phase-locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizers have been the subject of extensive research in recent years. In fact, VCO is one of the key components being used in a modern PLL to provide local frequency signal since a few decades. The complicated synthesizer requirements imposed by cellular phone applications have been a key driver for PLL research. Design/methodology/approach This paper first opted to present the recent developments on implemented techniques of LC-VCO designs in popular RF bands. An LC-VCO with a differential (cross-coupled) MOS structure is then presented which has aimed to compensate the losses of an on-chip inductor implemented in UMC’s 130 nm RF-CMOS process. The LC-VCO is finally targeted to embed onto the synthesizer chip, to address the narrowband (S-Band) applications where Bluetooth has been the most sought one. The stacked inductor topology has been adopted to get the benefit of its on-chip compatibility and low noise. The active differential architecture, which basically is a cross-coupled NMOS structure, has been then envisaged for the gain which counters the losses completely. Three major areas of LC-VCO design are considered and worked upon for the optimum design parameters, which includes Bluetooth coverage range of 2.410 GHz to 2.490 GHz, better linearity and high sensitivity and finally the most sought phase noise performance for an LC-VCO. Findings The work provides the complete design aspect of a novel LC-VCO design for low phase noise narrowband applications such as Bluetooth. Using tuned MOS varactor, in 130 nm-RF CMOS process, a high gain sensitivity of 194 MHz/Volt was obtained. Thus, the entire frequency range of 2415-2500 MHz for Bluetooth applications, supporting multiple standards from 3G to 5G, was covered by voltage tuning of 0.7-1.0 V. To achieve the low power dissipation, low bias (1.2 V) cross-coupled differential structure was adopted, which completely paid for the losses occurred in the LC resonator. The power dissipation comes out to be 8.56 mW which is a remarkably small value for such a high gain and low noise VCO. For the VCO frequencies in the presented LO-plan, the tank inductor was allowed to have a moderate value of inductance (8 nH), while maintaining a very high Q factor. The LC-VCO of the proposed LO-generator achieved extremely low phase noise of −140 dBc/Hz @ 1 MHz, as compared to the contemporary designs. Research limitations/implications Though a professional tool for inductor and circuit design (ADS-by Keysight Technologies) has been chosen, actual inductor and circuit implementation on silicon may still lead to various parasitic evolutions; therefore, one must have that margin pre-considered while finalizing the design and testing it. Practical implications The proposed LC-VCO architecture presented in this work shows low phase noise and wide tuning range with high gain sensitivity in S-Band, low power dissipation and narrowband nature of wireless applications. Originality/value The on-chip stacked inductor has uniquely been designed with the provided dimensions and other parameters. Though active design is in a conventional manner, its sizing and bias current selection are unique. The pool of results obtained completely preserves the originally to the full extent.


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