scholarly journals Design and Performance Evaluation of On-chip Antenna for Ultra Low Power Wireless Transceiver

2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 405-409
Author(s):  
Won-Hyun Kwon
2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (7) ◽  
pp. 101-107
Author(s):  
Il-Gu Lee ◽  
Duk Bai Kim ◽  
Jeongki Choi ◽  
Hyungu Park ◽  
Sok-Kyu Lee ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Robert Landers ◽  
B. Jerry Elkind ◽  
C. Rajni Aggarwal

Both external and implantable devices are becoming more sophisticated and are requiring more on-chip memory to store data from biological sensors. To deal with this complexity, chip designs are moving toward smaller process geometries, which provide added functionality, reduced size, or both, often along with a reduction in dynamic power. However, leakage power begins to increase significantly at the 130nm node if steps are not taken to mitigate the increased transistor leakage. Lower operating voltages and careful transistor design can offset some of this increase. These very changes, however, make it difficult to design a dense, stable low-power SRAM. Nonvolatile memories like FRAM (F-RAM) avoid these difficulties and save power by simply turning off the memory when not in use. This is particularly valuable since many medical devices have very low duty cycle. FRAM provides the added benefit of providing SRAM-like active power, unlike competing nonvolatile technologies. To meet the challenging power requirements of medical devices, a new ultra-low-power 130nm process has been developed. The new process includes a very-high-density, SER-resistant, nonvolatile FRAM and an ultra-low-leakage transistor, coupled with a library that is optimized for low-power operation. This paper compares the power, area and performance of competing process technologies for a typical implantable medical design and highlights the advantages that FRAM provides in low static power through a transparent power-down capability and in low SRAM-like active power.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 145-150
Author(s):  
Markus Scholl ◽  
Ralf Wunderlich ◽  
Stefan Heinen

Abstract. This paper presents a highly efficient digital frequency calibration method for ultra-low-power oscillators in wireless communication systems. This calibration method locks the ultra-low-power oscillator's output frequency to the reference clock of the wireless transceiver during its send- and receive-state to achieve frequency stability over process variation and temperature drifts. The introduced calibration scheme offers high jitter immunity and short locking periods overcoming frequency calibration errors for typical ultra-low-power oscillator's by utilizing non-linear segmented feedback levels. In measurements the proposed calibration method improves the frequency stability of an ultra-low-power 32 kHz oscillator from 53 to 10 ppm ∘C−1 over a wide temperature range for temperature drifts of less than 1 ∘C s−1 with an estimated power consumption of 185 nW while coping with relocking periods of 7 ms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2.16) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
T Yugendra Chary ◽  
S Anitha ◽  
M Alamillo ◽  
Ameet Chavan

For efficient ultra-low power IoT applications, working with various communication devices and sensors which operating voltages  from subthreshold to superthreshold levels which requires wide variety of robust level converters for signal interfacing with low power dissipation. This paper proposes two topologies of level converter circuits that offer dramatic improvement in power and performance when compared to the existing level converters that shift signals from sub to super threshold levels for IoT applications. At 250 mV, the first proposed circuit - a modification of a tradition al current mirror level converter - offers the best energy efficiency with approximately seven times less energy consumption per operation than the existing design, but suffers from a slight reduction in performance.  However, a second proposed circuit - based on a two-stage level converter - at the same voltage enhances performance by several orders of magnitude while still maintaining a modest improvement in energy efficiency.  The Energy Delay Products (EDP) of the two proposed designs are equivalent and are approximately four times better than the best existing design.  Consequently, the two circuit options either optimizes power or performance with improved overall EDP.  


1996 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 277 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.A. Serdijn ◽  
A.C. van der Woerd ◽  
H.M. van Roermund
Keyword(s):  

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