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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Design and implementation of a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter

Paul, Suganth 15 May 2009 (has links)
Power Consumption in VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated) circuits is currently a major issue in the semiconductor industry. Power is a first order design constraint in many applications. Several of these applications need extreme low power but do not need high speed. Sub-threshold circuit design can be used in these cases, but at such a low supply voltage these circuits exhibit an exponential sensitivity to process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations. In this thesis we implement and test a robust sub-threshold design flow which uses circuit level PVT compensation to stabilize circuit performance. This is done by dynamic modulation of the delay of a representative signal in the circuit and then phase locking it with an external reference signal. We design and fabricate a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter chip. The transmitter is specified to transmit baseband signals up to a data rate of 32kbps over a distance of 1000m. In addition to the sub-threshold implementation, we implement the BFSK transmitter using a standard cell methodology on the same die operating at super-threshold voltages on a different voltage domain. Experiments using the fabricated die show that the sub-threshold circuit consumes 19.4x lower power than the traditional standard cell based implementation.
2

Design and implementation of a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter

Paul, Suganth 10 October 2008 (has links)
Power Consumption in VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated) circuits is currently a major issue in the semiconductor industry. Power is a first order design constraint in many applications. Several of these applications need extreme low power but do not need high speed. Sub-threshold circuit design can be used in these cases, but at such a low supply voltage these circuits exhibit an exponential sensitivity to process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations. In this thesis we implement and test a robust sub-threshold design flow which uses circuit level PVT compensation to stabilize circuit performance. This is done by dynamic modulation of the delay of a representative signal in the circuit and then phase locking it with an external reference signal. We design and fabricate a sub-threshold wireless BFSK transmitter chip. The transmitter is specified to transmit baseband signals up to a data rate of 32kbps over a distance of 1000m. In addition to the sub-threshold implementation, we implement the BFSK transmitter using a standard cell methodology on the same die operating at super-threshold voltages on a different voltage domain. Experiments using the fabricated die show that the sub-threshold circuit consumes 19.4x lower power than the traditional standard cell based implementation.

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