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Topic Name: The world first digital UWB transmitter IC
Category: Electronics
Research persons: IMEC
Location: Katrien Marent Corporate Communication Manager IMEC, Kapeldreef 75 Tel +32 16 28 18 80 Fax +32 16 28 16 37 Email: Katrien.Marent@imec.be, Belgium
Details
IMEC’s 90nm CMOS digital UWB transmitter is the first ever published IEEE
802.15.4a standard-compliant transmitter and outperforms state-of-the-art
low-power narrowband transmitter implementations. The transmitter covers all the
frequency bands of the standard up to 10GHz and is especially suited for
application in low-power wireless sensor networks.
Recently, the IEEE 802.15.4a standardization committee proposed an
alternative physical layer for ZIGBEE providing positioning on top of low cost,
low power and scalable data range using UWB as key technology. IMEC designed the
transmitter IC based on the signal structure depicted in the standard. The chip
consists of a digitally-controlled oscillator, a programmable frequency divider,
a unique digital RF modulator and an early-late detector for frequency
calibration of the oscillator.
The digitally-controlled oscillator produces the RF carrier for all bands
between 3 and 10GHz. The correct RF frequency is generated by a phase-aligned
frequency locked loop instead of a traditional phase locked loop (PLL). This
novel approach substantially reduces the start-up time to only 2ns and
consequently reduces the signal duty cycle to only 3% resulting in very low
power consumption. In addition, the technique also truncates the accumulative
jitter process.
The transmitter has been designed in a 90nm digital CMOS technology with 1V
power supply. Measurements on silicon show a power consumption for the
transmitter of 0.65nJ per 16 chips burst (40pJ/pulse) at 3.5GHz carrier
frequency and 1.4nJ per 16 chips burst (87pJ/pulse) at 10GHz. For the mandatory
mode, this corresponds to 0.65mW to 1.4mW for 1Mbit/s data rate which
outperforms state-of-the-art low-power narrowband transmitter implementations.
The ultra-low power is obtained by switching off the entire transmitter between
each burst and optimally exploiting the low power advantages of low duty-cycle
communication.
These results show that the new standard leads to implementations with power
consumptions meeting sensor network requirements. IMEC will use the low-power
radio within its program on wireless autonomous transducer systems, run by IMEC-NL
in the Holst Centre, targeting healthcare, lifestyle and process automation
applications.
About IMEC
IMEC is a world-leading independent research center in nanoelectronics and
nanotechnology. Its research focuses on the next generations of chips and
systems, and on the enabling technologies for ambient intelligence. IMEC’s
research bridges the gap between fundamental research at universities and
technology development in industry. Its unique balance of processing and system
know-how, intellectual property portfolio, state-of-the-art infrastructure and
its strong network of companies, universities and research institutes worldwide
position IMEC as a key partner for shaping technologies for future systems.
As an expansion of its wireless autonomous microsystems research, IMEC has
created a legal entity in the Netherlands. Stichting IMEC Nederland runs
activities at the Holst Centre, an independent R&D institute that develops
generic technologies and technology platforms for autonomous wireless transducer
solutions and systems-in-foil.
IMEC is headquartered in Leuven, Belgium, and has representatives in the US,
China and Japan. Its staff of more than 1500 people includes more than 500
industrial residents and guest researchers. In 2006, its estimated revenue (P&L)
was EUR 231 million. Further information on IMEC can be found on
www.imec.be.
For more information:
Katrien Marent
Corporate Communication Manager
IMEC, Kapeldreef 75
B- 3001 Leuven, Belgium
Tel +32 16 28 18 80 Fax +32 16 28 16 37
Email: Katrien.Marent@imec.be
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