학술논문

A Low Power Impulse Radio Design for Body-Area-Networks
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. I Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on. 58(7):1458-1469 Jul, 2011
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Receivers
Radio transmitters
Transceivers
Noise
Gain
Sensors
Bandwidth
Body-area-networks
impulse radio
noncoherent detection
ultralow-power radio
ultrawideband (UWB)
wireless sensor networks
Language
ISSN
1549-8328
1558-0806
Abstract
This paper presents a low power radio design tailored to the short distance, low data rate application of body area networks. In our analysis we consider a comparison between traditional continuous wave radios and ultra wide band impulse radios for this application space. We analyze the energy/bit requirement for each of the architectures and discuss how a duty-cycled radio is better suited to low data rate applications due to practical design considerations. As a proof-of-concept we present the design and measured results of a duty-cycled, noncoherent impulse radio transceiver. The designed transceiver was measured to consume only 19 $\mu \hbox{W}$ at a data-rate of 100 kbps. The design gives a BER of $10 ^{-5}$ and works for a range of 2.5 m at an average Rx-sensitivity of $-81~\hbox{dBm}$. The designed transceiver enables both OOK and BPSK schemes and can be configured to use a pseudocoherent self-correlated signature detection and generation mechanism. This added functionality helps distinguish different types of pulses such as timing and data-pulses in real time. The transceiver was designed in a 90 nm CMOS process and occupies 2.3 $\hbox{mm}^{2}$ area.