This paper presents the design of a narrowband transmitter and antenna system that achieves an average power consumption of 78 pW when operating at a duty-cycled data rate of 1 bps. Fabricated in a 0.18 µm CMOS process, the transmitter employs a direct-RF power oscillator topology where a loop antenna acts as a both a radiative and resonant element. The low-complexity single-stage architecture, in combination with aggressive power gating techniques and sizing optimizations, limited the standby power of the transmitter to only 39.7 pW at 0.8 V. Supporting both OOK and FSK modulations at 2.4 GHz, the transmitter consumed as low as 38 pJ/bit at an active-mode data rate of 5 Mbps. The loop antenna and integrated diodes were also used as part of a wireless power transfer receiver in order to kick-start the system power supply during energy harvesting operation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JSSC.2014.2316237 | DOI Listing |
Sensors (Basel)
December 2024
Department of Informatics and Telecommunications, University of Peloponnese, Acadimaikou G.K. Vlachou, 22100 Tripolis, Greece.
The urgent need for timely and accurate precipitation estimations in the face of ongoing climate change and the increasing frequency and/or intensity of extreme weather events underscores the necessity for innovative approaches. Recently, several studies have focused on estimating the precipitation rate through induced attenuation of radio frequency (RF) signals, which are abundant in modern communication systems. Most research has concentrated on frequencies exceeding 10 GHz, as attenuation at lower frequencies is minimal, posing measurement challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicromachines (Basel)
December 2024
Purple Mountain Laboratories, Nanjing 211111, China.
The millimeter-wave wireless transmission system is widely regarded as a promising solution for applications of future 6G communication. This paper presents an experimental comparison between all-optical and all-electric receivers for millimeter-wave communication systems over a 15 m wireless link and demonstrates 200 m and 2 km real-time uncompressed HD video transmission using an all-optical transceiver at 100 GHz. The systems leverage photonics-assisted heterodyne beating techniques at the transmitter, while the receivers employ either an avalanche photodiode (APD)-based all-optical approach or an envelope detection-based all-electric approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Biomed Eng
January 2025
William B. Burnsed Jr. Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering, University of South Alabama, 150 Student Services Drive, Mobile, AL, 36688, USA.
Background: The ST response to high frequency EM heating may give an indication of rate of BF in underlying tissue. This novel method, which we have termed REFLO (Rapid Electromagnetic Flow) has potential for applications such as detection of PAD. The method utilizes the relationship between blood flow rate and tissue temperature increase during exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOutdoor long-range terahertz (THz) communications often come at the expense of transmission rate. Moreover, the practicability of the single polarization optical/THz link, which is commonly used in the previous long-range THz demonstrations based on photonics, is extremely limited by the following two fatal defects. One is relying on active polarization control, and the other is not supporting the transparent bridging of optical polarization division multiplexed (PDM) signals for mature coherent optical communication networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper introduces a novel Fabry-Perot cavity (FPC) antenna design based on metasurface technique to achieve bi-directional radiation with independent forward and backward beam control capability and a low-profile configuration. Two pieces of partially reflective metasurface (PRMS) based on receiver-transmitter architecture with independent control of transmission and reflection phases are designed to serve as the upper and lower layers of the FPC antenna, respectively. By manipulating the transmission phase distribution of the two pieces of PRMS, designable independent multi-beam bi-directional radiation patterns can be achieved.
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