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Smart Dust: Unique Low Power Flexible Sensor Networks Maryland Sensor Network Group Neil Goldsman, Martin Peckerar, Quirino Balzano, Shuvra Bhattacharyya, Reza Ghodssi, Gilmer Blankenship Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Maryland College Park Outline: Focus on Hardware for Achieving Smart Dust Motes and Working Network 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Overview Power Efficient Micro RF Circuits Digital Low Power Circuits and Networking Ultra Small Antennas Energy: Micro Super Capacitor-Battery Energy Harvesting: RF & RF Overview: Smart Dust Hardware Smart Dust Node • Analog Transceiver • Microprocessor ~1mm – Communication and Sensor Control – Decision making • Micro-Battery • Energy Harvesting • Micro-Antenna /power Smart Dust Particle Power Efficient Micro RF Circuits: Smart Dust RF Receiver and Transmitter Bo Yang, Thomas Salter Yiming Zhai and Neil Goldsman Receiver Summary • Previous Review Results: – Tested initial OOK (On-off Keying) receiver without comparator. The output of receiver is not quite a digital signal. – Tested Low Noise Amplifier (LNA), performance is poor due to poor layout considerations. • Current Review Results: – Tested full OOK receiver. It can demodulate a modulated signal, and provide a ready to use rail-to-rail amplitude. – Tested the performance of LNA for its Gain (S21), Matching (S11 , S22) and linearity (IIP3, P-1dB). – Tested performance of on-chip comparator. – Measured our chip receiving and demodulation performance using our antenna (FICA). (See video file). Receive Architecture: On-Off Keying Micrograph of actual chip Summary of Receiver Performance Minimum Detectable Signal Operational with custom ultra-small FICA antenna Micrograph and Performance of full OOK Receiver Measured gain and return losses of the LNA. Gain: S21 = 11.3 dB, Return Loss: S11 = 11.8 dB, S22 = -8 dB • Receiver operation verified • Signal extracted from noise • Modulated Input: green • Demodulated output: yellow Transmitter Oscillator Buffer Power Amplifier Transmitter Overview Design a new CMOS ring oscillator and an LC oscillator The new CMOS ring oscillator has wider frequency tunable range than the first version design The new CMOS ring oscillator consumes much less power than the LC oscillator and has wider frequency tunable range Improved gain of Power Amplifier with new layout Voltage Controlled Oscillator Design: Ring & LC Voltage Controlled Oscillator Results CMOS Ring Oscillator VCO • Tuning range: 424MHz ~ 2.235GHz • Power consumption: 2.63mW @ 2.2GHz • About 80% of the power is consumed by the output buffer. Ring Oscillator Output CMOS LC VCO • Tuning range: 2.093GHz ~ 2.893GHz • Power consumption: 7.7mW @ 2.2GHz • About 27% of the power is consumed by the output buffer. LC Oscillator Output New Power Amp Reduces Parasitic Losses & Increases Gain Resistive losses in initial Design Some Power Loss here (1.2 dB) Most of Power Loss Here (3.8 dB) PA was redesigned and taped out to reduce parasitics. Gain improved by 4 dB to a total gain of 17 dB, efficiency between 35 & 50%, depending on the inductors available in the process. Digital/Low Power Design and Optimization of Smart Dust Sensor Nodes and Networks Chung-Ching Shen, Roni Kupershtok, Shuvra Bhattacharyya and Neil Goldsman Digital Design Overview • Goal is to design and fabricate the digital component of the smart dust nodes. • Develop extremely low power ASIC (microwatts) • Develop small footprint (millimeter) • Integrate with analog sensor and transceiver • Develop and implement communication algorithms and sensing • Developing low power asynchronous design methods to eliminate clock trees Digital Design: New Results Summary Overall project flow complete Software Partially complete FPGA Analog Digital ASIC mixed-signal ASIC design • Digital ASIC Design of the Smart Dust System – Designed a digital ASIC chip that performs protocol sensor control and inter-node communication for Smart Dust – This chip was designed for integrating On-Off Keying (OOK)-based analog transceiver modules. • Has less I/O interfaces resulting in smaller chip size – This design has been demonstrated in an FPGA, and also submitted to IBM 0.13µm fabrication. 16 Smart Dust ASIC Design Receive Packet • Schematic design of the ASIC – 8 major modules – 12 sub modules – All the modules have been implemented with Verilog. – All the modules have been tested and verified with an FPGA development platform. – Only one wire is needed to receive input bits from a wireless receiver. – Only one wire is needed to transmit output bits to a wireless transmitter. Packet Filter Clock Counter Control Unit S e n s e Pre Sync Control Core Transmit Packet 17 The Layout Snapshot and Design of the Smart Dust Digital ASIC Process: IBM 0.13 µm Voltage: 1.32 V Target Freq: 20MHz Core : Dynamic Power: 10.7 µW Leakage Power: 554 nW Core Size: 2.8e+5 µm2 # of Gates: 6843 Chip Size: 10.5e+5 µm2 Pads: 20 (includes test pins) 18 Experimental Platforms and Results • FPGA-based system prototype – FPGA (for demonstrating Smart Dust ASIC Design), LINX OOK-based transmitter/receiver, line crossing 19 Experimental Platforms and Results Previous prototype PCB: 2cm X 3cm 2cm • Compact size smart dust system design 3cm (only lower left corner used) 15mm 1.5x1.5x1.5cm3 Smart Dust Mote 1.3cm The latest prototype PCB: 1.3cm X 1.3cm 15mm 1.3cm 20 World’s Smallest 2.4GHz mote, to our knowledge FICA: F-Inverted Compact Antenna Ultra Small Antenna (<< l/4) Bo Yang, Xi Shao, Quirino Balzano, Neil Goldsman January, 2008 Review Summary • Last Review: – Improved design of FICA – Measured Gain performance of 916 MHz FICA • This Review – Fabricated FICA for 2.2 GHz with 1.1 cm x 1.1 cm ground plane. – Fabricated FICA for 2.4 GHz with 1.1 cm x 1.1 cm ground plane. – Tested 2.2 GHz FICA outdoor. – Measured FICA performance with in-house designed On-Off Keying (OOK) receiver – Developed circuit model of FICA – Expected 3D integration of transceiver, with lowest form factor in the world – Investigation of ground plane size effect under way 2.2 GHz FICA Gain Test (I) • Environmental reflections and multi-path effects minimized to obtain correct gain values. • Designed special Bazooka baluns as chokes to suppress cable radiation effect. 2.2 GHz FICA Gain Test (II) 11mm x 11 mm x 3 mm 61 mm Calibrate using ½ λ dipole Difference between FICA and ½ dipole is -7dB; Polarization demonstrates functionality Normalized Gain (dB), Theta = 90 degree -5 -10 -15 -20 -25 -30 -50 0 50 100 150 200 Phi 250 300 350 400 Phase and direction of the current • Modeling illustrates unique design enables current resonance. • In phase current helps parallel radiation • Loop current helps radiations in other directions, but much weaker FICA structures. (a) photo of FICA; (b) circuit model of FICA; (c) equivalent circuit of (b). • Derived circuit model predicts performance very well; • Circuit model can be scaled to FICA at other frequencies. 15 mm (0.12 λ) FICA Circuit Model Developed An Example at 916 MHz Ruthenium Oxide Based Micro Battery – Super Capacitor Yves Ngu, Zeynep Dilli, Marty Peckerar, Neil Goldsman ECE Department University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742 Micro Battery - Super Capacitor Provide high density energy storage system that may also capable of re-charging through a “rectenna”, and be used as a micro-battery The Cell: A high density battery-capacitor was fabricated nanoparticles to facilitate the redox reaction. using RuO The cell allows for easy integration (in terms of “form, fit and function”) into arbitrarily designed sensor “motes” to meet energy storage specifications for low-power ad hoc distributed networks. Microwave In To System “Rectenna” Energy Storage Block Where the Cell Fits Into the Sensor System Cell Generation • Substrates: – Silicon die – Glass slides • Conducting substrate – Aluminum (sheets and foil) – Copper sheets – Graphite sheets New Cells/Cell Structure • New Electrolytes – Boric Acid based – Phosphorus Acid based – Lithium ion based • New electrode – Anode: Zinc – Cathode: RuOx (graphite backing) The electrolyte is made of a solution of ethylene glycol, ammonium hydroxide, boric acid + nitric acid OR phosphorus acid • New Packaging – Lexane package – Methylene Chloride seal Negative lead Negative lead Filter paper + electrolyte Zinc sheet Gold coated graphite Powder mix Positive lead Lexan package Positive lead Single cell Double stacked cell New Lexane-packaged Cells Each lexane sheet is 0.794 mm thick Material layers are held in place by internal sheets cut to form frames Provides mechanical support/prevents electrolyte leaks Performance • Non-discharged and discharged cells maintain open circuit potential since fabrication in October Different electrolyte composition and higher electrolyte amount reduces overpotential drop and increases amount of energy delivered to a load • Left: Increasing electrolyte amount reduces initialdischarge overpotential drop over the same load from 0.8 V to 0.27 V Right: Electrolyte with higher pH and different buffer shows initial-discharge overpotential drop of 0.06 V • • No cell completely discharged so far Measured delivered energy and capacity for three sample cells: Cell Capacity (mA.hr) Energy (J) Total discharge hours E0GZ7 1.3524 0.824 66.5 E0GZ8 5.7946 15.0364 106.55 1.0724 2.4322 15.5 (more electrolyte) E1GZ1 (different electrolyte) RF Energy Harvesting Thomas Salter George Metze and Neil Goldsman Prior RF Energy Harvesting Work Vout vs Frequency for Pin = -6.7 dBm 1.2 1 Vout (V) 0.8 10Mohm load 1Mohm load 150kohm load 0.6 10M Simulated 1M Simulated 0.4 150k Simulated 0.2 0 0 500 1000 1500 2000 Freq (MHz) 2500 3000 3500 4000 Designed, fabricated and tested RF energy harvesting circuit for use at 2.2 GHz using IBM 8RF LM metal process. Good agreement between simulation and measurement. Significant Improvements Made to the RF Energy Harvesting Circuit Improvements to the RF energy harvesting circuit include: Self biasing reduces threshold voltage •self biasing •modifications to the impedance matching circuit and voltage doubler to reduce parasitics •techniques to reduce the body effect Regular self biased MOSFET performs closer to the ideal diode than a low threshold voltage MOSFET Performance Improvements • • • • • Normal RF Power Harvesting Circuit (DM w/ no improvements) = 14.6%, .822 V PMOS/NMOS improvement (DM) = 15.3%, .841 V PMOS/NMOS with Biasing (DM) = 19.7%, .954 V Switching L and C (DM) = 18.8%, .931 V Reg Vth diodes (w/ all improvements) = 24.3%, 1.059 V • Total Efficiency w/ improvements = 24.3%, 1.059 V • This is a 64% increase in Power Harvesting Efficiency! The new design has been simulated, taped out, and is currently being fabricated. Design of a Hybrid Ambient Low Frequency, Low Intensity Vibration Energy Scavenger (HALF-LIVES) M. Khbeis1,2 and R. Ghodssi1 1MEMS Sensors and Actuators Laboratory (MSAL) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Institute for Systems Research 2Laboratory for Physical Sciences University of Maryland, College Park 37 variable capacitor piezoelectric springs control electronics Hybrid Ambient Low Frequency, Low Intensity Vibration Energy Scavenger (HALF-LIVES) System Overview supercapacitor Legacy in-plane micro-scavenger supercapacitor control electronics piezoelectric spring variable capacitor Re-designed out-of-plane macro-scavenger PCB – Piezoelectric Springs • Pre-charge: supplies voltage to electrostatics • Control: voltage signals charge control – Variable capacitor • Charge pump: primary energy conversion • Proof mass: shuttle is coupling mass – Control Electronics • Charge: charge/discharge MOS switches • Peak detector: differential pair – Supercapacitor • Storage: energy reserve 2007 Progress Voltage (V) – Implemented real circuit models vs. ideal • Power: PZT power too low to provide 2 Vpzt both current and voltage for in-plane Vdd 1.5 operation Vee Vout • Re-design: out-of-plane operation for Vref1 1 Vref2 increased PZT power output 0.5 – Re-designed system • Macro-device: simpler implementation 0 using PCB assembly and machining -0.5 – Improved MATLAB model -1 • ODE Solver: changed from Euler solver to a continuous system model to use -1.50 5 10 15 Time (s) more efficient Runge-Kutta solvers. MATLAB model simulation output for real circuit • Measureable parameters: converted from obscure model parameters to measureable relationships like forcevoltage and Re-designed Scavenger Fabrication1 – Improved performance • Power: only increase in PZT dimensions 1. Design and manufacture PCB will increase power to a useable level • Simplified: single bender reduces circuit complexity dramatically 2. Populate PCB with control electronics – Simplified fabrication plan • Machining: reduces fabrication complexity 3. Apply solder paste for scavenger frame by permitting the use of commercially available PZT materials • Printed circuit board: PCB permits use of an 4. Machine and attach scavenger frame embedded system to test performance and calibration of input vibration • Microfabrication: can still be instituted on 5. Cut and solder attach commercial PZT sub-components to enhance performance (e.g. using high aspect ration corrugated structures and/or high-k coatings on the 6. Wirebond PZT electrode to circuit variable capacitor 1Currently being constructed at LPS model shop Accomplishments for Previous Six Months: Reducing Smart Dust Power and Dimensions: Currently at (~1cm) • Transceiver (Analog ASICs) – Designed and had fabricated low power, OOK receiver IC; tested and met specifications – Uses 0.13μm, IBM CMOS, (1.0mm x 1.1 mm) – Designed and had fabricated low power transmitter, (<1.0mm), met specifications • FICA Antenna – – – – • Designed and had fabricated 2.2 & 2.4 GHz mini antennas (~ 0.025 λ) Derived antenna equivalent circuits Excellent power transfer characteristics Co-designed Transceiver and Antenna for custom integration Digital Control (ASICs, FPGA, COTS) – Designed digital circuit to control communication and sensing algorithms of Smart Dust nodes and network – Implemented design in FPGA and ASIC (currently under fabrication) – Developed 1.5cm x 1.5cm smart dust nodes (with transceiver and antenna group). To our knowledge, smallest motes ever built and networked Accomplishments for Previous Six Months: Reducing Smart Dust Power and Dimensions: Current (~1cm) • RuOx - Based Battery – Super Capacitor – Developed new electrolytes for higher energy density – Testing indicates cells competitive with commercial products and potentially much better – Developed new packaging for smaller size, support, and reduced leakage, and increased shelf-life – Incorporated zinc as new electrode for higher cell potential – Obtained energy of approximately 5mWH in ~.5cm3 volume. – Substantial Rechargeablity observed • Energy Harvesting (RF and MEMS Systems) – RF Energy Harvester: Improved matching, reduced body effect, introduced self-bias – Increased power harvesting efficiency 64% – MEMS Harvester: Implemented simpler fabrication using PCB assembly and machining – Improved modeling of system using MATLAB and Circuit models Future Work General • Continue the inexorable march to mm scale dust • Integration of all ASICS, Antenna and Battery into one totally custom package – All components designed by group – Improve performance of components Transceiver (RF and Digital) • Push frequency limits of IC processes to facilitate scaling down to mm level – Ramp frequency of RF ASICs to process limit (< 10GHz) • Integrate digital part of ASIC design with our newly-developed transceiver module • Continue developing efficient design methodology (design and modeling techniques) for low power application-specific embedded systems. – GALS (Globally asynchronous, locally synchronous) design and synthesis Future Work Micro Battery – Super Capacitor • Optimize electrolyte composition and amount. • Improve charging capability and optimize charging method (charging voltage/current level). • Perform more active load tests. Energy Harvesting (RF and MEMS) • Test RF energy harvester scheduled for fabrication confirm experimenta • Use RF harvester to charge batteries from ambient • Perform RF ambient energy survey & adapt design commensurately • MEMS Simulation: optimization of out-of-plane system specifying PZT dimensions and circuit element values • MEMS Design: layout of an evaluation PCB for testing scavenger performance with an embedded system using calibrated reference accelerometers • MEMS Fabrication: prototype macro-scale scavenger being machined at LPS 44 Publications – C. Shen, R. Kupershtok, S. Adl, S. S. Bhattacharyya, N. Goldsman, and M. Peckerar. Sensor support systems for asymmetric threat countermeasures. Accepted subject to minor revisions IEEE Sensors Journal, 2007. – C. Shen, R. Kupershtok, S. S. Bhattacharyya, and N. Goldsman. Design and implementation of a device network application for distributed line-crossing recognition. In Proceedings of the International Semiconductor Device Research Symposium, College Park, Maryland, December 2007. – C. Shen, R. Kupershtok, S. S. Bhattacharyya, and N. Goldsman. Design techniques for streamlined integration and fault tolerance in a distributed sensor system for linecrossing recognition. In Proceedings of the International Workshop on Distributed Sensor Systems, Honolulu, Hawaii, August 2007. – C. Shen, R. Kupershtok, B. Yang, F. M. Vanin, X. Shao, D. Sheth, N. Goldsman, Q. Balzano, and S. S. Bhattacharyya. Compact, low power wireless sensor network system for line crossing recognition. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, pages 2506-2509, New Orleans, Louisiana, May 2007. – C. Shen, C. Badr, K. Kordari, S. S. Bhattacharyya, G. L. Blankenship, and N. Goldsman. A rapid prototyping methodology for application-specific sensor networks. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Workshop on Computer Architecture for Machine Perception and Sensing, Montreal, Canada, September 2006. 45 Publications • • • Y. Ngu et. al., “High Capacitance Battery for Powering Distributed Network Node Devices,” ISDRS 2007 (poster) Y. Ngu et. al, “Technique for Improving the “Supercapacitance” of Ruthenium Oxide Based Capacitors,” provisional pattern, filled 2006. Y. Ngu et. al, “An Electrochemical Cell with Capacitance-Enhanced Double Layer,” ECS Transactions – Cancun 2006, Volume 3