Ultra-low-power and ultra-low-cost short-range wireless receivers in nanoscale CMOS
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Ultra-low-power and ultra-low-cost short-range wireless receivers in nanoscale CMOS
(Analog circuits and signal processing series / consulting editor, Mohammed Ismail)
Springer, c2016
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book provides readers with a state-of-the-art description of techniques to be used for ultra-low-power (ULP) and ultra-low-cost (ULC), short-range wireless receivers. Readers will learn what is required to deploy these receivers in short-range wireless sensor networks, which are proliferating widely to serve the internet of things (IoT) for "smart cities." The authors address key challenges involved with the technology and the typical tradeoffs between ULP and ULC. Three design examples with advanced circuit techniques are described in order to address these trade-offs, which special focus on cost minimization. These three techniques enable respectively, cascading of radio frequency (RF) and baseband (BB) circuits under an ultra-low-voltage (ULV) supply, cascading of RF and BB circuits in current domain for current reuse and a novel function-reuse receiver architecture, suitable for ULV and multi-band ULP applications such as the sub-GHz ZigBee.
Table of Contents
Introduction.- Design and Implementation of Ultra-Low-Power ZigBee/WPAN Receiver.- A 2.4-GHz ZigBee Receiver Exploiting an RF-to-BB-Current-Reuse Blixer + Hybrid Filter Topology in 65-nm CMOS.- Analysis and Modeling of a Gain-Boosted N-Path Switched-Capacitor Bandpass Filter.- A 0.5-V 1.15-mW 0.2-mm2 Multi-Band ZigBee Receiver Using Function Reuse and Gain-Boosted N-Path Techniques for IoT Applications.- Conclusion.
by "Nielsen BookData"