Title :
Ultralow-Power Optical CDR for Integrated Photovoltaic Energy-Harvesting Sensors
Author :
Shaik, Khadar ; Kleeburg, Travis ; Amirtharajah, Rajeevan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Abstract :
Energy storage elements and electromechanical timing references, such as crystals, can dominate energy-autonomous wireless sensor node volume at the 1-mm3 scale. This brief proposes a clock-data recovery circuit that receives power from integrated photovoltaics and extracts clock and data signals from optical data input. A prototype fabricated in 90-nm CMOS was tested over a VDD range of 150-500 mV, and it supports maximum data rates from 15 kb/s to 4 Mb/s while dissipating 51 nW-3.5 μW. A software implementation of the conjugate gradient method running on an ultralow-power embedded microcontroller was investigated for its potential to compensate for jitter when the recovered clock is used to sample a sensor input. The output signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio of an analog-to-digital converter can be improved by up to 16-28 dB for an estimated microcontroller power consumption of 15 μW.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; clock and data recovery circuits; compensation; computerised instrumentation; conjugate gradient methods; electromechanical effects; embedded systems; energy harvesting; low-power electronics; microcontrollers; optical sensors; synchronisation; timing jitter; wireless sensor networks; CMOS technology; analog-to-digital converter; clock data recovery circuit; conjugate gradient method; electromechanical timing; embedded microcontroller; energy storage element; integrated photovoltaic energy harvesting sensor; jitter compensation; power 15 muW; power 51 nW to 3.5 muW; prototype fabrication; signal to noise and distortion ratio; size 90 nm; software implementation; ultralow power optical CDR; voltage 150 mV to 500 mV; wireless sensor node; Adaptive optics; Energy management; Integrated optics; Jitter; Low power electronics; Optical receivers; Optical sensors; clock–data recovery (CDR); jitter; nonuniform sampling; optical wireless sensor node;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems II: Express Briefs, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSII.2013.2285995