DocumentCode
3117803
Title
Ultra low-power monolithically integrated, capacitive pressure sensor for tire pressure monitoring
Author
Kolle, Christian ; Scherr, Wolfgang ; Hammerschmidt, Dirk ; Pichler, Gerhard ; Motz, Mario ; Schaffer, Bernhard ; Forster, Bernhard ; Ausserlechner, Udo
Author_Institution
Infineon Technol. Austria AG, Villach, Austria
fYear
2004
fDate
24-27 Oct. 2004
Firstpage
244
Abstract
Tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMS) are gaining importance due to improved security standards in the automotive industry. In active systems, the power consumption of the system is of utmost importance for a required lifetime of more than 10 years. The presented integrated circuit comprises high resolution pressure, temperature and voltage monitoring, low-power oscillators, a specialized DSP with RAM/ROM and an EEPROM to store calibration data. The continuously running low-power oscillator for internal wake-up timing is operated with 30 nA. Due to the extremely low-power consumption of all circuit blocks, pressure measurements can be carried out in short intervals (0.5 s). This enables the implementation of a new intelligent dynamic wake-up algorithm to optimize the power-intensive HF-transmission intervals under different driving situations. Thus additional rotation detectors are not needed any more. The charge consumption without HF-transmission results in 48 mAh in 10 years.
Keywords
EPROM; automotive electronics; digital signal processing chips; intelligent sensors; low-power electronics; microsensors; oscillators; pressure sensors; random-access storage; read-only storage; temperature measurement; voltage measurement; 0.5 s; 10 year; 30 nA; DSP; EEPROM; HF-transmission interval optimization; RAM; ROM; TPMS required lifetime; calibration data storage; continuously running low-power oscillators; high resolution temperature monitoring; intelligent dynamic wake-up algorithm; internal wake-up timing; monolithically integrated capacitive pressure sensor; tire pressure monitoring; ultra low-power pressure sensor; voltage monitoring; Automotive engineering; Capacitive sensors; Digital signal processing; Energy consumption; Monitoring; Power system security; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Tires; Voltage-controlled oscillators;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Sensors, 2004. Proceedings of IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8692-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSENS.2004.1426147
Filename
1426147
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