Title :
Ultra-Low-Power Interface Chip for Autonomous Capacitive Sensor Systems
Author :
Bracke, Wouter ; Merken, Patrick ; Puers, Robert ; Van Hoof, Chris
Author_Institution :
ICsense, Leuven
Abstract :
Traditionally, most of the sensor interfaces must be tailored towards a specific application. This approach results in a high recurrent design cost and time to market. On the other hand, generic sensor interface design reduces the costs and offers a handy solution for multisensor applications. This paper presents a generic sensor interface chip (GSIC), which can read out a broad range of capacitive sensors. It contains capacitance-to-voltage converters, a switched-capacitor amplifier, an analog-to-digital converter, oscillators, clock generation circuits and a reference circuit. The system combines a very low-power design with a smart energy management, which adapts the current consumption according to the accuracy and speed requirements of the application. The GSIC is used in a pressure and an acceleration monitoring system. The pressure monitoring system achieves a current drain of 2.3 muA for a 10-Hz sample frequency and an 8-bit accuracy. In the acceleration monitoring system, we measured a current of 3.3 muA for a sample frequency of 10 Hz and an accuracy of 9 bits
Keywords :
acceleration measurement; amplifiers; analogue-digital conversion; capacitive sensors; clocks; convertors; detector circuits; low-power electronics; oscillators; pressure measurement; readout electronics; reference circuits; switched capacitor networks; 10 Hz; 2.3 muA; 3.3 muA; acceleration monitoring; analog-to-digital converter; autonomous capacitive sensor; capacitance-to-voltage converters; clock generation; generic sensor interface chip; oscillators; pressure monitoring; reference circuit; smart energy management; switched-capacitor amplifier; Acceleration; Analog-digital conversion; Capacitance; Capacitive sensors; Circuits; Costs; Frequency; Intelligent sensors; Monitoring; Time to market; Capacitive sensors; generic sensor interface; smart energy management; ultra low power (ULP);
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSI.2006.887978