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Progettazione di circuiti a bassissima potenza e tensione per System on Chip energicamente autonomi

dc.contributor.authorFassio, Luigi
dc.contributor.authorCrupi, Felice
dc.contributor.authorLanuzza, Marco
dc.date.accessioned2024-03-12T10:37:07Z
dc.date.available2024-03-12T10:37:07Z
dc.date.issued2021-05-15
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10955/5454
dc.descriptionDottorato di ricerca in Information and communication technologies. Ciclo XXXIIIen_US
dc.description.abstractUltra-low power/voltage (ULP/ULV) circuits (both analog and digital blocks) have been gaining considerable interest from the scientific community in the last few years. The advent of the Internet of Things (IoT) era has also increased the interest of the market in ULP/ULV circuits addressed to energy-autonomous and extremely small-sized Systems-on-Chip (SoCs). Wireless sensor networks, biomedical implantable devices, wearable computing, ambient control intelligence, air quality monitoring, warehouse, and agriculture monitoring are just some of the fields that can benefit from ULP/ULV circuits. The design of ULP/ULV circuit blocks for energy-autonomous SoCs is a wide topic and needs some knowledge on several elements that can compose these SoCs. In this regard, this thesis first provides a general overview on energy-autonomous SoCs with a focus on available energy harvesting sources and energy storage solutions. The availability of on-chip energy harvesting/storage opens the route for the development of battery-less IoT sensor nodes and moves the challenge towards the design of ULP/ULV circuits that make the node working even with a small amount of available energy from harvesting. Among various key building blocks of SoCs, this thesis presents the design of voltage/current reference circuits to provide a precise and stable DC bias under a wide range of environmental conditions, a level shifter to interface blocks between different voltage domains, and comparators to interface the analog world with the digital one. More specifically, a low-area voltage reference circuit able to operate at supply voltage as low as 250 mV and 5.4 pW of power consumption at room temperature is first presented. The proposed circuit exploits a body biasing scheme to deal with the effect of voltage/temperature fluctuations and hence to ensure good accuracy of the generated output voltage, as demonstrated through measurements on a test chip fabricated in 180-nm CMOS technology. The design of a current reference circuit based on a voltage generator exploiting the structure used for the voltage reference is also presented and validated by means of silicon measurements on a 180-nm prototype. The proposed circuit properly works down to 0.6 V to generate a current in the nA range with only 4,000-μm2 area occupancy, while reaching high power efficiency as guaranteed by the pW-power consumption of the voltage generator sub-block. Then, the design of a global variation-aware voltage reference based on an on-chip process sensor is proposed with the aim of achieving low sensitivity to process variations and overall good accuracy against process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations, while also ensuring ULP/ULV operation, i.e., minimum supply voltage of 200 mV and power consumption of only 3.2 pW at room temperature. Experimental results in 180-nm CMOS technology across corner wafers demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed solution. In addition, the design of a robust level shifter able to convert input voltages from the subthreshold regime (around 100 mV) up to the nominal supply voltage (1.8 V) is presented. The proposed circuit is based on a self-biased low-voltage cascode current mirror topology that features diode-connected PMOS and NMOS transistors to drive the split-input inverting buffer used as output stage with high energy efficiency. Obtained measurement results in 180-nm CMOS technology and across corner wafers demonstrate good robustness and performance of the proposed level shifter as compared to prior art. Finally, the design of an ULP/ULV comparator is proposed by using the dynamic leakage suppression (DLS) logic family. In particular, two different topologies, i.e., a single-stage structure and a dual-stage architecture based on the combination of two single-stage comparator are presented and validated through silicon measurements on 180-nm test chips, which demonstrate a power consumption of few tens of pW. My research activity during PhD concerned the design of innovative ULP/ULV circuits and their validation through silicon measurements. First, a low-area voltage reference circuit able to operate at supply voltage as low as 250 mV and 5.4 pW of power consumption at room temperature was designed and fabricated in 180-nm CMOS technology. The proposed circuit exploits a body biasing scheme to deal with the effect of voltage/temperature fluctuations and hence to ensure good accuracy of the generated output voltage. A current reference circuit based on a voltage generator exploiting the structure used for the voltage reference was also designed and validated by means of silicon measurements on a 180-nm prototype. The proposed current reference properly works down to 0.6 V to generate a current in the nA range with only 4,000-μm2 area occupancy, while reaching high power efficiency as guaranteed by the pW-power consumption of the voltage generator sub-block. Then, the design of a global variation-aware voltage reference based on an on-chip process sensor was realized with the aim of achieving competitive sensitivity to process variations and and overall accuracy against process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations, while also ensuring ULP/ULV operation (minimum supply voltage of 200 mV and power consumption of only 3.2pW at room temperature). Experimental results in 180-nm CMOS technology across corner wafers demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed solution. The research activity was also addressed to interfacing blocks between different voltage domains in multiple-voltage systems. In this regard, a robust level shifter able to convert input voltages from the subthreshold regime (around 100 mV) up to the nominal supply voltage (1.8 V) was designed. The proposed circuit is based on a self-biased low-voltage cascode current mirror topology that features diode-connected PMOS and NMOS transistors to drive the split-input inverting buffer used as output stage with high energy efficiency. Obtained measurement results in 180-nm CMOS technology and across corner wafers demonstrate good robustness and performance of the proposed level shifter as compared to prior art. Finally, to interface the analog world with the digital one, an ULP/ULV comparator was designed by using the dynamic leakage suppression (DLS) logic family. Two different topologies, i.e., a single-stage structure and a dual-stage architecture based on the combination of two single-stage comparator were fabricated and validated through silicon measurements on 180-nm test chips, which demonstrated a power consumption of few tens of pW.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherUniversità della Calabriaen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesING-INF/01;
dc.subjectUltra-Low Poweren_US
dc.subjectUltra-Low Voltageen_US
dc.subjectVoltage Referenceen_US
dc.subjectAnalog Comparatoren_US
dc.subjectProcess Sensitivity Reductionen_US
dc.subjectResearch Subject Categories::TECHNOLOGY::Information technology::Telecommunicationen_US
dc.titleProgettazione di circuiti a bassissima potenza e tensione per System on Chip energicamente autonomien_US
dc.typeThesisen_US


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