Radio chip for the 'Internet of things'

Date: February 23, 2015
Source:Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Summary: A circuit that reduces power leakage when transmitters are idle could 
greatly extend battery life.


At this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the big theme was the 
"Internet of things" -- the idea that everything in the human environment, from 
kitchen appliances to industrial equipment, could be equipped with sensors and 
processors that can exchange data, helping with maintenance and the 
coordination of tasks.

Realizing that vision, however, requires transmitters that are powerful enough 
to broadcast to devices dozens of yards away but energy-efficient enough to 
last for months -- or even to harvest energy from heat or mechanical vibrations.

"A key challenge is designing these circuits with extremely low standby power, 
because most of these devices are just sitting idling, waiting for some event 
to trigger a communication," explains Anantha Chandrakasan, the Joseph F. and 
Nancy P. Keithley Professor in Electrical Engineering at MIT. "When it's on, 
you want to be as efficient as possible, and when it's off, you want to really 
cut off the off-state power, the leakage power."

This week, at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' 
International Solid-State Circuits Conference, Chandrakasan's group will 
present a new transmitter design that reduces off-state leakage 100-fold. At 
the same time, it provides adequate power for Bluetooth transmission, or for 
the even longer-range 802.15.4 wireless-communication protocol.

"The trick is that we borrow techniques that we use to reduce the leakage power 
in digital circuits," Chandrakasan explains. The basic element of a digital 
circuit is a transistor, in which two electrical leads are connected by a 
semiconducting material, such as silicon. In their native states, 
semiconductors are not particularly good conductors. But in a transistor, the 
semiconductor has a second wire sitting on top of it, which runs 
perpendicularly to the electrical leads. Sending a positive charge through this 
wire -- known as the gate -- draws electrons toward it. The concentration of 
electrons creates a bridge that current can cross between the leads.

But while semiconductors are not naturally very good conductors, neither are 
they perfect insulators. Even when no charge is applied to the gate, some 
current still leaks across the transistor. It's not much, but over time, it can 
make a big difference in the battery life of a device that spends most of its 
time sitting idle.

Going negative

Chandrakasan -- along with Arun Paidimarri, an MIT graduate student in 
electrical engineering and computer science and first author on the paper, and 
Nathan Ickes, a research scientist in Chandrakasan's lab -- reduces the leakage 
by applying a negative charge to the gate when the transmitter is idle. That 
drives electrons away from the electrical leads, making the semiconductor a 
much better insulator.

Of course, that strategy works only if generating the negative charge consumes 
less energy than the circuit would otherwise lose to leakage. In tests 
conducted on a prototype chip fabricated through the Taiwan Semiconductor 
Manufacturing Company's research program, the MIT researchers found that their 
circuit spent only 20 picowatts of power to save 10,000 picowatts in leakage.

To generate the negative charge efficiently, the MIT researchers use a circuit 
known as a charge pump, which is a small network of capacitors -- electronic 
components that can store charge -- and switches. When the charge pump is 
exposed to the voltage that drives the chip, charge builds up in one of the 
capacitors. Throwing one of the switches connects the positive end of the 
capacitor to the ground, causing a current to flow out the other end. This 
process is repeated over and over. The only real power drain comes from 
throwing the switch, which happens about 15 times a second.

Turned on

To make the transmitter more efficient when it's active, the researchers 
adopted techniques that have long been a feature of work in Chandrakasan's 
group. Ordinarily, the frequency at which a transmitter can broadcast is a 
function of its voltage. But the MIT researchers decomposed the problem of 
generating an electromagnetic signal into discrete steps, only some of which 
require higher voltages. For those steps, the circuit uses capacitors and 
inductors to increase voltage locally. That keeps the overall voltage of the 
circuit down, while still enabling high-frequency transmissions.

What those efficiencies mean for battery life depends on how frequently the 
transmitter is operational. But if it can get away with broadcasting only every 
hour or so, the researchers' circuit can reduce power consumption 100-fold.

Story Source:

The original article was written by Larry Hardesty. Note: Materials may be 
edited for content and length. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Radio 
chip for the 'Internet of things'." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 23 February 
2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150223122653.htm>.

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