An ultra-wideband transceiver architecture for low power, low rate, wireless systems |
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Authors: | O'Donnell I.D. Brodersen R.W. |
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Affiliation: | Berkeley Wireless Res. Center, CA, USA; |
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Abstract: | This paper presents the system architecture, modeling, and design constraints for a baseband, integrated, CMOS, impulse ultra-wideband transceiver targeting very low power consumption on the order of 1 mW. Intended for a sensor network application, the radio supports low communication rates (/spl sim/100 kpbs) and ranging capabilities over short distances (/spl sim/10 m). Based on a "mostly digital" architecture, the analog complexity is reduced by moving the A/D convertor as close to the antenna as is reasonable. Pulses are generated from simple digital switches, overlaying the signal energy on the lower FCC UWB band (0-960 MHz). Reception is achieved using baseband gain blocks feeding a time-interleaved bank of low resolution A/D converters. A window of energy is captured in time and fed to the digital backend for processing. To save power and area, the digital backend implements only a pulse template correlation filter block overlaid with an additional spreading code. As a pulse template is used, no specific channel estimation or interference cancellation is assumed. The system performance is quantified for this case and implementation tradeoffs are explored with a strong focus on reducing power consumption. In particular, the issues of modulation choice, clock generation, gain and noise figure, ADC resolution, and digital signal processing requirements will be discussed. |
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