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A Wireless-Powered IR-UWB Transmitter for Long-Range Passive RFID Tags in 90-nm CMOS
13
Citations
7
References
2014
Year
Rf DevicesLow-power ElectronicsElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingEngineeringRadio FrequencyMicrowave TransmissionAntennaUltra-wideband CommunicationIdentification TagsComputer EngineeringImpulse Radio UltrawidebandRadio Frequency IdentificationTx Input SensitivityWireless-powered Ir-uwb TransmitterRf SubsystemElectromagnetic Compatibility
An impulse radio ultrawideband (IR-UWB) transmitter (TX) intended for long-range passive radio-frequency (RF) identification tags is presented. It is wirelessly powered by an ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) signal. A 128-bit pseudonoise code is transmitted when enough energy is harvested. A new on-off-keying multicycle energy-efficient IR-UWB pulse generator (PG) is proposed, and a co-design with power management circuits is introduced to improve the system supply noise performance. A novel injection-locking divider co-designed with an RF voltage rectifier is proposed to eliminate the injection input resistive load that exists in some designs; otherwise, the input sensitivity would be degraded. A proof-of-concept prototype is fabricated in a TSMC 90-nm CMOS process. Measurements show the TX input sensitivity to be approximately -17.5 dBm with a 900-MHz UHF input. The measured PG output swing is 195 mV <sub xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">p-p</sub> with a -10 dB bandwidth of approximately 3.4 GHz.
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