Publication | Open Access
Power-Efficiency Evolution of Capacitive Sensor Interfaces
16
Citations
36
References
2020
Year
Low-power ElectronicsEnergy ConsumptionElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingEngineeringBiomedical SensorsHigh ResolutionPower-efficiency EvolutionAnalog-to-digital Converterδς ModulationAnalog DesignMixed-signal Integrated CircuitComputer EngineeringSensor InterfaceSensor DesignInstrumentationMicroelectronicsElectromagnetic Compatibility
Recent years have witnessed an improvement in the energy efficiency of capacitive sensor interfaces by more than three orders of magnitude. This article reviews the architectural and circuit innovations that have contributed to this progress. The fundamental limit on the energy consumption of capacitive sensor interfaces is discussed, as well as the widely used figure-of-merit (FoM). Interfaces based on period modulation feature simple circuitry, but their power efficiency at higher resolution deteriorates. Those employing ΔΣ modulation achieve high resolution with improved efficiency but require operational transconductance amplifiers that do not easily scale with process and supply voltage. Interfaces using successive approximation techniques feature mostly digital circuitry achieving good power efficiency at medium resolution. To achieve higher resolution, they can also be employed as the front-end in a hybrid architecture, where a back-end based on ΔΣ modulation or a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) performs a fine measurement on the front-end's residue, resulting in high resolution and excellent energy efficiency simultaneously.
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