1-5hit |
Takahide TERADA Haruki FUKUDA Tadahiro KURODA
A rotating shaft with attached sensors is wrapped in a two-dimensional waveguide sheet through which the data and power are wirelessly transmitted. A retrodirective transponder array affixed to the sheet beamforms power to the moving sensor to eliminate the need for a battery. A universal on-sheet reference scheme is proposed for calibrating the transponder circuit delay variation and eliminating a crystal oscillator from the sensor. A base signal transmitted from the on-sheet reference device is used for generating the pilot signal transmitted from the sensor and the power signal transmitted from the transponder. A 0.18-µm CMOS transponder chip and the sheet with couplers were fabricated. The coupler has three resonant frequencies used for the proposed system. The measured propagation gain of the electric field changes to less than ±1.5dB within a 2.0-mm distance between the coupler and the sheet. The measured power transmission efficiency with beamforming is 23 times higher than that without it. Each transponder outputs 1W or less for providing 3mW to the sensor.
Hiroshi SHINODA Takahide TERADA
A plane coupler has been developed for a two-dimensional (2D) wireless power transmission. This coupler can construct a continuous wireless power transmission system for mobile devices due to its small, light characteristics. This coupler has two elements connected with a 2D waveguide sheet, and coupling capacitances between the elements and the sheet decrease the coupler size by reducing their resonance frequencies. A propagation loss of -10.0 dB is obtained using the small 0.025-λ2 coupler. Continuous operation of the mobile device is demonstrated by applying wireless power transmission to the 2D waveguide sheet with the small plane coupler.
Ryosuke FUJIWARA Kenichi MIZUGAKI Goichi ONO Tatsuo NAKAGAWA Takayasu NORIMATSU Takahide TERADA Akira MAEKI Masayuki MIYAZAKI
In this work, an ultra-wideband impulse radio (UWB-IR) transceiver with accurate time-of-arrival (TOA) estimation for a ranging/positioning system was developed for wireless sensor network applications. The system uses an impulse radio characterized by a low duty cycle and direct-sequence spreading, which enable very precise ranging and good receiver sensitivity. An algorithm enabling the TOA of the first-path signal to be measured accurately in a multi-path environment with simple, low-power and low cost implementations was proposed. UWB chips with CMOS 0.18-µm technology and UWB transceiver modules performed that the accuracy of the proposed ranging system is 18.5 cm in a closed space.
Takahide TERADA Koji NASU Taizo YAMAWAKI Masaru KOKUBO
A 4th-order programmable continuous-time filter (CTF) for hard-disk-drive (HDD) read channels was developed with 65-nm CMOS process technology. The CTF cutoff frequency and boost are programmable by switching units of the operational trans-conductance amplifier (OTA) banks and the capacitor banks. The switches are operated by lifted local-supply voltage to reduce on-resistance of the transistors. The CTF characteristics were robust against process technology variations and supply voltage and temperature ranges due to the introduction of a digitally assisted compensation scheme with analog auto-tuning circuits and digital calibration sequences. The digital calibration sequences, which fit into the operation sequence of the HDD read channel, compensate for the tuning circuits of the process technology variations, and the tuning circuits compensate for the CTF characteristics over the supply voltage and temperature ranges. As a result, the CTF had a programmability of 100–1000-MHz cutoff frequency and 0–12-dB boost.
Takahide TERADA Hiroshi SHINODA
A two-dimensional (2D) wireless power transmission (WPT) system that handles a wide range of transmitted and received power is proposed and evaluated. A transmitter outputs the power to an arbitrary position on a 2D waveguide sheet by using a beam-forming technique. The 2D waveguide sheet does not require an absorber on its edge. The minimum propagation power on the sheet is increased 18 times by using the beam-forming technique. Power amplifier (PA) efficiency was improved from 19% to 46% when the output power was 10dB smaller than peak power due to the use of a PA supply-voltage and input power control method. Peak PA efficiency was 60%. A receiver inputs a wide range of power levels and drives various load impedances with a parallel rectifier. This rectifier enables a number of rectifying units to be tuned dynamically. The rectifier efficiency was improved 1.5 times while input power range was expanded by 6dB and the load-impedance range was expanded fourfold. The rectifier efficiency was 66-73% over an input power range of 18-36dBm at load impedances of 100 and 400Ω.