Graduate Thesis Or Dissertation
 

CMOS Transducers and Programmable Interface Circuits for Resource-Efficient Sensing Applications

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https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/8910k255x

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  • Modern sensors are complex systems comprising multiple sub-systems such as transducers, analog and mixed-signal interface circuits, digital processing circuits, and packaging. Over the last few decades, innovations in these sub-systems combined with their increased integration in complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) processes have led to the rapid growth in sensors for the Internet-of-Things (IoT), wearable devices, and fundamental scientific instrumentation. This thesis introduces novel ideas for various parts of a sensor signal chain. First, CMOS-based transducers (i.e. sensing elements) are introduced. Single-photon avalanche diodes (SPADs) fabricated in 0.18µm and 0.13µm standard CMOS processes are demonstrated and characterized for various optical sensing techniques. A resistor fabricated using standard CMOS-BEOL layers in a 0.18µm process is used to demonstrate a compact, fully-integrated single-element flow sensor occupying less than 0.065mm2. Second, front-end interface circuits for single-photon optical detectors are introduced. A fully-integrated SPAD-based ambient light sensor using mostly digital circuits and fabricated in a 0.13µm CMOS process is highlighted. It consumes 125μW and achieves one of the lowest reported areas (0.046mm2) in the literature. A custom analog front-end (AFE) chip is fabricated in a 0.18µm CMOS process for interfacing with a commercial silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) for gamma spectroscopy. It incorporates tunability of dynamic range and integration time, thus making it suitable for different detectors (i.e. SiPM and scintillator crystal combinations). Third, non-linear analog-to-digital converters (NL-ADCs) are explored as a viable alternative to linear ADCs for information-aware, non-uniform quantization and a widely reconfigurable piecewise-linear analog-to-digital converter (PWL-ADC) prototype chip (0.18µm CMOS) is used to validate this. With a 7-bit output word, it achieves 5.6-bit to 9.5-bit resolution in user-defined regions of the input full-scale range (FSR), while consuming 105µW at a sampling frequency of 42kHz. Measurements with recorded ECG waveforms are used to highlight the application-specific advantages of the PWL-ADC. Finally, some of the aforementioned ideas are used at the system level in a gamma spectrometer realized on a printed circuit board (PCB). The PCB design includes the AFE and PWL-ADC IC chips, a commercial SiPM and scintillator crystal, and a FPGA-based digital back-end (DBE). Several linear and non-linear isotope spectra with variable energy bin-widths (dE/bin) are recorded and analyzed to demonstrate the utility of the proposed concepts for peak enhancement and improved peak discrimination in radiation spectroscopy.
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  • Pending Publication
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  • 2021-12-10 to 2023-01-11

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