论文标题
采样:能量收集ADC
eSampling: Energy Harvesting ADCs
论文作者
论文摘要
模数转换器(ADC)允许使用数字硬件处理物理信号。转换中消耗的功率随采样率和量化分辨率增长,在功率限制系统中构成了重大挑战。常见的ADC架构基于样品和含量(S/H)电路,在该电路中仅在采样期的一小部分跟踪模拟信号。在本文中,我们提出了Esampling ADC的概念,该概念在未跟踪信号的时间段内从模拟信号中收集能量。这种收获的能量可用于补充ADC本身,为零功率消耗和省电ADC的可能性铺平了道路。我们分析了恢复采样信号的能力与收获的能量之间的权衡,并根据准确性和能量约束提供了设置采样率的准则。我们的分析表明,每个样品最多12位运行的ES采样ADC可以获取带有限制的模拟信号,从而可以完美地恢复它们而无需从外部来源供电。此外,我们的理论结果表明,Esampling ADC实际上可以通过收获比消耗更多的能量来节省功率。为了验证Esampling ADC的可行性,我们使用标准互补金属氧化物半导体(CMOS)65 nm技术提出了电路级设计。在40 MHz采样的Es采样8位ADC是在Cadence Virtuoso平台上设计的。我们涉及带有限制信号的Nyquist速率采样的实验研究表明,此类ADC确实能够收获比在类似物到数字转换过程中花费的能量更多的能量,而不会影响准确性。
Analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) allow physical signals to be processed using digital hardware. The power consumed in conversion grows with the sampling rate and quantization resolution, imposing a major challenge in power-limited systems. A common ADC architecture is based on sample-and-hold (S/H) circuits, where the analog signal is being tracked only for a fraction of the sampling period. In this paper, we propose the concept of eSampling ADCs, which harvest energy from the analog signal during the time periods where the signal is not being tracked. This harvested energy can be used to supplement the ADC itself, paving the way to the possibility of zero-power consumption and power-saving ADCs. We analyze the tradeoff between the ability to recover the sampled signal and the energy harvested, and provide guidelines for setting the sampling rate in the light of accuracy and energy constraints. Our analysis indicates that eSampling ADCs operating with up to 12 bits per sample can acquire bandlimited analog signals such that they can be perfectly recovered without requiring power from the external source. Furthermore, our theoretical results reveal that eSampling ADCs can in fact save power by harvesting more energy than they consume. To verify the feasibility of eSampling ADCs, we present a circuit-level design using standard complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) 65 nm technology. An eSampling 8-bit ADC which samples at 40 MHZ is designed on a Cadence Virtuoso platform. Our experimental study involving Nyquist rate sampling of bandlimited signals demonstrates that such ADCs are indeed capable of harvesting more energy than that spent during analog-to-digital conversion, without affecting the accuracy.