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Future of Adaptive Circuits. Justin Kyungryun Kim Ph.D. Candidate, Electrical Eng. Stanford University justinkr@stanford.edu. Abstract.
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Future of Adaptive Circuits Justin Kyungryun Kim Ph.D. Candidate, Electrical Eng. Stanford University justinkr@stanford.edu
Abstract • Ever increasing demands for lower cost and better functionality in communication devices are starting to drive analog circuitry to have adaptive features [1]. • Possibilities and promises of this new design direction have been explored. [1] A. Tasic, W.A. Serdijn, and J.R. Long, “Adaptive multi-standard circuits and systems for wireless communications,” IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine, Page(s): 29 - 37
Outline • Introduction and Motivation • Adaptive Circuits • Finding a Niche • Adaptive Circuits to the Rescue • Real-Time Dynamic Range Control • Cognitive Radio • Ongoing Project • Reconfigurable ADC • Summary
Adaptive Circuits • Circuits that can trade off power consumption for performance on the fly. Reconfigurable Learning systems Self-tuning Self-optimizing Adaptive Electronics [Peter Asbeck]
Finding a Niche • Multi-Standard Communication Systems • Inefficiency in Worst-Case Design Methodology • Inefficient Spectrum Usage
Multi-Standard Communication Systems • Cell phone is a great example Video Audio Text Cell Phone Bluetooth Telephony LAN TV
Inefficiency in Worst-Case Design Worst case point Circuit is designed to operate even at worst-case situation which result in inefficient power usage at most of the time
Inefficiency in Spectrum Usage • Recent measurements by the FCC in the US show 70% of the allocated spectrum is not utilized [BWRC_White_Paper]
Niches and Solutions • Multi-Standard Communication Systems • Single circuitry designed to operate for multiple standards • Inefficiency in Worst-Case Design Methodology • Real-time dynamic range control • Inefficient Spectrum Usage • Cognitive radio
Real-Time Dynamic Range (DR) Control • Detect signal strength and control dynamic range of RF/analog circuitry Lower DR and power Higher DR and power
Cognitive Radio • FCC (Federal Communications Commission) “A cognitive radio (CR) is a radio that can change its transmitter parameters based on interaction with the environment in which it operates.” • Features of CR (A) Detect user need (B) Interact with the environment and figure out unused communication bands (C) Provide cheap communication solution Possible communication band
Reconfigurable ADC • Pipeline ADC with capability of adjusting speed and resolution with adaptive power • Main goal • Achieve ~state-of-the-art performance at every point on reconfiguration curve • Approximately 2x power reduction per bit of resolution dropped • Power approximately proportional to speed
K. Gulati and H.-S. Lee, "A Low-Power Reconfigurable Analog-to-Digital Converter," IEEE JSSC, Dec. 2001. Prior Art
The Simpler The Better • Analog becomes easier to turn on / off
Digitally Assisted Analog Design B. Murmann and B.E. Boser, "A 12-bit, 75MS/s Pipelined ADC Using Open-Loop Residue Amplification," IEEE JSSC, Dec. 2003.
Future Promises • Better functionalities and lower cost • Cheaper service with CR • Cellular service provider can lease their spectrum in secondary market to make more out of the spectrum they paid for • Wide area, reliable internet access • Low frequency TV signal has good propagation characteristics suitable for wide area internet access
Summary • Driving Force Towards Adaptive Circuits • Multi-standard communication systems • Worst-case design methodology in communication systems • Inefficient spectrum usage • Adaptive Circuits to the Rescue • Real-time dynamic range control • Cognitive radio • Reconfigurable ADC • Digitally assisted analog design concept can be effectively used to build a reconfigurable ADC