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Design of a Self-Controlled Dual-Oscillator-Based Supply Voltage Monitor for Biofuel-Cell-Combined Biosensing Systems in 65-nm CMOS and 55-nm DDC CMOS.

Authors :
Kobayashi A
Hayashi K
Arata S
Murakami S
Xu G
Niitsu K
Source :
IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems [IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst] 2019 Dec; Vol. 13 (6), pp. 1152-1162. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Oct 30.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

A supply voltage monitor (SVM) with self-controlled dual-oscillator-based architecture is proposed herein for biosensing systems combined with a biofuel cell (BFC) in this paper. The output of the BFCs can be used to monitor the biological signals while powering the BFC-combined biosensing systems. Thus, the SVM is designed to convert the change in the supply voltage (V <subscript>DD</subscript> ) into a code. The architecture of the proposed SVM allows self-controlled periodic operation without external signals. Furthermore, the frequency subtraction technique that uses two oscillators employing gate-leakage-based architecture with different frequency sensitivities to V <subscript>DD</subscript> allows accurate code generation with low power consumption and a small circuit area for supply voltage monitoring. The proposed SVM is fabricated using two different CMOS process technologies, including 65-nm CMOS and 55-nm deeply depleted channel (DDC) CMOS. The implementation of the 65-nm CMOS obtains an operating V <subscript>DD</subscript> range of 250 mV (0.75-1 V), draws a standby power consumption of 1.4 nW at 0.75-V V <subscript>DD</subscript> , exhibits a resolution of 2.4 mV with a nonlinearity error of -8.4/ +12.1 mV, and occupies a circuit area of 0.0047 mm <superscript>2</superscript> . Meanwhile, the implementation of the 55-nm DDC CMOS for low-voltage operation achieves an operating V <subscript>DD</subscript> range of 300 mV (0.225-0.525 V), draws a standby power consumption of 32.5 nW at 0.25-V V <subscript>DD</subscript> , exhibits a resolution of 0.94 mV with a nonlinearity error of -15.2/ +14 mV, and occupies a circuit area of 0.0032 mm <superscript>2</superscript> .

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1940-9990
Volume :
13
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31675341
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TBCAS.2019.2950509