Title :
System-on-chip microwave radiometer for thermal remote sensing and its application to the forest fire detection
Author :
Alimenti, F. ; Zito, D. ; Boni, A. ; Borgarino, M. ; Fonte, A. ; Carboni, A. ; Leone, S. ; Pifferi, M. ; Roselli, L. ; Neri, B. ; Menozzi, R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Inf. Eng., Univ. of Perugia, Perugia
fDate :
Aug. 31 2008-Sept. 3 2008
Abstract :
This paper focuses on the opportunities offered by the latest advances in silicon technologies for realizing system-on-chip microwave radiometer. Such a highly integrated, low-cost, radiometer chip could be applied to the environmental remote sensing and, in particular, to the forest fire detection. The feasibility study is carried-out in two steps. First, a proof of the concept is given by means of a discrete-component radiometer operating at 12.65 GHz. This radiometer exploits TV-SAT components such as low-noise down-converter and dish antenna. On-field measurements shows a radiometric contrast (increase of the antenna noise temperature due to the fire with respect to the background) of about 8 K for a wooden fire of 0.38 m 2 placed 30 m away from the antenna. Then, a single-chip 13 GHz radiometer has been designed exploiting a CMOS 90 nm standard process. The sensor is based on a direct-conversion architecture with integrated LNA, Gilbertpsilas cell mixer and PLL frequency synthesizer. The IF chain includes an active (gm-C) low-pass filter and a CMOS square-law detector. The circuit simulations show a total receiver gain of 72 dB, an equivalent input noise temperature of 105 K and an IF bandwidth of 100 MHz.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; circuit simulation; frequency synthesizers; low-pass filters; microwave antennas; microwave detectors; microwave mixers; radiometry; remote sensing; system-on-chip; temperature sensors; CMOS square-law detector; PLL frequency synthesizer; active low-pass filter; antenna noise temperature; cell mixer; circuit simulations; direct-conversion architecture; discrete-component radiometer; dish antenna; forest fire detection application; frequency 100 MHz; frequency 12.65 GHz; frequency 13 GHz; gain 72 dB; low-noise down-converter; radiometric contrast; system-on-chip microwave radiometer; temperature 105 K; thermal remote sensing; Antenna accessories; Antenna measurements; Fires; Microwave radiometry; Microwave technology; Noise measurement; Remote sensing; Silicon; System-on-a-chip; Temperature sensors;
Conference_Titel :
Electronics, Circuits and Systems, 2008. ICECS 2008. 15th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
St. Julien´s
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2181-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2182-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICECS.2008.4675090