Title :
Low-Input Power-Level CMOS RF Energy-Harvesting Front End
Author :
Abouzied, Mohamed A. ; Sanchez-Sinencio, Edgar
Author_Institution :
Analog & Mixed Signal Center, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
Abstract :
RF energy-harvesting front ends consist of LC matching networks and RF rectifiers. The minimum detectable power (sensitivity) is dependent on the losses of both parts. In this paper, RF energy-harvesting sensitivity limits at steady state and design tradeoffs for matching networks and rectifiers are introduced. These limits and tradeoffs are examined for standard CMOS 0.18-μm technology. Two designs, one with off-chip matching network and the other with on-chip matching network, are presented, compared, and measured for an output voltage of 1 V. The sensitivity of the off-chip design is -27.3 dBm while taking 180 × 90 μm2 die area and off-chip high quality inductor and capacitor, which takes an extra 7.28 mm2 printed circuit board area. The fully integrated on-chip design has a sensitivity of -21.7 dBm while taking 820 × 450 μm2 die area. The sensitivity of the former proved superior while the latter is more attractive in terms of compactness, low cost, and easier tunability.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; capacitors; energy harvesting; inductors; printed circuits; rectifiers; CMOS RF energy-harvesting front end; LC matching networks; RF energy-harvesting sensitivity; RF rectifiers; low-input energy-harvesting front end; off-chip high quality capacitor; off-chip high quality inductor; off-chip matching network; on-chip matching network; power-level energy-harvesting front end; printed circuit board; size 0.18 mum; voltage 1 V; Capacitors; Charge pumps; Mathematical model; Radio frequency; Sensitivity; Threshold voltage; Transistors; Integrated CMOS; RF energy harvesting; matching network; performance limits; sensitivity; steady-state analysis; tunable;
Journal_Title :
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMTT.2015.2479233