A CMOS SoC for Wireless Ultrasonic Power/Data Transfer and SHM Measurements on Structures

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Abstract

This paper describes a highly-integrated CMOS system-on-chip (SoC) for active structural health monitoring (SHM). The chip integrates ultrasonic power and bidirectional half-duplex data transfer, a power management unit (PMU), and an ultrasound transceiver to enable wireless ultrasonically-coupled sensor SHM networks on structures. The PMU includes an active bias-flip rectifier with off-delay compensation, a high-efficiency dual-path DC-DC converter with inductor time-sharing, and five switched-capacitor DC-DC converters to generate multi-level spectrally band-limited pulses for guided-wave SHM. The chip was fabricated in a standard 180 nm process and has a die area of 2× 2 mm2. Test results show power conversion efficiency (PCE) > 85% for the active rectifier, > 70% for the inductive DC-DC converter, and > 60% for the switched-capacitor DC-DC converters. Output pulses have a peak-to-sidelobe ratio (PSL) > 30 dB and worst-case out-of-band emissions

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APA

Tang, X., Mandal, S., & Ozdemir, T. (2022). A CMOS SoC for Wireless Ultrasonic Power/Data Transfer and SHM Measurements on Structures. IEEE Access, 10, 110163–110180. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3214231

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