Communication and sensing circuits on cellulose

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Abstract

This paper proposes a review of several circuits for communication and wireless sensing applications implemented on cellulose-based materials. These circuits have been developed during the last years exploiting the adhesive copper laminate method. Such a technique relies on a copper adhesive tape that is shaped by a photo-lithographic process and then transferred to the hosting substrate (i.e., paper) by means of a sacrificial layer. The presented circuits span from UHF oscillators to a mixer working at 24 GHz and constitute an almost complete set of building blocks that can be applied to a huge variety communication apparatuses. Each circuit is validated experimentally showing performance comparable with the state-of-the-art. This paper demonstrates that circuits on cellulose are capable of operating at record frequencies and that ultra- low cost, green i.e., recyclable and biodegradable) materials can be a viable solution to realize high frequency hardware for the upcoming Internet of Things (IoT) era.

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Alimenti, F., Mariotti, C., Palazzi, V., Virili, M., Orecchini, G., Mezzanotte, P., & Roselli, L. (2015). Communication and sensing circuits on cellulose. Journal of Low Power Electronics and Applications, 5(3), 151–164. https://doi.org/10.3390/jlpea5030151

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