Schmidt C, Nehring J, Dietz M, Weigel R, Kissinger D, Hagelauer AM (2017)
Publication Type: Conference contribution
Publication year: 2017
Pages Range: 101-103
Conference Proceedings Title: IEEE Radio and Wireless Symposium
Event location: Phoenix
A highly-integrated (2\^{}11)-1 pseudo-random bit sequence (PRBS) transmitter for biomedical applications is presented. The chip consists of an ultra-wideband synthesizer with an integrated divider to drive a PLL, a linear feedback shift register (LFSR) to generate an M-sequence and a programmable binary divider to enable adaptive subsampling technique in the signal processing path. The circuit is created to be used in a miniaturized portable PRBS based sensor system for biomedical applications. A conceivable application is the measurement of dehydration in a human body. The PRBS generator is capable of generating a bit-rate up to 10 Gb/s, correlating to a maximum bandwidth of the generated sequence of 5 GHz, which is sufficient for the designated applications. The circuit is manufactured in an 0.35 um SiGe-Bipolar technology with an ft of 200 GHz using 12 mm\^{}2 chip area.
APA:
Schmidt, C., Nehring, J., Dietz, M., Weigel, R., Kissinger, D., & Hagelauer, A.M. (2017). A 10 Gb/s Highly-Integrated Adaptive Pseudo-Noise Transmitter for Biomedical Applications. In IEEE Radio and Wireless Symposium (pp. 101-103). Phoenix.
MLA:
Schmidt, Christian, et al. "A 10 Gb/s Highly-Integrated Adaptive Pseudo-Noise Transmitter for Biomedical Applications." Proceedings of the IEEE Radio and Wireless Symposium, Phoenix 2017. 101-103.
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