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Description
Readout Integrated Circuits(ROICs) are important components of infrared(IR) imag

ing systems. Performance of ROICs affect the quality of images obtained from IR

imaging systems. Contemporary infrared imaging applications demand ROICs that

can support large dynamic range, high frame rate, high output data rate, at low

cost, size and power. Some of these applications are

Readout Integrated Circuits(ROICs) are important components of infrared(IR) imag

ing systems. Performance of ROICs affect the quality of images obtained from IR

imaging systems. Contemporary infrared imaging applications demand ROICs that

can support large dynamic range, high frame rate, high output data rate, at low

cost, size and power. Some of these applications are military surveillance, remote

sensing in space and earth science missions and medical diagnosis. This work focuses

on developing a ROIC unit cell prototype for National Aeronautics and Space Ad

ministration(NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s(JPL’s) space applications. These

space applications also demand high sensitivity, longer integration times(large well

capacity), wide operating temperature range, wide input current range and immunity

to radiation events such as Single Event Latchup(SEL).

This work proposes a digital ROIC(DROIC) unit cell prototype of 30ux30u size,

to be used mainly with NASA JPL’s High Operating Temperature Barrier Infrared

Detectors(HOT BIRDs). Current state of the art DROICs achieve a dynamic range

of 16 bits using advanced 65-90nm CMOS processes which adds a lot of cost overhead.

The DROIC pixel proposed in this work uses a low cost 180nm CMOS process and

supports a dynamic range of 20 bits operating at a low frame rate of 100 frames per

second(fps), and a dynamic range of 12 bits operating at a high frame rate of 5kfps.

The total electron well capacity of this DROIC pixel is 1.27 billion electrons, enabling

integration times as long as 10ms, to achieve better dynamic range. The DROIC unit

cell uses an in-pixel 12-bit coarse ADC and an external 8-bit DAC based fine ADC.

The proposed DROIC uses layout techniques that make it immune to radiation up to

300krad(Si) of total ionizing dose(TID) and single event latch-up(SEL). It also has a

wide input current range from 10pA to 1uA and supports detectors operating from

Short-wave infrared (SWIR) to longwave infrared (LWIR) regions.
ContributorsPraveen, Subramanya Chilukuri (Author) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Thesis advisor) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Long, Yu (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Within the near future, a vast demand for autonomous vehicular techniques can be forecast on both aviation and ground platforms, including autonomous driving, automatic landing, air traffic management. These techniques usually rely on the positioning system and the communication system independently, where it potentially causes spectrum congestion. Inspired by the

Within the near future, a vast demand for autonomous vehicular techniques can be forecast on both aviation and ground platforms, including autonomous driving, automatic landing, air traffic management. These techniques usually rely on the positioning system and the communication system independently, where it potentially causes spectrum congestion. Inspired by the spectrum sharing technique, Communications and High-Precision Positioning (CHP2) system is invented to provide a high precision position service (precision ~1cm) while performing the communication task simultaneously under the same spectrum. CHP2 system is implemented on the consumer-off-the-shelf (COTS) software-defined radio (SDR) platform with customized hardware. Taking the advantages of the SDR platform, the completed baseband processing chain, time-of-arrival estimation (ToA), time-of-flight estimation (ToF) are mathematically modeled and then implemented onto the system-on-chip (SoC) system. Due to the compact size and cost economy, the CHP2 system can be installed on different aerial or ground platforms enabling a high-mobile and reconfigurable network.

In this dissertation report, the implementation procedure of the CHP2 system is discussed in detail. It mainly focuses on the system construction on the Xilinx Ultrascale+ SoC platform. The CHP2 waveform design, ToA solution, and timing exchanging algorithms are also introduced. Finally, several in-lab tests and over-the-air demonstrations are conducted. The demonstration shows the best ranging performance achieves the ~1 cm standard deviation and 10Hz refreshing rate of estimation by using a 10MHz narrow-band signal over 915MHz (US ISM) or 783MHz (EU Licensed) carrier frequency.
ContributorsYu, Hanguang (Author) / Bliss, Daniel (Thesis advisor) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Committee member) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
The objective of this work is to design a novel method for imaging targets and scenes which are not directly visible to the observer. The unique scattering properties of terahertz (THz) waves can turn most building surfaces into mirrors, thus allowing someone to see around corners and various occlusions. In

The objective of this work is to design a novel method for imaging targets and scenes which are not directly visible to the observer. The unique scattering properties of terahertz (THz) waves can turn most building surfaces into mirrors, thus allowing someone to see around corners and various occlusions. In the visible regime, most surfaces are very rough compared to the wavelength. As a result, the spatial coherency of reflected signals is lost, and the geometry of the objects where the light bounced on cannot be retrieved. Interestingly, the roughness of most surfaces is comparable to the wavelengths at lower frequencies (100 GHz – 10 THz) without significantly disturbing the wavefront of the scattered signals, behaving approximately as mirrors. Additionally, this electrically small roughness is beneficial because it can be used by the THz imaging system to locate the pose (location and orientation) of the mirror surfaces, thus enabling the reconstruction of both line-of-sight (LoS) and non-line-of-sight (NLoS) objects.

Back-propagation imaging methods are modified to reconstruct the image of the 2-D scenario (range, cross-range). The reflected signal from the target is collected using a SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) set-up in a lab environment. This imaging technique is verified using both full-wave 3-D numerical analysis models and lab experiments.

The novel imaging approach of non-line-of-sight-imaging could enable novel applications in rescue and surveillance missions, highly accurate localization methods, and improve channel estimation in mmWave and sub-mmWave wireless communication systems.
ContributorsDoddalla, Sai Kiran kiran (Author) / Trichopoulos, George (Thesis advisor) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Committee member) / Zeinolabedinzadeh, Saeed (Committee member) / Aberle, James T., 1961- (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
The recent increase in users of cellular networks necessitates the use of new technologies to meet this demand. Massive multiple input multiple output (MIMO) communication systems have great potential for increasing the network capacity of the emerging 5G+ cellular networks. However, leveraging the multiplexing and beamforming gains from these large-scale

The recent increase in users of cellular networks necessitates the use of new technologies to meet this demand. Massive multiple input multiple output (MIMO) communication systems have great potential for increasing the network capacity of the emerging 5G+ cellular networks. However, leveraging the multiplexing and beamforming gains from these large-scale MIMO systems requires the channel knowlege between each antenna and each user. Obtaining channel information on such a massive scale is not feasible with the current technology available due to the complexity of such large systems. Recent research shows that deep learning methods can lead to interesting gains for massive MIMO systems by mapping the channel information from the uplink frequency band to the channel information for the downlink frequency band as well as between antennas at nearby locations. This thesis presents the research to develop a deep learning based channel mapping proof-of-concept prototype.



Due to deep neural networks' need of large training sets for accurate performance, this thesis outlines the design and implementation of an autonomous channel measurement system to analyze the performance of the proposed deep learning based channel mapping concept. This system obtains channel magnitude measurements from eight antennas autonomously using a mobile robot carrying a transmitter which receives wireless commands from the central computer connected to the static receiver system. The developed autonomous channel measurement system is capable of obtaining accurate and repeatable channel magnitude measurements. It is shown that the proposed deep learning based channel mapping system accurately predicts channel information containing few multi-path effects.
ContributorsBooth, Jayden Charles (Author) / Spanias, Andreas (Thesis advisor) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Thesis advisor) / Ewaisha, Ahmed (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020