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Description
ABSTRACT The D flip flop acts as a sequencing element while designing any pipelined system. Radiation Hardening by Design (RHBD) allows hardened circuits to be fabricated on commercially available CMOS manufacturing process. Recently, single event transients (SET's) have become as important as single event upset (SEU) in radiation hardened high

ABSTRACT The D flip flop acts as a sequencing element while designing any pipelined system. Radiation Hardening by Design (RHBD) allows hardened circuits to be fabricated on commercially available CMOS manufacturing process. Recently, single event transients (SET's) have become as important as single event upset (SEU) in radiation hardened high speed digital designs. A novel temporal pulse based RHBD flip-flop design is presented. Temporally delayed pulses produced by a radiation hardened pulse generator design samples the data in three redundant pulse latches. The proposed RHBD flip-flop has been statistically designed and fabricated on 90 nm TSMC LP process. Detailed simulations of the flip-flop operation in both normal and radiation environments are presented. Spatial separation of critical nodes for the physical design of the flip-flop is carried out for mitigating multi-node charge collection upsets. The proposed flip-flop is also used in commercial CAD flows for high performance chip designs. The proposed flip-flop is used in the design and auto-place-route (APR) of an advanced encryption system and the metrics analyzed.
ContributorsKumar, Sushil (Author) / Clark, Lawrence (Thesis advisor) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Switch mode DC/DC converters are suited for battery powered applications, due to their high efficiency, which help in conserving the battery lifetime. Fixed Frequency PWM based converters, which are generally used for these applications offer good voltage regulation, low ripple and excellent efficiency at high load currents. However at light

Switch mode DC/DC converters are suited for battery powered applications, due to their high efficiency, which help in conserving the battery lifetime. Fixed Frequency PWM based converters, which are generally used for these applications offer good voltage regulation, low ripple and excellent efficiency at high load currents. However at light load currents, fixed frequency PWM converters suffer from poor efficiencies The PFM control offers higher efficiency at light loads at the cost of a higher ripple. The PWM has a poor efficiency at light loads but good voltage ripple characteristics, due to a high switching frequency. To get the best of both control modes, both loops are used together with the control switched from one loop to another based on the load current. Such architectures are referred to as hybrid converters. While transition from PFM to PWM loop can be made by estimating the average load current, transition from PFM to PWM requires voltage or peak current sensing. This theses implements a hysteretic PFM solution for a synchronous buck converter with external MOSFET's, to achieve efficiencies of about 80% at light loads. As the PFM loop operates independently of the PWM loop, a transition circuit for automatically transitioning from PFM to PWM is implemented. The transition circuit is implemented digitally without needing any external voltage or current sensing circuit.
ContributorsVivek, Parasuram (Author) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Thesis advisor) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Song, Hongjiang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Flexible hybrid electronics (FHE) is emerging as a promising solution to combine the benefits of printed electronics and silicon technology. FHE has many high-impact potential areas, such as wearable applications, health monitoring, and soft robotics, due to its physical advantages, which include light weight, low cost and the ability conform

Flexible hybrid electronics (FHE) is emerging as a promising solution to combine the benefits of printed electronics and silicon technology. FHE has many high-impact potential areas, such as wearable applications, health monitoring, and soft robotics, due to its physical advantages, which include light weight, low cost and the ability conform to different shapes. However, physical deformations that can occur in the field lead to significant testing and validation challenges. For example, designers have to ensure that FHE devices continue to meet specs even when the components experience stress due to bending. Hence, physical deformation, which is hard to emulate, has to be part of the test procedures developed for FHE devices. This paper is the first to analyze stress experience at different parts of FHE devices under different bending conditions. Then develop a novel methodology to maximize the test coverage with minimum number of text vectors with the help of a mixed integer linear programming formulation.
ContributorsGao, Hang (Author) / Ozev, Sule (Thesis advisor) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Christen, Jennifer Blain (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Medical ultrasound imaging is widely used today because of it being non-invasive and cost-effective. Flow estimation helps in accurate diagnosis of vascular diseases and adds an important dimension to medical ultrasound imaging. Traditionally flow estimation is done using Doppler-based methods which only estimate velocity in the beam direction. Thus

Medical ultrasound imaging is widely used today because of it being non-invasive and cost-effective. Flow estimation helps in accurate diagnosis of vascular diseases and adds an important dimension to medical ultrasound imaging. Traditionally flow estimation is done using Doppler-based methods which only estimate velocity in the beam direction. Thus when blood vessels are close to being orthogonal to the beam direction, there are large errors in the estimation results. In this dissertation, a low cost blood flow estimation method that does not have the angle dependency of Doppler-based methods, is presented.

First, a velocity estimator based on speckle tracking and synthetic lateral phase is proposed for clutter-free blood flow.

Speckle tracking is based on kernel matching and does not have any angle dependency. While velocity estimation in axial dimension is accurate, lateral velocity estimation is challenging due to reduced resolution and lack of phase information. This work presents a two tiered method which estimates the pixel level movement using sum-of-absolute difference, and then estimates the sub-pixel level using synthetic phase information in the lateral dimension. Such a method achieves highly accurate velocity estimation with reduced complexity compared to a cross correlation based method. The average bias of the proposed estimation method is less than 2% for plug flow and less than 7% for parabolic flow.

Blood is always accompanied by clutter which originates from vessel wall and surrounding tissues. As magnitude of the blood signal is usually 40-60 dB lower than magnitude of the clutter signal, clutter filtering is necessary before blood flow estimation. Clutter filters utilize the high magnitude and low frequency features of clutter signal to effectively remove them from the compound (blood + clutter) signal. Instead of low complexity FIR filter or high complexity SVD-based filters, here a power/subspace iteration based method is proposed for clutter filtering. Excellent clutter filtering performance is achieved for both slow and fast moving clutters with lower complexity compared to SVD-based filters. For instance, use of the proposed method results in the bias being less than 8% and standard deviation being less than 12% for fast moving clutter when the beam-to-flow-angle is $90^o$.

Third, a flow rate estimation method based on kernel power weighting is proposed. As the velocity estimator is a kernel-based method, the estimation accuracy degrades near the vessel boundary. In order to account for kernels that are not fully inside the vessel, fractional weights are given to these kernels based on their signal power. The proposed method achieves excellent flow rate estimation results with less than 8% bias for both slow and fast moving clutters.

The performance of the velocity estimator is also evaluated for challenging models. A 2D version of our two-tiered method is able to accurately estimate velocity vectors in a spinning disk as well as in a carotid bifurcation model, both of which are part of the synthetic aperture vector flow imaging (SA-VFI) challenge of 2018. In fact, the proposed method ranked 3rd in the challenge for testing dataset with carotid bifurcation. The flow estimation method is also evaluated for blood flow in vessels with stenosis. Simulation results show that the proposed method is able to estimate the flow rate with less than 9% bias.
ContributorsWei, Siyuan (Author) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Wenisch, Thomas F. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
This dissertation proposes and presents two different passive sigma-delta

modulator zoom Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) architectures. The first ADC is fullydifferential, synthesizable zoom-ADC architecture with a passive loop filter for lowfrequency Built in Self-Test (BIST) applications. The detailed ADC architecture and a step

by step process designing the zoom-ADC along with

This dissertation proposes and presents two different passive sigma-delta

modulator zoom Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) architectures. The first ADC is fullydifferential, synthesizable zoom-ADC architecture with a passive loop filter for lowfrequency Built in Self-Test (BIST) applications. The detailed ADC architecture and a step

by step process designing the zoom-ADC along with a synthesis tool that can target various

design specifications are presented. The design flow does not rely on extensive knowledge

of an experienced ADC designer. Two example set of BIST ADCs have been synthesized

with different performance requirements in 65nm CMOS process. The first ADC achieves

90.4dB Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) in 512µs measurement time and consumes 17µW

power. Another example achieves 78.2dB SNR in 31.25µs measurement time and

consumes 63µW power. The second ADC architecture is a multi-mode, dynamically

zooming passive sigma-delta modulator. The architecture is based on a 5b interpolating

flash ADC as the zooming unit, and a passive discrete time sigma delta modulator as the

fine conversion unit. The proposed ADC provides an Oversampling Ratio (OSR)-

independent, dynamic zooming technique, employing an interpolating zooming front-end.

The modulator covers between 0.1 MHz and 10 MHz signal bandwidth which makes it

suitable for cellular applications including 4G radio systems. By reconfiguring the OSR,

bias current, and component parameters, optimal power consumption can be achieved for

every mode. The ADC is implemented in 0.13 µm CMOS technology and it achieves an

SNDR of 82.2/77.1/74.2/68 dB for 0.1/1.92/5/10MHz bandwidth with 1.3/5.7/9.6/11.9mW

power consumption from a 1.2 V supply.
ContributorsEROL, OSMAN EMIR (Author) / Ozev, Sule (Thesis advisor) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Blain-Christen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
As integrated technologies are scaling down, there is an increasing trend in the

process,voltage and temperature (PVT) variations of highly integrated RF systems.

Accounting for these variations during the design phase requires tremendous amount

of time for prediction of RF performance and optimizing it accordingly. Thus, there

is an increasing gap between the need

As integrated technologies are scaling down, there is an increasing trend in the

process,voltage and temperature (PVT) variations of highly integrated RF systems.

Accounting for these variations during the design phase requires tremendous amount

of time for prediction of RF performance and optimizing it accordingly. Thus, there

is an increasing gap between the need to relax the RF performance requirements at

the design phase for rapid development and the need to provide high performance

and low cost RF circuits that function with PVT variations. No matter how care-

fully designed, RF integrated circuits (ICs) manufactured with advanced technology

nodes necessitate lengthy post-production calibration and test cycles with expensive

RF test instruments. Hence design-for-test (DFT) is proposed for low-cost and fast

measurement of performance parameters during both post-production and in-eld op-

eration. For example, built-in self-test (BIST) is a DFT solution for low-cost on-chip

measurement of RF performance parameters. In this dissertation, three aspects of

automated test and calibration, including DFT mathematical model, BIST hardware

and built-in calibration are covered for RF front-end blocks.

First, the theoretical foundation of a post-production test of RF integrated phased

array antennas is proposed by developing the mathematical model to measure gain

and phase mismatches between antenna elements without any electrical contact. The

proposed technique is fast, cost-efficient and uses near-field measurement of radiated

power from antennas hence, it requires single test setup, it has easy implementation

and it is short in time which makes it viable for industrialized high volume integrated

IC production test.

Second, a BIST model intended for the characterization of I/Q offset, gain and

phase mismatch of IQ transmitters without relying on external equipment is intro-

duced. The proposed BIST method is based on on-chip amplitude measurement as

in prior works however,here the variations in the BIST circuit do not affect the target

parameter estimation accuracy since measurements are designed to be relative. The

BIST circuit is implemented in 130nm technology and can be used for post-production

and in-field calibration.

Third, a programmable low noise amplifier (LNA) is proposed which is adaptable

to different application scenarios depending on the specification requirements. Its

performance is optimized with regards to required specifications e.g. distance, power

consumption, BER, data rate, etc.The statistical modeling is used to capture the

correlations among measured performance parameters and calibration modes for fast

adaptation. Machine learning technique is used to capture these non-linear correlations and build the probability distribution of a target parameter based on measurement results of the correlated parameters. The proposed concept is demonstrated by

embedding built-in tuning knobs in LNA design in 130nm technology. The tuning

knobs are carefully designed to provide independent combinations of important per-

formance parameters such as gain and linearity. Minimum number of switches are

used to provide the desired tuning range without a need for an external analog input.
ContributorsShafiee, Maryam (Author) / Ozev, Sule (Thesis advisor) / Diaz, Rodolfo (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurological disorder with complicated and disabling motor and non-motor symptoms. The pathology for PD is difficult and expensive. Furthermore, it depends on patient diaries and the neurologist’s subjective assessment of clinical scales. Objective, accurate, and continuous patient monitoring have become possible with the

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurological disorder with complicated and disabling motor and non-motor symptoms. The pathology for PD is difficult and expensive. Furthermore, it depends on patient diaries and the neurologist’s subjective assessment of clinical scales. Objective, accurate, and continuous patient monitoring have become possible with the advancement in mobile and portable equipment. Consequently, a significant amount of work has been done to explore new cost-effective and subjective assessment methods or PD symptoms. For example, smart technologies, such as wearable sensors and optical motion capturing systems, have been used to analyze the symptoms of a PD patient to assess their disease progression and even to detect signs in their nascent stage for early diagnosis of PD.

This review focuses on the use of modern equipment for PD applications that were developed in the last decade. Four significant fields of research were identified: Assistance diagnosis, Prognosis or Monitoring of Symptoms and their Severity, Predicting Response to Treatment, and Assistance to Therapy or Rehabilitation. This study reviews the papers published between January 2008 and December 2018 in the following four databases: Pubmed Central, Science Direct, IEEE Xplore and MDPI. After removing unrelated articles, ones published in languages other than English, duplicate entries and other articles that did not fulfill the selection criteria, 778 papers were manually investigated and included in this review. A general overview of PD applications, devices used and aspects monitored for PD management is provided in this systematic review.
ContributorsDeb, Ranadeep (Author) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Thesis advisor) / Shill, Holly (Committee member) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Clock generation and distribution are essential to CMOS microchips, providing synchronization to external devices and between internal sequential logic. Clocks in microprocessors are highly vulnerable to single event effects and designing reliable energy efficient clock networks for mission critical applications is a major challenge. This dissertation studies the basics of

Clock generation and distribution are essential to CMOS microchips, providing synchronization to external devices and between internal sequential logic. Clocks in microprocessors are highly vulnerable to single event effects and designing reliable energy efficient clock networks for mission critical applications is a major challenge. This dissertation studies the basics of radiation hardening, essentials of clock design and impact of particle strikes on clocks in detail and presents design techniques for hardening complete clock systems in digital ICs.

Since the sequential elements play a key role in deciding the robustness of any clocking strategy, hardened-by-design implementations of triple-mode redundant (TMR) pulse clocked latches and physical design methodologies for using TMR master-slave flip-flops in application specific ICs (ASICs) are proposed. A novel temporal pulse clocked latch design for low power radiation hardened applications is also proposed. Techniques for designing custom RHBD clock distribution networks (clock spines) and ASIC clock trees for a radiation hardened microprocessor using standard CAD tools are presented. A framework for analyzing the vulnerabilities of clock trees in general, and study the parameters that contribute the most to the tree’s failure, including impact on controlled latches is provided. This is then used to design an integrated temporally redundant clock tree and pulse clocked flip-flop based clocking scheme that is robust to single event transients (SETs) and single event upsets (SEUs). Subsequently, designing robust clock delay lines for use in double data rate (DDRx) memory applications is studied in detail. Several modules of the proposed radiation hardened all-digital delay locked loop are designed and studied. Many of the circuits proposed in this entire body of work have been implemented and tested on a standard low-power 90-nm process.
ContributorsChellappa, Srivatsan (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Holbert, Keith E. (Committee member) / Cao, Yu (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Power Management circuits are employed in almost all electronic equipment and they have energy storage elements (capacitors and inductors) as building blocks along with other active circuitry. Power management circuits employ feedback to achieve good load and line regulation. The feedback loop is designed at an operating point and component

Power Management circuits are employed in almost all electronic equipment and they have energy storage elements (capacitors and inductors) as building blocks along with other active circuitry. Power management circuits employ feedback to achieve good load and line regulation. The feedback loop is designed at an operating point and component values are chosen to meet that design requirements. But the capacitors and inductors are subject to variations due to temperature, aging and load stress. Due to these variations, the feedback loop can cross its robustness margins and can lead to degraded performance and potential instability. Another issue in power management circuits is the measurement of their frequency response for stability assessment. The standard techniques used in production test environment require expensive measurement equipment (Network Analyzer) and time. These two issues of component variations and frequency response measurement can be addressed if the frequency response of the power converter is used as measure of component (capacitor and inductor) variations. So, a single solution of frequency response measurement solves both the issues. This work examines system identification (frequency response measurement) of power management circuits based on cross correlation technique and proposes the use of switched capacitor correlator for this purpose. A switched capacitor correlator has been designed and used in the system identification of Linear and Switching regulators. The obtained results are compared with the standard frequency response measurement methods of power converters.
ContributorsMalladi, Venkata Naga Koushik (Author) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Thesis advisor) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
The reduced availability of 3He is a motivation for developing alternative neutron detectors. 6Li-enriched CLYC (Cs2LiYCl6), a scintillator, is a promising candidate to replace 3He. The neutron and gamma ray signals from CLYC have different shapes due to the slower decay of neutron pulses. Some of the well-known pulse shape

The reduced availability of 3He is a motivation for developing alternative neutron detectors. 6Li-enriched CLYC (Cs2LiYCl6), a scintillator, is a promising candidate to replace 3He. The neutron and gamma ray signals from CLYC have different shapes due to the slower decay of neutron pulses. Some of the well-known pulse shape discrimination techniques are charge comparison method, pulse gradient method and frequency gradient method. In the work presented here, we have applied a normalized cross correlation (NCC) approach to real neutron and gamma ray pulses produced by exposing CLYC scintillators to a mixed radiation environment generated by 137Cs, 22Na, 57Co and 252Cf/AmBe at different event rates. The cross correlation analysis produces distinctive results for measured neutron pulses and gamma ray pulses when they are cross correlated with reference neutron and/or gamma templates. NCC produces good separation between neutron and gamma rays at low (< 100 kHz) to mid event rate (< 200 kHz). However, the separation disappears at high event rate (> 200 kHz) because of pileup, noise and baseline shift. This is also confirmed by observing the pulse shape discrimination (PSD) plots and figure of merit (FOM) of NCC. FOM is close to 3, which is good, for low event rate but rolls off significantly along with the increase in the event rate and reaches 1 at high event rate. Future efforts are required to reduce the noise by using better hardware system, remove pileup and detect the NCC shapes of neutron and gamma rays using advanced techniques.
ContributorsChandhran, Premkumar (Author) / Holbert, Keith E. (Thesis advisor) / Spanias, Andreas (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015