Digital Regenerative Receiver for Millimeter-Wave and Sub-Millimeter-Wave Imaging and Communication
- Technology Benefits
- High receiver sensitivity at sub-mm frequenciesEliminates the need for analog to digital conversionReadily configurable across frequency bandsEasily interleaved for higher data rates
- Technology Application
- Wireless RF Receivers (mm- and sub-mm- wave)High data rate communication, Imaging signals, Spaceborne systems
- Detailed Technology Description
- Researchers at UCLA have constructed a low-complexity receiver capable of receiving data in the milimeter and sub-milimeter wave range and directly generating a time-encoded digital output. Through employing a super-regenerative architecture that is quenched by digital circuitry, the need for an analog-to-digital converter is eliminated, reducing power consumption and chip area. Accordingly, the architecture is ideal for interleaving multiple receivers to provide high baseband data rates and it also provides an attractive solution for mmw-imaging arrays where 10,000s of pixel receivers need to be fabricated on the same chop.
- Supplementary Information
- Inventor: CHANG, Mau-Chung | TANG, Adrian
Priority Number: WO2012034103A3
IPC Current: G01V000312 | G01S001304 | G01S001389
Assignee Applicant: The Regents of the University of California
Title: DIGITAL REGENERATIVE RECEIVER FOR MILLIMETER-WAVE AND SUB-MILLIMETER-WAVE IMAGING AND COMMUNICATION | RÉCEPTEUR À RÉACTION NUMÉRIQUE DESTINÉ À UNE IMAGERIE ET À DES COMMUNICATIONS À ONDES MILLIMÉTRIQUES ET À ONDES SUBMILLIMÉTRIQUES
Usefulness: DIGITAL REGENERATIVE RECEIVER FOR MILLIMETER-WAVE AND SUB-MILLIMETER-WAVE IMAGING AND COMMUNICATION | RÉCEPTEUR À RÉACTION NUMÉRIQUE DESTINÉ À UNE IMAGERIE ET À DES COMMUNICATIONS À ONDES MILLIMÉTRIQUES ET À ONDES SUBMILLIMÉTRIQUES
Summary: Apparatus e.g. digital regenerative receiver (DRR) (claimed) and intermodal regenerative receiver (IRR), for use in an imaging array of a high resolution imaging system for receiving millimeter and sub-millimeter wavelength imaging. Can also be used for ultra-long-range data communication.
Novelty: Millimeter and sub-millimeter wavelength imaging receiving apparatus e.g. digital regenerative receiver, for high resolution imaging system, has latch coupled to regenerative oscillator to activate and deactivate oscillator
- Industry
- ICT/Telecom
- Sub Category
- Image Processing
- Application No.
- 9077412
- Others
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Background
As applications for high data rate wireless communications increase, so does the demand for high frequency receivers with low power consumption. However, as the frequency of operation increases, device gains drop, rendering conventional receiver designs ineffective. Additional Technologies by these Inventors
- Self-synchronized RF Interconnect for 3-dimensional Circuit Integration
- Submillimeter-wave Signal Generation by Linear Superimposition of Phase-shifted Fundamental Tone Signals
- Phase Coherent Frequency Divider
- Off-Chip Multi-Band RF-Interconnect (OMRF-I) Transceiver for Future Advanced High Speed Memory Interface
- Origamic Topology for Analog and Mixed-Signal Circuit Applications
- Digital Oscillator Method to Implement Non-Contact Sensors for Gesture Detection Displays
- Interference Tolerant Radar System for Self-Driving Vehicles
- Grouping Algorithm For Touchscreen Finger Position Detection
- On-Chip Tunable Artificial Dielectrics
- Interleaved 3D On-Chip Differential Inductor And Transformer
- Sub-Carrier Successive-Approximation Mm-Wave Radar For High-Resolution 3D Imaging
- Millimeter-Wave CMOS Transceiver with PCB Antenna for Contactless Wave-Connectors
- Hollow Plastic Waveguide ("Wave Cable") Based High Speed And Low Power Data Center Inter-Server Link
- Metal-Coated Flexible Dielectric Waveguides For Millimeter-Wave Multi-Lane Wireline Communication
- Deep-Learning Accelerator And Analog Neuromorphic Computation With CMOS-Compatible Charge-Trap-Transistor (CTT) Technique
- An Efficient Architecture To Compute Sparse Neural Network
Tech ID/UC Case
21577/2010-811-0
Related Cases
2010-811-0
- *Abstract
-
Researchers at UCLA have developed a universal architecture for high-frequency receivers that eliminate the need for analog to digital converters, reducing power consumption and chip area while providing high input sensitivity and receiver gain.
- *Applications
-
Wireless RF Receivers (mm- and sub-mm- wave) - High data rate communication, Imaging signals, Spaceborne systems
- *IP Issue Date
- Jul 7, 2015
- *Principal Investigator
-
Name: Mau-Chung Frank Chang
Department:
Name: Adrian Tang
Department:
- Country/Region
- USA

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