A Fully-Reflective Wi-Fi-Compatible Backscatter Communication System With Retro-Reflective MIMO Gain for Improved Range.

IEEE J. Solid State Circuits(2023)

Cited 0|Views20
No score
Abstract
This article presents an integrated circuit (IC) designed to enable low-power long-range backscatter communication with commodity Wi-Fi transceivers. The proposed chip endeavors to improve the most critical and difficult specification in Wi-Fi backscatter systems: range. It does so through two proposed techniques: 1) a fully-reflective single-antenna backscatter solution, whereby the termination of a power combiner always has a reflection coefficient near 1 to ensure high reflected power while enabling single-sideband (SSB) quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) modulation with frequency-translation to separate Wi-Fi channel and 2) a retro-reflective multiple-in-multiple-out (MIMO) approach that redirects incident Wi-Fi signals, after SSB QPSK modulation, back to a colocated access point (AP) with MIMO gain. The proposed chip also implemented a counter-based wake-up scheme within a synchronization receiver (RX) to achieve standards-compatible wake-up with high synchronization accuracy. Implemented in 65-nm CMOS, the wake-up RX consumes 4.5 mu W and achieves a sensitivity of -43.5 dBm, while the synchronization RX consumes an average power of 4.8 mu W and achieves a synchronization accuracy of at least 150 ns for input power of -35 dBm or better. During backscattering, the IC consumes 32 and 38 mu W and attains an AP-to-tag range of 13 and 23 m for the fully-reflective and retro-reflective MIMO approaches, respectively.
More
Translated text
Key words
Backscatter communication, Internet-of-Things (IoT), low-power wireless system, range improvement, wake-up radios, Wi-Fi
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined