Timothy Dickson, Zeynep Deniz, et al.
VLSI Technology and Circuits 2022
The design of ultra-low-voltage microcontroller (MCU) systems with high energy-efficiency operations is a key concept to achieve fully autonomous energy-harvesting powered Internet-of-Things applications. In this paper, a system-on-chip (SoC) is presented, embedding an ARM® Cortex®-M0+ MCU, 2 × 4 KB SRAM, an ultra-low power frequency synthesizer, a custom power switch, and a power management unit enabling the active and sleep modes. The 28 nm fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FD-SOI) technology has been used to fabricate the device. The whole system operates at a fixed voltage of 0.5 V, and can switch from active and sleep/deep sleep modes, adjusting its frequency from 16 to 8 MHz or 32 kHz in one cycle upon energy availability. Silicon measurements report an SoC's power consumption of 2.7 pJ/cycle at 16 MHz during active mode, and a total power consumption of 0.7 μW during deep sleep mode. By combining frequency and power modes switching with extra reverse body-biasing, the system power consumption is drastically reduced by 2× and 61× in, respectively, sleep and deep sleep modes.
Timothy Dickson, Zeynep Deniz, et al.
VLSI Technology and Circuits 2022
Ramon Bertran, Pradip Bose, et al.
ICCD 2017
Erik Loscalzo, Martin Cochet, et al.
VLSI Technology and Circuits 2024
Zeynep Toprak-Deniz, Timothy O. Dickson, et al.
VLSI Technology and Circuits 2024