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An interactive clothing design and a personalized virtual display with user’s own face are presented in this paper to meet the requirement of personalized clothing customization. A customer interactive clothing design approach based on genetic engineering ideas is analyzed by taking suit as an example. Thus, customers could rearrange the clothing style elements, chose available color, fabric and come up with their own personalized suit style. A web 3D customization prototype system of personalized clothing is developed based on the Unity3D and VR technology. The layout of the structure and functions combined with the flow of the system are given. Practical issues such as 3D face scanning, suit style design, fabric selection, and accessory choices are addressed also. Tests to the prototype system indicate that it could show realistic clothing and fabric effect and offer effective visual and customization experience to users.
Usually battery chargers have two stages and DC charging current is considered to by necessary for a proper charging. To decrease the charger volume, a single stage LLC battery charger is investigated in this paper. PFC stage is eliminated, therefore no bulky capacitor is necessary any more, and battery is charged with a sinusoidal-like charging current. However, previous studies show that such a pulsating charging current has only minimal impact on battery life and efficiency. Design considerations of the resonant tank and optimal transformer design are presented. A 360W single stage LLC converter prototype for e-bike charger achieves a power factor of 0.98, efficiency of 0.93 and power density of 1,8kW/dm³.
This paper presents a permanent magnet tubular linear generator system for powering passive sensors using vertical vibration harvesting energy. The system consists of a permanent magnet tubular linear vibration generator and electric circuits. By using the design of mechanical resonant movers, the generator is capable of converting low frequencies small amplitude vertical vibration energy into more regular sinusoidal electrical energy. The distribution of the magnetic field and electromotive force are calculated by Finite Element Analysis. The characteristics of the linear vibration generator system are observed. The experimental results show the generator can produce about 0.4W~1.6W electrical power when the vibration source's amplitude is fixed on 2mm and the frequencies are between 13Hz and 22Hz.
DMOS transistors are often subject to high power dissipation and thus substantial self-heating. This limits their safe operating area because very high device temperatures can lead to thermal runaway and subsequent destruction. Because the peak temperature usually occurs only in a small region in the device, it is possible to redistribute part of the dissipated power from the hot region to the cooler device areas. In this way, the peak temperature is reduced, whereas the total power dissipation is still the same. Assuming that a certain temperature must not be exceeded for safe operation, the improved device is now capable of withstanding higher amounts of energy with an unchanged device area. This paper presents two simple methods to redistribute the power dissipation density and thus lower the peak device temperature. The presented methods only require layout changes. They can easily be applied to modern power technologies without the need of process modifications. Both methods are implemented in test structures and investigated by simulations and measurements.
DMOS transistors often suffer from substantial self-heating during high power dissipation, which can lead to thermal destruction if the device temperature reaches excessive values. A successfully demonstrated method to reduce the peak temperature is the redistribution of power dissipation density from the hotter to the cooler device areas by careful layout modification. However, this is very tedious and time-consuming if complex-shaped devices as often found in industrial applications are considered.
This paper presents an approach for fully automatic layout optimization which requires only a few hours processing time. The approach is applied to complex shaped test structures which are investigated by measurements and electro-thermal simulations. Results show a significantly lower peak temperature and an energy capability gain of 84 %, offering potential for a 18 % size reduction of active area.
In dieser Arbeit wird eine optimierte Bandgap-Referenz zur Erzeugung einer temperaturstabilen Spannung und eines Referenzstroms vorgestellt. Für Low-Power-Anwendungen wurde die Bandgap-Referenz, basierend auf der Brokaw-Zelle, mit minimaler Stromaufnahme und optimierter Chipfläche durch Multi-Emitter-Layout der Bipolartransistoren implementiert. Zusätzliches Merkmal ist ein verbreiteter Versorgungsspannungsbereich von 2,5 bis 5,5 V. Simulationen zeigen, dass eine stabile Ausgangsspannung von 1,218 V und ein Referenzstrom von 1,997 μA realisiert wird. Im Temperaturbereich -40 °C … 50 °C sowie dem gesamten Bereich der Versorgungsspannung beträgt die Genauigkeit der Referenzspannung ± 0,04 % mit einer Gesamtstromaufnahme zwischen 3,5 und 10 μA. Es wird eine Temperaturdrift von 2,18 ppm/K erreicht. Durch das elektronische Trimmen von Widerständen wird der Offset der Ausgangsspannung, bedingt durch Herstellungstoleranzen, auf ±3,5 mV justiert. Die Referenz wird in einer 0,18 μm BiCMOS-Technologie implementiert.
In this paper, it aims to model wind speed time series at multiple sites. The five-parameter Johnson distribution is deployed to relate the wind speed at each site to a Gaussian time series, and the resultant m-dimensional Gaussian stochastic vector process Z(t) is employed to model the temporal-spatial correlation of wind speeds at m different sites. In general, it is computationally tedious to obtain the autocorrelation functions (ACFs) and cross-correlation functions (CCFs) of Z(t), which are different to those of wind speed times series. In order to circumvent this correlation distortion problem, the rank ACF and rank CCF are introduced to characterize the temporal-spatial correlation of wind speeds, whereby the ACFs and CCFs of Z(t) can be analytically obtained. Then, Fourier transformation is implemented to establish the cross-spectral density matrix of Z(t), and an analytical approach is proposed to generate samples of wind speeds at m different sites. Finally, simulation experiments are performed to check the proposed methods, and the results verify that the five-parameter Johnson distribution can accurately match distribution functions of wind speeds, and the spectral representation method can well reproduce the temporal-spatial correlation of wind speeds.
A millimeter-wave power amplifier concept in an advanced silicon germanium (SiGe) BiCMOS technology is presented. The goal of the concept is to investigate the impact of physical limitations of the used heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBT) on the performance of a 77 GHz power amplifier. High current behavior, collectorbase breakdown and transistor saturation can be forced with the presented design. The power amplifier is manufactured in an advanced SiGe BiCMOS technology at Infineon Technologies AG with a maximum transit frequency fT of around 250 GHz for npn HBT’s [1]. The simulation results of the power amplifier show a saturated output power of 16 dBm at a power added efficiency of 13%. The test chip is designed for a supply voltage of 3.3 V and requires a chip size of 1.448 x 0.930 mm².
Aimed at the problem that the accuracy of face image classification in complex environment is not high, a network model F-Net suitable for aesthetic classification of face images is proposed. Based on LeNet-5, the model uses convolutional layers to extract facial image features in complex backgrounds, optimized parameters in the network model, and changes the number of convolutional layers and fully connected layer feature elements in the model. The experimental results show that the F-Net network model proposed in this paper has a face image classifation accuracy of 73% in complex environment background, which is better than other classical convolutional neural network classification models.
Verification of an active time constant tuning technique for continuous-time delta-sigma modulators
(2022)
In this work we present a technique to compensate the effects of R-C / g m -C time-constant (TC) errors due to process variation in continuous-time delta-sigma modulators. Local TC error compensation factors are shifted around in the modulator loop to positions where they can be implemented efficiently with finely tunable circuit structures, such as current-steering digital-to-analog converters (DAC). We apply our technique to a third-order, single-bit, low-pass continuous-time delta-sigma modulator in cascaded integrator feedback structure, implemented in a 0.35-μm CMOS process. A tuning scheme for the reference currents of the feedback DACs is derived as a function of the individual TC errors and verified by circuit simulations. We confirm the tuning technique experimentally on the fabricated circuit over a TC parameter variation range of ±20%. Stable modulator operation is achieved for all parameter sets. The measured performances satisfy the expectations from our theoretical calculations and circuit-level simulations.