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[Keyword] mix(413hit)

381-400hit(413hit)

  • An All-Optical Base Station for MMW Micro-Cell Radio Using Microwave-Optical Mixing in LiNbO3 Modulators

    Howard J. THOMAS  Nobuaki IMAI  Eiichi OGAWA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E80-C No:1
      Page(s):
    74-80

    This paper proposes a new approach for distributing millimeter wave signals from a central location to micro-base-stations using optical fiber links. The links utilize two Mach-Zehnder external optical modulators (EOMs) to perform all optical down-conversion, eliminating the need for a local oscillator or laser diode in the micro-base-station. A simple model of the EOMs is developed to illustrate the principle of dual-EOM mixing. The characteristics of conversion loss and intermodulation are examined for two cases: where the EOMs are operated in the linear mode and where the local oscillator's EOM is biased as a frequency doubling modulator. Additionally, we examined the use of an optical amplifier to reduce conversion loss for these two cases. The measured conversion loss of the link was 82 dB, and we estimated this could be reduced to about 48 dB by employing an optical amplifier and a more efficient EOM for RF reception.

  • Compact Monolithic Frequency Converters for a V-Band Transmitter/Receiver

    Hiroshi OKAZAKI  Tetsuo HIROTA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E79-B No:12
      Page(s):
    1754-1758

    A V-band compact monolithic up-converter and down-converter were designed and tested. Each frequency converter was highly integrated with RF and LO amplifiers into a single compact chip. To avoid undesirable resonance, the chip width was limited to 0.9 mm. The up-converter has a balanced configuration to suppress undesired LO leakage. Using the uniplanar concept, the chip size of each frequency converter was greatly reduced to only 2.6 mm2. Measured performance of the up-converter includes conversion gain of-10.6 dB3.3 dB for a bandwidth of 10 GHz, and LO leakage is more than 10 dB below LO input. The down-converter shows a conversion gain of -0.4 dB2.0 dB.

  • Quasi-Optical SIS Mixers with Nb/AIOx/Nb Tunnel Junctions in the 270-GHz Band

    Yoshinori UZAWA  Akira KAWAKAMI  Zhen WANG  Takashi NOGUCHI  

     
    PAPER-Analog applications

      Vol:
    E79-C No:9
      Page(s):
    1237-1241

    A quasi-optical Superconductor-Insulator-Superconductor (SIS) mixer has been designed and tested in the 270-GHz band. The mixer used a substrate-lens-coupled log-periodic antenna and a tuning circuit for RF matching. The antenna is planar and self-complementary, and has a frequency-independent impedance of around 114 Ω over several octaves. The tuning circuit consists of two Nb/AIOx/Nb tunnel junctions separated by inductance for tuning out the junction capacitances and a λ/4 impedance transformer for matching the resistance of the two-junction circuit to the antenna impedance. The IF output from the mixer is brought out in a balanced method at each edge of the antenna, and is coupled to a low noise amplifier through a balun transformer using a 180-degree hybrid coupler for broadband IF matching. Double sideband receiver noise temperatures, determined from experimental Y-factor measurements, are about 150 K across the majority of the desired operating frequency band. The minimum receiver noise temperature of 120 K was measured at 263 GHz, which is as low as that of waveguide receivers. At this frequency, measurement of the noise contribution to the receiver results in input losses of 90 K, mixer noise of 17 K, and multiplied IF noise of 13 K. We found that the major sources of noise in our quasi-optical receiver were the optical losses.

  • Strato-Mesospheric Ozone Monitoring System Using an SIS Mixer

    Hideo SUZUKI  Minoru SUZUKI  Hideo OGAWA  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Analog applications

      Vol:
    E79-C No:9
      Page(s):
    1219-1227

    We have developed a strato-mesospheric ozone monitoring system with a low noise SIS mixer, which receives 110.836 GHz millimeter-wave emission due to the rotational transition of ozone molecules (J=61,560,6). The system is completely standalone. We derived the altitude profile of ozone density between 25 km and 80 km from the observed spectrum. The receiver noise temperature was as low as 17 K (DSB), so that the altitude profile could be obtained every 3-10 minutes. The monitoring system can operate continuously over one year without any maintenance work, because it utilizes a 4 K closed cycle helium refrigerator and reliable Nb/AIOx/Nb SIS junctions. We used two acousto-optical spectrometers (AOSs) as real-time spectrometers because of their high resolution and simple construction. In an up-to-date system, one AOS would have a band-width of 65 MHz and the other, a band-width of 250 MHz with resolutions of 40 kHz and 250 kHz, respectively. A computer controls the entire system and is also used to analyze measured data. In this paper, we present the principles of system operation, the latest performance and the construction of the system, and some observed data.

  • Flat and Lateral High-Tc Superconducting Junctions Applied to Millimeter-Wave Mixer

    Katsumi SUZUKI  Seiichi TOKUNAGA  Masahito BAN  Masashi OHTSUKA  Youichi ENOMOTO  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Analog applications

      Vol:
    E79-C No:9
      Page(s):
    1233-1236

    Here we report on a fabrication and a millimeter-wave performance of reliable and reproducible high-Tc superconducting (HTS) Josephson junctions on MgO substrates using a focused Ga ion beam (FIB). The junction normal resistance Rn can be controlled by making the junction in a series. The Rn depends on space between each junction in the series structure. A mechanism of the junction is proposed by measuring cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images and their X-ray spectra of Ga, Y, Ba, Cu, Mg and O. The junctions with more than 1 µm spaces, and flat and lateral structure are independent each other for the crystallization process. We observe the HTS mixer-antenna performance as fundamental/harmonic mixers in the wide frequency range up to 100 GHz.

  • An Adaptive Filtering Method for Speech Parameter Enhancement

    Byung-Gook LEE  Ki Yong LEE  Souguil ANN  

     
    PAPER-Digital Signal Processing

      Vol:
    E79-A No:8
      Page(s):
    1256-1266

    This paper considers the estimation of speech parameters and their enhancement using an approach based on the estimation-maximization (EM) algorithm, when only noisy speech data is available. The distribution of the excitation source for the speech signal is assumed as a mixture of two Gaussian probability distribution functions with differing variances. This mixture assumption is experimentally valid for removing the residual excitation signal. The assumption also is found to be effective in enhancing noise-corrupted speech. We adaptively estimate the speech parameters and analyze the characteristics of its excitation source in a sequential manner. In the maximum likelihood estimation scheme we utilize the EM algorithm, and employ a detection and an estimation step for the parameters. For speech enhancement we use Kalman filtering for the parameters obtained from the above estimation procedure. The estimation and maximization procedures are closely coupled. Simulation results using synthetic and real speech vindicate the improved performance of our algorithm in noisy situations, with an increase of about 3 dB in terms of output SNR compared to conventional Gaussian assumption. The proposed algorithm also may be noteworthy in that it needs no voiced/unvoiced decision logic, due to the use of the residual approach.

  • Development of New Liquid Crystal Materials for TFT LCDs

    Kazuaki TARUMI  Matthias BREMER  Brigitte SCHULER  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E79-C No:8
      Page(s):
    1035-1039

    We report recent progress in the development of Liquid Crystal(LC) materials for the TN-TFT and ECB-TFT technologies, which require LC materials with positive and negative dielectric anisotropy, respectively. Many kinds of new LC materials have been synthesized and have been evaluated based on their fundamental physical properties. We have succeeded in identifying new LC materials, and developing new LC mixtures based on those, so that the current typical requirements of TFT-LCDs e.g. fast switching times, low power consumption, good viewing angles and wide operation temperature ranges together with high reliability can be fulfilled.

  • Extending Pitchmatching Algorithms to Layouts with Multiple Grid Constraints

    Hiroshi MIYASHITA  

     
    PAPER-VLSI Design Technology and CAD

      Vol:
    E79-A No:6
      Page(s):
    900-909

    Pitchmatching algorithms are widely used in layout environments where no grid constraints are imposed. However, realistic layouts include multiple grid constraints which facilitate the applications of automatic routing. Hence, pitchmatching algorithms should be extended to those realistic layouts. This paper formulates a pitchmatching problem with multiple grid constraints. An algorithm for solving this problem is constructed as an extension of conventional pitchmatching algorithms. The computational complexity is also discussed in comparison with a conventional naive algorithm. Finally, examples and application results to realistic layouts are presented.

  • Structural Active Object Systems for Mixed-Mode Simulation

    Doohun EUM  Toshimi MINOURA  

     
    PAPER-Sofware System

      Vol:
    E79-D No:6
      Page(s):
    855-865

    A structural active-object system (SAOS) is a transition-based object-oriented system suitable for rapid development of hardware logic simulators. A SAOS consists of a collection of interacting structural active objects (SAOs), whose behaviors are determined by the transition statements provided in their class definitions. Furthermore, SAOs can be structurally and hierarchically composed from their component SAOs like hardware components. These features allow SAOs to model components for circuit simulation more naturally than passive objects used in ordinary object-oriented programming. Also, we can easily create new kinds of components by using the inheritance mechanism. Executions of transition statements may be event-and/or time-driven, and hence digital, analog, and mixed-mode simulation is possible. Prototype simulation programs with graphical user interfaces have been developed as SAOS programs for digital, analog, and mixed-mode circuit simulation.

  • Novel Optoelectronic Networks Using Cascaded Optical Intensity Modulation Links for Frequency Multiplexing and Mixing.

    Yoshinori NAKASUGA  Kohji HORIKAWA  Hiroyo OGAWA  

     
    PAPER-System Applications

      Vol:
    E79-C No:1
      Page(s):
    105-110

    A new configuration is proposed for an optoelectronic network (OEN) using microwave frequency mixing and multiplexing. The mn OEN consists of m optical sources, m-parallel n-stage cascaded optical intensity modulators, and m-photodetectors. The mn OEN matrix is theoretically discussed, and 12, 22 and 33 OENs are analyzed in detail. The 22 OEN, which mixes and multiplexes microwaves, is further investigated and the theoretical prediction derived from OEN equations is experimentally confirmed.

  • Optical-Microwave Mixing Using Planar Transistors

    Tibor BERCELI  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Optomicrowave Devices

      Vol:
    E79-C No:1
      Page(s):
    21-26

    The properties of the optical-microwave mixing process are investigated in detail. To describe these processes a new approach, the parametric method is introduced which provides a better description of the mixing phenomenon. The paper presents new experimental results on and new theoretical analysis methods for the optical-microwave mixing process and also for its dynamic behavior. The dynamic properties are very important in many applications when the light is intensity modulated by a high frequency or high bit rate signal. A remarkable decrease is observed in the mixing product with increasing optical modulation frequency. There are two reasons for it: the time constant exhibited by the depletion region between the substrate and the epitaxial layer and the optically induced substrate current which is increasing with the modulation frequency and doesn't contribute to the mixing effect. Understanding the optical-microwave mixing process provides new solutions for many applications. For example the optical-microwave mixing techniques offers several advantages in case of optical reception. In the detection process the modulation signal can be transposed to an intermediate frequency band (instead of the baseband) making possible a lower noise reception in a wider band. Another important and advantageous application is in the reception of subcarrier modulated optical signals.

  • Deposition of Ba Ferrite Films for Perpendicular Magnetic Recording Media Using Mixed Sputtering Gas of Xe, Ar and O2

    Nobuhiro MATSUSHITA  Kenji NOMA  Shigeki NAKAGAWA  Masahiko NAOE  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-C No:11
      Page(s):
    1562-1566

    Ba ferrite films were deposited epitaxially on ZnO underlayer from targets with composition of BaO-6.5Fe2O3 at substrate temperature of 600 using the facing targets sputtering apparatus. The gas mixture of Ar and Xe of 0.18 Pa and O2 of 0.02 Pa was used as the sputtering gas and the dependences of crystallographic and magnetic characteristics on the partial Xe pressure PXe(0.0-0.18 Pa) were investigated. Films deposited at various PXe were composed of BaM ferrite and spinel crystallites, and the minimum centerline average roughness Ra of 8.3 nm was obtained at PXe of 0.10 Pa. Since saturation 4πMs of 5.1 kG and perpendicular anisotropy constant Ku1 of 4.23105 Jm-3 were larger than those of bulk BaM ferrite of 4.8 kG and 3.30105 Jm-3, respectively, these films appeared promising for use as perpendicular recording media.

  • Novel Architecture and MMIC's for an Integrated Front-End of a Spectrum Analyzer

    Tsutomu TAKENAKA  Atsushi MIYAZAKI  Hiroyuki MATSUURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-C No:8
      Page(s):
    911-918

    This paper proposes a novel architecture and MMICs for an integrated 2-32 GHz front-end of a spectrum analyzer. The architecture achieves miniaturization by eliminating the large YIG tracking filter and also achieves multi-octave measurement with less than one octave sweep of the first local oscillator. The MMIC's demonstrate ultra-wideband performances with reduced chip sizes by utilizing newly developed FET cells for power combination, multi-order frequency conversion, low leakage variable resistance, and active impedance translation. The MMIC's are a fundamental/harmonic frequency converter, a variable attenuator, a single-pole triple-throw switch, a single-pole double-throw switch, a distributed pre-amplifier, and an active LC lowpass filter. All the MMIC's are smaller than 1 mm2, except the pre-amplifier and the filter.

  • Very Fast Fault Simulation for Voltage Stuck-at Faults in Analog/Digital Mixed Circuit

    Shigeharu TESHIMA  Naoya CHUJO  Ryuta TERASHIMA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-D No:7
      Page(s):
    853-860

    This paper deals with the problems in testing large mixed-signal ICs. To help generating test patterns of these larger mixed-signal circuits for a functional test, a fast fault simulation algorithm and a fault model voltage stuck-at fault" which the algorithm is based on, are proposed. A voltage stuck-at fault is that a signal line sticks its voltage level at a certain constant. Under an assumption that blocks in a circuit are designed as identically current-independent, i.e. their input impedance can be regarded as infinite and their output impedance as zero, fault simulation can be realized by the event driven method and the concurrent method and can detect voltage stuck-at faults. These methods are essential for digital fault simulation and very effective to high speed simulation, although they were impossible for an analog or mixed-signal circuit by a conventional algorithm. Furthermore, the efficiency of the simulation is improved because I/O relation of blocks is approximated to a stepwise linear function. The above techniques and methods make fault simulation for a mixed-signal circuit possible in practical use. Actually, a fault simulator was implemented, then some test circuits were simulated. The simulator is really faster than conventional simulation based on circuit simulation. Next, fault analysis was applied to several bipolar ICs to verify the validity of the fault model voltage stuck-at faults". Analyses of open and short faults between terminals of transistors and resistors show that this fault model has sufficient coverage (more than 50%) to test mixed-signal circuit.

  • A Method of Current Testing for CMOS Digital and Mixed-Signal LSIs

    Yukiya MIURA  Sachio NAITO  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-D No:7
      Page(s):
    845-852

    Current testing has been proposed as an alternative technique for testing fully CMOS digital LSIs. Current testing has higher fault coverage than conventional stuck-at fault (SAF) testing and is more economical because it detects a wide range of faults and requires fewer test vectors than does SAF testing. We have proposed a current testing that measures the integral of the power supply current (IDD) during one clock period including the switching current. Since this method cannot be affected by the switching current, it can be used to test an LSI operating at a relatively high clock freuqnecy. This paper presents an improved current testing method for CMOS digital and analog LSIs. The method uses two current values (i.e., an upper limit and a lower limit) and judges the circuit under test to be faulty if the measured IDD is outside these limits. The proposed current testing is evaluated here for some kinds of faults (e.g., the bridging fault and the breaking fault) in digital and mixed-signal LSIs, and its efficiency of the current testing using SPICE3.

  • Automatic Determination of the Number of Mixture Components for Continuous HMMs Based a Uniform Variance Criterion

    Tetsuo KOSAKA  Shigeki SAGAYAMA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-D No:6
      Page(s):
    642-647

    We discuss how to determine automatically the number of mixture components in continuous mixture density HMMs (CHMMs). A notable trend has been the use of CHMMs in recent years. One of the major problems with a CHMM is how to determine its structure, that is, how many mixture components and states it has and its optimal topology. The number of mixture components has been determined heuristically so far. To solve this problem, we first investigate the influence of the number of mixture components on model parameters and the output log likelihood value. As a result, in contrast to the mixture number uniformity" which is applied in conventional approaches to determine the number of mixture components, we propose the principle of distribution size uniformity". An algorithm is introduced for automatically determining the number of mixture components. The performance of this algorithm is shown through recognition experiments involving all Japanese phonemes. Two types of experiments are carried out. One assumes that the number of mixture components for each state is the same within a phonetic model but may vary between states belonging to different phonemes. The other assumes that each state has a variable number of mixture components. These two experiments give better results than the conventional method.

  • Duration Modeling with Decreased Intra-Group Temporal Variation for HMM-Based Phoneme Recognition

    Nobuaki MINEMATSU  Keikichi HIROSE  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-D No:6
      Page(s):
    654-661

    A new clustering method was proposed to increase the effect of duration modeling on the HMM-based phoneme recognition. A precise observation on the temporal correspondences between a phoneme HMM with output probabilities by single Gaussian modeling and its training data indicated that there were two extreme cases, one with several types of correspondences in a phoneme class completely different from each other, and the other with only one type of correspondence. Although duration modeling was commonly used to incorporate the temporal information in the HMMs, a good modeling could not be obtained for the former case. Further observation for phoneme HMMs with output probabilities by Gaussian mixture modeling also showed that some HMMs still had multiple temporal correspondences, though the number of such phonemes was reduced as compared to the case of single Gaussian modeling. An appropriate duration modeling cannot be obtained for these phoneme HMMs by the conventional methods, where the duration distribution for each HMM state is represented by a distribution function. In order to cope with the problem, a new method was proposed which was based on the clustering of phoneme classes with plural types of temporal correspondences into sub-classes. The clustering was conducted so as to reduce the variations of the temporal correspondences in sub-classes. After the clustering, an HMM was constructed for each sub-class. Using the proposed method, speaker dependent recognition experiments were performed for phonemes segmented from isolated words. A few-percent increase was realized in the recognition rate, which was not obtained by another method based on the duration modeling with a Gaussian mixture.

  • Parallel Connected Twin SIS Junctions for Millimeter and Submillimeter Wave Mixers: Analysis and Experimental Verification

    Takashi NOGUCHI  Sheng-Cai SHI  Junji INATANI  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Microwave devices

      Vol:
    E78-C No:5
      Page(s):
    481-489

    A Superconductor-Insulator-Superconductor (SIS) mixer using two junctions connected in parallel through a stripline inductance has been studied. The essential point of the two-junctions device is that the capacitance of the junctions was tuned out by the inductance to obtain a broadband operation without mechanical tuning elements. It has been shown by theoretical analysis that the performance of this type of device is excellent and nearly quantum-limited performance of the mixer can be obtained. It has been demonstrated that the double sideband (DSB) noise temperature of a receiver employing this type of device was less than 40 K over the bandwidth of 90-120 GHz and that the lowest receiver noise temperature of 18 K, which is only 3.2 times as large as the quantum limited photon noise was obtained around 118 GHz. Junctions used in the two-junctions device have significantly larger area, i.e. larger capacitance, and smaller normal resistance than conventional ones. In order to obtain a good impedance match between the source and the junctions, an impedance transformer made of a superconductiong stripline was integrated with the junctions. This type of two-junctions device can easily be scaled to submillimeter frequency without using submicron-sized SIS junctions.

  • A Taxonomy of Mixed Reality Visual Displays

    Paul MILGRAM  Fumio KISHINO  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E77-D No:12
      Page(s):
    1321-1329

    This paper focuses on Mixed Reality (MR) visual displays, a particular subset of Virtual Reality (VR) related technologies that involve the merging of real and virtual worlds somewhere along the virtuality continuum" which connects completely real environments to completely virtual ones. Probably the best known of these is Augmented Reality (AR), which refers to all cases in which the display of an otherwise real environment is augmented by means of virtual (computer graphic) objects. The converse case on the virtuality continuum is therefore Augmented Virtuality (AV). Six classes of hybrid MR display environments are identified. However, an attempt to distinguish these classes on the basis of whether they are primarily video or computer graphics based, whether the real world is viewed directly or via some electronic display medium, whether the viewer is intended to feel part of the world or on the outside looking in, and whether or not the scale of the display is intended to map orthoscopically onto the real world leads to quite different groupings among the six identified classes, thereby demonstrating the need for an efficient taxonomy, or classification framework, according to which essential differences can be identified. The obvious' distinction between the terms real" and virtual" is shown to have a number of different aspects, depending on whether one is dealing with real or virtual objects, real or virtual images, and direct or non-direct viewing of these. An (approximately) three dimensional taxonomy is proposed, comprising the following dimensions: Extent of World Knowledge (how much do we know about the world being displayed?"), Reproduction Fidelity (how realistically' are we able to display it?"), and Extent of Presence Metaphor (what is the extent of the illusion that the observer is present within that world?").

  • Evolution of Mixed-Signal Communications LSIs

    Masayuki ISHIKAWA  Tsuneo TSUKAHARA  Yukio AKAZAWA  

     
    INVITED PAPER-Analog LSIs

      Vol:
    E77-C No:12
      Page(s):
    1895-1902

    Mixed-signal LSIs promise to permit increased levels of integration, not only in voiceband but also in multi-GHz-band applications such as wireless communications and optical data links. This paper reviews the evolution of mixed-signal communications LSIs and discusses some of their design problems, including device noise and crosstalk noise. In the low-power and low-voltage designs emerging as new disciplines, the target supply voltage for voiceband LSIs is around 1 V, and even GHz-band circuits are approaching 2 V. MOS devices are expected to play an important role even in the frequency range over 100 MHz, in the area of wireless or optical communications circuits.

381-400hit(413hit)