Development of Close Proximity Wireless Technology with Integrated On-Chip Antenna
Realizes Contactless Connection of Memory Cards over Several Centimeters Distance
TOKYO, Japan, June 29, 2010-- Renesas Electronics Corporation (TSE: 6723) today announced the development of new technology that realizes a close proximity wireless communication over very short distances of a few centimeters, in which a compact antenna only a few square millimeters in area (about one-hundredth the area of conventional antennas) can be integrated with the transmitter and receiver circuit blocks in a single chip. The new technology can eliminate the metal connector in small equipment such as memory cards and/or wires in hinges of mobile terminal devices, where contactless communication has been difficult to realize.
Renesas Electronics has also developed a prototype transceiver chip with an integrated antenna employing this technology, confirming the availability of contactless data communication at a rate of 15 megabits per second (Mbps), which is comparable to the data rates required for high-definition terrestrial digital TV transmission.
The close proximity wireless communication technology is currently applied in contactless smartcards. However, problems still remain with the adoption of this technology for small equipment as they require a large antenna area of credit card size to achieve sufficiently small noise levels and/or large tolerance for misalignment between the transmitter chip and the receiver chip.
Renesas Electronics' newly developed contactless communication technology requires an antenna only 1 mm in diameter, which is small enough for on-chip integration, and enables short-range data transmission over a distance of 1 cm. By applying the new technology, the contactless communication interface on a flash memory card will not fail to achieve a wireless connection even at a misalignment of 1 cm. Moreover, the adoption of this interface technology can overcome issues such as unstable metal connections caused by moisture or abrasion.
Proximity Wireless Technology with Integrated On-Chip Antenna
The new technology uses a wireless architecture in which the transmitter sends the data signal and synchronization signal simultaneously. This architecture provides a higher noise-tolerance than conventional methods in which the receiver circuit and transmitter circuit each generate synchronization signals separately. This has made it possible to accept a position misalignment of even 1 cm between the transmitter circuit and receiver circuit, while reducing the size of the antenna to a few square millimeters, approximately one-hundredth the area previously required. In addition, the antenna as well as the transmitter and receiver circuit blocks can be integrated in a single chip.
The new technology can also eliminate the use of a large-sized, power-consuming PLL (phase locked loop) in the receiver, since the receiver does not need to generate a synchronization signal. This reduces the power consumption of the receiver by approximately 50 percent compared to conventional designs.
In addition to allowing for more compact products, the use of contactless connectors makes possible a higher level of communication quality assurance regardless of their usage environment. Furthermore, the use of a contactless communication interface for the docking cradle of devices such as slim mobile phones, smartphones, and mobile information terminal devices, provides advanced design flexibility.
Renesas Electronics believes the new technology will contribute to the development of compact and reliable ubiquitous networking devices. The company will continue to advance its research and development activities in this area to put the developed technologies to practical use.
Renesas Electronics presented the results of this research at the Symposium on VLSI Circuits, which was held in Honolulu, Hawaii from June 16 to June 18.
About Renesas Electronics Corporation
Renesas Electronics Corporation (TSE: 6723), the world's number one supplier of microcontrollers, is a premiere supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions including microcontrollers, SoC solutions and a broad-range of analog and power devices. Business operations began as Renesas Electronics in April 2010 through the integration of NEC Electronics Corporation (TSE:6723) and Renesas Technology Corp., with operations spanning research, development, design and manufacturing for a wide range of applications. Headquartered in Japan, Renesas Electronics has subsidiaries in 20 countries worldwide. More information can be found at www.renesas.com.
|
Related News
- Xilinx Single-Chip Solution with On-Chip Redundancy for Functional Safety Speeds Up IEC 61508 Certification and Reduces Systems Development Cost
- Sonics Adopts Cadence JasperGold Apps Formal Verification for On-Chip Network IP Development
- Analog Bits Unveils Integrated Sensor Macro Family
- Blu-Wireless Technology Selects Sonics' On-chip Networks to Develop New Class of High-Speed Wireless Communications
- Enhanced Zatara(TM) ARM(R)-Based ASSP From Zilog Adds Integrated Security Features, On-Chip USB for Reduced BOM Costs and Faster Time-to-Market
Breaking News
- Arm loses out in Qualcomm court case, wants a re-trial
- Jury is out in the Arm vs Qualcomm trial
- Ceva Seeks To Exploit Synergies in Portfolio with Nano NPU
- Synopsys Responds to U.K. Competition and Markets Authority's Phase 1 Announcement Regarding Ansys Acquisition
- Alphawave Semi Scales UCIe™ to 64 Gbps Enabling >20 Tbps/mm Bandwidth Density for Die-to-Die Chiplet Connectivity
Most Popular
E-mail This Article | Printer-Friendly Page |