Claude Desset
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Claude Desset.
IEEE Wireless Communications | 2011
Gunther Auer; Vito Giannini; Claude Desset; István Gódor; Per Skillermark; Magnus Olsson; Muhammad Imran; Dario Sabella; Manuel J. Gonzalez; Oliver Blume; Albrecht J. Fehske
In order to quantify the energy efficiency of a wireless network, the power consumption of the entire system needs to be captured. In this article, the necessary extensions with respect to existing performance evaluation frameworks are discussed. The most important addenda of the proposed energy efficiency evaluation framework (E3F) are a sophisticated power model for various base station types, as well as large-scale long-term traffic models. The BS power model maps the RF output power radiated at the antenna elements to the total supply power of a BS site. The proposed traffic model emulates the spatial distribution of the traffic demands over large geographical regions, including urban and rural areas, as well as temporal variations between peak and off-peak hours. Finally, the E3F is applied to quantify the energy efficiency of the downlink of a 3GPP LTE radio access network.
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications | 2006
Andrew Fort; Julien Ryckaert; Claude Desset; P. De Doncker; Piet Wambacq; L. Van Biesen
Using ultra-wideband (UWB) wireless sensors placed on a person to continuously monitor health information is a promising new application. However, there are currently no detailed models describing the UWB radio channel around the human body making it difficult to design a suitable communication system. To address this problem, we have measured radio propagation around the body in a typical indoor environment and incorporated these results into a simple model. We then implemented this model on a computer and compared experimental data with the simulation results. This paper proposes a simple statistical channel model and a practical implementation useful for evaluating UWB body area communication systems.
IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques | 2006
Andrew Fort; Claude Desset; P. De Doncker; Piet Wambacq; L. Van Biesen
Body worn wireless sensors for monitoring health information is a promising new application. In developing these sensors, a communication channel model is essential. However, there are currently few measurements or models describing propagation around the body. To address this problem, we have measured electromagnetic waves near the torso and derived relevant statistics. We find that components diffracting around the body are well modeled using correlated log normal variables, and a Nakagami-m distribution can be used to incorporate the influence of arm motions. We have implement this model and evaluated it in terms of important communication metrics. This paper describes body area propagation statistics and proposes a suitable computer model implementation.
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems | 2005
Julien Ryckaert; Claude Desset; A. Fort; M. Badaroglu; V. De Heyn; P. Wambacq; G. Van der Plas; S. Donnay; B. Van Poucke; Bert Gyselinckx
The successful realization of a wireless body area network (WBAN) requires innovative solutions to meet the energy consumption budget of the autonomous sensor nodes. The radio interface is a major challenge, since its power consumption must be reduced below 100 /spl mu/W (energy scavenging limit). The emerging ultra-wide-band (UWB) technology shows strong advantages in reaching this target. First, most of the complexity of an UWB system is in the receiver, which is a perfect scenario in the WBAN context. Second, the very little hardware complexity of a UWB transmitter offers the potential for low-cost and highly integrated solutions. Finally, in a pulse-based UWB scheme, the transmitter can be duty-cycled at the pulse rate, thereby reducing the baseline power consumption. We present a low-power UWB transmitter that can be fully integrated in standard CMOS technology. Measured performances of a fully integrated pulse generator are provided, showing the potential of UWB for low power and low cost implementations. Finally, using a WBAN channel model, we present a comparison between our UWB solution and state-of-the-art low-power narrow-band implementations. This paper shows that UWB performs better in the short range due to a reduced baseline power consumption.
vehicular technology conference | 2011
Gunther Auer; Vito Giannini; István Gódor; Per Skillermark; Magnus Olsson; Muhammad Imran; Dario Sabella; Manuel J. Gonzalez; Claude Desset; Oliver Blume
In order to quantify the energy savings in wireless networks, the power consumption of the entire system needs to be captured and an appropriate energy efficiency evaluation framework must be defined. In this paper, the necessary enhancements over existing performance evaluation frameworks are discussed, such that the energy efficiency of the entire network comprising component, node and network level contributions can be quantified. The most important addendums over existing frameworks include a sophisticated power model for various base station (BS) types, which maps the RF output power radiated at the antenna elements to the total supply power of a BS site. We also consider an approach to quantify the energy efficiency of large geographical areas by using the existing small scale deployment models along with long term traffic models. Finally, the proposed evaluation framework is applied to quantify the energy efficiency of the downlink of a 3GPP LTE radio access network.
international conference on ultra-wideband | 2005
Andrew Fort; Claude Desset; Julien Ryckaert; P. De Doncker; L. Van Biesen; Piet Wambacq
Using wireless sensors placed on a person to continuously monitor health information is a promising new application. In developing these sensors, detailed knowledge of the communication channel is essential. However, there are currently very few measurements describing propagation around the body. To address this problem, we have measured electromagnetic waves traveling near the torso to derive a simple pathless law. The pathless law is then extended to include the influence of arm movements and a surrounding office environment. This paper describes our measurement campaign and the basic characteristics of the body area radio channel.
international solid-state circuits conference | 2007
Julien Ryckaert; G. Van der Plas; V. De Heyn; Claude Desset; G. Vanwijnsberghe; B. Van Poucke; Jan Craninckx
We propose an all-digital UWB transmitter architecture that exploits the low duty cycle of impulse-radio UWB to achieve ultra-low power consumption. The design supports the IEEE 802.15.4a standard and is demonstrated for its mandatory mode. A digitally controlled oscillator produces the RF carrier between 3 and 10 GHz. It is embedded in a phase-aligned frequency-locked loop that starts up in 2 ns and thus exploits the signal duty cycle that can be as low as 3%. A fully dynamic modulator shapes the BPSK symbols in discrete steps at the 499.2 MHz chip rate as required by the standard. The transmitter can operate in any 499.2 MHz band of the standard between 3.1 and 10 GHz, and the generated signal fulfills the emission spectral mask. The jitter accumulation over a burst is below 6 psRMS, which is within specifications. The transmitter was realized in a 1 V 90 nm digital CMOS technology, and its power consumption drawn from a 1 V supply is from 0.65 mW at 3.1 GHz to 1.4 mW at 10 GHz for a 1 Mb/s data rate.
international conference on communications | 2005
Andrew Fort; Claude Desset; Julien Ryckaert; P. De Doncker; L. Van Biesen; S. Donnay
Using wireless sensors placed on a person to continuously monitor health information is a promising new application. However, there are currently no models describing the radio channel around the human body making it difficult to design a suitable communication system. To address this problem, we have simulated electromagnetic wave propagation around the body and incorporated these results into a simple model. We then compared this model with measurements taken around the human torso and with previous studies in the literature. This paper proposes a simple statistical channel model useful for evaluating both UWB and (after resampling) narrow-band body area communication systems.
IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2007
Julien Ryckaert; Marian Verhelst; M. Badaroglu; S. D'Amico; V. De Heyn; Claude Desset; P. Nuzzo; B. Van Poucke; P. Wambacq; A. Baschirotto; Wim Dehaene; G. Van der Plas
A low-power impulse-radio ultra-wideband receiver is demonstrated for low data-rate applications. A topology selection study demonstrates that the quadrature analog correlation is a good receiver architecture choice when energy consumption must be minimized. The receiver operates in the 3.1-5 GHz band of the UWB FCC spectrum mask on channels of 500 MHz bandwidth. The pulse correlation operation is done in the analog domain in order to reduce the ADC sampling speed down to the pulse repetition rate, thereby reducing the power consumption. The receiver comprises a low-noise amplifier with full on-chip matching network, an RF local oscillator generation, two quadrature mixers, two analog baseband chains followed by two ADCs, and a clock generation network. The receiver is implemented in 0.18 mum CMOS technology and achieves 16 mA power consumption at 20 Mpulses/s pulse repetition rate.
international solid-state circuits conference | 2006
Julien Ryckaert; Mustafa Badaroglu; V. De Heyn; G. Van der Plas; P. Nuzzo; A. Baschirotto; S. D'Amico; Claude Desset; H. Suys; Michael Libois; B. Van Poucke; P. Wambacq; Bert Gyselinckx
A 3-to-5GHz quadrature analog correlation RX for UWB impulse radio draws 16mA at 20Mpulses/s, making it suitable for low-power low-data-rate applications. The RX is fully integrated in a CMOS 0.18mum process and comprises an LNA, quadrature LO generation and mixers, baseband filtering, an integrator, timing circuitry, and an ADC