Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Gabriel Cadilha Marques; Suresh Kumar Garlapati; Simone Dehm; Subho Dasgupta; Horst Hahn; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann
Printed electronic components offer certain technological advantages over their silicon based counterparts, like mechanical flexibility, low process temperatures, maskless and additive manufacturing possibilities. However, to be compatible to the fields of smart sensors, Internet of Things, and wearables, it is essential that devices operate at small supply voltages. In printed electronics, mostly silicon dioxide or organic dielectrics with low dielectric constants have been used as gate isolators, which in turn have resulted in high power transistors operable only at tens of volts. Here, we present inkjet printed circuits which are able to operate at supply voltages as low as <= 2 V. Our transistor technology is based on lithographically patterned drive electrodes, the dimensions of which are carefully kept well within the printing resolutions; the oxide semiconductor, the electrolytic insulator and the top-gate electrodes have been inkjet printed. Our inverters show a gain of similar to 4 and 2.3 ms propagation delay time at 1 V supply voltage. Subsequently built 3-stage ring oscillators start to oscillate at a supply voltage of only 0.6 V with a frequency of similar to 255 Hz and can reach frequencies up to similar to 350 Hz at 2 V supply voltage. Furthermore, we have introduced a systematic methodology for characterizing ring oscillators in the printed electronics domain, which has been largely missing. Benefiting from this procedure, we are now able to predict the switching capacitance and driver capability at each stage, as well as the power consumption of our inkjet printed ring oscillators. These achievements will be essential for analyzing the performance and power characteristics of future inkjet printed digital circuits.
Sensors | 2018
Mayukh Bhattacharyya; Waldemar Gruenwald; Dirk Jansen; Leonhard M. Reindl; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann
Battery-less passive sensor tags based on RFID or NFC technology have achieved much popularity in recent times. Passive tags are widely used for various applications like inventory control or in biotelemetry. In this paper, we present a new RFID/NFC frontend IC (integrated circuit) for 13.56 MHz passive tag applications. The design of the frontend IC is compatible with the standard ISO 15693/NFC 5. The paper discusses the analog design part in details with a brief overview of the digital interface and some of the critical measured parameters. A novel approach is adopted for the demodulator design, to demodulate the 10% ASK (amplitude shift keying) signal. The demodulator circuit consists of a comparator designed with a preset offset voltage. The comparator circuit design is discussed in detail. The power consumption of the bandgap reference circuit is used as the load for the envelope detection of the ASK modulated signal. The sub-threshold operation and low-supply-voltage are used extensively in the analog design—to keep the power consumption low. The IC was fabricated using 0.18 μm CMOS technology in a die area of 1.5 mm × 1.5 mm and an effective area of 0.7 mm2. The minimum supply voltage desired is 1.2 V, for which the total power consumption is 107 μW. The analog part of the design consumes only 36 μW, which is low in comparison to other contemporary passive tags ICs. Eventually, a passive tag is developed using the frontend IC, a microcontroller, a temperature and a pressure sensor. A smart NFC device is used to readout the sensor data from the tag employing an Android-based application software. The measurement results demonstrate the full passive operational capability. The IC is suitable for low-power and low-cost industrial or biomedical battery-less sensor applications. A figure-of-merit (FOM) is proposed in this paper which is taken as a reference for comparison with other related state-of-the-art researches.
international soc design conference | 2014
Mayukh Bhattacharyya; Waldemar Gruenwald; Benjamin Dusch; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Dirk Jansen; Leonhard M. Reindl
A new RFID/NFC (ISO 15693 standard) based inductively powered passive SoC (System on chip) for biomedical applications is presented here. The proposed SOC consists of an integrated 32 bit microcontroller, RFID/NFC frontend, sensor interface circuit, analog to digital converter and some peripherals such as timer, SPI interface and memory devices. An energy harvesting unit supplies the power required for the entire system for complete passive operation. The complete chip is realized on CMOS 0.18 μm technology with a chip area of 1.5 mm × 3.0 mm.
Nanotechnology | 2018
Suresh Kumar Garlapati; Gabriel Cadilha Marques; Julia Susanne Gebauer; Simone Dehm; Michael Bruns; Markus Winterer; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Horst Hahn; Subho Dasgupta
Oxide semiconductors are highly promising candidates for the most awaited, next-generation electronics, namely, printed electronics. As a fabrication route for the solution-processed/printed oxide semiconductors, photonic curing is becoming increasingly popular, as compared to the conventional thermal curing method; the former offers numerous advantages over the latter, such as low process temperatures and short exposure time and thereby, high throughput compatibility. Here, using dissimilar photonic curing concepts (UV-visible light and UV-laser), we demonstrate facile fabrication of high performance In2O3 field-effect transistors (FETs). Beside the processing related issues (temperature, time etc.), the other known limitation of oxide electronics is the lack of high performance p-type semiconductors, which can be bypassed using unipolar logics from high mobility n-type semiconductors alone. Interestingly, here we have found that our chosen distinct photonic curing methods can offer a large variation in threshold voltage, when they are fabricated from the same precursor ink. Consequently, both depletion and enhancement-mode devices have been achieved which can be used as the pull-up and pull-down transistors in unipolar inverters. The present device fabrication recipe demonstrates fast processing of low operation voltage, high performance FETs with large threshold voltage tunability.
Journal of Low Power Electronics and Applications | 2018
Mayukh Bhattacharyya; Waldemar Gruenwald; Dirk Jansen; Leonhard M. Reindl; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann
international symposium on quality electronic design | 2018
Ahmet Turan Erozan; Mohammad Saber Golanbari; Rajendra Bishnoi; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori
asia and south pacific design automation conference | 2018
Gabriel Cadilha Marques; Farhan Rasheed; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori
arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018
Fei Wang; O. Tschukin; Gabriel Cadilha Marques; Michael Selzer; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Britta Nestler
IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration Systems | 2018
Ahmet Turan Erozan; Gabriel Cadilha Marques; Mohammad Saber Golanbari; Rajendra Bishnoi; Simone Dehm; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices | 2018
Farhan Rasheed; Michael Hefenbrock; Michael Beigl; Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori; Jasmin Aghassi-Hagmann