A Power-Efficient Radiation Sensor Interface with a Peak-Triggered Sampling Scheme for Mobile Dosimeters

Sensors (Basel). 2020 Jun 7;20(11):3255. doi: 10.3390/s20113255.

Abstract

Radiation sensor interfaces for battery-powered mobile dosimeters must consume low power to monitor the amount of radiation exposure over a long period. This paper proposes a power-efficient radiation sensor interface using a peak-triggered sampling scheme. Since the peak of the analog-to-digital converter's (ADC's) input represents radiation energy, our ADC only operates around the peak value thanks to the proposed sampling scheme. Although our ADC operates with a high sampling frequency, this proposed sampling scheme reduces the power consumption of the sensor interface because of the reduced operation time of the ADC. Our sensor interface does not have signal distortion caused by a conventional shaper because the interface quantizes the peak value using the high sampling frequency instead of the shaper. When the radiation input occurs once every 10 μs, the power consumption of the ADC with the proposed sampling scheme is only about 21.5% of the ADC's power consumption when the ADC continuously operates. In this worst case, the fabricated radiation sensor interface in a 0.18-μm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process consumes only 1.11 mW.

Keywords: analog-to-digital converter (ADC); mobile dosimeter; radiation sensor interface; silicon photomultiplier (SiPM).