1 / 33

Cellular Phones as Embedded Systems

Cellular Phones as Embedded Systems. EEL 6935 - Embedded Systems Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Florida. Liza Rodriguez Aurelio Morales. Outline Introduction Today’s Cellular Phone Architecture Challenges for Wireless Access Memory , OS, and Power Challenges

ziarre
Télécharger la présentation

Cellular Phones as Embedded Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cellular Phones as Embedded Systems EEL 6935 - Embedded Systems Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Florida Liza Rodriguez Aurelio Morales

  2. Outline • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  3. Outline • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  4. Cellular Generations • Analog Cellular Technology (1G) • Early 1980’s • NMT, AMPS (FDMA) • Susceptible to noise and interference. No protection. • Digital Mobile Communication (2G, 2.5G) • Early 1990’s • GSM (TDMA), IS-95 (CDMA), IS-136 (D-AMPS, TDMA), PDC (TDMA) • Data services: SMS • Digital encryption of conversations. Enhanced privacy. • Wide Band Mobile Communication (3G, 3.5G) • Early 2000’s • EDGE (TDMA), CDMA 2000, UMTS (CDMA) • Data transfer rates >= 2 Mbit/s • Data & Voice convergence, Internet access. • Broadband Mobile Communication (4G) • LTE Advanced, IEEE 802.16 (WiMAX) • Data transfer rates >= 100 Mbits/s • Mobile IPTV, Wireless VoIP.

  5. Introduction (cont.) Evolution of Radio Systems, Mobility, Data Rates

  6. Introduction (cont.) Digital Convergence • Convergence enables people to create, share and consume digital content, using interoperable devices • Cellular phones evolve from traditional cost-optimized handhelds to multifunctional terminals • Cellular phones: key platform for mobile convergence applications (web browsing, video streaming, etc.)

  7. Agenda • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  8. Today’s Cellular Phone • Extremely complex embedded system • Functional blocks are custom-made for mobility • Chips are either proprietary designs or based on available chips. • Miniaturization and functionality

  9. Block diagram of triple-band cellular phone

  10. Example: Blackberry Bold

  11. Example: Blackberry Bold

  12. Example: Blackberry Bold

  13. Example: Blackberry Bold

  14. Example: Nokia N95

  15. Example: Nokia N95

  16. Example: Nokia N95

  17. Example: Nokia N95

  18. Agenda • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  19. Development of Cellular phones • Miniaturization • Functionality

  20. Baseband and RF domains challenges

  21. RF challenges: Multiradio • Wide variety of radio systems • Combination of systems at reasonable cost and size • Interference • Miniaturization challenges • Antennas • Filters

  22. Outline • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  23. Memory Challenge • Total memory requirement is increasing rapidly • Mass Memories – interactive games, high quality video • Large memories are required to support data downloading and local storage • Supported by external memory cards: MMC or SD • Small Memories – processing and small applications • Memory chips and their interconnections consume large areas on PCBs and are accessed frequently • New types of NVRAM may challenge memory chips to provide smaller and more cost effective memory solutions

  24. NVRAM – Alternatives to Flash Memory • Ferroelectric RAM (FeRAM) • DRAM cell with ferroelectric dielectric in the storage capacitor • Advantages: low power, faster reads and writes (single word vs. entire block erase), greater number of write-erase cycles (1016 vs. 106) • Disadvantages: lower storage density, higher cost • Phase Change Memory • Glass cells that become crystalline • or amorphous by cooling • Advantages: faster reads and writes, • greater number of write-erase cycles • (108 vs. 106), longer hold times • Disadvantages: temp sensitivity, • no pre-programming

  25. Application Platform • Mobile internet – web browsing, video calls and high bit rate streaming • Java ME – provides flexible user interfaces, built in network protocols, multimedia support • Fact: 2.1 Billion mobile phones use Java platforms • 3rd Party Mobile Applications – if developed in Java, are portable enough to run on almost all cell phones

  26. Java – Hardware or Software? • Hardware – an additional small processor dedicated for running Java • Improves performance, minimizes memory requirements • Software becomes dependent on inflexible hardware implementation • Software – Java is run on • baseband processor • Virtual machine – Java commands • are interpreted as equivalent • microprocessor commands -- slow! • Just In Time – compiler that would • translate Java classes into processor • instructions --- fast!

  27. Power Challenge • Recent evolution of communication and application functions have substantially increased power consumption • Constant annual growth of 10% in battery capacity has enabled battery volume shrinkage while having mAh level constant • However, when 3G or WLAN communication is run simultaneously with multimedia applications, power consumption must be reduced

  28. Power consumption and Battery Capacity

  29. Solutions to Power Gap • 10% increase in battery capacity will continue forever • Reduce power hungry components: • Antennas – Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, RF • Digital displays • Dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) • Reconfigurable RF components to reduce the number of ICs.

  30. Outline • Introduction • Today’sCellularPhone • ArchitectureChallengesforWireless Access • Memory, OS, and PowerChallenges • Conclusions

  31. Conclusions • Cellular phones have come a long way from analog communication devices to digital mobile computers. • Today, a cellular phone is a paradigm of an embedded system having highly optimized cost, size, efficiency and performance. • Challenges in RF circuits, implementation architecture, memory, and power consumption are still affecting the development and growth of mobile devices. • New technologies such as decentralized architectures, reconfigurable circuits, advanced memories, and low power designs will help overcome challenges.

  32. References • http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=1332581 • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_phone • http://www.portioresearch.com/resources.html • http://www.phonewreck.com/wiki/index.php?title=BlackBerry_Bold • http://www.phonewreck.com/wiki/index.php?title=Nokia_N95

  33. Questions?

More Related