A new chip component designed by MIT researchers promises to expand the reach of the Internet of Things into 5G. The discovery represents a broader push for 5G-based IoT techâusing the telecom standardâs low latency, energy efficiency, and capacity for massive device connectivity. The new research also signals an important step toward applications that include smaller, low-power health monitors, smart cameras, and industrial sensors, for instance.
More broadly, the prospect of moving the IoT onto 5G means more things can connect more quickly with potentially greater data speeds and less battery drain. It also means trickier and more complicated circuits will need to be toiling away behind the data streams.
And doing all this using 5G standards rather than equivalent 4G/LTE or Wi-Fi networks arguably means IoT is expanding its range and scope. Itâs moving beyond relatively modest-sized IoT deployments to broader networks boasting the potential for hundreds of nodes or more.
To clarify, however, says Soroush Araei, a PhD candidate at MIT in electrical engineering and computer science, IoT-over-5G doesnât mean that every node in a network will suddenly be getting its own phone number.
âThe main goal here is that you have a single radio receiver that can be reused for different applications,â Araei says. âYou have a single piece of hardware which is flexible, and you can tune it across a wide frequency range in software.â
Using 5G standards rather than 5G wireless networks allows IoT devices to frequency hop, to sip their battery power, and to use massive-connectivity tricks that allow for up to one million devices per square kilometer.
How to Make a 5G IoT Chip
On the other hand, the fact that IoT developers have to date been slow to adopt 5G underscores just how difficult the hardware challenge is.
âFor IoT, power efficiency is critical,â says Eric Klumperink, associate professor of IC design at the University of Twente in Enschede, Netherlands. âYou want a decent radio performance for very low powerâ[using] a small battery or even energy harvesting.â
But with more and more devices connecting to more and more networks, 5G or otherwise, other concerns rear their heads too.
âIn a world increasingly saturated with wireless signals, interference is a major problem,â says Vito Giannini, a technical fellow at Austin, Tex.-based L&T Semiconductor Technologies. (Neither Giannini nor Klumperink were involved with the MIT groupâs research.)
Using 5G standards potentially addresses both issues, Araei says. Specifically, he says, the MIT groupâs new tech relies on a slimmed-down version of 5G thatâs already been developed for IoT and other applications. Itâs called 5G reduced capacity (or 5G RedCap).
â5G RedCap IoT receivers can hop across frequencies,â he says. âBut theyâre not required to be as low-latency as the top-tier 5G applications [including smartphones].â
By contrast, the simplest IoT chip that uses Wi-Fi would rely on a single frequency bandâperhaps 2.5 or 5 gigahertzâand could potentially seize up if too many other devices were using the same channel.
Frequency hopping, however, requires robust radio communications hardware that can quickly switch between frequency channels as directed by the network and then ensure the frequency hops align with network instructions and timing.
Thatâs a lot of hardware and software smarts packed into a tiny chip that might be just one of hundreds of motes affixed to pallets across an entire warehouse.
But features like that are just the appetizers, Araei says.
The centerpiece of any viable 5G RedCap chip is the hardware that can flexibly work across a range of frequencies, while still keeping to a tiny power budget and a modest overall cost for the device. (The MIT groupâs tech can only be used for receiving incoming signals; other chip components would be needed to transmit across a similarly wide range of frequencies.)
Here the researchers pulled a few tricks from the world of analog circuits and power electronics. But rather than bulk components layered and stacked like ceramic capacitors, the present work integrates these tricks into an on-chip system to miniaturize RF frequency hopping cheaply and efficiently. The researchers presented their work last month at the IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium in San Francisco.
âThis is kind of a switched-capacitor network,â Araei says. âYouâre turning on and off these capacitors in a periodic manner sequentially, which is called âN-path structure.â That generally gives you a low-pass filter.â
Which means that rather than using a single capacitor in the circuit, the team used a miniaturized bank of capacitors to flick on and off in tune with the needs of the frequency range being received at the circuit.
And because they could put all this frequency-filtering wizardry at the front-end of the circuit, before the amplifier touches the signal, the team reports high efficiency at blocking out interference. Compared to conventional IoT receivers, they report, their circuit can filter out 30 times more interference, while doing so using only single-digit milliwatts of power.
In other words, the group appears to have designed some pretty effective low-power 5G IoT receiver circuitry. So who can design a similarly clever transmitter?
Do both of those, and someone someday will be in business, says Klumperink. âThere are arguments to be made for IoT-over-5G (or 6G),â he says. âBecause spectrum is allocated and managed better than ad hoc Wi-Fi connections.â
  Running the Internet of Things over 5G realistically means operating with very low power requirements. The MIT teamâs chip consumes less than a milliwatt while still filtering out extraneous signals.Soroush Araei
Is This the Stuff of 5G IoT Chips to Come?
The MIT groupâs circuitry, Klumperink says, could conceivably be manufactured at a mainstream chip fab.
âI donât see big hurdles as the circuit is implemented in mainstream CMOS technology,â Klumperink says. (The groupâs circuits demand only a 22-nanometer fabrication process, so it wouldnât need to be a bleeding-edge foundry by any stretch.)
Araei says the team aims next to work on eliminating a need for a battery or other dedicated power supply.
âIs it possible to get rid of that power supply and basically harness the power from the existing electromagnetic waves in the environment?â Araei asks.
He says they also hope to extend the frequency range for their receiver tech to cover the whole frequency range of 5G signals. âIn this prototype we were able to achieve low frequencies of 250 megahertz up to 3 GHz,â he says. âSo is it possible to extend that frequency range letâs say up to 6 GHz, to cover the entire 5G range?â
If these various upcoming hurdles can be cleared, says Giannini, a range of applications probably appear on the near-term horizon. âIt offers an advantage for mobility, scalability, and secure wide-area coverage in mid-range and mid-bandwidth scenarios,â he says of the MIT groupâs work. He adds that the new circuitâs 5G IoT adaptability could make the tech well suited for, he says, âindustrial sensors, some wearables, and smart cameras.â
From Your Site Articles
Related Articles Around the Web

