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Seokhyeon Jeong

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  44
Citations -  1170

Seokhyeon Jeong is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: CMOS & Comparator. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 42 publications receiving 902 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Fully-Integrated 71 nW CMOS Temperature Sensor for Low Power Wireless Sensor Nodes

TL;DR: A new sensing element is introduced that outputs only 75 mV to save both power and area in battery-operated, ultra-low power microsystems and is integrated into a wireless sensor node to demonstrate its operation at a system level.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

IoT design space challenges: Circuits and systems

TL;DR: This paper explores the IoT application space and identifies two common challenges that exist across this space: ultra-low power operation and system design using modular, composable components.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

27.6 A 0.7pF-to-10nF fully digital capacitance-to-digital converter using iterative delay-chain discharge

TL;DR: A fully digital capacitance-to-digital converters (CDC) is presented that is based on the observation that when a ring oscillator is powered from a charged capacitance, the number of RO cycles required to discharge the capacitance to a fixed voltage is naturally linear with the capacitor value.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A millimeter-scale wireless imaging system with continuous motion detection and energy harvesting

TL;DR: A 2×4×4mm3 imaging system complete with optics, wireless communication, battery, power management, solar harvesting, processor and memory, and the system features a 160×160 resolution CMOS image sensor with 304nW continuous in-pixel motion detection mode is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Edge-Pursuit Comparator: An Energy-Scalable Oscillator Collapse-Based Comparator With Application in a 74.1 dB SNDR and 20 kS/s 15 b SAR ADC

TL;DR: A detailed analysis of the EPC in the phase domain shows improved energy efficiency over conventional comparators even without energy scaling, and wider resolution tuning capability with small load capacitance and area.