Abstract

Nowadays, sensors with built-in sigma-delta modulators (ΣΔMs) are widely used in consumer, industrial, automotive, and medical applications, as they have become a cost-effective and convenient way to deliver data to digital processors. This is the case for micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS), digital microphones that convert analog audio to a pulse-density modulated (PDM) bitstream. However, as the ΣΔMs output a PDM signal, sensors require either built-in or external high-order decimation filters to demodulate the PDM signal to a baseband multi-bit pulse-code modulated (PCM) signal. Because of this extra circuit requirement, the implementation of sensor array algorithms, such as beamforming in embedded systems (where the processing resources are critical) or in very large-scale integration (VLSI) circuits (where the power and area are crucial) becomes especially expensive as a large number of parallel decimation filters are required. This article proposes a novel architecture for beamforming algorithm implementation that fuses delay and decimation operations based on maximally flat (MAXFLAT) filters to make array processing more affordable. As proof of concept, we present an implementation example of a delay-and-sum (DAS) beamformer at given spatial and frequency requirements using this novel approach. Under these specifications, the proposed architecture requires 52% lower storage resources and 19% lower computational resources than the most efficient state-of-the-art architecture.

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