A programmable temperature monitoring device for tagging small fish: A prototype chip development

This paper describes the design of an archival temperature monitoring tag to be used to collect habitat information of Atlantic salmon during the marine phase of the species' natural history. The monolithic circuit should not exceed an average power dissipation of 3.4μW, so that a small 3 V, 3...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems
Main Authors: Fischer, Godi, Daly, James C., Recksiek, Conrad W., Friedland, Kevin D.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/ele_facpubs/188
https://doi.org/10.1109/92.645066
Description
Summary:This paper describes the design of an archival temperature monitoring tag to be used to collect habitat information of Atlantic salmon during the marine phase of the species' natural history. The monolithic circuit should not exceed an average power dissipation of 3.4μW, so that a small 3 V, 30 mAh lithium battery will provide the device with the expected lifetime of 3 years. The thermal sensor is realized by a p-n-junction. The recorded junction voltages are digitized and stored in static RAM cells. The tag is programmed before deployment by an external computer via a serial interface. The device's temperature-monitoring protocol is defined at this stage. Upon retrieval of the tag, the stored temperature values will be transfered to a computer where the geographical location of the fish at the actual sampling time will be deduced through retrospective navigation based on known sea temperature distribution. © 1997 IEEE.