36 research outputs found
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High Performance Local Oscillator Design for Next Generation Wireless Communication
Local Oscillator (LO) is an essential building block in modern wireless radios. In modern wireless radios, LO often serves as a reference of the carrier signal to modulate or demod- ulate the outgoing or incoming data. The LO signal should be a clean and stable source, such that the frequency or timing information of the carrier reference can be well-defined. However, as radio architecture evolves, the importance of LO path design has become much more important than before. Of late, many radio architecture innovations have exploited sophisticated LO generation schemes to meet the ever-increasing demands of wireless radio performances.
The focus of this thesis is to address challenges in the LO path design for next-generation high performance wireless radios. These challenges include (1) Congested spectrum at low radio frequency (RF) below 5GHz (2) Continuing miniaturization of integrated wireless radio, and (3) Fiber-fast (>10Gb/s) mm-wave wireless communication.
The thesis begins with a brief introduction of the aforementioned challenges followed by a discussion of the opportunities projected to overcome these challenges.
To address the challenge of congested spectrum at frequency below 5GHz, novel ra- dio architectures such as cognitive radio, software-defined radio, and full-duplex radio have drawn significant research interest. Cognitive radio is a radio architecture that opportunisti- cally utilize the unused spectrum in an environment to maximize spectrum usage efficiency. Energy-efficient spectrum sensing is the key to implementing cognitive radio. To enable energy-efficient spectrum sensing, a fast-hopping frequency synthesizer is an essential build- ing block to swiftly sweep the carrier frequency of the radio across the available spectrum. Chapter 2 of this thesis further highlights the challenges and trade-offs of the current LO gen-
eration scheme for possible use in sweeping LO-based spectrum analysis. It follows by intro- duction of the proposed fast-hopping LO architecture, its implementation and measurement results of the validated prototype. Chapter 3 proposes an embedded phase-shifting LO-path design for wideband RF self-interference cancellation for full-duplex radio. It demonstrates a synergistic design between the LO path and signal to perform self-interference cancellation.
To address the challenge of continuing miniaturization of integrated wireless radio, ring oscillator-based frequency synthesizer is an attractive candidate due to its compactness. Chapter 4 discussed the difficulty associated with implementing a Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) with ultra-small form-factor. It further proposes the concept sub-sampling PLL with time- based loop filter to address these challenges. A 65nm CMOS prototype and its measurement result are presented for validation of the concept.
In shifting from RF to mm-wave frequencies, the performance of wireless communication links is boosted by significant bandwidth and data-rate expansion. However, the demand for data-rate improvement is out-pacing the innovation of radio architectures. A >10Gb/s mm-wave wireless communication at 60GHz is required by emerging applications such as virtual-reality (VR) headsets, inter-rack data transmission at data center, and Ultra-High- Definition (UHD) TV home entertainment systems. Channel-bonding is considered to be a promising technique for achieving >10Gb/s wireless communication at 60GHz. Chapter 5 discusses the fundamental radio implementation challenges associated with channel-bonding for 60GHz wireless communication and the pros and cons of prior arts that attempted to address these challenges. It is followed by a discussion of the proposed 60GHz channel- bonding receiver, which utilizes only a single PLL and enables both contiguous and non- contiguous channel-bonding schemes.
Finally, Chapter 6 presents the conclusion of this thesis
Flexible Receivers in CMOS for Wireless Communication
Consumers are pushing for higher data rates to support more services that are introduced in mobile applications. As an example, a few years ago video-on-demand was only accessed through landlines, but today wireless devices are frequently used to stream video. To support this, more flexible network solutions have merged in 4G, introducing new technical problems to the mobile terminal. New techniques are thus needed, and this dissertation explores five different ideas for receiver front-ends, that are cost-efficient and flexible both in performance and operating frequency. All ideas have been implemented in chips fabricated in 65 nm CMOS technology and verified by measurements. Paper I explores a voltage-mode receiver front-end where sub-threshold positive feedback transistors are introduced to increase the linearity in combination with a bootstrapped passive mixer. Paper II builds on the idea of 8-phase harmonic rejection, but simplifies it to a 6-phase solution that can reject noise and interferers at the 3rd order harmonic of the local oscillator frequency. This provides a good trade-off between the traditional quadrature mixer and the 8- phase harmonic rejection mixer. Furthermore, a very compact inductor-less low noise amplifier is introduced. Paper III investigates the use of global negative feedback in a receiver front-end, and also introduces an auxiliary path that can cancel noise from the main path. In paper IV, another global feedback based receiver front-end is designed, but with positive feedback instead of negative. By introducing global positive feedback, the resistance of the transistors in a passive mixer-first receiver front-end can be reduced to achieve a lower noise figure, while still maintaining input matching. Finally, paper V introduces a full receiver chain with a single-ended to differential LNA, current-mode downconversion mixers, and a baseband circuity that merges the functionalities of the transimpedance amplifier, channel-select filter, and analog-to-digital converter into one single power-efficient block
Saw-Less radio receivers in CMOS
Smartphones play an essential role in our daily life. Connected to the internet, we can easily keep in touch with family and friends, even if far away, while ever more apps serve us in numerous ways. To support all of this, higher data rates are needed for ever more wireless users, leading to a very crowded radio frequency spectrum. To achieve high spectrum efficiency while reducing unwanted interference, high-quality band-pass filters are needed. Piezo-electrical Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) filters are conventionally used for this purpose, but such filters need a dedicated design for each new band, are relatively bulky and also costly compared to integrated circuit chips. Instead, we would like to integrate the filters as part of the entire wireless transceiver with digital smartphone hardware on CMOS chips. The research described in this thesis targets this goal. It has recently been shown that N-path filters based on passive switched-RC circuits can realize high-quality band-select filters on CMOS chips, where the center frequency of the filter is widely tunable by the switching-frequency. As CMOS downscaling following Moore’s law brings us lower clock-switching power, lower switch on-resistance and more compact metal-to-metal capacitors, N-path filters look promising. This thesis targets SAW-less wireless receiver design, exploiting N-path filters. As SAW-filters are extremely linear and selective, it is very challenging to approximate this performance with CMOS N-path filters. The research in this thesis proposes and explores several techniques for extending the linearity and enhancing the selectivity of N-path switched-RC filters and mixers, and explores their application in CMOS receiver chip designs. First the state-of-the-art in N-path filters and mixer-first receivers is reviewed. The requirements on the main receiver path are examined in case SAW-filters are removed or replaced by wideband circulators. The feasibility of a SAW-less Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) radio receiver is explored, targeting extreme linearity and compression Irequirements. A bottom-plate mixing technique with switch sharing is proposed. It improves linearity by keeping both the gate-source and gate-drain voltage swing of the MOSFET-switches rather constant, while halving the switch resistance to reduce voltage swings. A new N-path switch-RC filter stage with floating capacitors and bottom-plate mixer-switches is proposed to achieve very high linearity and a second-order voltage-domain RF-bandpass filter around the LO frequency. Extra out-of-band (OOB) rejection is implemented combined with V-I conversion and zero-IF frequency down-conversion in a second cross-coupled switch-RC N-path stage. It offers a low-ohmic high-linearity current path for out-of-band interferers. A prototype chip fabricated in a 28 nm CMOS technology achieves an in-band IIP3 of +10 dBm , IIP2 of +42 dBm, out-of-band IIP3 of +44 dBm, IIP2 of +90 dBm and blocker 1-dB gain-compression point of +13 dBm for a blocker frequency offset of 80 MHz. At this offset frequency, the measured desensitization is only 0.6 dB for a 0-dBm blocker, and 3.5 dB for a 10-dBm blocker at 0.7 GHz operating frequency (i.e. 6 and 9 dB blocker noise figure). The chip consumes 38-96 mW for operating frequencies of 0.1-2 GHz and occupies an active area of 0.49 mm2. Next, targeting to cover all frequency bands up to 6 GHz and achieving a noise figure lower than 3 dB, a mixer-first receiver with enhanced selectivity and high dynamic range is proposed. Capacitive negative feedback across the baseband amplifier serves as a blocker bypassing path, while an extra capacitive positive feedback path offers further blocker rejection. This combination of feedback paths synthesizes a complex pole pair at the input of the baseband amplifier, which is up-converted to the RF port to obtain steeper RF-bandpass filter roll-off than the conventional up-converted real pole and reduced distortion. This thesis explains the circuit principle and analyzes receiver performance. A prototype chip fabricated in 45 nm Partially Depleted Silicon on Insulator (PDSOI) technology achieves high linearity (in-band IIP3 of +3 dBm, IIP2 of +56 dBm, out-of-band IIP3 = +39 dBm, IIP2 = +88 dB) combined with sub-3 dB noise figure. Desensitization due to a 0-dBm blocker is only 2.2 dB at 1.4 GHz operating frequency. IIFinally, to demonstrate the performance of the implemented blocker-tolerant receiver chip designs, a test setup with a real mobile phone is built to verify the sensitivity of the receiver chip for different practical blocking scenarios
Vidutinių dažnių 5G belaidžių tinklų galios stiprintuvų tyrimas
This dissertation addresses the problems of ensuring efficient radio fre-quency transmission for 5G wireless networks. Taking into account, that the next
generation 5G wireless network structure will be heterogeneous, the device
density and their mobility will increase and massive MIMO connectivity
capability will be widespread, the main investigated problem is formulated –
increasing the efficiency of portable mid-band 5G wireless network CMOS power amplifier with impedance matching networks.
The dissertation consists of four parts including the introduction, 3 chapters, conclusions, references and 3 annexes.
The investigated problem, importance and purpose of the thesis, the ob-ject of the research methodology, as well as the scientific novelty are de-fined in the
introduction. Practical significance of the obtained results, defended state-ments and the structure of the dissertation are also included.
The first chapter presents an extensive literature analysis. Latest ad-vances in the structure of the modern wireless network and the importance of the power amplifier in the radio frequency transmission chain are de-scribed in detail. The latter is followed by different power amplifier archi-tectures, parameters and their improvement techniques. Reported imped-ance matching network design methods are also discussed. Chapter 1 is concluded distinguishing the possible research vectors and defining the problems raised in this dissertation.
The second chapter is focused around improving the accuracy of de-signing lumped impedance matching network. The proposed methodology of estimating lumped inductor and capacitor parasitic parameters is dis-cussed in detail provi-ding complete mathematical expressions, including a summary and conclusions.
The third chapter presents simulation results for the designed radio fre-quency power amplifiers. Two variations of Doherty power amplifier archi-tectures are presented in the second part, covering the full step-by-step de-sign and simulation process. The latter chapter is concluded by comparing simulation and
measurement results for all designed radio frequency power amplifiers.
General conclusions are followed by an extensive list of references and a list of 5 publications by the author on the topic of the dissertation.
5 papers, focusing on the subject of the discussed dissertation, have been
published: three papers are included in the Clarivate Analytics Web of Sci-ence database with a citation index, one paper is included in Clarivate Ana-lytics Web of Science database Conference Proceedings, and one paper has been published in unreferred international conference preceedings. The au-thor has also made
9 presentations at 9 scientific conferences at a national and international level.Dissertatio
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A Flexible RFIC Architecture for High-Sensitivity Reception and Compressed-Sampling Wideband Detection
Compressed sensing (CS) is a new signal processing approach that has disrupted the Shannon-Nyquist limit based design methodology and has opened promising avenues for building energy-efficient radio frequency integrated circuits (RFICs) for detecting and estimating particular classes (i.e. sparse) of signals. Whether in application domains where naturally occurring signals are sparse or where representations of signals subject to the fidelity limits or configuration settings of the radio equipment are often found to be sparse, the emergence of CS has forced us to re-imagine the radio receiver. While realizing some of the potential benefits promised by theory, CS-RFIC architectures proposed in earlier research were not particularly suitable for mass-market applications.
This thesis demonstrates how to take a new signal processing technique all the way to the hardware level. So far, the main focus in literature has been how CS offers a significant advantage for signal processing. This work will show how CS techniques drive novel architectures down to the integrated circuit level. This requires close collaboration between communication system developers, integrated circuit designers and signal processing experts. The trans-disciplinary approach presented here has led to the unification of CS-inspired architectures for wideband signal detection with robust, legacy architectures for high-sensitivity signal reception. The result is a functionally flexible and rapidly reconfigurable CMOS RFIC compactly implemented on silicon with the potential to achieve the cost, size and power targets in mass-market applications. While the focus of this thesis is RF signal finding and reception in frequency, the CS-based RFIC design approach presented here is applicable to a wide range of other applications like direction-of-arrival and range finding.
We begin by developing a signal-model driven approach for optimizing the performance of CS RF frontends (RFFEs). We consider sparse multiband signals with supports contained within a frequency span extending from fMIN to fMAX. The resulting quadrature analog-to-information converter (QAIC) is a flexible-bandwidth, blind sub-Nyquist sampling architecture optimized for energy consumption and sensitivity performance. The QAIC addresses key drawbacks of earlier CS RFFE architectures like the modulated wideband converter (MWC) that implement frequency spans extending from 0 to fMAX. While these earlier architectures, a direct implementation of CS signal processing theory, have several beneficial properties, the true cost of their proposed analog frontend significantly diminishes the sensitivity performance and energy savings that CS methods have the potential to deliver. They use periodic pseudo-random bit sequence (PRBS) generators where the clock frequency fPRBS scales up with the maximum signal frequency fMAX. In contrast, fPRBS in the QAIC RFFE scales up with the instantaneous bandwidth IBW, where IBW = ( fMAX − fMIN ). This results in significant performance advantages in terms of energy consumption and sensitivity performance. The QAIC uncouples fPRBS from fMAX by performing wideband quadrature downconversion ahead of analog mixing with PRBSs at an intermediate frequency (IF). However, the dual heterodyne architecture of the QAIC suffers from spurious responses at IF caused by gain and phase imbalance in its wideband downconverter.
We then show how the direct RF-to-information converter (DRF2IC) compactly adds CS wideband detection to a direct conversion frequency-translational noise-cancelling (FTNC) receiver by introducing pseudo-random modulation of the local oscillator (LO) signals and by consolidating multiple CS measurements into one hardware branch. The DRF2IC inherits benefits of the FTNC receiver in signal reception mode. In CS wideband detection mode, the DRF2IC inherits key advantages from both the earlier lowpass CS architectures and the QAIC while avoiding the drawbacks of both. It uncouples fPRBS from fMAX in contrast with the MWC. In contrast with the QAIC, the DRF2IC employs a direct conversion RF chain with narrow bandwidth analog components at baseband thereby avoiding frequency-dependent gain and phase imbalance. The DRF2IC chip occupies 0.56mm2 area in 65nm CMOS. In reception mode, it consumes 46.5mW from 1.15V and delivers 40MHz RF bandwidth, 41.5dB conversion gain, 3.6dB noise figure (NF) and -2dBm blocker 1dB compression point (B1dB). In CS wideband detection mode, 66dB operational dynamic range, 40dB instantaneous dynamic range and 1.43GHz instantaneous bandwidth are demonstrated and 6 interferers each 10MHz wide scattered over a 1.27GHz span are detected in 1.2us consuming 58.5mW
Design and Reliability of mm-Wave Circuits In Silicon-Germanium
The first goal of this research is to develop a methodology for the design of RF and
mm-Wave circuits in Silicon-Germanium utilizing CMOS, PIN diodes, and passive
circuits. Such circuits consist of a 2-20 GHz CMOS-based TR (Transmit/Receive) SPDT
switch and an 18-47 GHz Wilkinson Power Divider-Combiner (WPDC). Optimal design
techniques are utilized in these circuit designs to overcome the limitations of both Front
End of the Line (FEOL: active devices) and Back End of the Line (BEOL: metal stack-up)
in a commercial SiGe BiCMOS processes. The resulting performances utilize novel design
techniques that allow them to be competitive with existing state-of-the-art designs across
multiple IC technologies.
The second goal of this research is to understand the impact of DC reliability
mechanisms on AC performance for analog SiGe HBT circuits and to locate an optimal
DC biasing regime that balances the tradeoff between circuit reliability and performance.
The circuit of interest is a DC-100 GHz wireline driver, which is widely used as a critical
block in optical communications. The aim is to extend the concept of Safe Operating Area
(SOA), which is the region of the DC I-V plane that does not damage a device over time,
to the circuit level. This is done with the introduction of a performance-informed Circuit Safe Operating Area (C-SOA), which is defined as the region of the DC I-V plane that does
not result in a degradation to AC performance over time while maintaining the best possible
AC performance. The wireline driver’s highlighted AC performance is the OP1dB or output referred 1-dB compression point.M.S
Four-element phased-array beamformers and a self-interference canceling full-duplex transciver in 130-nm SiGe for 5G applications at 26 GHz
This thesis is on the design of radio-frequency (RF) integrated front-end circuits for next generation 5G communication systems. The demand for higher data rates and lower latency in 5G networks can only be met using several new technologies including, but not limited to, mm-waves, massive-MIMO, and full-duplex. Use of mm-waves provides more bandwidth that is necessary for high data rates at the cost of increased attenuation in air. Massive-MIMO arrays are required to compensate for this increased path loss by providing beam steering and array gain. Furthermore, full duplex operation is desirable for improved spectrum efficiency and reduced latency. The difficulty of full duplex operation is the self-interference (SI) between transmit (TX) and receive (RX) paths. Conventional methods to suppress this interference utilize either bulky circulators, isolators, couplers or two separate antennas. These methods are not suitable for fully-integrated full-duplex massive-MIMO arrays. This thesis presents circuit and system level solutions to the issues summarized above, in the form of SiGe integrated circuits for 5G applications at 26 GHz. First, a full-duplex RF front-end architecture is proposed that is scalable to massive-MIMO arrays. It is based on blind, RF self-interference cancellation that is applicable to single/shared antenna front-ends. A high resolution RF vector modulator is developed, which is the key building block that empowers the full-duplex frontend architecture by achieving better than state-of-the-art 10-b monotonic phase control. This vector modulator is combined with linear-in-dB variable gain amplifiers and attenuators to realize a precision self-interference cancellation circuitry. Further, adaptive control of this SI canceler is made possible by including an on-chip low-power IQ downconverter. It correlates copies of transmitted and received signals and provides baseband/dc outputs that can be used to adaptively control the SI canceler. The solution comes at the cost of minimal additional circuitry, yet significantly eases linearity requirements of critical receiver blocks at RF/IF such as mixers and ADCs. Second, to complement the proposed full-duplex front-end architecture and to provide a more complete solution, high-performance beamformer ICs with 5-/6- b phase and 3-/4-b amplitude control capabilities are designed. Single-channel, separate transmitter and receiver beamformers are implemented targeting massive- MIMO mode of operation, and their four-channel versions are developed for phasedarray communication systems. Better than state-of-the-art noise performance is obtained in the RX beamformer channel, with a full-channel noise figure of 3.3 d
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Integrated Self-Interference Cancellation for Full-Duplex and Frequency-Division Duplexing Wireless Communication Systems
From wirelessly connected robots to car-to-car communications, and to smart cities, almost every aspect of our lives will benefit from future wireless communications. While promise an exciting future world, next-generation wireless communications impose requirements on the data rate, spectral efficiency, and latency (among others) that are higher than those for today's systems by several orders of magnitude.
Full-duplex wireless, an emergent wireless communications paradigm, breaks the long-held assumption that it is impossible for a wireless device to transmit and receive simultaneously at the same frequency, and has the potential to immediately double network capacity at the physical (PHY) layer and offers many other benefits (such as reduced latency) at the higher layers. Recently, discrete-component-based demonstrations have established the feasibility of full-duplex wireless. However, the realization of integrated full duplex radios, compact radios that can fit into smartphones, is fraught with fundamental challenges. In addition, to unleash the full potential of full-duplex communication, a careful redesign of the PHY layer and the medium access control (MAC) layer using a cross-layer approach is required.
The biggest challenge associated with full duplex wireless is the tremendous amount of transmitter self-interference right on top of the desired signal. In this dissertation, new self-interference-cancellation approaches at both system and circuit levels are presented, contributing towards the realization of full-duplex radios using integrated circuit technology. Specifically, these new approaches involve elimination of the noise and distortion of the cancellation circuitry, enhancing the integrated cancellation bandwidth, and performing joint radio frequency, analog, and digital cancellation to achieve cancellation with nearly one part-per-billion accuracy.
In collaboration with researchers at higher layers of the stack, a cross-layer approach has been used in our full-duplex research and has allowed us to derive power allocation algorithms and to characterize rate-gain improvements for full-duplex wireless networks. To enable experimental characterization of full-duplex MAC layer algorithms, a cross-layered software-defined full-duplex radio testbed has been developed. In collaboration with researchers from the field of micro-electro-mechanical systems, we demonstrate a multi-band frequency-division duplexing system using a cavity-filter-based tunable duplexer and our integrated widely-tunable self-interference-cancelling receiver