2 research outputs found

    Design of high frequency transconductor ladder filters

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    Design of 10 Gb/s burst-mode receivers for high-split extended reach PONs

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    The continuous stream of new applications for the internet, increases the need for higher access speed in the currently deployed communication networks. Most networks in use today still consist of twisted copper wires, inherited from the telephone network. The disadvantages of reusing the existing telephone network are twofold. Firstly, the bandwidth of twisted copper wires is limited and secondly, a large number of switches and routers are needed throughout the network leading to an excessive power consumption. The hybrid fiber coax network that reuses the television distribution network is not free from these drawbacks. The bandwidth is also limited and power hungry amplifiers are needed to bridge the distance to and from the user. The future of broadband access lies in optical fiber networks. The optical fiber has a virtually unlimited bandwidth and the lower attenuation leads to less switches and amplifiers in the network, reducing the power consumption of the complete infrastructure. This dissertation describes the design of a 10 Gb/s burst-mode receiver for high-split extended reach passive optical networks (PONs). The designed receiver incorporates two very advanced features. Firstly, the burst-mode receiver locks its gain setting within 6 ns avoiding packet loss due to gain switching during data payload reception. Secondly, the burst-mode receiver detects both burst start and burst end, making it the first burst-mode receiver of its kind to operate without any time critical signal requirements from outside the burst-mode receiver. The presented work covers the chip-level architecture study and design of a 10 Gb/s burst-mode transimpedance amplifier and a 10 Gb/s post-amplifier, which are the two most critical components of a burst-mode receiver
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