255 research outputs found

    Saw-Less radio receivers in CMOS

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    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

    A Fully-Integrated Reconfigurable Dual-Band Transceiver for Short Range Wireless Communications in 180 nm CMOS

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    © 2015 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works.A fully-integrated reconfigurable dual-band (760-960 MHz and 2.4-2.5 GHz) transceiver (TRX) for short range wireless communications is presented. The TRX consists of two individually-optimized RF front-ends for each band and one shared power-scalable analog baseband. The sub-GHz receiver has achieved the maximum 75 dBc 3rd-order harmonic rejection ratio (HRR3) by inserting a Q-enhanced notch filtering RF amplifier (RFA). In 2.4 GHz band, a single-ended-to-differential RFA with gain/phase imbalance compensation is proposed in the receiver. A ΣΔ fractional-N PLL frequency synthesizer with two switchable Class-C VCOs is employed to provide the LOs. Moreover, the integrated multi-mode PAs achieve the output P1dB (OP1dB) of 16.3 dBm and 14.1 dBm with both 25% PAE for sub-GHz and 2.4 GHz bands, respectively. A power-control loop is proposed to detect the input signal PAPR in real-time and flexibly reconfigure the PA's operation modes to enhance the back-off efficiency. With this proposed technique, the PAE of the sub-GHz PA is improved by x3.24 and x1.41 at 9 dB and 3 dB back-off powers, respectively, and the PAE of the 2.4 GHz PA is improved by x2.17 at 6 dB back-off power. The presented transceiver has achieved comparable or even better performance in terms of noise figure, HRR, OP1dB and power efficiency compared with the state-of-the-art.Peer reviewe

    대역 외 방해신호에 내성을 가지는 광대역 수신기에 관한 연구

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 공과대학 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2018. 2. 남상욱.In this thesis, a study of wideband receivers as one of the practical SDR receiver implementations is presented. The out-of-band interference signal (or blocker), which is the biggest problem of the wideband receiver is investigated, and have studied how to effectively remove it. As a result of reviewing previous studies, we have developed a wideband receiver based on the current-mode receiver structure and attempted to eliminate the blocker. The contents of the step-by-step research are as follows. First, attention was paid to the linearity of a low-noise transconductance amplifier (LNTA), which is the base block of current-mode receivers. In current-mode receivers, the LNTA should have a high transconductance (Gm) value to achieve a low noise figure, but a high Gm value results in low linearity. To solve this trade-off, we proposed a linearization method of transconductors. The proposed technique eliminates the third-order intermodulation distortion (IMD3) in a feed-forward manner using two paths. A transconductor having a transconductance of 2Gm is disposed in the main path, and an amplifier having a gain of ∛2 and a Gm-sized transconductor are located in the auxiliary path. This structure allows for some fundamental signal loss but cancel the IMD3 component at the output. As a result, the entire transconductor circuit can have high linearity due to the removed IMD3 component. We have designed a reconfigurable high-pass filter using a linearized transconductor and have demonstrated its performance. The fabricated circuit achieved a high input-referred third-order intercept point(IIP3) performance of 19.4 dBm. Then, a further improved linearized transconductor is designed. Since the linearized transconductors have a high noise figure due to the additional circuitry used for linearization, we have proposed a more suitable form for application to LNTA through noise figure analysis. The improved LNTA is designed to operate in low noise mode when there is no blocker, and can be switched to operate in high linearity mode when the blocker exists. We also applied noise cancelling techniques to the receiver to improve the noise figure performance of the wideband receiver circuit. A feedback path has been added to the current-mode receiver structure consisting of the LNTA, the mixer and the baseband transimpedance amplifier (TIA), and the noise signal can be detected using this path. This feedback path also maintains the input matching of the receiver to 50 Ω in a wide bandwidth. By adding an auxiliary path to the receiver, the in-band signal is amplified and the detected noise is removed from the baseband. The completed circuit exhibited wideband performance from 0.025 GHz to 2 GHz and IIP3 performance of -6.9 dBm in the high linearity mode. Finally, we designed a double noise-cancelling wideband receiver circuit by improving the performance of a wideband receiver with high immunity to blocker signals. In previous receivers, the LNTA was operated in two modes depending on the situation. In the improved receiver, the Gm ratio of the linearized LNTA was changed and the RF noise-cancelling technique was applied. The input matching and noise cancelling scheme introduced in the previous circuit was also applied and a wideband receiver circuit was designed to perform double noise-cancelling. As a result, the linearization and noise-cancellation of LNTA could be achieved at the same time, and the completed receiver circuit showed high IIP3 performance of 5 dBm with minimum noise figure of 1.4 dB. In conclusion, this thesis proposed a linearization technique for transconductor circuit and designed a wideband receiver based on current-mode receiver. The designed receiver circuit experimentally verified that it has low noise figure performance and high IIP3 performance and is tolerant to out-of-band blocker signals.Chapter 1. Introduction 1 1.1. Motivation of Wideband Receiver Architecture 2 1.2. Challenges in Designing Wideband Receiver 7 1.3. Prior Researches 13 1.3.1. N-Path Filter 14 1.3.2. Feed-Forward Blocker Filtering 16 1.3.3. Current-Mode Receiver 18 1.4. Research Objectives and Thesis Organization 22 Chapter 2. Transconductor Linearization Technique and Design of Tunable High-pass Filter 24 2.1. Transconductor Linearization Technique 27 2.2. Design of Tunable High-pass Filter 36 2.3. Measurement Results 41 2.4. Conclusions 46 Chapter 3. Wideband Noise-Cancelling Receiver Front-End Using Linearized Transconductor 47 3.1. Low-Noise Transconductance Amplifier Based on Linearized Transconductor 49 3.2. Wideband Noise-Cancelling Receiver Architecture 58 3.3. Measurement Results 64 3.4. Conclusions 70 Chapter 4. Blocker-Tolerant Wideband Double Noise-Cancelling Receiver Front-End 71 4.1. Linearized Noise-Cancelling Low-Noise Transconductance Amplifier 73 4.2. Wideband Double Noise-Cancelling Receiver Front-End 83 4.3. Measurement Results 90 4.4. Conclusions 97 Chapter 5. Conclusions 98 Bibliography 102 Abstract in Korean 112Docto

    Low-Power Wake-Up Receivers

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    The Internet of Things (IoT) is leading the world to the Internet of Everything (IoE), where things, people, intelligent machines, data and processes will be connected together. The key to enter the era of the IoE lies in enormous sensor nodes being deployed in the massively expanding wireless sensor networks (WSNs). By the year of 2025, more than 42 billion IoT devices will be connected to the Internet. While the future IoE will bring priceless advantages for the life of mankind, one challenge limiting the nowadays IoT from further development is the ongoing power demand with the dramatically growing number of the wireless sensor nodes. To address the power consumption issue, this dissertation is motivated to investigate low-power wake-up receivers (WuRXs) which will significantly enhance the sustainability of the WSNs and the environmental awareness of the IoT. Two proof-of-concept low-power WuRXs with focuses on two different application scenarios have been proposed. The first WuRX, implemented in a cost-effective 180-nm CMOS semiconductor technology, operates at 401−406-MHz band. It is a good candidate for application scenarios, where both a high sensitivity and an ultra-low power consumption are in demand. Concrete use cases are, for instance, medical implantable applications or long-range communications in rural areas. This WuRX does not rely on a further assisting semiconductor technology, such as MEMS which is widely used in state-of-the-art WuRXs operating at similar frequencies. Thus, this WuRX is a promising solution to low-power low-cost IoT. The second WuRX, implemented in a 45-nm RFSOI CMOS technology, was researched for short-range communication applications, where high-density conventional IoT devices should be installed. By investigation of the WuRX for operation at higher frequency band from 5.5 GHz to 7.5 GHz, the nowadays ever more over-traffic issues that arise at low frequency bands such as 2.4 GHz can be substantially addressed. A systematic, analytical research route has been carried out in realization of the proposed WuRXs. The thesis begins with a thorough study of state-of-the-art WuRX architectures. By examining pros and cons of these architectures, two novel architectures are proposed for the WuRXs in accordance with their specific use cases. Thereon, key WuRX parameters are systematically analyzed and optimized; the performance of relevant circuits is modeled and simulated extensively. The knowledge gained through these investigations builds up a solid theoretical basis for the ongoing WuRX designs. Thereafter, the two WuRXs have been analytically researched, developed and optimized to achieve their highest performance. Proof-of-concept circuits for both the WuRXs have been fabricated and comprehensively characterized under laboratory conditions. Finally, measurement results have verified the feasibility of the design concept and the feasibility of both the WuRXs

    Flexible Receivers in CMOS for Wireless Communication

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    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

    Interference-robust CMOS receivers for IoT:Highly linear RF front-ends at low power

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    Wireless technologies have brought Internet access to more than half of the world’s population in the last decade. Nowadays, Internet-of-Things (IoT) technology extends the internet connectivity to sensor nodes embedded in machines, animals, and plants. It will soon put us in a realm of billions of interconnected sensor nodes networking and communicating with each other. Such unprecedented growth of wireless devices puts a big challenge of sustainable and robust connectivity in front of us. Concretely, this challenge demands a wireless sensor node with low power and robust connectivity. Radios are the physical interface for sensor nodes with the external world and are one of the power-hungry components in sensor nodes. Hence it is imperative to make them energy-efficient and interference-robust. This thesis explores CMOS passive mixer-first receiver topology to enhance the interference tolerance of receivers in IoT radios. The dissertation proposes a novel N-path filter/mixer topology at the circuit level and a multipath cross-correlation technique at the system level. Two test-chips of mixer-first receiver front ends, using these techniques, are implemented in CMOS FDSOI 22nm technology as a proof-of-concept. The experimental prototypes demonstrate voltage gain in passive mixers and exhibit high-Q widely-tunable RF filtering, large out-of-band and harmonic interferer tolerance, and moderate noise figure while consuming much lower power than several state-of-the-art receivers

    Analysis and Design of Wideband Low Noise Amplifier with Digital Control

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    The design issues in designing low noise amplifier (LNA) for Software-Defined-Radio (SDR) are reviewed. An inductor-less wideband low noise amplifier aiming at low frequency band (0.2-2GHz) for Software-Defined-Radio is presented. Shunt-shunt LNA with active feedback is used as the first stage which is carefully optimized for low noise and wide band applications. A digitally controlled second stage is employed to provide an additional 12dB gain control. A novel method is proposed to bypass the first stage without degrading input matching. This LNA is fabricated in a standard 0.18 um CMOS technology. The measurement result shows the proposed LNA has a gain range of 6dB-18dB at high gain mode and -12dB-0dB at low gain mode, as well as a –3dB bandwidth of 2GHz. The noise figure (NF) is 3.5-4.5dB in the high gain setting mode. It consumes 20mW from a 1.8V supply

    ワイヤレス通信のための先進的な信号処理技術を用いた非線形補償法の研究

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    The inherit nonlinearity in analogue front-ends of transmitters and receivers have had primary impact on the overall performance of the wireless communication systems, as it gives arise of substantial distortion when transmitting and processing signals with such circuits. Therefore, the nonlinear compensation (linearization) techniques become essential to suppress the distortion to an acceptable extent in order to ensure sufficient low bit error rate. Furthermore, the increasing demands on higher data rate and ubiquitous interoperability between various multi-coverage protocols are two of the most important features of the contemporary communication system. The former demand pushes the communication system to use wider bandwidth and the latter one brings up severe coexistence problems. Having fully considered the problems raised above, the work in this Ph.D. thesis carries out extensive researches on the nonlinear compensations utilizing advanced digital signal processing techniques. The motivation behind this is to push more processing tasks to the digital domain, as it can potentially cut down the bill of materials (BOM) costs paid for the off-chip devices and reduce practical implementation difficulties. The work here is carried out using three approaches: numerical analysis & computer simulations; experimental tests using commercial instruments; actual implementation with FPGA. The primary contributions for this thesis are summarized as the following three points: 1) An adaptive digital predistortion (DPD) with fast convergence rate and low complexity for multi-carrier GSM system is presented. Albeit a legacy system, the GSM, however, has a very strict requirement on the out-of-band emission, thus it represents a much more difficult hurdle for DPD application. It is successfully implemented in an FPGA without using any other auxiliary processor. A simplified multiplier-free NLMS algorithm, especially suitable for FPGA implementation, for fast adapting the LUT is proposed. Many design methodologies and practical implementation issues are discussed in details. Experimental results have shown that the DPD performed robustly when it is involved in the multichannel transmitter. 2) The next generation system (5G) will unquestionably use wider bandwidth to support higher throughput, which poses stringent needs for using high-speed data converters. Herein the analog-to-digital converter (ADC) tends to be the most expensive single device in the whole transmitter/receiver systems. Therefore, conventional DPD utilizing high-speed ADC becomes unaffordable, especially for small base stations (micro, pico and femto). A digital predistortion technique utilizing spectral extrapolation is proposed in this thesis, wherein with band-limited feedback signal, the requirement on ADC speed can be significantly released. Experimental results have validated the feasibility of the proposed technique for coping with band-limited feedback signal. It has been shown that adequate linearization performance can be achieved even if the acquisition bandwidth is less than the original signal bandwidth. The experimental results obtained by using LTE-Advanced signal of 320 MHz bandwidth are quite satisfactory, and to the authors’ knowledge, this is the first high-performance wideband DPD ever been reported. 3) To address the predicament that mobile operators do not have enough contiguous usable bandwidth, carrier aggregation (CA) technique is developed and imported into 4G LTE-Advanced. This pushes the utilization of concurrent dual-band transmitter/receiver, which reduces the hardware expense by using a single front-end. Compensation techniques for the respective concurrent dual-band transmitter and receiver front-ends are proposed to combat the inter-band modulation distortion, and simultaneously reduce the distortion for the both lower-side band and upper-side band signals.電気通信大学201

    RF Amplification and Filtering Techniques for Cellular Receivers

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    The usage of various wireless standards, such as Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS, and 4G/5G cellular, has been continually increasing. In order to utilize the frequency bands efficiently and to support new communication standards with lower power consumption, lower occupied volume and at reduced costs, multimode transceivers, software defined radios (SDRs), cognitive radios, etc., have been actively investigated. Broadband behavior of a wireless receiver is typically defined by its front-end low-noise amplifier (LNA), whose design must consider trade-offs between input matching, noise figure (NF), gain, bandwidth, linearity, and voltage headroom in a given process technology. Moreover, monolithic RF wireless receivers have been trending toward high intermediatefrequency (IF) or superhetrodyne radios thanks to recent breakthroughs in silicon integration of band-pass channel-select filters. The main motivation is to avoid the common issues in the currently predominant zero/low-IF receivers, such as poor 2nd-order nonlinearity, sensitivity to 1/f (i.e. flicker) noise and time-variant dc offsets, especially in the fine CMOS technology. To avoid interferers and blockers at the susceptible image frequencies that the high-IF entails, band-pass filters (BPF) with high quality (Q) factor components for sharp transfer-function transition characteristics are now required. In addition, integrated low-pass filters (LPF) with strong rejection of out-of-band frequency components are essential building blocks in a variety of applications, such as telecommunications, video signal processing, anti-aliasing filtering, etc. Attention is drawn toward structures featuring low noise, small area, high in-/out-of-band linearity performance, and low-power consumption. This thesis comprises three main parts. In the first part (Chapters 2 and 3), we focus on the design and implementation of several innovative wideband low-noise (transconductance) amplifiers [LN(T)A] for wireless cellular applications. In the first design, we introduce new approaches to reduce the noise figure of the noise-cancellation LNAs without sacrificing the power consumption budget, which leads to NF of 2 dB without adding extra power consumption. The proposed LNAs also have the capability to be used in current-mode receivers, especially in discrete-time receivers, as in the form of low noise transconductance amplifier (LNTA). In the second design, two different two-fold noise cancellation approaches are proposed, which not only improve the noise performance of the design, but also achieve high linearity (IIP3=+4.25 dBm). The proposed LN(T)As are implemented in TSMC 28-nm LP CMOS technology to prove that they are suitable for applications such as sub-6 GHz 5G receivers. The second objective of this dissertation research is to invent a novel method of band-pass filtering, which leads to achieving very sharp and selective band-pass filtering with high linearity and low input referred (IRN) noise (Chapter 4). This technique improves the noise and linearity performance without adding extra clock phases. Hence, the duty cycle of the clock phases stays constant, despite the sophisticated improvements. Moreover, due to its sharp filtering, it can filter out high blockers of near channels and can increase the receiver’s blocker tolerance. With the same total capacitor size and clock duty cycle as in a 1st-order complex charge-sharing band-pass filter (CS BPF), the proposed design achieves 20 dB better out-of-band filtering compared to the prior-art 1st-order CS BPF and 10 dB better out-of-band filtering compared to the conventional 2nd-order C-CS BPF. Finally, the stop-band rejection of the discrete-time infinite-impulse response (IIR) lowpass filter is improved by applying a novel technique to enhance the anti-aliasing filtering (Chapter 5). The aim is to introduce a 4th-order charge rotating (CR) discrete-time (DT) LPF, which achieves the record of stop-band rejection of 120 dB by using a novel pseudolinear interpolation technique while keeping the sampling frequency and the capacitor values constant

    Frequency Translation loops for RF filtering-Theory and Design

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    Modern wireless transceivers are required to operate over a wide range of frequencies in order to support the multitude of currently available wireless standards. Wideband operation also enables future systems that aim for better utilization of the available spectrum through dynamic allocation. As such, co-existence problems like harmonic mixing and phase noise become a main concern. In particular, dealing with interfer- ence scenarios is crucial since they directly translate to higher linearity requirements in a receiver. With CMOS driving the consumer electronics market due to low cost and high level of integration demands, the continued increase in speed, mainly intended for digital applications, oers new possibilities for RF design to improve the linearity of front-end receivers. Furthermore, the readily available switches in CMOS have proven to be a viable alternative to traditional active mixers for frequency translation due to their high linearity, low flicker noise, and, most recently recognized, their impedance transformation properties. In this thesis, frequency translation feedback loops employing passive mixers are explored as a means to relax the linearity requirements in a front-end receiver by providing channel selectivity as early as possible in the receiver chain. The proposed receiver architecture employing such loop addresses some of the most common prob- lems of integrated RF lters, while maintaining their inherent tunability. Through a simplied and intuitive analysis, the operation of the receiver is first examined and the design parameters aecting the lter characteristics, such as band- width and stop-band rejection, are determined. A systematic procedure for analyzing the linearity of the receiver reveals the possibility of LNA distortion canceling, which decouples the trade-o between noise, linearity and harmonic radiation. Next, a detailed analysis of frequency translation loops using passive mixers is developed. Only highly simplied analysis of such loops is commonly available in literature. The analysis is based on an iterative procedure to address the complexity introduced by the presence of LO harmonics in the loop and the lack of reverse isolation in the mixers, and results in highly accurate expressions for the harmonic and noise transfer functions of the system. Compared to the alternative of applying general LPTV theory, the procedure developed oers more intuition into the operation of the system and only requires the knowledge of basic Fourier analysis. The solution is shown to be capable of predicting trade-os arising due to harmonic mixing and loop stability requirements, and is therefore useful for both system design and optimization. Finally, as a proof of concept, a chip prototype is designed in a standard 65nm CMOS process. The design occupies +12dBm. As such, the work presented in this thesis aims to provide a highly-integrated means for programmable RF channel selection in wideband receivers. The topic oers several possibilities for further research, either in terms of extending the viability of the system, for example by providing higher order ltering, or by improving performance, such as noise
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