113 research outputs found

    Linear Operation of Switch-Mode Outphasing Power Amplifiers

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    Radio transceivers are playing an increasingly important role in modern society. The ”connected” lifestyle has been enabled by modern wireless communications. The demand that has been placed on current wireless and cellular infrastructure requires increased spectral efficiency however this has come at the cost of power efficiency. This work investigates methods of improving wireless transceiver efficiency by enabling more efficient power amplifier architectures, specifically examining the role of switch-mode power amplifiers in macro cell scenarios. Our research focuses on the mechanisms within outphasing power amplifiers which prevent linear amplification. From the analysis it was clear that high power non-linear effects are correctable with currently available techniques however non-linear effects around the zero crossing point are not. As a result signal processing techniques for suppressing and avoiding non-linear operation in low power regions are explored. A novel method of digital pre-distortion is presented, and conventional techniques for linearisation are adapted for the particular needs of the outphasing power amplifier. More unconventional signal processing techniques are presented to aid linearisation of the outphasing power amplifier, both zero crossing and bandwidth expansion reduction methods are designed to avoid operation in nonlinear regions of the amplifiers. In combination with digital pre-distortion the techniques will improve linearisation efforts on outphasing systems with dynamic range and bandwidth constraints respectively. Our collaboration with NXP provided access to a digital outphasing power amplifier, enabling empirical analysis of non-linear behaviour and comparative analysis of behavioural modelling and linearisation efforts. The collaboration resulted in a bench mark for linear wideband operation of a digital outphasing power amplifier. The complimentary linearisation techniques, bandwidth expansion reduction and zero crossing reduction have been evaluated in both simulated and practical outphasing test benches. Initial results are promising and indicate that the benefits they provide are not limited to the outphasing amplifier architecture alone. Overall this thesis presents innovative analysis of the distortion mechanisms of the outphasing power amplifier, highlighting the sensitivity of the system to environmental effects. Practical and novel linearisation techniques are presented, with a focus on enabling wide band operation for modern communications standards

    Phase manipulation for efficient radio frequency transmission

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    Thesis (Sc. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 109-112).Power amplifiers (PAs) for microwave communications are generally the most power-hungry element of a transmitter. High linearity is required for modern digital communications standards, and often is achieved at the expense of efficiency. Outphasing architectures, which combine multiple nonlinear but efficient switching PAs into a system with an overall linear response, represent a promising strategy for breaking the efficiency/linearity tradeoff inherent to conventional PAs. This work explores methods for efficient PA design using outphasing techniques. Two aspects of outphasing design are considered. First, a wide-band phase modulator is introduced that uses a single current-steering digital to analog converter (DAC) structure and discrete clock prerotation. This topology takes advantage of specifications particular to outphasing architectures to reduce matching requirements as compared to a two-DAC phase modulator while providing wideband capability. The phase modulator is demonstrated in 65-nm CMOS, operates over a carrier frequency range of 1.2-4.2 GHz and has a 12-bit phase resolution and sample rate of 160 MSamples/second. The second technique is a novel four-way lossless power combiner and outphasing system which provides ideally lossless power combining along with resistive loading of switching power amplifiers over a wide output range. This work presents the first-ever demonstration of this system at microwave frequencies. Particular attention is paid to the microwave-specific aspects of implementation. A 60-W GaN prototype demonstrates the outphasing and dynamic performance, which closely matches the expected performance despite the challenges of operating at microwave frequencies.by Taylor Wallis Barton.Sc.D

    Linearity of Outphasing Radio Transmitters

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    The outphasing transmitter is a promising technique, which can simultaneously achieve high linearity and power efficiency, thereby addressing the major design requirements of next generation transmitters. It employs highly non-linear power amplifier (PA) classes in a linear manner, in principle transmitting a distortion-free signal. Due to symmetric nature of the outphasing architecture, its linearity performance is constrained by any mismatches and non-linear effects encountered in the RF paths. This thesis analyzes the linearity performance of outphasing transmitters (in terms of ACLR specification) for LTE base station applications, under the non-linear effects and tolerances present in practical implementations. The system-level model, built in Matlab software, investigates the important non-linear effects present in outphasing transmitters, including gain and phase imbalance, IQ modulator mismatches, delay imbalance, and the non-linear effects of PAs and Chireix combiners. The path and delay mismatches result in only partial cancellation of the wideband quadrature signal, and thus create interference in both the in-band and out-of-band frequency regions. The misalignment in IQ modulators, such as gain/phase imbalance and carrier leakage, introduces amplitude and phase modulation in the outphased signals. The quadrature modulator mismatches, in conjunction with amplifier nonlinearity, result in spectral regrowth around the carrier frequency. The transmitter linearity performance is also affected by mismatches in the non-linear characteristics of the PAs. Realistic square-wave signals, exhibiting finite rise- and fall- time, also create spectral leakage for distinct rise/fall times in each outphasing branch. Furthermore, the Chireix combiner severely degrades the linearity of outphasing transmitters; it produces ACLR well below the specified limit for LTE base stations. This makes mandatory the compensation of Chireix combiner induced non-linearity in outphasing transmitters. The strict linearity requirements (for LTE downlink applications) present a small tolerance window for mismatches experienced in practical circuits. The relatively small tolerance margin indicates the need of linearization and compensation techniques in outphasing transmitters

    CMOS Data Converters for Closed-Loop mmWave Transmitters

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    With the increased amount of data consumed in mobile communication systems, new solutions for the infrastructure are needed. Massive multiple input multiple output (MIMO) is seen as a key enabler for providing this increased capacity. With the use of a large number of transmitters, the cost of each transmitter must be low. Closed-loop transmitters, featuring high-speed data converters is a promising option for achieving this reduced unit cost.In this thesis, both digital-to-analog (D/A) and analog-to-digital (A/D) converters suitable for wideband operation in millimeter wave (mmWave) massive MIMO transmitters are demonstrated. A 2 76 bit radio frequency digital-to-analog converter (RF-DAC)-based in-phase quadrature (IQ) modulator is demonstrated as a compact building block, that to a large extent realizes the transmit path in a closed-loop mmWave transmitter. The evaluation of an successive-approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is also presented in this thesis. Methods for connecting simulated and measured performance has been studied in order to achieve a better understanding about the alternating comparator topology.These contributions show great potential for enabling closed-loop mmWave transmitters for massive MIMO transmitter realizations

    Reconfigurable Signal Processing and DSP Hardware Generator for 5G Transmitters

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    To impose the reconfigurability and reusability of digital circuits for millimeterwave transmitter architectures, high-speed digital signal processing architectures are explored. The digital front-end of these next-generation transmitters can be implemented up to the maximum operating frequency to meet the requirements of the 5G NR FR2 frequency bands. This paper presents an efficient implementation of a reconfigurable digital signal processor (DSP) that contains programmable multistage multirate filters, operable up to 4 GHz, and a flexible generator for polar, outphasing, and multilevel outphasing modulation. The system achieves an excellent ACLR of 42 dB and EVM degradation of 1.61% with a 7-bit phase signal at a sampling frequency of 4 GHz for outphasing modulation. Digital synthesis of the circuit in a 22 nm FDSOI process results in a core area of 0.12 mm2and an estimated power consumption of 142 mW for a 200 MHz bandwidth 5G NR baseband signal.acceptedVersionPeer reviewe

    Vidutinių dažnių 5G belaidžių tinklų galios stiprintuvų tyrimas

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    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

    Theory and Implementation of RF-Input Outphasing Power Amplification

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    Conventional outphasing power amplifier systems require both a radio frequency (RF) carrier input and a separate baseband input to synthesize a modulated RF output. This work presents an RF-input/RF-output outphasing power amplifier that directly amplifies a modulated RF input, eliminating the need for multiple costly IQ modulators and baseband signal component separation as in previous outphasing systems. An RF signal decomposition network directly synthesizes the phase- and amplitude-modulated signals used to drive the branch power amplifiers (PAs). With this approach, a modulated RF signal including zero-crossings can be applied to the single RF input port of the outphasing RF amplifier system. The proposed technique is demonstrated at 2.14 GHz in a four-way lossless outphasing amplifier with transmission-line power combiner. The RF decomposition network is implemented using a transmission-line resistance compression network with nonlinear loads designed to provide the necessary amplitude and phase decomposition. The resulting proof-of-concept outphasing power amplifier has a peak CW output power of 93 W, peak drain efficiency of 70%, and performance on par with a previously-demonstrated outphasing and power combining system requiring four IQ modulators and a digital signal component separator

    Design and Characterization of Power Converters and Amplifiers for Supply-Modulation based Transmitter Architectures

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    The rapid evolution of telecommunication systems has strongly influenced our lives, and the way we communicate and exchange information. Nevertheless, much progress is expected to happen in the next years with the introduction of new generations of wireless communications standards, which require signals with large bandwidth and very high Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) in order to enhance the spectral efficiency and maximize the data rate. However, such developments can only take place through the evolution of Radio-Frequency (RF) which should be capable of working at higher frequencies, higher bandwidth and with higher efficiencies than before. In order to meet these demanding specifications, transmitter architectures have to evolve from a single linear RF Power-Amplifier (PA) into more complex architectures. Envelope Tracking (ET) is one of the most promising solutions for the efficiency-enhancement of next generation transmitters. The research described in this thesis aims to provide solutions to enhance the efficiency of the RF PA by means of an ET architecture. To this purpose, a novel discrete level supply modulator is investigated, which is based on a direct digital-to-analog power conversion. This supply modulator is capable of synthesizing eight voltage steps by means of three isolated voltage sources, thus behaving like a Power Digital-to-Analog Converter (Power-DAC). A hybrid version of the Power-DAC exploiting very fast GaN devices is developed and tested with an L-band PA achieving efficiency improvement up to 13% with 10 MHz of bandwidth. Furthermore, a monolithic GaN version of the Power-DAC is prototyped and tested with an X-band PA achieving efficiency improvement up to 20% and bandwidth of 20 MHz. This supply modulator is tested with outphasing PAs showing promising results with modulated signals and efficiency improvement up to 9%. Finally, dispersive phenomena, which affect PAs and switches in supply modulators, are investigated, characterized and modeled

    Digital Pre-distortion for Interference Reduction in Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks

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    Given the ever increasing reliance of today’s society on ubiquitous wireless access, the paradigm of dynamic spectrum access (DSA) as been proposed and implemented for utilizing the limited wireless spectrum more efficiently. Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) is growing in popularity for adoption into wireless services employing DSA frame- work, due to its high bandwidth efficiency and resiliency to multipath fading. While these advantages have been proven for many wireless applications, including LTE-Advanced and numerous IEEE wireless standards, one potential drawback of OFDM or its non-contiguous variant, NC-OFDM, is that it exhibits high peak-to-average power ratios (PAPR), which can induce in-band and out-of-band (OOB) distortions when the peaks of the waveform enter the compression region of the transmitter power amplifier (PA). Such OOB emissions can interfere with existing neighboring transmissions, and thereby severely deteriorate the reliability of the DSA network. A performance-enhancing digital pre-distortion (DPD) technique compensating for PA and in-phase/quadrature (I/Q) modulator distortions is proposed in this dissertation. Al- though substantial research efforts into designing DPD schemes have already been presented in the open literature, there still exists numerous opportunities to further improve upon the performance of OOB suppression for NC-OFDM transmission in the presence of RF front-end impairments. A set of orthogonal polynomial basis functions is proposed in this dissertation together with a simplified joint DPD structure. A performance analysis is presented to show that the OOB emissions is reduced to approximately 50 dBc with proposed algorithms employed during NC-OFDM transmission. Furthermore, a novel and intuitive DPD solution that can minimize the power regrowth at any pre-specified frequency in the spurious domain is proposed in this dissertation. Conventional DPD methods have been proven to be able to effectively reduce the OOB emissions that fall on top of adjacent channels. However more spectral emissions in more distant frequency ranges are generated by employing such DPD solutions, which are potentially in violation of the spurious emission limit. At the same time, the emissions in adjacent channel must be kept under the OOB limit. To the best of the author’s knowledge, there has not been extensive research conducted on this topic. Mathematical derivation procedures of the proposed algorithm are provided for both memoryless nonlinear model and memory-based nonlinear model. Simulation results show that the proposed method is able to provide a good balance of OOB emissions and emissions in the far out spurious domain, by reducing the spurious emissions by 4-5 dB while maintaining the adjacent channel leakage ratio (ACLR) improvement by at least 10 dB, comparing to the PA output spectrum without any DPD

    Techniques for high-efficiency outphasing power amplifiers

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-177).A trade-off between linearity and efficiency exists in conventional power amplifiers (PAs). The outphase amplifying concept overcomes this trade-off by enabling the use of high efficiency, non-linear power amplifiers for linear amplification. However, the efficiency improvement is limited by the efficiency of the output power combiner. This thesis investigates techniques to overcome this efficiency limit while maintaining sufficient linearity. Two techniques are proposed. The first technique is called the outphasing energy recovery amplifier (OPERA), which recovers the normally wasted power back to the power supply and utilizes a resistance compression network for improved linearity. A 48-MHz, 20-W prototype OPERA system was built which demonstrates more than 2x higher efficiency than the standard outphasing system for a 16-QAM signal. The second technique to improve the efficiency of the outphasing system is asymmetric multilevel outphasing (AMO) modulation. In the AMO system, the amplitude for each of the two outphased PAs can switch independently among multiple discrete levels, significantly reducing the energy lost in the power combiner. Three different AMO prototypes were built, each of which demonstrate between 2x-3x efficiency improvement compared to the standard outphasing system. A 2.4-GHz, 500- mW prototype made in a 65-nm CMOS process achieves an average system efficiency of 28.7% for a 20-MHz 64-QAM signal. To the author's best knowledge, this is the highest reported efficiency for a CMOS PA in the 2-2.7 GHz range for signal bandwidths greater than 10 MHz.by Philip Andrew Godoy.Ph.D
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