68 research outputs found

    Master of Science

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    thesisThis research work presents a novel way of realizing an adaptive noise canceler as a notch filter completely in the analog domain. The obvious advantage of using an adaptive notch filter would be the capability of tracking the exact frequency of interference as well as the ability to control the width of the null. The device will hereafter be referred to as the carrier canceler, as it will be used to track and cancel a 54.1 MHz carrier used in the Telescope Array RAdar (TARA) project, in southern Utah, for the detection of cosmic rays. The carrier canceler operates on a dual 5V power supply. The circuit has two inputs: An input from a signal generator that feeds a clean 54.1 MHz carrier reference and the second input, which is fed from the antenna at the receiver station of the TARA project. The circuit consists of a two tap Least Mean Square adaptive circuit that tracks the carrier frequency and phase to generate a clean replica of the carrier. This replica is then subtracted from the received signal to remove the carrier from it. The circuit is first tested in controlled conditions in the laboratory and then tested in the field. The results show the circuit has a null depth of 45 dB or better and has a 3 dB bandwidth of 300 Hz. Implementation issues such as DC offset of the multiplier Integrated Circuit (IC) and phase shift of all the ICs are discussed and a solution to rectify them is proposed

    Four-element phased-array beamformers and a self-interference canceling full-duplex transciver in 130-nm SiGe for 5G applications at 26 GHz

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    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

    Analog VLSI neural network integrated circuits

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    Two analog very large scale integration (VLSI) vector matrix multiplier integrated circuit chips were designed, fabricated, and partially tested. They can perform both vector-matrix and matrix-matrix multiplication operations at high speeds. The 32 by 32 vector-matrix multiplier chip and the 128 by 64 vector-matrix multiplier chip were designed to perform 300 million and 3 billion multiplications per second, respectively. An additional circuit that has been developed is a continuous-time adaptive learning circuit. The performance achieved thus far for this circuit is an adaptivity of 28 dB at 300 KHz and 11 dB at 15 MHz. This circuit has demonstrated greater than two orders of magnitude higher frequency of operation than any previous adaptive learning circuit

    Acoustic echo cancellation for full-duplex voice transmission on fading channels

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    This paper discusses the implementation of an adaptive acoustic echo canceler for a hands-free cellular phone operating on a fading channel. The adaptive lattice structure, which is particularly known for faster convergence relative to the conventional tapped-delay-line (TDL) structure, is used in the initialization stage. After convergence, the lattice coefficients are converted into the coefficients for the TDL structure which can accommodate a larger number of taps in real-time operation due to its computational simplicity. The conversion method of the TDL coefficients from the lattice coefficients is derived and the DSP56001 assembly code for the lattice and TDL structure is included, as well as simulation results and the schematic diagram for the hardware implementation

    A 125 MHz analog adaptive equalizer for UTP5 cable

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    Due to the abundance and low-cost of unshielded twisted pair (UTP5) cables, there is a great deal of interest in transmitting high-speed data over long UTP5 cables. However, there are certain challenges that face circuit and system designers in accomplishing this task. The non-idealities of the cable and the data transmission system tend to limit the performance of the communication system. The frequency dependent attenuation of the cable leads to Inter Symbol Interference (ISI), which makes data recovery more difficult for larger signaling rates and larger cable lengths. A channel equalizer at the receiver end can be used to partially compensate for the frequency dependent attenuation of the cable. In this thesis a general scheme for equalization is proposed. The industry\u27s first 2V channel equalizer for UTP5 cable systems is proposed. This device has been fabricated in a 0.21u CMOS process and tested experimentally. The device has very low power dissipation (\u3c12milliwatt) and requires minimal silicon area (0.14mm*0.14mm). The target application of this equalizer is the 1394 UTP5 standard. With the proposed equalizer in a UTP5 cable equalization structure, the peak-to-peak jitter of the equalized signal obtained experimentally is less than 0.3UI (which includes 1394 driver jitter) for data rates of 125Mbps and lengths of up to 100m. Although the overall approach was to design this system for UTP5 cable equalization the concepts apply to other systems as well

    High-speed Time-interleaved Digital-to-Analog Converter (TI-DAC) for Self-Interference Cancellation Applications

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    Nowadays, the need for higher data-rate is constantly growing to enhance the quality of the daily communication services. The full-duplex (FD) communication is exemplary method doubling the data-rate compared to half-duplex one. However, part of the strong output signal of the transmitter interferes to the receiver-side because they share the same antenna with limited attenuation and, as a result, the receiver’s performance is corrupted. Hence, it is critical to remove the leakage signal from the receiver’s path by designing another block called self-interference cancellation (SIC). The main goal of this dissertation is to develop the SIC block embedded in the current-mode FD receivers. To this end, the regenerated cancellation current signal is fed to the inputs of the base-band filter and after the mixer of a (direct-conversion) current-mode FD receiver. Since the pattern of the transmitter (the digital signal generated by DSP) is known, a high-speed digital-to-Analog converter (DAC) with medium-resolution can perfectly suppress main part of the leakage on the receiver path. A capacitive DAC (CDAC) is chosen among the available solutions because it is compatible with advanced CMOS technology for high-speed application and the medium-resolution designs. Although the main application of the design is to perform the cancellation, it can also be employed as a stand-alone DAC in the Analog (I/Q) transmitter. The SIC circuitry includes a trans-impedance amplifier (TIA), two DACs, high-speed digital circuits, and built-in-self-test section (BIST). According to the available specification for full-duplex communication system, the resolution and working frequency of the CDAC are calculated (designed) equal to 10-bit (3 binary+ 2 binary + 5 thermometric) and 1GHz, respectively. In order to relax the design of the TIA (settling time of the DAC), the CDAC implements using 2-way time-interleaved (TI) manner (the effective SIC frequency equals 2GHz) without using any calibration technique. The CDAC is also developed with the split-capacitor technique to lower the negative effects of the conventional binary-weighted DAC. By adding one extra capacitor on the left-side of the split-capacitor, LSB-side, the value of the split-capacitor can be chosen as an integer value of the unit capacitor. As a result, it largely enhances the linearity of the CADC and cancellation performance. If the block works as a stand-alone DAC with non-TI mode, the digital input code representing a Sinus waveform with an amplitude 1dB less than full-scale and output frequency around 10.74MHz, chosen by coherent sampling rule, then the ENOB, SINAD, SFDR, and output signal are 9.4-bit, 58.2 dB, 68.4dBc, and -9dBV. The simulated value of the |DNL| (static linearity) is also less than 0.7. The similar simulation was done in the SIC mode while the capacitive-array woks in the TI mode and cancellation current is set to the full-scale. Hence, the amount of cancelling the SI signal at the output of the TIA, SNDR, SFDR, SNDRequ. equals 51.3dB, 15.1 dB, 24dBc, 66.4 dB. The designed SIC cannot work as a closed-loop design. The layout was optimally drawn in order to minimize non-linearity, the power-consumption of the decoders, and reduce the complexity of the DAC. By distributing the thermometric cells across the array and using symmetrical switching scheme, the DAC is less subjected to the linear and gradient effect of the oxide. Based on the post-layout simulation results, the deviation of the design after drawing the layout is studied. To compare the results of the schematic and post-layout designs, the exact conditions of simulation above (schematic simulations) are used. When the block works as a stand-alone CDAC, the ENOB, SINAD, SFDR are 8.5-bit, 52.6 dB, 61.3 dBc. The simulated value of the |DNL| (static linearity) is also limited to 1.3. Likewise, the SI signal at the output of the TIA, SNDR, SFDR, SNDRequ. are equal to 44dB, 11.7 dB, 19 dBc, 55.7 dB

    SAW-Less Digitally-Assisted Receivers

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    Today’s wireless devices, like our smartphones, are able to handle multiple standards and bands for different applications, such as Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and data-voice communications. However, the cost of a modern transceiver is becoming mainly dominated by the large number of off-chip passive components, like Duplexers and SAW filters, needed to distinguish the desired signal among many interferences. Addressing the challenges that arise from the lack of RF filtering, a SAW-less architecture represents an interesting solution to reduce the platform complexity. This thesis proposes a feasible solution based on a SAW-less RF front-end able to meet the standard requirements and a digital system tailored to the RF path. The digital architecture, which represents the main topic of this thesis, is described in detail and experimentally tested to validate the proposed solutions
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