60 research outputs found

    Linearity vs. Power Consumption of CMOS LNAs in LTE Systems

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a study of linearity in wideband CMOS low noise amplifiers (LNA) and its relationship to power consumption in context of Long Term Evolution (LTE) system. Using proposed figure of merit to compare 35 state-of-the-art LNA circuits published in recent years, the paper shows a proportional but relatively weak dependence between amplifier performance (that is combined linearity, noise figure and gain) with power consumption. As a result, the predicted increase of LNA performance, necessary to satisfy stringent linearity specifications of LTE standard, may require a significant increase in power, a critical budget planning aspect for both handheld devices and base stations operating in small cells

    HIGH PERFORMANCE CMOS WIDE-BAND RF FRONT-END WITH SUBTHRESHOLD OUT OF BAND SENSING

    Get PDF
    In future, the radar/satellite wireless communication devices must support multiple standards and should be designed in the form of system-on-chip (SoC) so that a significant reduction happen on cost, area, pins, and power etc. However, in such device, the design of a fully on-chip CMOS wideband receiver front-end that can process several radar/satellite signal simultaneously becomes a multifold complex problem. Further, the inherent high-power out-of-band (OB) blockers in radio spectrum will make the receiver more non-linear, even sometimes saturate the receiver. Therefore, the proper blocker rejection techniques need to be incorporated. The primary focus of this research work is the development of a CMOS high-performance low noise wideband receiver architecture with a subthreshold out of band sensing receiver. Further, the various reconfigurable mixer architectures are proposed for performance adaptability of a wideband receiver for incoming standards. Firstly, a high-performance low- noise bandwidthenhanced fully differential receiver is proposed. The receiver composed of a composite transistor pair noise canceled low noise amplifier (LNA), multi-gate-transistor (MGTR) trans-conductor amplifier, and passive switching quad followed by Tow Thomas bi-quad second order filter based tarns-impedance amplifier. An inductive degenerative technique with low-VT CMOS architecture in LNA helps to improve the bandwidth and noise figure of the receiver. The full receiver system is designed in UMC 65nm CMOS technology and measured. The packaged LNA provides a power gain 12dB (including buffer) with a 3dB bandwidth of 0.3G – 3G, noise figure of 1.8 dB having a power consumption of 18.75mW with an active area of 1.2mm*1mm. The measured receiver shows 37dB gain at 5MHz IF frequency with 1.85dB noise figure and IIP3 of +6dBm, occupies 2mm*1.2mm area with 44.5mW of power consumption. Secondly, a 3GHz-5GHz auxiliary subthreshold receiver is proposed to estimate the out of blocker power. As a redundant block in the system, the cost and power minimization of the auxiliary receiver are achieved via subthreshold circuit design techniques and implementing the design in higher technology node (180nm CMOS). The packaged auxiliary receiver gives a voltage gain of 20dB gain, the noise figure of 8.9dB noise figure, IIP3 of -10dBm and 2G-5GHz bandwidth with 3.02mW power consumption. As per the knowledge, the measured results of proposed main-high-performancereceiver and auxiliary-subthreshold-receiver are best in state of art design. Finally, the various viii reconfigurable mixers architectures are proposed to reconfigure the main-receiver performance according to the requirement of the selected communication standard. The down conversion mixers configurability are in the form of active/passive and Input (RF) and output (IF) bandwidth reconfigurability. All designs are simulated in 65nm CMOS technology. To validate the concept, the active/ passive reconfigurable mixer configuration is fabricated and measured. Measured result shows a conversion gain of 29.2 dB and 25.5 dB, noise figure of 7.7 dB and 10.2 dB, IIP3 of -11.9 dBm and 6.5 dBm in active and passive mode respectively. It consumes a power 9.24mW and 9.36mW in passive and active case with a bandwidth of 1 to 5.5 GHz and 0.5 to 5.1 GHz for active/passive case respectively

    Novel RF/Microwave Circuits And Systems for Lab on-Chip/on-Board Chemical Sensors

    Get PDF
    Recent research focuses on expanding the use of RF/Microwave circuits and systems to include multi-disciplinary applications. One example is the detection of the dielectric properties of chemicals and bio-chemicals at microwave frequencies, which is useful for pharmaceutical applications, food and drug safety, medical diagnosis and material characterization. Dielectric spectroscopy is also quite relevant to detect the frequency dispersive characteristics of materials over a wide frequency range for more accurate detection. In this dissertation, on-chip and on-board solutions for microwave chemical sensing are proposed. An example of an on-chip dielectric detection technique for chemical sensing is presented. An on-chip sensing capacitor, whose capacitance changes when exposed to material under test (MUT), is a part of an LC voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO). The VCO is embedded inside a frequency synthesizer to convert the change in the free runing frequency frequency of the VCO into a change of its input voltage. The system is implemented using 90 nm CMOS technology and the permittivities of MUTs are evaluated using a unique detection procedure in the 7-9 GHz frequency range with an accuracy of 3.7% in an area of 2.5 × 2.5 mm^2 with a power consumption of 16.5 mW. The system is also used for binary mixture detection with a fractional volume accuracy of 1-2%. An on-board miniaturized dielectric spectroscopy system for permittivity detec- tion is also presented. The sensor is based on the detection of the phase difference be- tween the input and output signals of cascaded broadband True-Time-Delay (TTD) cells. The sensing capacitor exposed to MUTs is a part of the TTD cell. The change of the permittivity results in a change of the phase of the microwave signal passing through the TTD cell. The system is fabricated on Rogers Duroid substrates with a total area of 8 × 7.2 cm2. The permittivities of MUTs are detected in the 1-8 GHz frequency range with a detection accuracy of 2%. Also, the sensor is used to extract the fractional volumes of mixtures with accuracy down to 1%. Additionally, multi-band and multi-standard communication systems motivate the trend to develop broadband front-ends covering all the standards for low cost and reduced chip area. Broadband amplifiers are key building blocks in wideband front-ends. A broadband resistive feedback low-noise amplifier (LNA) is presented using a composite cross-coupled CMOS pair for a higher gain and reduced noise figure. The LNA is implemented using 90 nm CMOS technology consuming 18 mW in an area of 0.06 mm2. The LNA shows a gain of 21 dB in the 2-2300 MHz frequency range, a minimum noise figure of 1.4 dB with an IIP3 of -1.5 dBm. Also, a four-stage distributed amplifier is presented providing bandwidth extension with 1-dB flat gain response up to 16 GHz. The flat extended bandwidth is provided using coupled inductors in the gate line with series peaking inductors in the cascode gain stages. The amplifier is fabricated using 180 nm CMOS technology in an area of 1.19 mm2 achieving a power gain of 10 dB, return losses better than 16 dB, noise figure of 3.6-4.9 dB and IIP3 of 0 dBm with 21 mW power consumption. All the implemented circuits and systems in this dissertation are validated, demonstrated and published in several IEEE Journals and Conferences

    Wideband Inductorless Low-Noise Amplifier Using Three Feedback Paths

    Get PDF
    This paper presents the design of a wideband inductorless low noise amplifier (LNA) in 0.18 m CMOS technology for multiband wireless communication standards. The LNA is a fully differential common-gate structure. It uses three feedback paths, for choosing arbitrary value of LNA transconductance which leads to a LNA with higher gain and lower noise figure (NF) over the previously reported amplifiers. Post-layout simulation results show a gain of 20.4 dB with a 3-dB bandwidth of 2.84GHZ, with a 2.62dB NF while dissipating 2.97mW. The IIP3 is -1.67dB

    Design of broadband inductor-less RF front-ends with high dynamic range for G.hn

    Get PDF
    System-on-Chip (SoC) was adopted in recent years as one of the solutions to reduce the cost of integrated systems. When the SoC solution started to be used, the final product was actually more expensive due to lower yield. The developments in integrated technology through the years allowed the integration of more components in lesser area with a better yield. Thus, SoCs became a widely used solution to reduced the cost of the final product, integrating into a single-chip the main parts of a system: analog, digital and memory. As integrated technology kept scaling down to allow a higher density of transistors and thus providing more functionality with the same die area, the analog RF parts of the SoC became a bottleneck to cost reduction as inductors occupy a large die area and do not scale down with technology. Hence, the trend moves toward the research and design of inductor-less SoCs that further reduce the cost of the final solution. Also, as the demand for home networking high-data-rates communication systems has increased over the last decade, several standards have been developed to satisfy the requirements of each application, the most popular being wireless local area networks (WLANs) based on the IEEE 802.11 standard. However, poor signal propagation across walls make WLANs unsuitable for high-speed applications such as high-definition in-home video streaming, leading to the development of wired technologies using the existing in-home infrastructure. The ITU-T G.hn recommendation (G.9960 and G.9961) unifies the most widely used wired infrastructures at home (coaxial cables, phone lines and power lines) into a single standard for high-speed data transmission of up to 1 Gb/s. The G.hn recommendation defines a unified networking over power lines, phone lines and coaxial cables with different plans for baseband and RF. The RF-coax bandplan, where this thesis is focused, uses 50 MHz and 100 MHz bandwidth channels with 256 and 512 carriers respectively. The center frequency can range from 350 MHz to 2450 MHz. The recommendation specifies a transmission power limit of 5 dBm for the 50 MHz bandplan and 8~dBm for the 100 MHz bandplan, therefore the maximum transmitted power in each carrier is the same for both bandplans. Due to the nature of an in-home wired environment, receivers that can handle both very large and very small amplitude signals are required; when transmitter and receiver are connected on the same electric outlet there is no channel attenuation and the signal-to-noise-plus-distortion ratio (SNDR) is dominated by the receiver linearity, whereas when transmitter and receiver are several rooms apart channel attenuation is high and the SNDR is dominated by the receiver noise figure. The high dynamic range specifications for these receivers require the use of configurable-gain topologies that can provide both high-linearity and low-noise for different configurations. Thus, this thesis has been aimed at researching high dynamic range broadband inductor-less topologies to be used as the RF front-end for a G.hn receiver complying with the provided specifications. A large part of the thesis has been focused on the design of the input amplifier of the front-end, which is the most critical stage as the noise figure and linearity of the input amplifier define the achievable overall specifications of the whole front-end. Three prototypes has been manufactured using a 65 nm CMOS process: two input RFPGAs and one front-end using the second RFPGA prototype.El "sistema en un chip" (SoC) fue adoptado recientemente como una de las soluciones para reducir el coste de sistemas integrados. Cuando se empezó a utilizar la solución SoC, el producto final era más caro debido al bajo rendimiento de producción. Los avances en tecnología integrada a lo largo de los años han permitido la integración de más componentes en menos área con mejoras en rendimiento. Por lo tanto, SoCs pasó a ser una solución ampliamente utilizada para reducir el coste del producto final, integrando en un único chip las principales partes de un sistema: analógica, digital y memoria. A medida que las tecnologías integradas se reducían en tamaño para permitir una mayor densisdad de transistores y proveer mayor funcionalidad con la misma área, las partes RF analógicas del SoC pasaron a ser la limitación en la reducción de costes ya que los inductores ocupan mucha área y no escalan con la tecnología. Por lo tanto, las tendencias en investigación se mueven hacia el diseño de SoCs sin inductores que todavía reducen más el coste final del producto. También, a medida que la demanda en sistemas de comunicación domésticos de alta velocidad ha crecido a lo largo de la última década, se han desarrollado varios estándares para satisfacer los requisitos de cada aplicación, siendo las redes sin hilos (WLANs) basadas en el estándar IEEE 802.11 las más populares. Sin embargo, una pobre propagación de señal a través de las paredes hacen que las WLANs sean inadecuadas para aplicaciones de alta-velocidad como transmisión de vídeo de alta definición en tiempo real, resultando en el desarrollo de tecnologías con hilos utilizando la infraestructura existente en los domicilios. La recomendación ITU-T G.hn (G.9960 and G.9961) unifica las principales infraestructuras con hilos domésticas (cables coaxiales, línias de teléfono y línias de electricidad) en un sólo estándar para la transmisión de datos hasta 1 Gb/s. La recomendación G.hn define una red unificada sobre línias de electricidad, de teléfono y coaxiales con diferentes esquemas para banda base y RF. El esquema RF-coax en el cual se basa esta tesis, usa canales con un ancho de banda de 50 MHz y 100 MHz con 256 y 512 portadoras respectivamente. La frecuencia centra puede variar desde 350 MHz hasta 2450 MHz. La recomendación especifica un límite en la potencia de transmisión de 5 dBm para el esquema de 50 MHz y 8 dBm para el esquema de 100 MHz, de tal forma que la potencia máxima por portadora es la misma en ambos esquemas. Debido a la estructura de un entorno doméstico con hilos, los receptores deben ser capaces de procesar señales con amplitud muy grande o muy pequeña; cuando transmisor y receptor están conectados en la misma toma eléctrica no hay atenuación de canal y el ratio de señal a rudio más distorsión (SNDR) está dominado por la linealidad del receptor, mientras que cuando transmisor y receptor están separados por varias habitaciones la atenuación es elevada y el SNDR está dominado por la figura de ruido del receptor. Los elevados requisitos de rango dinámico para este tipo de receptores requieren el uso de topologías de ganancia configurable que pueden proporcionar tanto alta linealidad como bajo ruido para diferentes configuraciones. Por lo tanto, esta tesis está encarada a la investigación de topologías sin inductores de banda ancha y elevado rango dinámico para ser usadas a la entrada de un receptor G.hn cumpliendo con las especificaciones proporcionadas. Una gran parte de la tesis se ha centrado en el diseño del amplificador de entrada al ser la etapa más crítica, ya que la figura de ruido y linealidad del amplificador de entrada definen lás máximas especificaciones que el sistema puede conseguir. Se han fabricado 3 prototipos con un proceso CMOS de 65 nm: 2 amplificadores y un sistema completo con amplificador y mezclador.Postprint (published version

    RF Amplification and Filtering Techniques for Cellular Receivers

    Get PDF
    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

    Wideband CMOS low noise amplifiers

    Get PDF
    Modern fully integrated receiver architectures, require inductorless circuits to achieve their potential low area, low cost, and low power. The low noise amplifier (LNA), which is a key block in such receivers, is investigated in this thesis. LNAs can be either narrowband or wideband. Narrowband LNAs use inductors and have very low noise figure, but they occupy a large area and require a technology with RF options to obtain inductors with high Q. Recently, wideband LNAs with noise and distortion cancelling, with passive loads have been proposed, which can have low NF, but have high power consumption. In this thesis the main goal is to obtain a very low area, low power, and low-cost wideband LNA. First, it is investigated a balun LNA with noise and distortion cancelling with active loads to boost the gain and reduce the noise figure (NF). The circuit is based on a conventional balun LNA with noise and distortion cancellation, using the combination of a common-gate (CG) stage and common-source (CS) stage. Simulation and measurements results, with a 130 nm CMOS technology, show that the gain is enhanced by about 3 dB and the NF is reduced by at least 0.5 dB, with a negligible impact on the circuit linearity (IIP3 is about 0 dBm). The total power dissipation is only 4.8 mW, and the active area is less than 50 x 50 m2 . It is also investigated a balun LNA in which the gain is boosted by using a double feedback structure.We propose to replace the load resistors by active loads, which can be used to implement local feedback loops (in the CG and CS stages). This will boost the gain and reduce the noise figure (NF). Simulation results, with the same 130 nm CMOS technology as above, show that the gain is 24 dB and NF is less than 2.7 dB. The total power dissipation is only 5.4 mW (since no extra blocks are required), leading to a figure-of-merit (FoM) of 3.8 mW1, using 1.2 V supply. The two LNA approaches proposed in this thesis are validated by simulation and by measurement results, and are included in a receiver front-end for biomedical applications (ISM and WMTS), as an example; however, they have a wider range of applications

    Linearity and Noise Improvement Techniques Employing Low Power in Analog and RF Circuits and Systems

    Get PDF
    The implementation of highly integrated multi-bands and multi-standards reconfigurable radio transceivers is one of the great challenges in the area of integrated circuit technology today. In addition the rapid market growth and high quality demands that require cheaper and smaller solutions, the technical requirements for the transceiver function of a typical wireless device are considerably multi-dimensional. The major key performance metrics facing RFIC designers are power dissipation, speed, noise, linearity, gain, and efficiency. Beside the difficulty of the circuit design due to the trade-offs and correlations that exist between these parameters, the situation becomes more and more challenging when dealing with multi-standard radio systems on a single chip and applications with different requirements on the radio software and hardware aiming at highly flexible dynamic spectrum access. In this dissertation, different solutions are proposed to improve the linearity, reduce the noise and power consumption in analog and RF circuits and systems. A system level design digital approach is proposed to compensate the harmonic distortion components produced by transmitter circuits’ nonlinearities. The approach relies on polyphase multipath scheme uses digital baseband phase rotation pre-distortion aiming at increasing harmonic cancellation and power consumption reduction over other reported techniques. New low power design techniques to enhance the noise and linearity of the receiver front-end LNA are also presented. The two proposed LNAs are fully differential and have a common-gate capacitive cross-coupled topology. The proposed LNAs avoids the use of bulky inductors that leads to area and cost saving. Prototypes are implemented in IBM 90 nm CMOS technology for the two LNAs. The first LNA covers the frequency range of 100 MHz to 1.77 GHz consuming 2.8 mW from a 2 V supply. Measurements show a gain of 23 dB with a 3-dB bandwidth of 1.76 GHz. The minimum NF is 1.85 dB while the input return loss is greater than 10 dB across the entire band. The second LNA covers the frequency range of 100 MHz to 1.6 GHz. A 6 dBm third-order input intercept point, IIP3, is measured at the maximum gain frequency. The core consumes low power of 1.55 mW using a 1.8 V supply. The measured voltage gain is 15.5 dB with a 3-dB bandwidth of 1.6 GHz. The LNA has a minimum NF of 3 dB across the whole band while achieving an input return loss greater than 12 dB. Finally, A CMOS single supply operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) is reported. It has high power supply rejection capabilities over the entire gain bandwidth (GBW). The OTA is fabricated on the AMI 0.5 um CMOS process. Measurements show power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) of 120 dB till 10 KHz. At 10 MHz, PSRR is 40 dB. The high performance PSRR is achieved using a high impedance current source and two noise reduction techniques. The OTA offers a very low current consumption of 25 uA from a 3.3 V supply

    Blocker Tolerant Radio Architectures

    Get PDF
    Future radio platforms have to be inexpensive and deal with a variety of co- existence issues. The technology trend during the last few years is towards system- on-chip (SoC) that is able to process multiple standards re-using most of the digital resources. A major bottle-neck to this approach is the co-existence of these standards operating at different frequency bands that are hitting the receiver front-end. So the current research is focused on the power, area and performance optimization of various circuit building blocks of a radio for current and incoming standards. Firstly, a linearization technique for low noise amplifiers (LNAs) called, Robust Derivative Superposition (RDS) method is proposed. RDS technique is insensitive to Process Voltage and Temperature (P.V.T.) variations and is validated with two low noise transconductance amplifier (LNTA) designs in 0.18µm CMOS technology. Measurement results from 5 dies of a resistive terminated LNTA shows that the pro- posed method improves IM3 over 20dB for input power up to -18dBm, and improves IIP_(3) by 10dB. A 2V inductor-less broadband 0.3 to 2.8GHz balun-LNTA employing the proposed RDS linearization technique was designed and measured. It achieves noise figure of 6.5dB, IIP3 of 16.8dBm, and P1dB of 0.5dBm having a power consumption of 14.2mW. The balun LNTA occupies an active area of 0.06mm2. Secondly, the design of two high linearity, inductor-less, broadband LNTAs employing noise and distortion cancellation techniques is presented. Main design issues and the performance trade-offs of the circuits are discussed. In the fully differential architecture, the first LNTA covers 0.1-2GHz bandwidth and achieves a minimum noise figure (NFmin) of 3dB, IIP_(3) of 10dBm and a P_(1dB) of 0dBm while dissipating 30.2mW. The 2^(nd) low power bulk driven LNTA with 16mW power consumption achieves NFmin of 3.4dB, IIP3 of 11dBm and 0.1-3GHz bandwidth. Each LNTA occupy an active area of 0.06mm2 in 45nm CMOS. Thirdly, a continuous-time low-pass ∆ΣADC equipped with design techniques to provide robustness against loop saturation due to blockers is presented. Loop over- load detection and correction is employed to improve the ADC’s tolerance to blockers; a fast overload detector activates the input attenuator, maintaining the ADC in linear operation. To further improve ADC’s blocker tolerance, a minimally-invasive integrated low-pass filter that reduces the most critical adjacent/alternate channel blockers is implemented. An ADC prototype is implemented in a 90nm CMOS technology and experimentally it achieves 69dB dynamic range over a 20MHz bandwidth with a sampling frequency of 500MHz and 17.1mW of power consumption. The alternate channel blocker tolerance at the most critical frequency is as high as -5.5dBFS while the conventional feed-forward modulator becomes unstable at -23.5dBFS of blocker power. The proposed blocker rejection techniques are minimally-invasive and take less than 0.3µsec to settle after a strong agile blocker appears. Finally, a new radio partitioning methodology that gives robust analog and mixed signal radio development in scaled technology for SoC integration, and the co-design of RF FEM-antenna system is presented. Based on the proposed methodology, a CMOS RF front-end module (FEM) with power amplifier (PA), LNA and transmit/receive switch, co-designed with antenna is implemented. The RF FEM circuit is implemented in a 32nm CMOS technology. Post extracted simulations show a noise figure < 2.5dB, S_(21) of 14dB, IIP3 of 7dBm and P1dB of -8dBm for the receiver. Total power consumption of the receiver is 11.8mW from a 1V supply. On the trans- mitter side, PA achieves peak RF output power of 22.34dBm with peak power added efficiency (PAE) of 65% and PAE of 33% with linearization at -6dB power back off. Simulations show an efficiency of 80% for the miniaturized dipole antenna
    corecore