1,040 research outputs found
Equalization of Third-Order Intermodulation Products in Wideband Direct Conversion Receivers
This paper reports a SAW-less direct-conversion receiver which utilizes a mixed-signal feedforward path to regenerate and adaptively cancel IM3 products, thus accomplishing system-level linearization. The receiver system performance is dominated by a custom integrated RF front end implemented in 130-nm CMOS and achieves an uncorrected out-of-band IIP3 of -7.1 dBm under the worst-case UMTS FDD Region 1 blocking specifications. Under IM3 equalization, the receiver achieves an effective IIP3 of +5.3 dBm and meets the UMTS BER sensitivity requirement with 3.7 dB of margin
Highly efficient linear CMOS power amplifiers for wireless communications
The rapidly expanding wireless market requires low cost, high integration and high performance of wireless communication systems. CMOS technology provides benefits of cost effectiveness and higher levels of integration. However, the design of highly efficient linear CMOS power amplifier that meets the requirement of advanced communication standards is a challenging task because of the inherent difficulties in CMOS technology. The objective of this research is to realize PAs for wireless communication systems that overcoming the drawbacks of CMOS process, and to develop design approaches that satisfying the demands of the industry. In this dissertation, a cascode bias technique is proposed for improving linearity and reliability of the multi-stage cascode CMOS PA. In addition, to achieve load variation immunity characteristic and to enhance matching and stability, a fully-integrated balanced PA is implemented in a 0.18-m CMOS process. A triple-mode balanced PA using switched quadrature coupler is also proposed, and this work saved a large amount of quiescent current and further improved the efficiency in the back-off power. For the low losses and a high quality factor of passive output combining, a transformer-based quadrature coupler was implemented using integrated passive device (IPD) process. Various practical approaches for linear CMOS PA are suggested with the verified results, and they demonstrate the potential PA design approach for WCDMA applications using a standard CMOS technology.PhDCommittee Chair: Kenney, J. Stevenson; Committee Member: Jongman Kim; Committee Member: Kohl, Paul A.; Committee Member: Kornegay, Kevin T.; Committee Member: Lee, Chang-H
Floating-Gate Design and Linearization for Reconfigurable Analog Signal Processing
Analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits have found a place in modern electronics design as a viable alternative to digital pre-processing. With metrics that boast high accuracy and low power consumption, analog pre-processing has opened the door to low-power state-monitoring systems when it is utilized in place of a power-hungry digital signal-processing stage. However, the complicated design process required by analog and mixed-signal systems has been a barrier to broader applications. The implementation of floating-gate transistors has begun to pave the way for a more reasonable approach to analog design. Floating-gate technology has widespread use in the digital domain. Analog and mixed-signal use of floating-gate transistors has only become a rising field of study in recent years. Analog floating gates allow for low-power implementation of mixed-signal systems, such as the field-programmable analog array, while simultaneously opening the door to complex signal-processing techniques. The field-programmable analog array, which leverages floating-gate technologies, is demonstrated as a reliable replacement to signal-processing tasks previously only solved by custom design. Living in an analog world demands the constant use and refinement of analog signal processing for the purpose of interfacing with digital systems. This work offers a comprehensive look at utilizing floating-gate transistors as the core element for analog signal-processing tasks. This work demonstrates the floating gate\u27s merit in large reconfigurable array-driven systems and in smaller-scale implementations, such as linearization techniques for oscillators and analog-to-digital converters. A study on analog floating-gate reliability is complemented with a temperature compensation scheme for implementing these systems in ever-changing, realistic environments
A Modular Programmable CMOS Analog Fuzzy Controller Chip
We present a highly modular fuzzy inference analog CMOS chip architecture with on-chip digital programmability. This chip consists of the interconnection of parameterized instances of two different kind of blocks, namely label blocks and rule blocks. The architecture realizes a lattice partition of the universe of discourse, which at the hardware level means that the fuzzy labels associated to every input (realized by the label blocks) are shared among the rule blocks. This reduces the area and power consumption and is the key point for chip modularity. The proposed architecture is demonstrated through a 16-rule two input CMOS 1-ÎŒm prototype which features an operation speed of 2.5 Mflips (2.5Ă10^6 fuzzy inferences per second) with 8.6 mW power consumption. Core area occupation of this prototype is of only 1.6 mm 2 including the digital control and memory circuitry used for programmability. Because of the architecture modularity the number of inputs and rules can be increased with any hardly design effort.This work was
supported in part by the Spanish C.I.C.Y.T under Contract TIC96-1392-C02-
02 (SIVA)
High Performance Integrated Circuit Blocks for High-IF Wideband Receivers
Due to the demand for highâperformance radio frequency (RF) integrated circuit
design in the past years, a systemâonâchip (SoC) that enables integration of analog and
digital parts on the same die has become the trend of the microelectronics industry. As
a result, a major requirement of the next generation of wireless devices is to support
multiple standards in the same chipâset. This would enable a single device to support
multiple peripheral applications and services.
Based on the aforementioned, the traditional superheterodyne frontâend
architecture is not suitable for such applications as it would require a complete receiver
for each standard to be supported. A more attractive alternative is the highintermediate
frequency (IF) radio architecture. In this case the signal is digitalized at an
intermediate frequency such as 200MHz. As a consequence, the baseband operations,
such as downâconversion and channel filtering, become more power and area efficient
in the digital domain. Such architecture releases the specifications for most of the frontâend building blocks, but the linearity and dynamic range of the ADC become the
bottlenecks in this system. The requirements of large bandwidth, high frequency and
enough resolution make such ADC very difficult to realize. Many ADC architectures
were analyzed and ContinuousâTime Bandpass SigmaâDelta (CTâBPâÎŁÎ) architecture was
found to be the most suitable solution in the highâIF receiver architecture since they
combine oversampling and noise shaping to get fairly high resolution in a limited
bandwidth.
A major issue in continuousâtime networks is the lack of accuracy due to powervoltageâ
temperature (PVT) tolerances that lead to over 20% pole variations compared
to their discreteâtime counterparts. An optimally tuned BP ÎŁÎ ADC requires correcting
for center frequency deviations, excess loop delay, and DAC coefficients. Due to these
undesirable effects, a calibration algorithm is necessary to compensate for these
variations in order to achieve high SNR requirements as technology shrinks.
In this work, a novel linearization technique for a Wideband LowâNoise
Amplifier (LNA) targeted for a frequency range of 3â7GHz is presented. Postâlayout
simulations show NF of 6.3dB, peak S21 of 6.1dB, and peak IIP3 of 21.3dBm,
respectively. The power consumption of the LNA is 5.8mA from 2V.
Secondly, the design of a CMOS 6th order CT BPâÎŁÎ modulator running at 800
MHz for HighâIF conversion of 10MHz bandwidth signals at 200 MHz is presented. A
novel transconductance amplifier has been developed to achieve high linearity and high
dynamic range at high frequencies. A 2âbit quantizer with offset cancellation is alsopresented. The sixthâorder modulator is implemented using 0.18 um TSMC standard
analog CMOS technology. Postâlayout simulations in cadence demonstrate that the
modulator achieves a SNDR of 78 dB (~13 bit) performance over a 14MHz bandwidth.
The modulatorâs static power consumption is 107mW from a supply power of ± 0.9V.
Finally, a calibration technique for the optimization of the Noise Transfer
Function CT BP ÎŁÎ modulators is presented. The proposed technique employs two test
tones applied at the input of the quantizer to evaluate the noise transfer function of
the ADC, using the capabilities of the Digital Signal Processing (DSP) platform usually
available in mixedâmode systems. Once the ADC output bit stream is captured,
necessary information to generate the control signals to tune the ADC parameters for
best SignalâtoâQuantization Noise Ratio (SQNR) performance is extracted via Leastâ
Mean Squared (LMS) softwareâbased algorithm. Since the two tones are located
outside the band of interest, the proposed global calibration approach can be used
online with no significant effect on the inâband content
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