25 research outputs found
Enhancing Digital Controllability in Wideband RF Transceiver Front-Ends for FTTx Applications
Enhancing the digital controllability of wideband RF transceiver front-ends helps in widening the range of operating conditions and applications in which such systems can be employed. Technology limitations and design challenges often constrain the extensive adoption of digital controllability in RF front-ends. This work focuses on three major aspects associated with the design and implementation of a digitally controllable RF transceiver front-end for enhanced digital control.
Firstly, the influence of the choice of semiconductor technology for a system-on-chip integration of digital gain control circuits are investigated. The digital control of gain is achieved by utilizing step attenuators that consist of cascaded switched attenuation stages. A design methodology is presented to evaluate the influence of the chosen technology on the performance of the three conventionally used switched attenuator topologies for desired attenuation levels, and the constraints that the technology suitable for high amplification places on the attenuator performance are examined.
Secondly, a novel approach to the integrated implementation of gain slope equalization is presented, and the suitability of the proposed approach for integration within the RF front-end is verified.
Thirdly, a sensitivity-aware implementation of a peak power detector is presented. The increased employment of digital gain control also increases the requirements on the sensitivity of the power detector employed for adaptive power and gain control. The design, implementation, and measurement results of a state-of-the-art wideband power detector with high sensitivity and large dynamic range are presented. The design is optimized to provide a large offset cancellation range, and the influence of offset cancellation circuits on the sensitivity of the power detector is studied. Moreover, design considerations for high sensitivity performance of the power detector are investigated, and the noise contributions from individual sub-circuits are evaluated.
Finally, a wideband RF transceiver front-end is realized using a commercially available SiGe BiCMOS technology to demonstrate the enhancements in the digital controllability of the system. The RF front-end has a bandwidth of 500 MHz to 2.5 GHz, an input dynamic range of 20 dB, a digital gain control range larger than 30 dB, a digital gain slope equalization range from 1.49 dB/GHz to 3.78 dB/GHz, and employs a power detector with a sensitivity of -56 dBm and dynamic range of 64 dB. The digital control in the RF front-end is implemented using an on-chip serial-parallel-interface (SPI) that is controlled by an external micro-controller. A prototype implementation of the RF front-end system is presented as part of an RFIC intended for use in optical transceiver modules for fiber-to-the-x applications
Design Techniques for High Performance Serial Link Transceivers
Increasing data rates over electrical channels with significant frequency-dependent loss is difficult due to excessive inter-symbol interference (ISI). In order to achieve sufficient link margins at high rates, I/O system designers implement equalization in the transmitters and are motivated to consider more spectrally-efficient modulation formats relative to the common PAM-2 scheme, such as PAM-4 and duobinary.
The first work, reviews when to consider PAM-4 and duobinary formats, as the modulation scheme which yields the highest system margins at a given data rate is a function of the channel loss profile, and presents a 20Gb/s triple-mode transmitter capable of efficiently implementing these three modulation schemes and three-tap feedforward equalization. A statistical link modeling tool, which models ISI, crosstalk, random noise, and timing jitter, is developed to compare the three common modulation formats operating on electrical backplane channel models. In order to improve duobinary modulation efficiency, a low-power quarter-rate duobinary precoder circuit is proposed which provides significant timing margin improvement relative to full-rate precoders.
Also as serial I/O data rates scale above 10 Gb/s, crosstalk between neighboring channels degrades system bit-error rate (BER) performance. The next work presents receive-side circuitry which merges the cancellation of both near-end and far-end crosstalk (NEXT/FEXT) and can automatically adapt to different channel environments and variations in process, voltage, and temperature.
NEXT cancellation is realized with a novel 3-tap FIR filter which combines two traditional FIR filter taps and a continuous-time band-pass filter IIR tap for efficient crosstalk cancellation, with all filter tap coefficients automatically determined via an ondie sign-sign least-mean-square (SS-LMS) adaptation engine. FEXT cancellation is realized by coupling the aggressor signal through a differentiator circuit whose gain is automatically adjusted with a power-detection-based adaptation loop.
In conclusion, the proposed architectures in the transmitter side and receiver side together are to be good solution in the high speed I/O serial links to improve the performance by overcome the physical channel loss and adjacent channel noise as the system becomes complicated
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Design of Energy-Efficient Equalization and Data Encoding/Decoding Techniques for Wireline Communication Systems
Ever increasing global internet data traffic has driven up the demand for cutting-edge high-speed wireline communication systems including SerDes PHY for various interfaces, interconnects, data centers servers and switches in optical systems. Operating wireline communications at higher data rates leads to signals suffering from greater channel loss and exponential increase in power consumption, mainly caused by a heavier amount of required equalization.
In this dissertation, two distinct methodologies for designing SerDes transceivers are presented: 1) a pulse width modulated (PWM) time-domain feed forward equalizer (FFE) and linearity improvement technique for higher-order pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) including PAM-8, and 2) an inter-symbol interference (ISI)-resilient data encoding and decoding technique with Dicode encoding and error correction logic for low-bandwidth wireline channels, as an alternative strategy for communicating in an energy-efficient way on bandwidth-limited wireline channels without using conventional equalizers or filters.
The first topic is a PAM-8 wireline transceiver with receiver-side pulse-width-modulated (PWM) or time-domain based feed forward equalization (FFE) technique. The receiver converts voltage-modulated signals or PAM signals to PWM signals and processes them using inverter based delay elements having rail to rail voltage swing. Time-to-voltage and voltage-to-time converters are designed to have non-linearity with opposite signs with the aim of achieving higher front-end linearity on the receiver. The proposed PAM-8 transceiver can operate from 12.0 Gb/s to 39.6 Gb/s and compensates 14 dB loss at 6.6 GHz with an efficiency of 8.66 pJ/bit in 65 nm CMOS.
The second topic is an alternative strategy for communicating on bandwidth-limited wireline channels without using conventional equalizers or filters (FFE, DFE, and CTLE): Inter-symbol interference (ISI) resilient Dicode encoding and error correction for low-bandwidth wireline channels. The key observation is that Dicode-encoded data have no consecutive 1s or -1s. With this known information, the error correction logic at the receiver can correct multi-bit errors due to ISI. Implemented in 65 nm CMOS, the proposed digital encoding and decoding approach can achieve BER less than 10−12 while communicating on a channel with an insertion loss of 24.2 dB and 21.4 dB with 2.56 pJ/bit and 2.66 pJ/bit efficiency while operating at 13.6 Gb/s and 16 Gb/s, respectively
Equalization Architectures for High Speed ADC-Based Serial I/O Receivers
The growth in worldwide network traffic due to the rise of cloud computing and wireless video consumption has required servers and routers to support increased serial I/O data rates over legacy channels with significant frequency-dependent attenuation. For these high-loss channel applications, ADC-based high-speed links are being considered due to their ability to enable powerful digital signal processing (DSP) algorithms for equalization and symbol detection. Relative to mixed-signal equalizers, digital implementations offer robustness to process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations, are easier to reconfigure, and can leverage CMOS technology scaling in a straight-forward manner. Despite these advantages, ADC-based receivers are generally more complex and have higher power consumption relative to mixed-signal receivers. The ensuing digital equalization can also consume a significant amount of power which is comparable to the ADC contribution. Novel techniques to reduce complexity and improve power efficiency, both for the ADC and the subsequent digital equalization, are necessary.
This dissertation presents efficient modeling and implementation approaches for ADC-based serial I/O receivers. A statistical modeling framework is developed, which is able to capture ADC related errors, including quantization noise, INL/DNL errors and time interleaving mismatch errors. A novel 10GS/s hybrid ADC-based receiver, which combines both embedded and digital equalization, is then presented. Leveraging a time-interleaved asynchronous successive approximation ADC architecture, a new structure for 3-tap embedded FFE inside the ADC with low power/area overhead is used. In addition, a dynamically-enabled digital 4-tap FFE + 3-tap DFE equalizer architecture is introduced, which uses reliable symbol detection to achieve remarkable savings in the digital equalization power. Measurement results over several FR4 channels verify the accuracy of the modeling approach and the effectiveness of the proposed receiver. The comparison of the fabricated prototype against state-of-the-art ADC-based receivers shows the ability of the proposed archi-tecture to compensate for the highest loss channel, while achieving the best power efficiency among other works
Integrated Filters and Couplers for Next Generation Wireless Tranceivers
The main focus of this thesis is to investigate the critical nonlinear distortion issues affecting RF/Microwave components such as power amplifiers (PA) and develop new and improved solutions that will improve efficiency and linearity of next generation RF/Microwave mobile wireless communication systems. This research involves evaluating the nonlinear distortions in PA for different analog and digital signals which have been a major concern. The second harmonic injection technique is explored and used to effectively suppress nonlinear distortions. This method consists of simultaneously feeding back the second harmonics at the output of the power amplifier (PA) into the input of the PA. Simulated and measured results show improved linearity results. However, for increasing frequency bandwidth, the suppression abilities reduced which is a limitation for 4G LTE and 5G networks that require larger bandwidth (above 5 MHz). This thesis explores creative ways to deal with this major drawback. The injection technique was modified with the aid of a well-designed band-stop filter. The compact narrowband notch filter designed was able to suppress nonlinear distortions very effectively when used before the PA. The notch filter is also integrated in the injection technique for LTE carrier aggregation (CA) with multiple carriers and significant improvement in nonlinear distortion performance was observed. This thesis also considers maximizing efficiency alongside with improved linearity performance. To improve on the efficiency performance of the PA, the balanced PA configuration was investigated. However, another major challenge was that the couplers used in this configuration are very large in size at the desired operating frequency. In this thesis, this problem was solved by designing a compact branch line coupler. The novel coupler was simulated, fabricated and measured with performance comparable to its conventional equivalent and the coupler achieved substantial size reduction over others. The coupler is implemented in the balanced PA configuration giving improved input and output matching abilities. The proposed balanced PA is also implemented in 4G LTE and 5G wireless transmitters. This thesis provides simulation and measured results for all balanced PA cases with substantial efficiency and linearity improvements observed even for higher bandwidths (above 5 MHz). Additionally, the coupler is successfully integrated with rectifiers for improved energy harvesting performance and gave improved RF-dc conversion efficienc
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Space-time-frequency methods for interference-limited communication systems
textTraditionally, noise in communication systems has been modeled as an additive, white Gaussian noise process with independent, identically distributed samples. Although this model accurately reflects thermal noise present in communication system electronics, it fails to capture the statistics of interference and other sources of noise, e.g. in unlicensed communication bands. Modern communication system designers must take into account interference and non-Gaussian noise to maximize efficiencies and capacities of current and future communication networks. In this work, I develop new multi-dimensional signal processing methods to improve performance of communication systems in three applications areas: (i) underwater acoustic, (ii) powerline, and (iii) multi-antenna cellular. In underwater acoustic communications, I address impairments caused by strong, time-varying and Doppler-spread reverberations (self-interference) using adaptive space-time signal processing methods. I apply these methods to array receivers with a large number of elements. In powerline communications, I address impairments caused by non-Gaussian noise arising from devices sharing the powerline. I develop and apply a cyclic adaptive modulation and coding scheme and a factor-graph-based impulsive noise mitigation method to improve signal quality and boost link throughput and robustness. In cellular communications, I develop a low-latency, high-throughput space-time-frequency processing framework used for large scale (up to 128 antenna) MIMO. This framework is used in the world's first 100-antenna MIMO system and processes up to 492 Gbps raw baseband samples in the uplink and downlink directions. My methods prove that multi-dimensional processing methods can be applied to increase communication system performance without sacrificing real-time requirements.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Baseband analog circuits in deep-submicron cmos technologies targeted for mobile multimedia
Three main analog circuit building blocks that are important for a mixed-signal
system are investigated in this work. New building blocks with emphasis on power
efficiency and compatibility with deep-submicron technology are proposed and
experimental results from prototype integrated circuits are presented.
Firstly, a 1.1GHz, 5th order, active-LC, Butterworth wideband equalizer that
controls inter-symbol interference and provides anti-alias filtering for the subsequent
analog to digital converter is presented. The equalizer design is based on a new series
LC resonator biquad whose power efficiency is analytically shown to be better than a
conventional Gm-C biquad. A prototype equalizer is fabricated in a standard 0.18μm
CMOS technology. It is experimentally verified to achieve an equalization gain
programmable over a 0-23dB range, 47dB SNR and -48dB IM3 while consuming 72mW
of power. This corresponds to more than 7 times improvement in power efficiency over
conventional Gm-C equalizers.
Secondly, a load capacitance aware compensation for 3-stage amplifiers is
presented. A class-AB 16W headphone driver designed using this scheme in 130nm technology is experimentally shown to handle 1pF to 22nF capacitive load while
consuming as low as 1.2mW of quiescent power. It can deliver a maximum RMS power
of 20mW to the load with -84.8dB THD and 92dB peak SNR, and it occupies a small
area of 0.1mm2. The power consumption is reduced by about 10 times compared to
drivers that can support such a wide range of capacitive loads.
Thirdly, a novel approach to design of ADC in deep-submicron technology is
described. The presented technique enables the usage of time-to-digital converter (TDC)
in a delta-sigma modulator in a manner that takes advantage of its high timing precision
while noise-shaping the error due to its limited time resolution. A prototype ADC
designed based on this deep-submicron technology friendly architecture was fabricated
in a 65nm digital CMOS technology. The ADC is experimentally shown to achieve
68dB dynamic range in 20MHz signal bandwidth while consuming 10.5mW of power. It
is projected to reduce power and improve speed with technology scaling