277 research outputs found

    A 300-800MHz Tunable Filter and Linearized LNA applied in a Low-Noise Harmonic-Rejection RF-Sampling Receiver

    Get PDF
    A multiband flexible RF-sampling receiver aimed at software-defined radio is presented. The wideband RF sampling function is enabled by a recently proposed discrete-time mixing downconverter. This work exploits a voltage-sensing LNA preceded by a tunable LC pre-filter with one external coil to demonstrate an RF-sampling receiver with low noise figure (NF) and high harmonic rejection (HR). The second-order LC filter provides voltage pre-gain and attenuates the source noise aliasing, and it also improves the HR ratio of the sampling downconverter. The LNA consists of a simple amplifier topology built from inverters and resistors to improve the third-order nonlinearity via an enhanced voltage mirror technique. The RF-sampling receiver employs 8 times oversampling covering 300 to 800 MHz in two RF sub-bands. The chip is realized in 65 nm CMOS and the measured gain across the band is between 22 and 28 dB, while achieving a NF between 0.8 to 4.3 dB. The IIP2 varies between +38 and +49 dBm and the IIP3 between -14 dBm and -9 dBm, and the third and fifth order HR ratios are more than 60 dB. The LNA and downconverter consumes 6 mW, and the clock generator takes 12 mW at 800 MHz RF.\ud \u

    CIRCUIT MODULES FOR BROADBAND CMOS SIX-PORT SYSTEMS

    Get PDF
    This dissertation investigates four circuit modules used in a CMOS integrated six-port measurement system. The first circuit module is a wideband power source generator, which can be implemented with a voltage controlled ring oscillator. The second circuit module is a low-power 0.5 GHz - 20.5 GHz power detector with an embedded amplifier and a wideband quasi T-coil matching network. The third circuit module is a six-port circuit, which can be implemented with distributed or lumped- lement techniques. The fourth circuit module is the phase sifter used as calibration loads. The theoretical analysis, circuit design, simulated or experimental verifications of each circuit module are also included

    Fully integrated cmos phase shifter/vco for mimo/ism application

    Get PDF
    A fully integrated CMOS 0 – 900 phase shifter in 0.18um TSMC technology is presented. With the increasing use of wireless systems in GHz range, there is high demand for integrated phase shifters in phased arrays and MIMO on chip systems. Integrated phase shifters have quite a high number of integrated inductors which consume a lot of area and introduce a huge amount of loss which make them impractical for on chip applications. Also tuning the phase shift is another concern which seems difficult with use of passive elements for integrated applications. This work is presents a new method for implementing phase shifters using only active CMOS elements which dramatically reduce the occupied area and make the tuning feasible. Also a fully integrated millimeter-wave VCO is implemented using the same technology. This VCO can be part of a 24 GHz frequency synthesizer for 24 GHz ISM band transceivers. The 24 GHz ISM band is the unlicensed band and available for commercial communication and automotive radar use, which is becoming attractive for high bandwidth data rate

    Synthesis and monolithic integration of analogue signal processing networks

    Get PDF
    Data traffic of future 5G telecommunication systems is projected to increase 10 000-fold compared to current rates. 5G fronthaul links are therefore expected to operate in the mm-wave spectrum with some preliminary International Telecommunication Union specifications set for the 71-76 and 81-86 GHz bands. Processing 5 GHz as a single contiguous band in real-time, using existing digital signal processing (DSP) systems, is exceedingly challenging. A similar challenge exists in radio astronomy, with the Square Kilometer Array project expecting data throughput rates of 15 Tbits/s at its completion. Speed improvements on existing state-of-the-art DSPs of 2-3 orders of magnitude are therefore required to meet future demands. One possible mitigating approach to processing wideband data in real-time is to replace some DSP blocks with analog signal processing (ASP) equivalents, since analogue devices outperform their digital counterparts in terms of cost, power consumption and the maximum attainable bandwidth. The fundamental building block of any ASP is an all-pass network of prescribed response, which can always be synthesized by cascaded first- and second-order all-pass sections (with two cascaded first-order sections being a special case of the latter). The monolithic integration of all-pass networks in commercial CMOS and BiCMOS technology nodes is a key consideration for commercial adaptation of ASPs, since it supports mass production at reduced costs and operating power requirements, making the ASP approach feasible. However, this integration has presented a number of yet unsolved challenges. Firstly, the state-of-the-art methods for synthesizing quasi-arbitrary group delay functions using all-pass elements lack a theoretical synthesis procedure that guarantees minimum-order networks. In this work an analytically-based solution to the synthesis problem is presented that produces an all-pass network with a response approximating the required group delay to within an arbitrary minimax error. This method is shown to work for any physical realization of second-order all-pass elements, is guaranteed to converge to a global optimum solution without any choice of seed values as an input, and allows synthesis of pre-defined networks described either analytically or numerically. Secondly, second-order all-pass networks are currently primarily implemented in off-chip planar media, which is unsuited for high volume production. Component sensitivity, process tolerances and on-chip parasitics often make proposed on-chip designs impractical. Consequently, to date, no measured results of a dispersive on-chip second-order all-pass network suitable for ASP applications (delay Q-value (QD) larger than 1) have been presented in either CMOS or BiCMOS technology nodes. In this work, the first ever on-chip CMOS second-order all-pass network is proposed with a measured QD-value larger than 1. Measurements indicate a post-tuning bandwidth of 280 MHz, peak-to-nominal delay variation of 10 ns, QD-value of 1.15 and magnitude variation of 3.1 dB. An active on-chip mm-wave second-order all-pass network is further demonstrated in a 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology node with a bandwidth of 40 GHz, peak-to-nominal delay of 62 ps, QD-value of 3.6 and a magnitude ripple of 1.4 dB. This is the first time that measurement results of a mm-wave bandwidth second-order all-pass network have been reported. This work therefore presents the first step to monolithically integrating ASP solutions to conventional DSP problems, thereby enabling ultra-wideband signal processing on-chip in commercial technology nodes.Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2018.Square Kilometer Array (SKA) project - postgraduate scholarshipElectrical, Electronic and Computer EngineeringPhDUnrestricte

    Full control of Josephson nonlinear processes in superconducting parametric devices for efficient control and readout of quantum circuits

    Get PDF
    In this thesis it is presented a novel superconducting microwave circuit, the Gradiometric SNAIL, that is capable of synthesizing in-situ tunable Hamiltonians with two degrees of freedom. Such a feature allows more flexibility in the choice of linear and non-linear processes that allow coherent elaboration of weak microwave photons. The Gradiometric SNAIL has been employed to implement a resonant parametric amplifier that, with two tuning degrees of freedom, is capable to provide 20dB gain amplification with three-wave mixing over a broad range of operating frequencies and simultaneously suppress the parasitic Kerr effect

    Enhancing Digital Controllability in Wideband RF Transceiver Front-Ends for FTTx Applications

    Get PDF
    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

    Characterization of process variability and robust optimization of analog circuits

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (p. 161-174).Continuous scaling of CMOS technology has enabled dramatic performance enhancement of CMOS devices and has provided speed, power, and density improvement in both digital and analog circuits. CMOS millimeter-wave applications operating at more than 50GHz frequencies has become viable in sub-100nm CMOS technologies, providing advantages in cost and high density integration compared to other heterogeneous technologies such as SiGe and III-V compound semiconductors. However, as the operating frequency of CMOS circuits increases, it becomes more difficult to obtain sufficiently wide operating ranges for robust operation in essential analog building blocks such as voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) and frequency dividers. The fluctuations of circuit parameters caused by the random and systematic variations in key manufacturing steps become more significant in nano-scale technologies. The process variation of circuit performance is quickly becoming one of the main concerns in high performance analog design. In this thesis, we show design and analysis of a VCO and frequency divider operating beyond 70GHz in a 65nm SOI CMOS technology. The VCO and frequency divider employ design techniques enlarging frequency operating ranges to improve the robustness of circuit operation. Circuit performance is measured from a number of die samples to identify the statistical properties of performance variation. A back-propagation of variation (BPV) scheme based on sensitivity analysis of circuit performance is proposed to extract critical circuit parameter variation using statistical measurement results of the frequency divider. We analyze functional failure caused by performance variability, and propose dynamic and static optimization methods to improve parametric yield. An external bias control is utilized to dynamically tune the divider operating range and to compensate for performance variation. A novel time delay model of a differential CML buffer is proposed to functionally approximate the maximum operating frequency of the frequency divider, which dramatically reduces computational cost of parametric yield estimation. The functional approximation enables the optimization of the VCO and frequency divider parametric yield with a reasonable amount of simulation time.by Daihyun Lim.Ph.D

    Circuit Design Techniques For Wideband Phased Arrays

    Get PDF
    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation.June 2015. Major: Electrical Engineering. Advisor: Ramesh Harjani. 1 computer file (PDF); xii, 143 pages.This dissertation focuses on beam steering in wideband phased arrays and phase noise modeling in injection locked oscillators. Two different solutions, one in frequency and one in time, have been proposed to minimize beam squinting in phased arrays. Additionally, a differential current reuse frequency doubler for area and power savings has been proposed. Silicon measurement results are provided for the frequency domain solution (IBM 65nm RF CMOS), injection locked oscillator model verification (IBM 130nm RF-CMOS) and frequency doubler (IBM 65nm RF CMOS), while post extraction simulation results are provided for the time domain phased array solution (the chip is currently under fabrication, TSMC 65nm RF CMOS). In the frequency domain solution, a 4-point passive analog FFT based frequency tunable filter is used to channelize an incoming wideband signal into multiple narrowband signals, which are then processed through independent phase shifters. A two channel prototype has been developed at 8GHz RF frequency. Three discrete phase shifts (0 & +/- 90 degrees) are implemented through differential I-Q swapping with appropriate polarity. A minimum null-depth of 19dB while a maximum null-depth of 27dB is measured. In the time domain solution, a discrete time approach is undertaken with signals getting sampled in order of their arrival times. A two-channel prototype for a 2GHz instantaneous RF bandwidth (7GHz-9GHz) has been designed. A QVCO generates quadrature LO signals at 8GHz which are phase shifted through a 5-bit (2 extra bits from differential I-Q swapping with appropriate polarity) cartesian combiner. Baseband sampling clocks are generated from phase shifted LOs through a CMOS divide by 4 with independent resets. The design achieves an average time delay of 4.53ps with 31.5mW of power consumption (per channel, buffers excluded). An injection locked oscillator has been analyzed in s-domain using Paciorek's time domain transient equations. The simplified analysis leads to a phase noise model identical to that of a type-I PLL. The model is equally applicable to injection locked dividers and multipliers and has been extended to cover all injection locking scenarios. The model has been verified against a discrete 57MHz Colpitt's ILO, a 6.5GHz ILFD and a 24GHz ILFM with excellent matching between the model and measurements. Additionally, a differential current reuse frequency doubler, for frequency outputs between 7GHz to 14GHz, design has been developed to reduce passive area and dc power dissipation. A 3-bit capacitive tuning along with a tail current source is used to better conversion efficiency. The doubler shows FOMT_{T} values between 191dBc/Hz to 209dBc/Hz when driven by a 0.7GHz to 5.8GHz wide tuning VCO with a phase noise that ranges from -114dBc/Hz to -112dBc/Hz over the same bandwidth
    • …
    corecore