362 research outputs found

    Optimization Of 5.7 Ghz Class E Power Amplifier For The Application Of Envelope Elimination And Restoration

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    Tez (Yüksek Lisans) -- İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü, 2007Thesis (M.Sc.) -- İstanbul Technical University, Institute of Science and Technology, 2007Rekabetin yoğun olduğu günümüzde tasarımcılar hafif, boyutları daha küçük ve düşük güçle çalışan yüksek performanslı ürün geliştirmenin yollarını aramaktadırlar. RF alıcı uygulamalarında güç kuvvetlendiricileri en fazla güç sarfiyatının olduğu bölümdür. Kablosuz iletişim sistemlerinde güç küvvetlendiricisi verimi maliyeti direkt olarak etkilemektedir. Teorik olarak %100 verim elde edilebilen E-sınıfı güç kuvvetlendiricileri transistorların açık/kapalı durum geçişlerinde güç sarfiyatını minimize edebilmektedir. Ayrıca çıkış gerilimi kaynak gerilimi ile doğrusal değişmektedir. Bu çalışmada E sınıfı güç kuvvetlendiricilerinin tasarım metodları ele alınmıştır. 5.7 GHz de çalışan birinde toplu devre elemanları, diğerinde transmisyon hattı elemanları kullanımış E sınıfı güç kuvvetlendiricileri tasarlanmıştır. Her iki devrede de %50 güç ekli verim (GEV) ve 500mW çıkış gücü elde edilmiştir. Sinyaldeki bozulmayı azaltmak için başvurulan doğrusallaştırma yöntemi Zarf Yoketme ve Tekrar Oluşturma metodudur. E sınıfı kuvvetlendiricinin Zarf Yoketme ve Tekrar Oluşturma yöntemi kullanılarak doğrusallaştırılmasıyla IMD bileşenlerinde 7.5 dB azalmış olup seviyesi gerçek işaretin 20dB altındadır.In today’s competitive, manufactures and product developers are seeking ways to build high performance devices that are lighter in weight, smaller in size and operating at lower power. In transceiver applications one module is responsible for a large portion of the power consumption - the power amplifier. The efficiency of the power amplifier has a direct impact on the cost of the wireless communication system. The class-E amplifier has a maximum theoretical efficiency of 100%. Class E power amplifiers have the ability to minimize power loss during on/off transitions of the transistor. Also, the output voltage varies linearly with the supply voltage. This thesis describes the design and the linearization methodology of the Class E amplifiers. Two class-E amplifiers operating at 5.7 GHz are presented. One of them is a lumped elements based circuit and the other is a transmission lines based circuit. Both circuit show good performance with 50% PAE and have 500mW output power. Envelope elimination and restoration is the linearization method chosen to achieve reduction of signal distortion. Linearization Class E PA using EER system provides an additional 7.5 dB reduction in intermodulation distortion products, achieving a minimum distortion level of 20 dB below the fundamental signals.Yüksek LisansM.Sc

    Design and implementation of an ETSI-SDR OFDM transmitter with power amplifier linearizer

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    Satellite radio has attained great popularity because of its wide range of geographical coverage and high signal quality as compared to the terrestrial broadcasts. Most Satellite Digital Radio (SDR) based systems favor multi-carrier transmission schemes, especially, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) transmission because of high data transfer rate and spectral efficiency. It is a challenging task to find a suitable platform that supports fast data rates and superior processing capabilities required for the development and deployment of the new SDR standards. Field programmable gate array (FPGA) devices have the potential to become suitable development platform for such standards. Another challenging factor in SDR systems is the distortion of variable envelope signals used in OFDM transmission by the nonlinear RF power amplifiers (PA) used in the base station transmitters. An attractive option is to use a linearizer that would compensate for the nonlinear effects of the PA. In this research, an OFDM transmitter, according to European Telecommunications Standard Institute (ETSI) SDR Technical Specifications 2007-2008, was designed and implemented on a low-cost Xilinx FPGA platform. A weakly nonlinear PA, operating in the L-band SDR frequency (1.450-1.490GHz), was used for signal transmission. An FPGA-based, low-cost, adaptive linearizer was designed and implemented based on the digital predistortion (DPD) reference design from Xilinx, to correct the distortion effects of the PA on the transmitted signal

    Energy-Efficient Distributed Estimation by Utilizing a Nonlinear Amplifier

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    abstract: Distributed estimation uses many inexpensive sensors to compose an accurate estimate of a given parameter. It is frequently implemented using wireless sensor networks. There have been several studies on optimizing power allocation in wireless sensor networks used for distributed estimation, the vast majority of which assume linear radio-frequency amplifiers. Linear amplifiers are inherently inefficient, so in this dissertation nonlinear amplifiers are examined to gain efficiency while operating distributed sensor networks. This research presents a method to boost efficiency by operating the amplifiers in the nonlinear region of operation. Operating amplifiers nonlinearly presents new challenges. First, nonlinear amplifier characteristics change across manufacturing process variation, temperature, operating voltage, and aging. Secondly, the equations conventionally used for estimators and performance expectations in linear amplify-and-forward systems fail. To compensate for the first challenge, predistortion is utilized not to linearize amplifiers but rather to force them to fit a common nonlinear limiting amplifier model close to the inherent amplifier performance. This minimizes the power impact and the training requirements for predistortion. Second, new estimators are required that account for transmitter nonlinearity. This research derives analytically and confirms via simulation new estimators and performance expectation equations for use in nonlinear distributed estimation. An additional complication when operating nonlinear amplifiers in a wireless environment is the influence of varied and potentially unknown channel gains. The impact of these varied gains and both measurement and channel noise sources on estimation performance are analyzed in this paper. Techniques for minimizing the estimate variance are developed. It is shown that optimizing transmitter power allocation to minimize estimate variance for the most-compressed parameter measurement is equivalent to the problem for linear sensors. Finally, a method for operating distributed estimation in a multipath environment is presented that is capable of developing robust estimates for a wide range of Rician K-factors. This dissertation demonstrates that implementing distributed estimation using nonlinear sensors can boost system efficiency and is compatible with existing techniques from the literature for boosting efficiency at the system level via sensor power allocation. Nonlinear transmitters work best when channel gains are known and channel noise and receiver noise levels are low.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Electrical Engineering 201

    DESIGN OF A GAAS DISTRIBUTED AMPLIFIER WITH LC TRAPS BASED BROADBAND LINEARIZATION

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    Increasing the linearity of power amplifiers has been an important area of research because its signal integrity influences the performance of the entire transreceiver system and there are strict regulatory requirements on them. Due to the nonlinear behaviour of power amplifiers, third order intermodulation products are generated close to the desired signals and cannot be removed by filters. Increasing linearity will help bring these distortion products closer to the noise floor. However, it is not an easy task to increase linearity without trading off output power. To maintain the same level of output power generated but with higher linearity, many techniques, each with its own pros and cons, have been implemented to linearize an amplifier. Techniques involving feedback are seriously limited in terms of modulation bandwidth whereas methods such as predistortion and feedforward are very difficult to implement. This project seeks to use a simple method of placing terminations directly to the distributed amplifier (DA), making it a device level linearization technique and can be used in addition to the other system level techniques mentioned earlier. To increase linearity over a broad bandwidth of 0.5 to 3.0 GHz, this work proposes using low impedance terminations (LC traps) at the envelope frequency to the input and output of several distributed amplifiers. This research is novel since this is the first time broadband improvement in linearity has been demonstrated using the LC trap method. Two design iterations were completed (first design iteration has four variants to test the output trap while the second design iteration has three variants to test the input trap). The low impedance terminations are implemented using inductor-capacitor networks that are external to the monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC). Design and layout of the DAs were carried out using Agilent’s Advanced Design System (ADS). Results show that placing the traps at the output of the DA does not truly affect the linearity of the device at lower frequencies but provide an improvement of 1.6 dB and 3.4 dB to the third-order output intercept point (OIP3) at 2.5 GHz and 3.0 GHz, respectively. With traps at the input, measurement results at -5 dBm input power, viii 1.375 V base bias (61 mA total collector current) and 10 MHz two tone spacing show a broadband improvement throughout the band (0.5 GHz to 3.0 GHz) of 3.3 dB to 7.4 dB in OIP3. Furthermore, the OIP3 is increased to 19.2 dB above P1dB. Results show that the improvement in OIP3 comes without lowering gain, return loss or P1dB and without causing any stability problems

    High Linearity Millimeter Wave Power Amplifiers with Novel Linearizer Techniques

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    Millimeter-wave communications have experienced phenomenal growth in recent years when limited frequency spectrum is occupied by the ever-developing communication services. The power amplifier, as the key component in the transmitter/receiver module of communication systems, affects performance of the whole system directly and receives much attention. For minimized distortion and optimum system performance, the non-constant en- velope modulation schemes used in communication systems have challenging requirements on linearity. As linearity is related to communication quality directly, several linearization techniques, such as predistortion and feedforward, are applied to power amplifier design. Predistortion method has the advantages over other techniques in relatively simple struc- ture and reasonable linearity improvement. But current predistortion circuits have quite limited performance improvement and relatively large insertion loss, which indicate the need for further research. In most of millimeter-wave amplifier design, great effort has been spent on output power or gain, while linearity is often ignored. As almost all the predistortion circuits operate at the RF frequencies, the linearized millimeter-wave com- munication circuit is still relatively immature and very challenging. This project is dedicated to solve the linearity problem faced by millimeter-wave power amplifier in communication systems, which lacks of e®ective techniques in this field. Linearity improvement with the predistortion method will be the key issue in this project and some original ideas for predistortion circuit design will be applied to millimeter-wave amplifiers. In this thesis, several predistortion circuits with novel structure were proposed, which provide a new approach for linearity improvement for millimeter-wave power am- plifier. A millimeter-wave power ampli¯er for LMDS applications built on GaAs pHEMT technology was developed to a high engineering standard, which works as the test bench for linearization. Actual operation and parasitic elements at tens of gigahertz have been taken into consideration during the design. Firstly, two novel predistorter structures based on the amplifier were proposed, one is based on an amplifier with a fixed bias circuit and the other is based on an amplifier with a nonlinear signal dependant bias circuit. These novel structures can improve the linearity while improving other metrics simultaneously, which can effectively solve the problem of insertion loss faced by the conventional structures. Besides this, an original predistortion circuit design methodology derived from frequency to signal amplitude transformation was proposed. Based on this methodology, several transfer functions were proposed and related predistortion circuits were built to linearize the power amplifier. As this methodology is quite different from the traditional approach, it can improve the linearity signifficantly while other metrics are affected slightly and has a broad prospect for application

    High Linearity Millimeter Wave Power Amplifiers with Novel Linearizer Techniques

    Get PDF
    Millimeter-wave communications have experienced phenomenal growth in recent years when limited frequency spectrum is occupied by the ever-developing communication services. The power amplifier, as the key component in the transmitter/receiver module of communication systems, affects performance of the whole system directly and receives much attention. For minimized distortion and optimum system performance, the non-constant en- velope modulation schemes used in communication systems have challenging requirements on linearity. As linearity is related to communication quality directly, several linearization techniques, such as predistortion and feedforward, are applied to power amplifier design. Predistortion method has the advantages over other techniques in relatively simple struc- ture and reasonable linearity improvement. But current predistortion circuits have quite limited performance improvement and relatively large insertion loss, which indicate the need for further research. In most of millimeter-wave amplifier design, great effort has been spent on output power or gain, while linearity is often ignored. As almost all the predistortion circuits operate at the RF frequencies, the linearized millimeter-wave com- munication circuit is still relatively immature and very challenging. This project is dedicated to solve the linearity problem faced by millimeter-wave power amplifier in communication systems, which lacks of e®ective techniques in this field. Linearity improvement with the predistortion method will be the key issue in this project and some original ideas for predistortion circuit design will be applied to millimeter-wave amplifiers. In this thesis, several predistortion circuits with novel structure were proposed, which provide a new approach for linearity improvement for millimeter-wave power am- plifier. A millimeter-wave power ampli¯er for LMDS applications built on GaAs pHEMT technology was developed to a high engineering standard, which works as the test bench for linearization. Actual operation and parasitic elements at tens of gigahertz have been taken into consideration during the design. Firstly, two novel predistorter structures based on the amplifier were proposed, one is based on an amplifier with a fixed bias circuit and the other is based on an amplifier with a nonlinear signal dependant bias circuit. These novel structures can improve the linearity while improving other metrics simultaneously, which can effectively solve the problem of insertion loss faced by the conventional structures. Besides this, an original predistortion circuit design methodology derived from frequency to signal amplitude transformation was proposed. Based on this methodology, several transfer functions were proposed and related predistortion circuits were built to linearize the power amplifier. As this methodology is quite different from the traditional approach, it can improve the linearity signifficantly while other metrics are affected slightly and has a broad prospect for application
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