48 research outputs found

    Analog/RF Circuit Design Techniques for Nanometerscale IC Technologies

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    CMOS evolution introduces several problems in analog design. Gate-leakage mismatch exceeds conventional matching tolerances requiring active cancellation techniques or alternative architectures. One strategy to deal with the use of lower supply voltages is to operate critical parts at higher supply voltages, by exploiting combinations of thin- and thick-oxide transistors. Alternatively, low voltage circuit techniques are successfully developed. In order to benefit from nanometer scale CMOS technology, more functionality is shifted to the digital domain, including parts of the RF circuits. At the same time, analog control for digital and digital control for analog emerges to deal with current and upcoming imperfections

    Analysis And Design Of Wideband Passive Mixer-First Receivers

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    This dissertation focuses on the design of wideband SAW-less receivers for softwaredefined radios. The entire body of work is based on a single RF front-end architecture type: a passive mixer connected directly to the antenna port of the radio, without an LNA or matching network up front. This structure is inherently wideband which allows for a single receiver front-end to operate at a wide range of frequencies, as tuned by its local oscillator (LO). Additionally, the mixer exhibits the property of transparency from the baseband port of the radio to the RF port of the radio, and vice versa. The focus of the first half of the thesis is on developing a simple theoretical framework for the impedance characteristics of the passive mixer, and implementing a maximally flexible receiver which utilizes the mixer's transparency to the fullest extent. Additionally, it is shown that mixing with 8 non-overlapping phases instead of the traditional 4 has benefits beyond harmonic rejection extending to improved noise performance and increased impedance tuning range. This receiver exhibits low noise figure (~3dB), excellent wideband linearity (IIP3[GREATER-THAN OR EQUAL TO]25dBm), and unprecedented RF impedance control from the baseband side of the passive mixer. Another wideband receiver is presented which explores increasing the number of LO phases even further to 16 and 32, increasing the impedance matching range. The same chip contains a circuit technique for alleviating the shunting effects of LO phase overlap on mixer conversion gain, noise, and impedance match range. Finally in a new design, the power consumption of the receiver architecture is decreased by a factor of 5x (and not scaling with RF frequency). This is done using a resonant LO drive with 8 non-overlapping phases, incorporating the large mixer gate capacitance directly into the LC tank of the VCO. Baseband power consumption is also reduced by reusing current in the four baseband amplifier channels, and performing harmonic rejection, all in one stage of amplification

    An in-band full-duplex radio receiver with a passive vector modulator downmixer for self-interference cancellation

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    In-band full-duplex (FD) wireless, i.e., simultaneous transmission and reception at the same frequency, introduces strong self-interference (SI) that masks the signal to be received. This paper proposes a receiver in which a copy of the transmit signal is fed through a switched-resistor vector modulator (VM)that provides simultaneous downmixing, phase shift, and amplitude scaling and subtracts it in the analog baseband for up to 27 dB SI-cancellation. Cancelling before active baseband amplification avoids self-blocking, and highly linear mixers keep SIinduced distortion low, for a receiver SI-to-noise-and-distortionratio (SINDR) of up to 71.5 dB in 16.25 MHz BW. When combined with a two-port antenna with only 20 dB isolation, the low RX distortion theoretically allows sufficient digital cancellation for over 90 dB link budget, sufficient for short-range, low-power FD links

    Ageing and embedded instrument monitoring of analogue/mixed-signal IPS

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    Configurable circuits and their impact on multi-standard RF front-end architectures

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    This thesis studies configurable circuits and their impact on multi-standard RF front-end architectures. In particular, low-voltage low-power linear LNA and mixer topologies suitable for implementation in multi-standard front-ends are subject of the investigation. With respect to frequency and bandwidth, multi-standard front-ends can be implemented using either tunable or wideband LNA and mixer topologies. Based on the type of the LNA and mixer(s), multi-standard receiver RF front-ends can be divided into three groups. They can be (tunable) narrow-band, wide-band or combined. The advantages and disadvantages of the different multi-standard receiver RF front-ends have been discussed in detail. The partitioning between off-chip selectivity, on-chip selectivity provided by the LNA and mixer, linearity, power consumption and occupied chip area in each multi-standard RF front-end group are thoroughly investigated. A Figure of Merit (FOM) for the multi-standard receiver RF front-end has been introduced. Based on this FOM the most suitable multi-standard RF front-end group in terms of cost-effectiveness can be selected. In order to determine which multi-standard RF front-end group is the most cost-effective for a practical application, a GSM850/E-GSM/DCS/PCS/Bluetooth/WLANa/b/g multi-standard receiver RF front-end is chosen as a demonstrator. These standards are the most frequently used standards in wireless communication, and this combination of standards allows to users almost "anytime-anywhere" voice and data transfer. In order to verify these results, three demonstrators have been defined, designed and implemented, two wideband RF front-end circuits in 90nm CMOS and 65nm CMOS, and one combined multi-standard RF front-end circuit in 65nm CMOS. The proposed multi-standard demonstrators have been compared with the state-of the art narrow-band, wide-band and combined multi-standard RF front-ends. On the proposed multi-standard RF front-ends and the state-of the art multi-standard RF front-ends the proposed FOM have been applied. The comparison shows that the combined multi-standard RF front-end group is the most cost effective multi-standard group for this application

    Low Power Continuous-time Bandpass Delta-Sigma Modulators.

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    Low power techniques for continuous-time bandpass delta-sigma modulators (CTBPDSMs) are introduced. First, a 800MS/s low power 4th-order CTBPDSM with 24MHz bandwidth at 200MHz IF is presented. A novel power-efficient resonator with a single amplifier is used in the loopfilter. A single op-amp resonator makes use of positive feedback to increase the quality factor. Also, a new 4th-order architecture is introduced for system simplicity and low power. Low power consumption and a simple modulator structure are achieved by reducing the number of feedback DACs. This modulator achieves 58dB SNDR, and the total power consumption is 12mW. Second, a 6th-order CTBPDSM with duty cycle controlled DACs is presented. This prototype introduces new architecture for low power consumption and other important features. Duty cycle control enables the use of a single DAC per resonator without degrading the signal transfer function (STF), and helps to lower power consumption, low area, and thermal noise. This ADC provides input signal filtering, and increases the dynamic range by reducing the peaking in the STF. Furthermore, the center frequency is tunable so that the CTBPDSM is more useful in the receiver. The prototype second modulator achieves 69dB SNDR, and consumes 35mW, demonstrating the best FoM of 320fJ/conv.-step for CTBPDSMs using active resonators. The techniques introduced in this research help CTBPDSMs have good power efficiency compared with the other kinds of ADCs, and make the implement of a software-defined radio architecture easier which is appropriate for the future multiple standard radio receivers without a power penalty.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98001/1/hichae_1.pd
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