10 research outputs found

    Modelação comportamental e pré-distorção digital de transmissores de rádio-frequência

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    Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotécnicaNos atuais sistemas de telecomunicações, os transmissores de rádio-frequência são desenvolvidos tendo maioritariamente em conta a eficiência da conversão da potência fornecida da fonte em potência de rádio-frequência. Este tipo de desenho resulta em amplificadores de potência com características de transmissão não-lineares, que distorcem severamente o envelope de informação no processo de amplificação, gerando distorção fora da banda. Para corrigir este problema utiliza-se um processo de compensação não linear, sendo que a pré-distorção digital se tem favorecido pela sua flexibilidade e precisão. Este método é tipicamente aplicado de uma forma cega, por força bruta até se obter a compensação desejada. No entanto, quando o método se mostra ineficaz, como se verificou em amplificadores de potência baseados em transístores de nitreto de gálio, é difícil saber o que modificar nos sistemas para os tornar de novo úteis. De forma a compreender e desenhar sistemas de pré-distorção digital robustos é necessário, por um lado, perceber o comportamento dos amplificadores de rádio-frequência, por outro, perceber as limitações e relações entre os modelos digitais e o comportamento real do amplificador. Nesse sentido, esta tese explora e descreve estas relações de forma a suportar a escolha de modelos de pré-distorção, desenvolve novos modelos baseados no comportamento dos transístores, e propõe métodos de caracterização para os amplificadores de RF.In current telecommunication systems, the main concern when developing the radio frequency transmitter is power efficiency. This type of design generally leads to a highly nonlinear transmission characteristic, mainly due to the radio frequency power amplifier. This nonlinear transmission severely distorts the information envelope, leading to spectral regrowth, out-of-band distortion. To correct this problem a nonlinear compensation process is employed. For this application, digital predistortion is generally favored for its flexibility and accuracy. Digital predistortion is mostly applied in a blind manner, using brute force until the desired compensation is achieved. Because of this, when the method fails, as it has in gallium nitride based power amplifiers, it is difficult to modify the system to achieve the desired results. To understand and design robust predistortion systems, it is both necessary to have knowledge of the power amplifiers’ behavior, on one hand, and understand the limitations and relations between the digital models and these behaviors, on the other. To do this, this thesis explores and describes these relationships, granting support to the digital predistortion model choice, it further develops new predistortion models based on the physics of the transistors’ behaviors, and it proposes methods for the characterization of radio frequency power amplifiers

    An enhanced modulated waveform measurement system

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    The microwave devices and circuits need to be characterized prior to being employed in the design of systems and components. Unfortunately the measurement systems required to characterize the microwave devices and circuits have not kept pace with the emerging telecommunication technologies demands. This has resulted into a situation where either the circuits being employed in the components are unoptimized or the yield and turn-around of optimized circuits are slow. One of the contributing factors of such situations is the limitations of the existing measurement systems to scale up in performance to fulfil the necessary requirements. This thesis presents an enhanced multi-tone, time domain waveform measurement and engineering system. The presented system allows for a more considered, and scientific process to be adopted in the characterisation and measurement of microwave power devices for modern day communications systems. The main contributions to the field of research come in two areas; firstly developments that allow for accurate time domain measurement of complex modulated signals using commercially available equipment; and secondly in the area of active impedance control, where significant developments were made allowing active control of impedance across a modulated bandwidth. The first research area addressed is the fundamental difficulty in sampling multi-tone waveforms, where the main achievements have been the realisation of a high quality trigger clock for the sampling oscilloscope and a “Time Domain Partitioning” approach to measure and average multi-tone waveforms on-board. This approach allows the efficient collection of high quality vectoral information for all significant distortion terms, for all bands of interest. The second area of research investigated suitable impedance control architectures to comprehensively investigate out-of-band impedance effects on the linearity performance of a device. The ultimate aim was to simultaneously present independent, baseband impedances to all the significant baseband (IF) frequency components and to 2nd harmonic that result from a multi-tone excitation. The main achievement in this area was the ability of the enhanced measurement system to present the broadband impedance. At baseband this has been achieved in the time domain using a single arbitrary waveform generator (AWG) to synthesise the necessary waveforms to allow a specific IF impedance environment to be maintained across a wide IF bandwidth. To engineer the RF out-of-band load terminations at RF frequencies and to emulate specific power amplifier modes, a Tektronix AWG7000 Arbitrary Waveform Generator was used to deliver the desired impedances, practically fulfilling the wideband application requirements for reliable device characterisation under complex modulated excitations

    An enhanced modulated waveform measurement system

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    The microwave devices and circuits need to be characterized prior to being employed in the design of systems and components. Unfortunately the measurement systems required to characterize the microwave devices and circuits have not kept pace with the emerging telecommunication technologies demands. This has resulted into a situation where either the circuits being employed in the components are unoptimized or the yield and turn-around of optimized circuits are slow. One of the contributing factors of such situations is the limitations of the existing measurement systems to scale up in performance to fulfil the necessary requirements. This thesis presents an enhanced multi-tone, time domain waveform measurement and engineering system. The presented system allows for a more considered, and scientific process to be adopted in the characterisation and measurement of microwave power devices for modern day communications systems. The main contributions to the field of research come in two areas; firstly developments that allow for accurate time domain measurement of complex modulated signals using commercially available equipment; and secondly in the area of active impedance control, where significant developments were made allowing active control of impedance across a modulated bandwidth. The first research area addressed is the fundamental difficulty in sampling multi-tone waveforms, where the main achievements have been the realisation of a high quality trigger clock for the sampling oscilloscope and a “Time Domain Partitioning” approach to measure and average multi-tone waveforms on-board. This approach allows the efficient collection of high quality vectoral information for all significant distortion terms, for all bands of interest. The second area of research investigated suitable impedance control architectures to comprehensively investigate out-of-band impedance effects on the linearity performance of a device. The ultimate aim was to simultaneously present independent, baseband impedances to all the significant baseband (IF) frequency components and to 2nd harmonic that result from a multi-tone excitation. The main achievement in this area was the ability of the enhanced measurement system to present the broadband impedance. At baseband this has been achieved in the time domain using a single arbitrary waveform generator (AWG) to synthesise the necessary waveforms to allow a specific IF impedance environment to be maintained across a wide IF bandwidth. To engineer the RF out-of-band load terminations at RF frequencies and to emulate specific power amplifier modes, a Tektronix AWG7000 Arbitrary Waveform Generator was used to deliver the desired impedances, practically fulfilling the wideband application requirements for reliable device characterisation under complex modulated excitations.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    GigaHertz Symposium 2010

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    Advanced Microwave Circuits and Systems

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    Development of novel design methodologies for the efficiency enhancement of RF power amplifiers in wireless communications

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    The research work presented in this thesis sets out to investigate improvements to the power amplifier design cycle through the use of recently developed radio-frequency waveform measurement and characterisation systems. One key objective of this work is to improve the overall efficiency of the modern wireless communication system by focusing on the radio-frequency power amplifier stage. More specifically, the direct utilisation of waveform-engineering techniques in the development of methodologies for the design and realisation of efficiency enhanced radio-frequency power amplifiers was targeted. In developing these power amplifier design methodologies, work has also led to significant advancements into the possibilities of 'first-pass-design' success. Through the direct import of captured waveform data into a computer-aided design environment, along with efficiency-optimised multi-harmonic and intermediate-frequency impedance information, a stable and highly efficient power amplifier has been realised. This direct implementation of waveform measurements completely by-passes any involvement with potentially unreliable nonlinear device models. Hence this has eliminated the need for multiple iterations of matching networks, resulting in a dramatically more time-efficient design process. Waveform-engineering-based designs completed in this research have been demonstrated with both very high-efficiency (70-80%), narrowband modes of operation, as well as a high-efficiency (60-70%) broadband mode covering almost an octave bandwidth. All designs throughout have been realised as prototype power amplifiers
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