233 research outputs found
Multi-band OFDM UWB receiver with narrowband interference suppression
A multi band orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) compatible
ultra wideband (UWB) receiver with narrowband interference (NBI) suppression
capability is presented. The average transmit power of UWB system is limited to
-41.3 dBm/MHz in order to not interfere existing narrowband systems. Moreover, it
must operate even in the presence of unintentional radiation of FCC Class-B compatible
devices. If this unintentional radiation resides in the UWB band, it can jam the
communication. Since removing the interference in digital domain requires higher dynamic
range of analog front-end than removing it in analog domain, a programmable
analog notch filter is used to relax the receiver requirements in the presence of NBI.
The baseband filter is placed before the variable gain amplifier (VGA) in order to reduce
the signal swing at the VGA input. The frequency hopping period of MB-OFDM
puts a lower limit on the settling time of the filter, which is inverse proportional to
notch bandwidth. However, notch bandwidth should be low enough not to attenuate
the adjacent OFDM tones. Since these requirements are contradictory, optimization
is needed to maximize overall performance. Two different NBI suppression schemes
are tested. In the first scheme, the notch filter is operating for all sub-bands. In the
second scheme, the notch filter is turned on during the sub-band affected by NBI.
Simulation results indicate that the UWB system with the first and the second suppression
schemes can handle up to 6 dB and 14 dB more NBI power, respectively. The results of this work are not limited to MB-OFDM UWB system, and can be
applied to other frequency hopping systems
Advances in Integrated Circuit Design and Implementation for New Generation of Wireless Transceivers
User’s everyday outgrowing demand for high-data and high performance mobile devices pushes industry and researchers into more sophisticated systems to fulfill those expectations. Besides new modulation techniques and new system designs, significant improvement is required in the transceiver building blocks to handle higher data rates with reasonable power efficiency. In this research the challenges and solution to improve the performance of wireless communication transceivers is addressed.
The building block that determines the efficiency and battery life of the entire mobile handset is the power amplifier. Modulations with large peak to average power ratio severely degrade efficiency in the conventional fixed-biased power amplifiers (PAs). To address this challenge, a novel PA is proposed with an adaptive load for the PA to improve efficiency. A nonlinearity cancellation technique is also proposed to improve linearity of the PA to satisfy the EVM and ACLR specifications.
Ultra wide-band (UWB) systems are attractive due to their ability for high data rate, and low power consumption. In spite of the limitation assigned by the FCC, the coexistence of UWB and NB systems are still an unsolved challenge. One of the systems that is majorly affected by the UWB signal, is the 802.11a system (5 GHz Wi-Fi). A new analog solution is proposed to minimize the interference level caused by the impulse Radio UWB transmitter to nearby narrowband receivers. An efficient 400 Mpulse/s IR-UWB transmitter is implemented that generates an analog UWB pulse with in-band notch that covers the majority of the UWB spectrum.
The challenge in receiver (RX) design is the over increasing out of blockers in applications such as cognitive and software defined radios, which are required to tolerate stronger out-of-band (OB) blockers. A novel RX is proposed with a shunt N-path high-Q filter at the LNA input to attenuate OB-blockers. To further improve the linearity, a novel baseband blocker filtering techniques is proposed. A new TIA has been designed to maintain the good linearity performance for blockers at large frequency offsets. As a result, a +22 dBm IIP3 with 3.5 dB NF is achieved.
Another challenge in the RX design is the tough NF and linearity requirements for high performance systems such as carrier aggregation. To improve the NF, an extra gain stage is added after the LNA. An N-path high-Q band-pass filter is employed at the LNA output together with baseband blocker filtering technique to attenuate out-of-band blockers and improve the linearity. A noise-cancellation technique based on the frequency translation has been employed to improve the NF. As a result, a 1.8dB NF with +5 dBm IIP3 is achieved. In addition, a new approach has been proposed to reject out of band blockers in carrier aggregation scenarios. The proposed solution also provides carrier to carrier isolation compared to typical solution for carrier aggregation
System-level design and RF front-end implementation for a 3-10ghz multiband-ofdm ultrawideband receiver and built-in testing techniques for analog and rf integrated circuits
This work consists of two main parts: a) Design of a 3-10GHz UltraWideBand
(UWB) Receiver and b) Built-In Testing Techniques (BIT) for Analog and RF circuits.
The MultiBand OFDM (MB-OFDM) proposal for UWB communications has
received significant attention for the implementation of very high data rate (up to
480Mb/s) wireless devices. A wideband LNA with a tunable notch filter, a downconversion
quadrature mixer, and the overall radio system-level design are proposed for
an 11-band 3.4-10.3GHz direct conversion receiver for MB-OFDM UWB implemented
in a 0.25mm BiCMOS process. The packaged IC includes an RF front-end with
interference rejection at 5.25GHz, a frequency synthesizer generating 11 carrier tones in
quadrature with fast hopping, and a linear phase baseband section with 42dB of gain
programmability. The receiver IC mounted on a FR-4 substrate provides a maximum
gain of 67-78dB and NF of 5-10dB across all bands while consuming 114mA from a
2.5V supply.
Two BIT techniques for analog and RF circuits are developed. The goal is to reduce
the test cost by reducing the use of analog instrumentation. An integrated frequency response characterization system with a digital interface is proposed to test the
magnitude and phase responses at different nodes of an analog circuit. A complete
prototype in CMOS 0.35mm technology employs only 0.3mm2 of area. Its operation is
demonstrated by performing frequency response measurements in a range of 1 to
130MHz on 2 analog filters integrated on the same chip. A very compact CMOS RF
RMS Detector and a methodology for its use in the built-in measurement of the gain and
1dB compression point of RF circuits are proposed to address the problem of on-chip
testing at RF frequencies. The proposed device generates a DC voltage proportional to
the RMS voltage amplitude of an RF signal. A design in CMOS 0.35mm technology
presents and input capacitance <15fF and occupies and area of 0.03mm2. The application
of these two techniques in combination with a loop-back test architecture significantly
enhances the testability of a wireless transceiver system
An analog approach to interference suppression in ultra-wideband receivers
Because of the huge bandwidth of Ultra-Wideband (UWB) systems, in-band narrowband
interference may hinder receiver performance. In this dissertation, sources
of potential narrowband interference that lie within the IEEE 802.15.3a UWB bandwidth
are presented, and a solution is proposed. To combat interference in Multi-Band
OFDM (MB-OFDM) UWB systems, an analog notch filter is designed to be included
in the UWB receive chain. The architecture of the filter is based on feed-forward
subtraction of the interference, and includes a Least Means Squared (LMS) tuning
scheme to maximize attenuation. The filter uses the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)
result for interference detection and discrete center frequency tuning of the filter. It
was fabricated in a 0.18 õm process, and experimental results are provided. This is
the first study of potential in-band interference sources for UWB. The proposed filter
offers a practical means for ensuring reliable UWB communication in the presense of
such interference.
The Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA) is the predominant building
block in the design of the notch filter. In many cases, OTAs must handle input
signals with large common mode swings. A new scheme for achieving rail-to-rail
input to an OTA is introduced. Constant gm is obtained by using tunable level
shifters and a single differential pair. Feedback circuitry controls the level shifters
in a manner that fixes the common mode input of the differential pair, resulting in consistent and stable operation for rail-to-rail inputs. As the new technique avoids
using complimentary input differential pairs, this method overcomes problems such
as Common Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR) and Gain Bandwidth (GBW) product
degradation that exist in many other designs. The circuit was fabricated in a 0.5õm
process. The resulting differential pair had a constant transconductance that varied
by only ñ0.35% for rail-to-rail input common mode levels. The input common mode
range extended well past the supply levels of ñ1.5V, resulting in only ñ1% fluctuation
in gm for input common modes from -2V to 2V
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