468 research outputs found
Reconfigurable Receiver Front-Ends for Advanced Telecommunication Technologies
The exponential growth of converging technologies, including augmented reality, autonomous vehicles, machine-to-machine and machine-to-human interactions, biomedical and environmental sensory systems, and artificial intelligence, is driving the need for robust infrastructural systems capable of handling vast data volumes between end users and service providers. This demand has prompted a significant evolution in wireless communication, with 5G and subsequent generations requiring exponentially improved spectral and energy efficiency compared to their predecessors. Achieving this entails intricate strategies such as advanced digital modulations, broader channel bandwidths, complex spectrum sharing, and carrier aggregation scenarios. A particularly challenging aspect arises in the form of non-contiguous aggregation of up to six carrier components across the frequency range 1 (FR1). This necessitates receiver front-ends to effectively reject out-of-band (OOB) interferences while maintaining high-performance in-band (IB) operation. Reconfigurability becomes pivotal in such dynamic environments, where frequency resource allocation, signal strength, and interference levels continuously change. Software-defined radios (SDRs) and cognitive radios (CRs) emerge as solutions, with direct RF-sampling receivers offering a suitable architecture in which the frequency translation is entirely performed in digital domain to avoid analog mixing issues. Moreover, direct RF- sampling receivers facilitate spectrum observation, which is crucial to identify free zones, and detect interferences. Acoustic and distributed filters offer impressive dynamic range and sharp roll off characteristics, but their bulkiness and lack of electronic adjustment capabilities limit their practicality. Active filters, on the other hand, present opportunities for integration in advanced CMOS technology, addressing size constraints and providing versatile programmability. However, concerns about power consumption, noise generation, and linearity in active filters require careful consideration.This thesis primarily focuses on the design and implementation of a low-voltage, low-power RFFE tailored for direct sampling receivers in 5G FR1 applications. The RFFE consists of a balun low-noise amplifier (LNA), a Q-enhanced filter, and a programmable gain amplifier (PGA). The balun-LNA employs noise cancellation, current reuse, and gm boosting for wideband gain and input impedance matching. Leveraging FD-SOI technology allows for programmable gain and linearity via body biasing. The LNA's operational state ranges between high-performance and high-tolerance modes, which are apt for sensitivityand blocking tests, respectively. The Q-enhanced filter adopts noise-cancelling, current-reuse, and programmable Gm-cells to realize a fourth-order response using two resonators. The fourth-order filter response is achieved by subtracting the individual response of these resonators. Compared to cascaded and magnetically coupled fourth-order filters, this technique maintains the large dynamic range of second-order resonators. Fabricated in 22-nm FD-SOI technology, the RFFE achieves 1%-40% fractional bandwidth (FBW) adjustability from 1.7 GHz to 6.4 GHz, 4.6 dB noise figure (NF) and an OOB third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of 22 dBm. Furthermore, concerning the implementation uncertainties and potential variations of temperature and supply voltage, design margins have been considered and a hybrid calibration scheme is introduced. A combination of on-chip and off-chip calibration based on noise response is employed to effectively adjust the quality factors, Gm-cells, and resonance frequencies, ensuring desired bandpass response. To optimize and accelerate the calibration process, a reinforcement learning (RL) agent is used.Anticipating future trends, the concept of the Q-enhanced filter extends to a multiple-mode filter for 6G upper mid-band applications. Covering the frequency range from 8 to 20 GHz, this RFFE can be configured as a fourth-order dual-band filter, two bandpass filters (BPFs) with an OOB notch, or a BPF with an IB notch. In cognitive radios, the filter’s transmission zeros can be positioned with respect to the carrier frequencies of interfering signals to yield over 50 dB blocker rejection
Survey on individual components for a 5 GHz receiver system using 130 nm CMOS technology
La intención de esta tesis es recopilar información desde un punto de vista general sobre los diferentes tipos de componentes utilizados en un receptor de señales a 5 GHz utilizando tecnología CMOS. Se ha realizado una descripción y análisis de cada uno de los componentes que forman el sistema, destacando diferentes tipos de configuraciones, figuras de mérito y otros parámetros. Se muestra una tabla resumen al final de cada sección, comparando algunos diseños que se han ido presentando a lo largo de los años en conferencias internacionales de la IEEE.The intention of this thesis is to gather information from an overview point about the different types of components used in a 5 GHz receiver using CMOS technology. A review of each of the components that form the system has been made, highlighting different types of configurations, figure of merits and parameters. A summary table is shown at the end of each section, comparing many designs that have been presented over the years at international conferences of the IEEE.Departamento de Ingeniería Energética y FluidomecánicaGrado en Ingeniería en Electrónica Industrial y Automátic
Saw-Less radio receivers in CMOS
Smartphones play an essential role in our daily life. Connected to the internet, we can easily keep in touch with family and friends, even if far away, while ever more apps serve us in numerous ways. To support all of this, higher data rates are needed for ever more wireless users, leading to a very crowded radio frequency spectrum. To achieve high spectrum efficiency while reducing unwanted interference, high-quality band-pass filters are needed. Piezo-electrical Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) filters are conventionally used for this purpose, but such filters need a dedicated design for each new band, are relatively bulky and also costly compared to integrated circuit chips. Instead, we would like to integrate the filters as part of the entire wireless transceiver with digital smartphone hardware on CMOS chips. The research described in this thesis targets this goal. It has recently been shown that N-path filters based on passive switched-RC circuits can realize high-quality band-select filters on CMOS chips, where the center frequency of the filter is widely tunable by the switching-frequency. As CMOS downscaling following Moore’s law brings us lower clock-switching power, lower switch on-resistance and more compact metal-to-metal capacitors, N-path filters look promising. This thesis targets SAW-less wireless receiver design, exploiting N-path filters. As SAW-filters are extremely linear and selective, it is very challenging to approximate this performance with CMOS N-path filters. The research in this thesis proposes and explores several techniques for extending the linearity and enhancing the selectivity of N-path switched-RC filters and mixers, and explores their application in CMOS receiver chip designs. First the state-of-the-art in N-path filters and mixer-first receivers is reviewed. The requirements on the main receiver path are examined in case SAW-filters are removed or replaced by wideband circulators. The feasibility of a SAW-less Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) radio receiver is explored, targeting extreme linearity and compression Irequirements. A bottom-plate mixing technique with switch sharing is proposed. It improves linearity by keeping both the gate-source and gate-drain voltage swing of the MOSFET-switches rather constant, while halving the switch resistance to reduce voltage swings. A new N-path switch-RC filter stage with floating capacitors and bottom-plate mixer-switches is proposed to achieve very high linearity and a second-order voltage-domain RF-bandpass filter around the LO frequency. Extra out-of-band (OOB) rejection is implemented combined with V-I conversion and zero-IF frequency down-conversion in a second cross-coupled switch-RC N-path stage. It offers a low-ohmic high-linearity current path for out-of-band interferers. A prototype chip fabricated in a 28 nm CMOS technology achieves an in-band IIP3 of +10 dBm , IIP2 of +42 dBm, out-of-band IIP3 of +44 dBm, IIP2 of +90 dBm and blocker 1-dB gain-compression point of +13 dBm for a blocker frequency offset of 80 MHz. At this offset frequency, the measured desensitization is only 0.6 dB for a 0-dBm blocker, and 3.5 dB for a 10-dBm blocker at 0.7 GHz operating frequency (i.e. 6 and 9 dB blocker noise figure). The chip consumes 38-96 mW for operating frequencies of 0.1-2 GHz and occupies an active area of 0.49 mm2. Next, targeting to cover all frequency bands up to 6 GHz and achieving a noise figure lower than 3 dB, a mixer-first receiver with enhanced selectivity and high dynamic range is proposed. Capacitive negative feedback across the baseband amplifier serves as a blocker bypassing path, while an extra capacitive positive feedback path offers further blocker rejection. This combination of feedback paths synthesizes a complex pole pair at the input of the baseband amplifier, which is up-converted to the RF port to obtain steeper RF-bandpass filter roll-off than the conventional up-converted real pole and reduced distortion. This thesis explains the circuit principle and analyzes receiver performance. A prototype chip fabricated in 45 nm Partially Depleted Silicon on Insulator (PDSOI) technology achieves high linearity (in-band IIP3 of +3 dBm, IIP2 of +56 dBm, out-of-band IIP3 = +39 dBm, IIP2 = +88 dB) combined with sub-3 dB noise figure. Desensitization due to a 0-dBm blocker is only 2.2 dB at 1.4 GHz operating frequency. IIFinally, to demonstrate the performance of the implemented blocker-tolerant receiver chip designs, a test setup with a real mobile phone is built to verify the sensitivity of the receiver chip for different practical blocking scenarios
A built-in self-test technique for high speed analog-to-digital converters
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - PhD grant (SFRH/BD/62568/2009
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Magnetless circulators based on linear time-varying circuits
In a crowded electromagnetic spectrum with an ever‐increasing demand for higher data rates to enable multimedia‐rich applications and services, an efficient use of the available wireless resources becomes crucial. For this reason, full‐duplex communication, which doubles the transmission rate over a certain bandwidth compared to currently deployed half-duplex radios by operating the uplink and the downlink simultaneously on the same frequency, has been brought back into the spotlight after decades of being presumed impractical. This long‐held assumption has been particularly due to the lack of high performance low-cost and small-size circulators that could mitigate the strong self-interference at the RF frontend interface of full-duplex transceivers while, at the same time, permitting low-loss bi-directional communication using a single antenna. Traditionally, such non-reciprocal components were almost exclusively based on magnetic biasing of rare-earth ferrite materials, which results in bulky and expensive devices that are not suitable for the vast majority of commercial systems. Despite significant research efforts over the past few decades, none of the previous works managed to eliminate the magnet while satisfying all the challenging requirements dictated by the standards of real systems. In this dissertation, we introduce several newly invented magnetless circulators based on linear time-varying circuits that can overcome for the first time the limitations of all previous approaches. We analyze the presented circuits rigorously and validate them through simulations and measurements, showing unprecedented performance in all relevant metrics, thus holding the promise to enable full-duplex radios in the near futur
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CMOS low noise amplifier design utilizing monolithic transformers
Full integration of CMOS low noise amplifiers (LNA) presents a challenge for low
cost CMOS receiver systems. A critical problem faced in the design of an RF CMOS LNA
is the inaccurate high-frequency noise model of the MOSFET implemented in circuit
simulators such as SPICE. Silicon-based monolithic inductors are another bottleneck in RF
CMOS design due to their poor quality factor.
In this thesis, a CMOS implementation of a fully-integrated differential LNA is
presented. A small-signal noise circuit model that includes the two most important noise
sources of the MOSFET at radio frequencies, channel thermal noise and induced gate
current noise, is developed for CMOS LNA analysis and simulation. Various CMOS LNA
architectures are investigated. The optimization techniques and design guidelines and
procedures for an LC tuned CMOS LNA are also described.
Analysis and modeling of silicon-based monolithic inductors and transformers are
presented and it is shown that in fully-differential applications, a monolithic transformer
occupies less die area and achieves a higher quality factor compared to two independent
inductors with the same total effective inductance. It is also shown that monolithic
transformers improve the common-mode rejection of the differential circuits
Passive Planar Microwave Devices
The aim of this book is to highlight some recent advances in microwave planar devices. The development of planar technologies still generates great interest because of their many applications in fields as diverse as wireless communications, medical instrumentation, remote sensing, etc. In this book, particular interest has been focused on an electronically controllable phase shifter, wireless sensing, a multiband textile antenna, a MIMO antenna in microstrip technology, a miniaturized spoof plasmonic antipodal Vivaldi antenna, a dual-band balanced bandpass filter, glide-symmetric structures, a transparent multiband antenna for vehicle communications, a multilayer bandpass filter with high selectivity, microwave planar cutoff probes, and a wideband transition from microstrip to ridge empty substrate integrated waveguide
Contributions to the development of microwave active circuits: metamaterial dual-band active filters and broadband differential low-noise amplifier
New telecommunication systems require electronic components with increasing performance. Microwave active circuits are not an exception. In fact, these active devices (such as amplifiers, active filters, oscillators, mixers, switches, modulators, etc.) are a key part of any modern communication device and, in many cases, the components that greatly limit the overall system performance. During the last decades, engineers have been improving the performance and operation capabilities of such active components, in order to satisfy the new requirements that novel communication services were demanding. This development has taken place in two distinct lines of action. The first line deals with the optimization of the fabrication process of the transistors, which are the basic components in most active circuits. This physical improvement usually translates into higher transconductance, lower noise gure or operation at higher frequencies. The other line is related with the circuit topology in which the transistor is embedded. This second aspect handles the interaction of the transistor with other additional components or transmission lines and provides the desired operation (e.g., amplification, oscillation, etc.). This thesis is more related with the last aspect, in which the use of novel active circuit topologies is investigated. Two main research lines are presented. In the first line, novel dual-band active filter topologies are proposed. This multiband response is achieved by the use of metamaterial structures. In the second one, the use of differential low noise amplifiers is proposed for the design of active antenna arrays. The intended application is the development of a broadband active antenna array demonstrator for radio-astronomy applications
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