RF MICROELECTRONICS BEHZAD RAZAVI
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Transcript RF MICROELECTRONICS BEHZAD RAZAVI
2010.08.13
지능형 마이크로웨이브 시스템 연구실
박 종 훈
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Contents
Ch.5 Transceiver Architecture
5.1 General Considerations
5.2 Receiver Architectures
5.3 Transmitter Architectures
5.3.1 Direct-Conversion Transmitters
5.3.2 Two-Step Transmitters
5.4 Transceiver Performance Tests
5.5 Case Studies
5.5.1 Motorola’s FM Receiver
5.5.2 Philips’ Pager Receiver
5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
5.5.4 Lucent Technologies’ GSM Transceiver
5.5.5 Philips’ GSM Transceiver
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
Transmitter Performances
Modulation, Upconversion, Power amplification
Modulation + Upconversion
Transmitter VS Receiver
Transmitter : Only a few forms
Receiver : Variety of approaches invented
Relaxed in transmitters than in receivers
Noise, interference rejection, band selectivity
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
1. Baseband / RF interface
1) FM System
Baseband signal is conditioned
By filter and/or a variable-gain stage, compensating for
manufacturing variations in the VCO characteristic
Because Output spectrum
Oscillator must be stabilized by feedback loop
Frequency synthesizer
Baseband signal modulated by VCO
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
2) Digital phase modulation system
Data pulses must be shaped
To minimize intersymbol interference and/or limit the signal
bandwidth
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
Bandpass pulse shaping
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
GMSK
h(t) : Impulse response of a Gaussian filter
-> Impacts the channel bandwidth
-> Prove more accurate filter
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
Phase and gain mismatch
Ideal case
Mismatch case
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5.3 Transmitter Architectures
2. PA/Antenna Interface
Transmitter output must pass through a duplexer filter or a
TDD switch
Duplexer filters : 2 to 3dB
-> Dissipating 30 to 50% of PA output power in the form of heat
Example
PA provides 1W of power -> 300mW is wasted in the filter
PA efficiency rarely exceeds 50%
600mW drained from the supply to filter
TDD switch : 0.5 and 1dB loss -> higher overall efficiency
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5.3.1 Direct-Conversion Transmitters
1. Direct conversion
Transmitted carrier frequency = Local oscillator frequency
Modulation and upconversion occur in the same circuit
Matching Network
Provide maximum power transfer to the antenna and filter outof-band components
Noise of the mixers is much less critical
Signal is sufficiently strong
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5.3.1 Direct-Conversion Transmitters
Drawback
Disturbance of the transmit local oscillator by the power amplifier
PA output is a modulated waveform with high power and a
spectrum centered around the LO frequency
Injection pulling or injection locking
Worsens if the PA is turned on and off ( to save power)
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5.3.1 Direct-Conversion Transmitters
Solution
Offsetting the LO frequency
Adding or subtracting the output frequency of another
oscillator
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5.3.2 Two-Step Transmitters
Circumventing the problem of LO pulling
Baseband modulate W1 ( Intermediate Frequency)
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5.3.2 Two-Step Transmitters
Advantage
Quadrature modulation is performed at lower frequencies
I and Q matching is superior
Less cross-talk
Limit the transmitted noise and spurs in adjacent channels
Difficulty
Second upconversion must reject the unwanted sideband by a
large factor (50 to 60dB)
Wanted and unwanted sidebands with equal magnitudes
Because of higher center frequency, filter is typically a passive,
relatively expensive off-chip device
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5.4 Transceiver Performance tests
1. Sensitivity and Dynamic Range
In most systems, a minimum detectable signal level is
specified
•In-band intermodulation test
•Output carrier-to(noise+intermodulation)
•[C/N+I)] must not far below 9dB
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5.4 Transceiver Performance tests
•Out-of-band and second-order
intermodulation test
•C/(N+I) of the IF signal must exceed 9dB
•Out-of-band cross modulation
•C/(N+I) of greater than 9dB
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5.4 Transceiver Performance tests
2. Unwanted Emission
Modulation Mask
Below which the transmitter output spectrum must lie
Standard to ensure negligible radiation in adjacent channels
Mask
ACP
IS-54 standards : -26dBc
IS-95 standards : -42dBc
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5.5 Case Studies
5.5.1 Motorola’s FM Receiver
5.5.2 Philips’ Pager Receiver
5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
5.5.4 Lucent Technologies’ GSM Transceiver
5.5.5 Philips’ GSM Transceiver
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5.5.1 Motorola’s FM Receiver
50Mhz±10.7MHz
Reject
interferers
Reasonable noise
figure and linearity
Remove
some
image
Channel
Selection
Amplified
nonlinearly
Walkie-talkies or first-generation cordless phone (50MHz)
No LNA and Image rejection filter
Required some external components
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Matching,
Single-ended
to differential
Spilit RF
signal ( LO
simplicity)
Channel
Selection
5.5.2 Philips’ Pager Receiver
UAA2080T is a single-chip bipolar homodyne receiver (FSK)
Required some external components
Local Oscillator
470MHz (frequency doubler : 235MHz X 2)
Actually operates at the third harmonic of a 78.3MHz crstal
Received single fixed freq. -> freq. need not be variable -> eliminating synthersizers
compact, low-power
But cannot easily generate precise quadrature phases -> Seperation in the RF path
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5.5.2 Philips’ Pager Receiver
Bypolar Technology
Minimize the I/Q imbalance
Even-order distortion is suppressed (Differential circuits)
LO leakage is reduced by cascode configuration (LNA, mixers)
Limited dynamic range is less serious
FSK : High frequency -> High SNR
Bit error rate can be as high as 3%
Because redundancies are incorporated in the data stream to
correct errors
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Mismatchlimited
5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
Matching,
Converted to
Differential
110MHz
SAW
filter
TDD
9.8MHz
1.89GHz
2nd IF is much higher than MC3362 because the DECT channel
bandwidth of 1.7MHz requires a sufficiently high center frequency
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5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
Blind slot
Receive and transmit modes are separated by blind slot
Stabilize the frequency
Approximately 250μs to settle, a blind slot precedes the signal
transmission to avoid leakage of the spectrum into adjacent
channels
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5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
Error Problem
Separation from the feedback loop, the VCO control line
experiences finite charge injection errors
PA is turned on, its input impedance varies thereby changin the
load impedance and hence the oscillation frequency of the VCO
PA active current, about 250mA, drops the battery voltage by a
few hundred millivolts, affecting the VCO output frequency
The sum of these errors must not exceed 50kHz
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5.5.4 Lucent Technologies’ GSM Transceiver
Channel
Selection
900Mhz
To avoid VCO pulling
Lucent Microelectronics(formerly AT&T Microelectronics) offers a single-chip solution that,
along with a low-noise amplifier and a power amplifier
Requires only two external filters
But the IF SAW device tends to have higher loss(and higher cost) if it must filter adjacent
channels to sufficiently low levels
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Allow the use of
two low-cost, lossy
image-reject filter
5.5.5 Philips’ GSM Transceiver
Signal : 700Mhz
Image : 1.7GHz
900Mhz
1.3GHz
Integrated
fifth-order
low-pass
filters
-> IF SAW
filters has
relaxed
1.3GHz Oscillator,
Suppressing the unwanted
sideband
-> LC Filter has relaxed
Philips’ semiconductor offers a pair of RF and IF chips for GSM transceivers
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5.5.3 Philips’ DECT Transceiver
Only two oscillators
Simplifying the prediction of various spurs
Because the system is time division(and frequency division)
duplexed, making it possible to share the oscillators between the
two paths
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