Prevalent third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) improvement methods for low-power low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) in narrowband applications may include two approaches. The first approach may use an auxiliary transistor biased in the weak inversion region to cancel the third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3), but in such an approach, the main transistor may be operated in a strong inversion region with higher linear transconductance (g1=gm) than in the auxiliary path (see for example, the following publications which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety herein: Aparin, V., “Linearization of CDMA Receiver Front-Ends,” Ph. D. dissertation, Univ. California, San Diego, Calif., USA, 2005, hereinafter “Linearization of CDMA Receiver Front-Ends;” and Aparin, V. and Larson, L. E., “Modified Derivative Superposition Method for Linearizing FET Low-Noise Amplifier,” IEEE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 53, no. 2, pp. 571-581, February 2005, hereinafter “Modified Derivative Superposition Method for Linearizing FET Low-Noise Amplifier”). The second approach may operate the main transistor between the moderate inversion and subthreshold regions for finding the optimum bias zone (see for example the following publication, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, Fiorelli, R., Silveria, F. and Peralias, E., “MOST Moderate-Weak-Inversion Region as the Optimum Design Zone for CMOS 2.4-GHz CS-LNAs,” IEEE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 556-566, March 2014, hereinafter “MOST Moderate-Weak-Inversion Region as the Optimum Design Zone for CMOS 2.4-GHz CS-LNAs”).
Thus, a method for reporting measurements of radio frequency (RF) amplifiers using transistors biased in the subthreshold region (and/or weak inversion region) is needed. As such, the proposed approach is directed to an amplifier and corresponding method to improve the third-order distortion performance of a subthreshold (and/or weak inversion) common-source cascode low-noise amplifier (LNA) without addition of an auxiliary transistor.
The proposed approach may include a linearization method (and/or amplifier and/or proposed LNA) to improve the third-order distortion performance of a subthreshold common-source cascode low-noise amplifier (LNA) by using passive components without extra power consumption. An inductor may be added between the gate of the cascode transistor and the power supply, which may improve the third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of the LNA. An inductor may be added between the gate of the cascode transistor and the power supply. A digitally programmable capacitor may be connected between the gate and drain of the cascode transistor. The inductor and/or the digitally programmable capacitor thereby may improve the third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of the proposed LNA.
The mechanism that underlies the linearity improvement may be analyzed under consideration of the LNA's input stage and its cascode stage. An 1.8 GHz LNA may be designed and fabricated using 0.11 μm complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology. Measurement results reveal that the linearized low-power LNA may have a 14.8 dB voltage gain, a 3.7 dB noise figure, and/or a -3.7 dBm IIP3 with a power consumption of 0.336 mW.
The proposed LNA may include an amplifier (and corresponding method) that may include a field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier (M1, or transistor M1 herein) and a cascode FET (M2, or transistor M2 herein). Descriptions herein with are understood to apply to the proposed LNA (amplifier and/or the corresponding method). The proposed approach may also include a buffer (Mbuffer and/or associated buffer circuitry), which may be referred to note that “the buffer,” “the output buffer,” and/or “buffer stage” herein. The “combined” LNA or “proposed combined” LNA may refer herein to any combination of M1, M2, and/or Mbufffer. The proposed approach (amplifier and method) may include, but is not limited to a linear amplifier, a low-noise amplifier, and/or any other type of amplifier. The proposed amplifier may be referred to as “the amplifier,” “the proposed amplifier,” “the proposed LNA,” “the LNA,” “the proposed linearized LNA,” “the subthreshold LNA,” “the proposed linearized subthreshold LNA,” “the subthreshold RF circuit,” and/or “the proposed subthreshold RF circuit” herein.
The amplifier (and corresponding method) may include a cascode FET (M2) in series with the FET amplifier (M1). Each FET may operate with a respective third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) and a respective linear gain (g1). Each respective ratio (g3/g1) of the respective third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) to the respective linear gain (g1) may be positive. The amplifier (and corresponding method) may include an inductor (Lg2) added at a gate of the cascode FET (M2). The inductor (Lg2) may be operatively coupled with other components in a circuit resulting in a first equivalent impedance looking into an input (e.g., source terminal) of the cascode FET (M2) from the FET amplifier (M1). The first equivalent impedance may substantially offset a distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) based upon the added inductor (Lg2).
The inductor (Lg2) may be operatively coupled with the other components in the circuit resulting in a second equivalent impedance looking out of the gate of the cascode FET (M2). The second equivalent impedance may substantially offset a distortion output of the cascode FET (M2) based upon the added inductor (Lg2).
The FET amplifier (M1) and/or the cascode FET (M2) may operate in a range of one or more operating frequencies. The range of each of the one or more operating frequencies may be programmable. Based upon programming the range, the FET amplifier (M1) and/or the cascode FET (M2) may amplify signals within a bandwidth (e.g., narrow bandwidth) at (and/or around) one or more of the operating frequencies. The proposed approach (amplifier and corresponding method) may substantially offset a distortion output within the bandwidth of the FET amplifier (M1) and/or the cascode FET (M2).
The FET amplifier and/or the cascode FET may operate in a range (optionally a programmable range) of one or more operating frequencies between 0.3 GHz and 6 GHz (and/or a higher frequency and/or lower frequency in other CMOS technologies and/or other technologies). The amplifier (and method) may amplify an output of the FET amplifier and/or an output of the cascode FET within a selected bandwidth associated with the one or more operating frequencies. The distortion output of the FET amplifier and/or the distortion output of the cascode FET may be substantially offset within the selected bandwidth.
The FET amplifier (M1) and/or the cascode FET (M2) may operate in a weak inversion region and/or subthreshold region. The other components may include a capacitor (Cgd2_ext) connected between the gate of the cascode FET (M2) and a drain of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor (Cgd2_ext) may add to a parasitic gate-to-drain capacitance (Cgd2) of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor may further substantially offset the distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) and the distortion output of the cascode FET (M2).
The first equivalent impedance may substantially offset the distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) based upon the added inductor (Lg2) and the capacitor (Cgd2_ext). The second equivalent impedance may substantially offset the distortion output of the cascode FET (M2) based upon the added inductor (Lg2) and the capacitor (Cgd2_ext). The capacitor may be a programmable variable capacitor. The distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) may be substantially offset by the first equivalent impedance, resulting in an improved value of an input third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of the FET amplifier (M1). The output of the cascode FET (M2) may be substantially offset by the second equivalent impedance, resulting in an improved value of an input third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of the cascode FET (M2).
The IIP3 (in units of dBm) value may be improved by at least 3 dB. The IIP3 value may be improved by at least 6 dB. The distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) and the distortion output of the cascode FET (M2) may be based upon the third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3). A first offset (goB,M1) associated with the first equivalent impedance may substantially offset the distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1). A second offset (goB,M2) associated with the second equivalent impedance may substantially offset the distortion output of the cascode FET (M2).
The proposed LNA (method and amplifier) may include a field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier (M1) and a cascode FET (M2). A capacitor (Cgd2_ext) may be connected between the gate of the cascode FET (M2) and a drain of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor (Cgd2_ext) may add to a parasitic gate-to-drain capacitance (Cgd2_ext) of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor (Cgd2_ext.) may further substantially offset the distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1). The cascode FET (M2) may be in series with the FET amplifier (M1). Each FET may operate with a respective third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) and a respective linear gain (g1). Each respective ratio (g3/g1) of the third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) to the linear gain (g1) may be positive. An inductor (Lg2) may be added at a gate of the cascode FET (M2). The inductor (Lg2) may be operatively coupled with other components in a circuit which may result in a first equivalent impedance looking into an input of the cascode FET (M2) from the FET amplifier (M1). The first equivalent impedance may substantially offset a distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) based upon the added inductor (Lg2).
The proposed approach (and/or proposed LNA) may include a method of amplifying. At least the above-mentioned and below-mentioned steps/components, mentioned with regard the amplifier may also be applied to the method of amplifying. The method may operate a field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier (M1) and/or a cascode FET (M2). The cascode FET (M2) may be in series with the FET amplifier (M1) and/or an inductor at a gate of the cascode FET (M2). Each FET may operate with a respective third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) and a respective linear gain (g1). Each respective ratio (g3/g1) of the respective third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3) to the respective linear gain (g1) may be positive. An inductor (Lg2) may connected with other components in a circuit, which may result in a first equivalent impedance looking into an input (e.g., source terminal) of the cascode FET (M2) from the FET amplifier (M1). The first equivalent impedance may substantially offset a distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1) based upon the added inductor (Lg2).
In the method of amplifying, the inductor (Lg2) with the other components in the circuit may further result in a second equivalent impedance looking out of the gate of the cascode FET (M2). The second equivalent impedance may substantially offset a distortion output of the cascode FET (M2) based upon the added inductor (Lg2).
In the method of amplifying, a capacitor (Cgd2_ext) may be connected between the gate of the cascode FET (M2) and a drain of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor (Cgd2_ext.) may add to a parasitic gate-to-drain capacitance (Cgd2) of the cascode FET (M2). The capacitor (Cgd2_ext) may further substantially offset the distortion output of the FET amplifier (M1).
The foregoing will be apparent from the following more particular description of example embodiments of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating embodiments of the present invention.
A description of example embodiments of the invention follows.
Requirements for portable electronic devices with low-power radio frequency (RF) circuits may be based on a need to extend battery lifetimes. The low-noise amplifier (LNA) may be a critical block in RF receiver front-ends because its specifications may strongly impact the system-level performance of the complete receiver, including overall noise and/or linearity. Over the past years, some subthreshold (and/or weak inversion) LNAs are reported to achieve lower power consumption (see for example, the following publications which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety herein: Do, A. V., Boon, C. C., Do, M. A., Yeo, K. S., and Cabuk, A., “A Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifier Optimized for Ultra-Low-Power Applications in the ISM Band,” IEEE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 56, no. 2, pp. 286-292, February 2008, hereinafter “A Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifier Optimized for Ultra-Low-Power Applications in the ISM Band;” Lee, H. and Mohammadi, S., “A 3GHz Subthreshold CMOS Low Noise Amplifier,” in Proc. Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit (RFIC) Symp., June 2006, hereinafter “A 3GHz Subthreshold CMOS Low Noise Amplifier;” Taris, T., Begueret, J., and Deval, Y., “A 60 μW LNA for 2.4 GHz Wireless Sensors Network Applications,” in Proc. Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit (RFIC) Symp., June 2011, hereinafter “A 60 μW LNA for 2.4 GHz Wireless Sensors Network Applications;” and Shameli, A. and Heydari, P., “A Novel Ultra Low Power Low Noise Amplifier Using Differential Inductor Feedback,” in Proc. IEEE European Solid State Circuit Conf. (ESSCIRC), pp. 352-355, June 2011, hereinafter “A Novel Ultra Low Power Low Noise Amplifier Using Differential Inductor Feedback”), which may be due to a higher transconductance-to-drain current ratio (g1n/ID) and a lower power supply (VDD). However, a prevalent design challenge associated with subthreshold LNAs may be linearity degradation. In subthreshold LNAs (“A Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifier Optimized for Ultra-Low-Power Applications in the ISM Band,” “A 3GHz Subthreshold CMOS Low Noise Amplifier,” “A 60 μW LNA for 2.4 GHz Wireless Sensors Network Applications,” and “A Novel Ultra Low Power Low Noise Amplifier Using Differential Inductor Feedback”) the input third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) may be less than −10 dBm.
Prevalent third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) improvement methods for low-power LNAs in narrowband applications may include two approaches related to the proposed approach. The first approach may use an auxiliary transistor biased in the weak inversion region to cancel the third-order nonlinearity coefficient (g3), but in such an approach, the main transistor may be operated in a strong inversion region with higher linear transconductance (g1=gm) than in the auxiliary path (see for example, “Linearization of CDMA Receiver Front-Ends,” and “Modified Derivative Superposition Method for Linearizing FET Low-Noise Amplifier”). The second approach may operate the main transistor between the moderate inversion and subthreshold regions for finding the optimum bias zone (see for example, “MOST Moderate-Weak-Inversion Region as the Optimum Design Zone for CMOS 2.4-GHz CS-LNAs”). However, existing linearization methods do not report measurements of radio frequency (RF) amplifiers using main transistors biased in the subthreshold region without use of auxiliary transistors.
The proposed LNA may include a subthreshold RF circuit (see for example, the following publications that are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety herein: Chang, C.-H. and Onabajo, M., “Linearization of Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifiers,” in Proc. IEEE Intl. Conf. on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS), pp. 377-380, May 2013, hereinafter “Linearization of Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifiers;” Chang, C.-H. and Onabajo, M., “IIP3 Enhancement of Subthreshold Active Mixers,” IEEE Trans. on Circuits and System II: Express Briefs, vol. 60, no. 11, pp. 731-735, Nov. 2013, hereinafter “IIP3 Enhancement of Subthreshold Active Mixers;” and Chang, C.-H. and Onabajo, M., “Input Impedance Matching Optimization for Adaptive Low-Power Low-Noise Amplifiers,” Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, vol. 77, no. 3, pp. 583-592, December 2013, hereinafter “Input Impedance Matching Optimization for Adaptive Low-Power Low-Noise Amplifiers”), different characteristics for transistors biased in subthreshold may be identified, and may include but are not limited to:
1.) Higher power efficiency: transistors biased in subthreshold region may provide a higher gm/ID ratio than those biased in the strong inversion region. Furthermore, the drain-to-source voltage (VDS) may be lower in the subthreshold region, which may permit the use of lower power supply voltages.
2.) The change of the contribution and increase of parasitic capacitances: in the subthreshold region, the gate-to-source capacitance (Cgs) may no longer dominate, implying that the gate-to-drain capacitance (Cgd) and/or the gate-to-bulk capacitance (Cgb) may be taken into account for more sophisticated design. Moreover, to achieve similar transconductance gains as in the strong inversion region, it may be preferably required to increase the transistor widths, which may result in higher parasitic capacitances and/or lower transition frequency (fT).
3.) Linearity degradation due to highly positive g3/g1: in the proposed LNA, the sign of g3 may change from negative to positive when the transistor biasing is changed from strong inversion to subthreshold (see for example, “Linearization of Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifiers”). In addition, the value of g3/g1 may preferably depend on the gm/ID ratio when biasing transistors in the subthreshold region.
Measurement results are presented herein for the proposed subthreshold LNA linearization technique (the proposed LNA) that preferably uses passive devices (and/or preferably does not use non-passive devices) for the third-order nonlinear coefficient cancellation without additional power consumption. Furthermore, a digitally programmable IIP3 tuning topology is introduced herein that may be applied in RF front-end calibration methods (see for example, the following publications which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety herein: Chauhan, H., Choi, Y., Onabajo, M., Jung, I.-S. and Kim, Y.-B., “Accurate and Efficient On-Chip Spectral Analysis for Built-In Testing and Calibration Approaches,” IEEE Trans. on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 497-506, March 2014, hereinafter “Accurate and Efficient On-Chip Spectral Analysis for Built-In Testing and Calibration Approaches;” and Choi, Y., Chang, C.-H., Chauhan, H., Jung, I.-S., Onabajo, M. and Kim, Y.-B., “A Built-In Calibration System to Optimize Third-Order Intermodulation Performance of RF Amplifiers,” in Proc. IEEE Intl. Midwest Symp. on Circuits and Systems (MWSCAS), pp. 599-602, Aug. 2014, hereinafter “A Built-In Calibration System to Optimize Third-Order Intermodulation Performance of RF Amplifiers”). Analyses of linearity, gain, noise, and input matching conditions for the proposed linearized subthreshold LNA are presented to follow. Chip measurement results are also presented to follow.
An LNA may include existing LNA linearization methods (see for example the following publication, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, Zhang, H. and Sanchez-Sinencio, E., “Linearization Techniques for CMOS Low Noise Amplifiers: A Tutorial,” IEEE Trans. Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 22-36, January 2011, hereinafter “Linearization Techniques for CMOS Low Noise Amplifiers: A Tutorial”), in which the main transistors may be biased in strong inversion. In some existing approaches (see for example, “Modified Derivative Superposition Method for Linearizing FET Low-Noise Amplifier”), g1 and g3 (i.e., the linear gain and third-order nonlinearity coefficient) may have opposite signs when CMOS transistors are operated in strong inversion, while g1 and g3 may have the same sign when transistors are operated in the subthreshold region. Thus, novel linearization techniques may be desired for subthreshold LNAs due to the potentially differing polarity of g3. As such, g1 and g3 may both have the same sign (both having a negative sign and/or both having a positive sign), in order to preferably operate in the subthreshold and/or weak inversion regions, in which the ratio of g1 to g3 may preferably be positive.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
In the proposed LNA, the bonding/package parasitics and “buffer stage” of
Linearity Analysis. The following shows an analysis of the proposed LNA (130 of
where ω may be the center frequency of the two intermodulation tones at ωRF1 and ωRF2, Δω is defined as |ωRF1-ωRF2|, and Rs is the antenna impedance of son. Referring to
The proposed LNA may be different than existing approaches (see for example, “Linearization of Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifiers”), in that the parasitic capacitance Cgb1 (312) may be included above for the proposed LNA to further improve the accuracy of the analysis, for which more detailed derivations are included in Appendix A to follow. The variables g1,M1, g2,M1 and g3,M1 are the linear gain, second-order nonlinearity coefficient, and third-order nonlinearity coefficient of transistor M1 (180), respectively.
Referring back to
The definition of εM2(Δω,2ω) may be the same as in Equation (2) and may be rewritten as:
The linear transfer function A11(ω) in Equation (11) may be derived in Appendix B as Equation (B.9) to follow. Parameters g1,M2, g2,M2 and g3,M2 are the linear gain, second-order nonlinear coefficient and third-order nonlinear coefficient of M2 (170), respectively.
Voltage Gain. The voltage gain of the proposed LNA (and/or proposed linearized LNA) may be separated to identify the contributions associated with the transistors M1 (180) and M2 (170). In Appendices A and B to follow, the linear transfer functions from Vx to V13 (
Av(ω)=|C11(ω)|×|C21(ω)|, Av(ω)=|C11(ω)|×|C21(ω)|. (15)
In addition to the nonlinearity cancellation analyzed above, a secondary mechanism may lead to linearity enhancement due to the extra components at the gate of M2 (170 of
According to the proposed LNA,
Input Matching Network. For the proposed LNA, the input matching of a subthreshold common-source LNA may be analyzed (see for example “Input Impedance Matching Optimization for Adaptive Low-Power Low-Noise Amplifiers”) without the inductor Lg2 (136 of
and Z13(ω) may be defined above in Equation (8).
Noise. According to the proposed LNA, a noise factor analysis for a subthreshold common-source LNA with inductive source degeneration (see for example, the following publication which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, Yang, J., Tran, N., Bai, S., Fu, M., Skafidas, E., Halpern, M., Ng, D.C. and Mareels, I., “A Subthreshold Down Converter Optimized for Super-Low-Power Applications in MICS Band,” in Proc. IEEE Biomedical Circuits and Systems Conf. (BioCAS), pp. 189-192, November 2011) may result in:
where Ct=Cgs1+Cgs1_ext, ω0 may represent the operating frequency, γ and δ may represent the channel and/or gate noise coefficients, α=g1,M1/gd0,M1, gd0,M1 may represent the channel conductance with zero drain-source voltage, VT may represent the thermal voltage, Qin may represent the quality factor of the input matching network, and c may represent the correlation parameter between the gate and channel noise currents.
Reverse Isolation and Stability. Compared to conventional common-source cascode LNAs, the proposed LNA may preferably require an inductor at the gate of the cascode transistor. In the proposed LNA, the reverse isolation may be improved (see for example, “A New Method to Stabilize High Frequency High Gain CMOS LNA”) in a desired frequency band by sizing of the inductor at the gate of the cascode transistor.
where:
a
3=1+Cgb2/Cgd2,
a
2=(ro2+ZM11+gm2ro2ZM1)/(Cgs2ro2ZM1)+(ro2+ZM1)/(Cgd2ro2ZM1)+Cgb2(1+gm2ro2+ro2/ZM1)/(Cgs2Cgd2ro2),
a1−1/(Cgd2Lg2),
a
0=(1−gm2ro2+ro2+ro2/ZM1)/(Cgs2Cgd2ro2Lg2),
b
2=1/(Cgs2ro2)+1/(Cgd2ro2)−gm2/Cgs2+Cgb2/(Cgs2Cgd2ro2),
b
0=1/(Cgs2Cgd2ro2Lg2),
r02 (704 of
The stability factor K of the proposed LNA may be defined (see for example, “A New Method to Stabilize High Frequency High Gain CMOS LNA,” and “A Noise Reduction and Linearity Improvement Technique for a Differential Cascode LNA”) as:
where Δ may be defined as Δ=S11·S22−S12·S21. The unconditional stability requirement may be K>1 and/or |Δ|<1. S11 and/or S22 may be close to zero when the input and output of the proposed LNA are matched to the source and load impedances.
From simulations of the proposed LNA without the buffer, the reverse isolation at 1.8 GHz with Lg2=3.5 nH (136 of
Measurement Results.
Table I to follow lists the key design parameters of the proposed LNA. The proposed LNA may consume a 480 μA current (with exclusion of the buffer) from a 0.7 V power supply instead of the nominal 1.2 V supply voltage for a selected technology. In order to limit the linearity degradation due to the buffer (and/or output buffer) which may be designed to test the proposed LNA, a 1.2 V supply may be used for the buffer. Note that “the buffer,” “the output buffer,” and/or “buffer stage” may refer to Mbuffer (154 of
The value of Lg2 (136 of
Performance. Referring back to
Table II summarizes the performance of narrowband low-power RF LNAs with operating frequencies which may range from 1 GHz to 3 GHz in comparison to the proposed LNA.
#fully differential structure
$without pads
‡with pads
In Table II above, [1] refers to reference “A Subthreshold Low-Noise Amplifier Optimized for Ultra-Low-Power Applications in the ISM Band;” [2] refers to reference “A 3 GHz Subthreshold CMOS Low Noise Amplifier;” [3] refers to reference “A 60 μW LNA for 2.4 GHz Wireless Sensors Network Applications;” [4] refers to reference “A Novel Ultra Low Power Low Noise Amplifier Using Differential Inductor Feedback;” [7] refers to reference “MOST Moderate-Weak-Inversion Region as the Optimum Design Zone for CMOS 2.4-GHz CS-LNAs;” and [16] refers to reference “A Fully Monolithic 260-μW, 4-GHz Subthreshold Low Noise Amplifier.”
IIP3 Tunability. Referring back to
The proposed LNA may include a 1.8 GHz subthreshold LNA with an IIP3 enhancement technique. The proposed LNA may be designed, analyzed, and fabricated in 0.11 μm CMOS technology. The proposed LNA may include extra passive components to accomplish full and/or partial cancellation of third-order nonlinearity products. The proposed LNA preferably does not require auxiliary amplification circuitry that may increase the power consumption. Therefore, the proposed LNA may be well-suited for low-power applications. Measurement results of the 0.336 mW LNA on the prototype chip may demonstrate an IIP3 of −3.7 dBm, a voltage gain of 14.8 dB, and/or a noise figure of 3.7 dB.
APPENDIX A, ANALYSIS OF THE INPUT STAGE. Referring back to
V
gs1
=V
11
−V
12 (A.4)
using (A.1) through (A.4) and the definitions of gM1(ω) and Z13(ω) above from Equations (4), (8), respectively, Vgs1(ω) may be derived as the following function of Vx (302) and id1 (332):
The relation between Vx (302) and V13 (326), where Vx (302) and V13 (326) may be the input and output voltages of the input stage with transistor M1 (element 180 of
V
13(ω)=(C11(ω)∘Vx+C12(ω1, ω2)∘Vx+C13(ω1, ω2, ω3)∘Vx (A.6)
The relationship between the drain current (id1, element 332) and the gate voltage (Vgs1, element 318) of transistor M1 (180) may be written in terms of its linear transconductance (g1,m1) and its nonlinear transconductance components (g2,M1, g3,M1, . . . ):
i
d1(Vgs1)=g1,M1Vgs1+g2,M1Vgs12+g3,M1Vgs13+ . . . . (A.7)
Furthermore, the relation between Vx (302) and Vgs1 (318) in
V
gs1(ω)=A11(ω)∘Vx+Al2 (ω1, ω2)∘Vx+A12(ω1, ω2)∘Vx+A13(ω1, ω2, ω3)∘Vx . . . (A.8)
The linear transfer functions A11(ω) and C11(ω) above of the proposed LNA may be determined (see for example, “Linearization of CDMA Receiver Front-Ends,” “Modified Derivative Superposition Method for Linearizing FET Low-Noise Amplifier,” and “A Noise Reduction and Linearity Improvement Technique for a Differential Cascode LNA”) by applying a tone [Vx(ω)=ejωt] in the analysis, which may result in:
APPENDIX B, ANALYSIS OF THE CASCODE STAGE. Referring back to
It may be noted that:
V
gs2
=V
22
−V
21 (B.3)
In equations (B.1) through (B.3), the gM2(ω), Z22(ω) and/or Z23(ω) definitions may be determined from the above equations (14), (9), and (10). Vgs2(ω) may be found in terms of V21 and id2 as follows:
The relationship between V21 (410) and V23 (430) in
V
23(ω)=C21(ω)∘V21+C22(ω1, ω2)∘V21+C23(ω1, ω3, ω3)∘V21 (B.6)
Referring back to
i
d2(Vgs2)=g1,M2Vgs2+g2,M2Vgs22+g3,M2Vgs22+ (B.7)
Furthermore, the relationship between V21 (410) and Vgs2 (416) of
V
gs2(ω)=A21(ω)∘Vx+A22(ω1, ω2)∘Vx+A23(ω1, ω2, ω3)∘Vx (B.8)
Correspondingly, the linear transfer functions A21(ω) and C21(ω) may be determined through single-tone analysis [using V21(ω)=ejωt], which may be:
The teachings of all patents, published applications and references cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to example embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/118,148, filed on Feb. 19, 2015. The entire teachings of the above application are incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under Grant No. 1349692 from The National Science Foundation and Grant No. 1451213 from The National Science Foundation. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2016/018056 | 2/16/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62118148 | Feb 2015 | US |