This invention relates to microwave coupler technology, and more particularly to a high directivity, low insertion loss, ultra-compact coupler and method of manufacturing the same.
Couplers are typically used in applications such as GSM/CDMA, WLAN 802.11a/b/g, and WiMax 802.16d/e to monitor the output power level of a power amplifier (PA) module. Minimizing coupler insertions loss is critical for maximizing PA efficiency especially for battery powered hand held devices. Improved coupler directivity is required to more accurately provide closed loop power control feedback to the base-band when the hand held device is subjected to mismatch conditions.
Conventional CDMA/GSM and WLAN modules use discrete band-limited thin film ceramic couplers in radio chipsets which have high insertion loss and consume substantial board space. Also, conventional WLAN RF power amplifier modules use on-chip resistive and/or capacitive coupling. This approach results in a large variation detector voltage error due to voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) mismatch.
In other known coupler designs with microstrip transmission lines, the transmission lines have an inhomogeneous dielectric which is partly dielectric substrate and partly air. This inhomogeneous medium results in unequal odd and even mode phase velocities. The difference in the odd and even mode phase velocities causes poor coupler directivity when the coupled length is less than a quarter wavelength.
Several techniques for improving coupler directivity have been proposed. In one approach, the gap between coupled lines is serrated to slow down the odd mode phase velocity without affecting the even mode phase velocity. In another approach, lumped capacitors/inductors are added at each end of the coupler to make even and odd mode phase velocity equal at a particular frequency and improve isolation and directivity. In yet another approach, multiple dielectric permittivities and thicknesses are chosen in a multi-layer substrate stack-up to achieve improved directivity with overlapping quarter wavelength transmission lines. While these and other known techniques may improve upon various performance parameters, no technique has yet been disclosed which can yield a broadband coupler with high directivity, low insertion loss, and small footprint that can be monolithically integrated in a RF integrated circuit.
Thus, there is a need for a broadband monolithic coupler with high directivity, low insertion loss and a compact layout, and a method of manufacturing the same.
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, a system with an RFin terminal and an RFout terminal includes an output matching network. The system further includes a coupler having a thru arm connected between the output matching network and the RFout terminal, and a coupled arm connected to a detector circuit. The coupler further includes a stack of first and second dielectric materials having different dielectric constants. The stack of first and second dielectric materials extends over a top surface of a substrate. The thru arm and the coupled arm extend over the stack of first and second dielectric materials in the same plane parallel to a surface of the substrate.
In one embodiment, the substrate comprises gallium arsenide, the first dielectric material comprises one or more layers of silicon nitride, and the second dielectric material comprises one or more layers of polyimide.
In another embodiment, the substrate comprises silicon, the first dielectric material comprises one or more layers of silicon nitride, and the second dielectric material comprises benzocyclobutene.
In another embodiment, the coupler further includes a conductive ground plate extending under both the thru arm and the coupled arm, the ground plate electrically contacting a bottom surface of the substrate.
In another embodiment the system further includes an input matching network connected between the RFin terminal and a first stage RF transistor, and an interstage matching network connected between the first stage RF transistor and a second stage RF transistor. An output of the second stage RF transistor is connected to an input of the output matching network.
In yet another embodiment, the thru arm has a width in the range of 55-85 μm and a coupled length in the range of 900-1300 μm, and the coupled arm has a width in the range of 50-70 μm, and the thru arm and the coupled arm are spaced from one another by a distance in the range of 3-6 μm.
In yet another embodiment, the thru arm has a coupled length less than one-sixteenth of a wavelength at 5.5 GHz operating frequency.
In still another embodiment, the thru arm has a coupled length less than one-thirty-second of a wavelength at 2.5 GHz operating frequency.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of embodiments of the invention.
In accordance with embodiments of the invention, a microwave coupler capable of covering multiple bands, offers low insertion loss and high directivity, has a compact layout, and can be monolithically integrated in the IC of a target application. In one embodiment, the coupler is implemented using GaAs process and multi-layers of dielectric material. The coupler includes a multi-dielectric layer stack-up and coupled microstrip lines configured to form distributed microstrip transmission lines where the even and odd mode phase velocities are substantially equalized to achieve high directivity. The coupler has a coupling length significantly shorter than the conventional quarter wave length coupled line couplers.
The low insertion loss of the coupler of the present invention helps maximize the efficiency of a power amplifier which is very desirable particularly for such applications as battery powered hand held devices. Also, the high directivity of the coupler of the present invention helps to more accurately provide closed loop power control feedback to the base-band when the hand held device is subjected to mismatch conditions.
As shown in
In step 105, a second dielectric material 108, different than first dielectric material 106, is formed to extend over the first dielectric material 106 using known techniques. In one exemplary embodiment, second dielectric material 108 comprises polyimide with a dielectric constant of 2.9 and a thickness in the range of 0.65-0.95 μm (e.g., 0.8 μm).
In step 107, two conductive lines 110A and 110B, optimally spaced from each other to obtain the desired coupling factor, are formed to extend over the second dielectric material 108 using conventional deposition and masking techniques. In one exemplary embodiment, conductive lines 110A, 110B comprise metal with a thickness in the range of 1.5-2.5 μm (e.g., 2.0 μm). As shown, conductive lines 110A, 110B are formed at the same time (e.g., when forming a single layer of metal) and thus extend in the same plane. Conductive lines 110A, 110B may have different or similar widths depending on the design goals. One of the conductive lines 110A, 110B serves as the coupled arm and the other as the thru arm of the coupler.
In step 109, one or more protective dielectric material(s) are formed over conductive lines 110A, 110B using known methods. In the embodiment shown in
A highly conductive backside ground plate 102 (e.g., comprising metal) electrically contacting the backside of starting substrate material 104 is formed using known techniques. Ground plate 102 may be formed near the end of the manufacturing process, or at an earlier stage. In one embodiment, ground plate 102 is a gold-plated metal to obtain a highly conductive ground plate that does not readily oxidize. The resistance to oxidation eliminates the need for elaborate cleaning and storage procedures which facilitates the subsequent assembly of the integrated circuit chips.
The multilayer dielectric stack-up in
The dimensions W1, W2, S and L are the critical dimensional parameters which are carefully designed to achieve the desired performance for a given frequency of operation. In one embodiment where the coupler is designed for a 2.5 GHz application, W1 is set to a value in the range of 55-85 μm (e.g., 70 μm), W2 is set to a value in the range of 50-70 μm (e.g., 60 μm), S is set to a value in the range of 3-5 μm (e.g., 4 μm), and L is set to a value less than 1300 μm (e.g., 1100 μm which is one-thirty-second of a wavelength at 2.5 GHz operating frequency). The exemplary dimensions correspond to a coupling factor of −25 dB and directivity of 22-23 dB. Depending on the performance criteria, the above dimensional parameters may be adjusted. For example, for a lower frequency of operation a longer L and/or a smaller S may be used, and vice versa. In one embodiment, L is set to less than or equal to one-sixteenth of a wavelength at 5.5 GHz operating frequency. From all the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein, one skilled in the art would be able to determine the appropriate value for the various dimensional parameters fro a given frequency operation.
While the two conductive lines 110A, 110B are shown to extend along a straight line, they may alternatively be shaped differently to, for example, accommodate die size or layout constraints.
A second dielectric material 508 comprising benzocyclobutene (BCB) with a dielectric constant of 2.65 and a thickness in the range of 4.5-6.5 μm (e.g., 5.65 μm) is formed to extend over the first dielectric material 506 using known techniques. A third dielectric material 514 also comprising BCB with a thickness in the range of 8-12 μm (e.g., 10 μm) is formed to extend over BCB material 508 using known techniques. Using conventional masking, patterning and etching methods, two openings are formed in upper BCB material 514, and are subsequently filled with conductive material (e.g., comprising metal) using know methods. Two conductive traces 510A, 510B of the same thickness as upper BCB layer 514 are thus formed. Conductive lines 510A, 510B are spaced from each other based on the desired coupling factor. As in the
One or more protective dielectric layers (not shown) may be formed over conductive lines 510A, 510B. A highly conductive backside ground plate 502 (e.g., comprising a metal) electrically contacting the backside of silicon substrate 504 is formed using known techniques. In one embodiment, ground plate 502 is gold-plated.
As in the
Since through vias are difficult to form in silicon substrate 504, the top side ground connection to the termination resistor R may be made through a bond wire, as shown in
Thus, a coupler in accordance with embodiments of the invention employs two coupled microstrip transmission lines fabricated on the same plane with at least two dielectric layers of different material extending below and one or more protective dielectric layers extending above the coupled microstrip transmission lines. A broad band, high directivity (e.g., 22 dB at 5.5 GHz) and low insertion loss (e.g., 0.2 dB at 5.5 Ghz) coupler is thus obtained that can operate at high frequencies (e.g., up to 10 GHz) and has a coupling length (e.g., less than one-sixteenth of a wavelength at 5.5 GHz) much smaller than and thus consumes far less area than prior art quarter wavelength couplers implemented at the same frequency band. The ultra-compact layout of the coupler together with its implementation in the same process technology used to manufacture monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) power amplifiers advantageously enables monolithic integration of the coupler and the MMIC power amplifier on a single MMIC chip. As compared to the prior art standalone ceramic couplers, the monolithically integrated coupler significantly reduces manufacturing cost. Further, the coupler of the present invention eliminates the lumped elements needed in some prior art approaches to compensate for phase velocity differences.
Moreover, the coupler in accordance with embodiments of the invention can be used in a variety of applications, such as CDMA, GSM, WLAN (e.g., 802.11a/b/g) and WiMax (e.g., 802.16d/e) applications. In accordance with measured data from an exemplary coupler design occupying only 0.3 mm2 in die area, a minimum 20 dB directivity over about 10 GHz frequency bandwidth and an insertion loss of 0.2 dB up to 6.0 GHz (WLAN applications) was obtained.
Input matching network 704 is configured to transform the electrical impedance of the RF input port to the conjugate impedance of the active device in the first gain stage 706. This provides an impedance match that minimizes the amount of reflected power. In some applications, such as low noise amplifiers, an exact power match is not desired. In these applications the RF port impedance is transformed to another impedance that is presented to input of the active device for the purpose of a desired response such as minimum noise figure which is different from minimum reflection.
The first stage RF transistor 706 is configured to provide amplification of the RF signal that is received at RFin port. Interstage matching network 708 transforms the output impedance of the first stage transistor 706 to the conjugate of the input impedance of the second stage transistor 710. This impedance transformation is commonly called matching. It eliminates power reflections between the two active devices, thereby enhancing the efficiency and stability of the amplifier.
The second RF transistor 710 is configured to provide amplification of the signal that is presented to its input terminal. Output matching network 712 transforms the electrical impedance of the output device (i.e., second stage transistor 710 in this example) to the impedance that is presented to the RFout port 716. This is typically the characteristic impedance of the system which is often 50 or 75 Ohms.
The
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art in view of this disclosure without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/675,564, filed Feb. 15, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6483398 | Nagamori et al. | Nov 2002 | B2 |
6603960 | Oida et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
7088201 | Piernas | Aug 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11675564 | Feb 2007 | US |
Child | 11747053 | US |