Energy Efficient Ultra-wideband Radio Transceiver Architectures and Receiver Circuits
Author | : Fred Shung-Neng Lee |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 123 |
Release | : 2007 |
ISBN-10 | : OCLC:228658295 |
ISBN-13 | : |
Rating | : 4/5 ( Downloads) |
Download or read book Energy Efficient Ultra-wideband Radio Transceiver Architectures and Receiver Circuits written by Fred Shung-Neng Lee and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 123 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Energy efficient short-range radios have become an active research area with proliferation of portable electronics. A critical specification for radio efficiency is energy/bit. The FCC has allocated the 3.1-10.6 GHz band for radios using ultra-wideband (UWB) signals. In this research, I exploit UWB signaling to develop energy efficient hardware systems for high and low data rate radios. In the high rate regime, a modular discrete prototype receiver is developed to observe pulsed UWB signals. Verification of system non-idealities upon bit-error-rate (BER) are easily observed with this system. The results are leveraged in designing a 3.1-10.6 GHz front-end in a 0.18 pm SiGe BiCMOS process, featuring an unmatched LNA and 802.11a switchable notch filter for interference mitigation. A 100 Mbps system demo is implemented to realize a wireless link. In the low rate regime, energy/bit increases because fixed power costs are less effectively amortized over fewer bits/sec. However, by using UWB PPM signaling, the receiver is duty-cycled so that energy/bit is decoupled from data rate. Through careful signaling, system, and circuit co-design, a non-coherent, 0-16.7 Mbps receiver is implemented in a 90 nm CMOS process with a 0.5 V and 0.65 V power supply. This work achieves 2.5 nJ/bit of energy efficiency over three orders of magnitude in data rate. With adjustable bandpass filters and a new relative compare demodulator, the receiver achieves 10-3 BER with -99 dBm sensitivity at 100 kbps. A first-pass acquisition algorithm is developed on an FPGA platform and a transceiver system demo is assembled using this chip.