Title :
An I/Q based CMOS Pulsed Ultra Wideband Receiver Front End for the 3.1 to 10.6 GHz Band
Author :
Vereecken, Wim ; Steyaert, Michiel S J
Author_Institution :
ESAT-MICAS, Katholieke Univ., Leuven
Abstract :
A pulsed ultra wideband receiver front end for the 3.1 to 10.6 GHz band is implemented in a main-stream 0.18 mum CMOS technology. The monolithic UWB receiver incorporates a mixed-signal multiphase clock generator together with an analog demodulation and amplifier chain on a die of 1.4times1.4 mm2. A dual in-phase/quadrature (I/Q) receiver approach, enabling phase modulation of the UWB impulses, is presented and experimentally demonstrated. The design is optimized to cope with the large bandwidths at the RF input stage and the output buffers are able to directly drive an external analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The receiver consumes 120 mW from a single 1.8 V power supply and is capable to detect 107 M pulses per second. Data transfer up to 428 Mbit/s is possible when a 16-PSK modulation scheme is applied, but can be easily scaled down according to the actual signal-to-noise (SNR) parameters
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; phase shift keying; radio receivers; signal generators; ultra wideband communication; 0.18 micron; 1.8 V; 120 mW; 16-PSK modulation scheme; 3.1 to 10.6 GHz; ADC; CMOS technology; analog demodulation; analog-digital converter; dual in-phase-quadrature receiver approach; mixed-signal multiphase clock generator; monolithic UWB receiver; phase modulation; phase shift keying; pulsed ultra wideband; Broadband amplifiers; CMOS technology; Clocks; Demodulation; Design optimization; Phase modulation; Pulse amplifiers; Pulsed power supplies; Radiofrequency amplifiers; Ultra wideband technology; CMOS analog integrated circuits; UWB; radio frequency (RF); radio receiver; ultra-wideband;
Conference_Titel :
Ultra-Wideband, The 2006 IEEE 2006 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Waltham, MA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0101-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0102-X
DOI :
10.1109/ICU.2006.281538