Title :
Design and Analysis of Low Flicker-Noise CMOS Mixers for Direct-Conversion Receivers
Author :
Park, Jinsung ; Lee, Chang-Ho ; Kim, Byung-Sung ; Laskar, Joy
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA
Abstract :
This paper presents the design and analysis of low flicker-noise RF mixers in a 0.18-mum CMOS process for C-band direct-conversion receivers. The low flicker-noise mixers are implemented by incorporating a double-balanced Gilbert-type configuration, the RF leakageless current bleeding technique, and the resonating technique for the tail capacitance. First, a double-balanced Gilbert-type mixer using the current bleeding technique has been fabricated and measured for lowering flicker corner frequency. Second, a double-balanced Gilbert-type mixer using the current bleeding technique with one resonating inductor has been designed to improve conversion gain and flicker-noise performance. Third, by using two separate inductors at the node between the current bleeding device and local oscillator switches, conversion gain and flicker-noise performance are significantly improved. A conventional Gilbert-type mixer without any technique has also been fabricated and measured for comparative purposes. The Gilbert-type mixer using the current bleeding technique with two resonating inductors has a measured conversion gain of 16.1 dB, a measured input third-order intercept point of -5 dBm, a measured noise figure of 9.8 dB at 1 MHz, and a flicker corner frequency of 125 kHz while consuming only 7 mW of dc power. To the best of our knowledge, the proposed mixer shows the lowest flicker corner frequency (125 kHz) with more than 15 dB of conversion gain in the CMOS process
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; flicker noise; integrated circuit noise; microwave mixers; microwave receivers; 0.18 micron; 125 kHz; 16.1 dB; 7 mW; 9.8 dB; C-band direct-conversion receivers; CMOS mixers; CMOS process; Gilbert-type mixer; RF mixers; current bleeding; flicker noise; improved conversion gain; resonating inductor; resonating techniques; CMOS process; Current measurement; Frequency measurement; Gain measurement; Hemorrhaging; Inductors; Mixers; Noise measurement; Power measurement; Radio frequency; CMOS mixer; Gilbert-type mixer; current bleeding; direct-conversion receiver; flicker noise;
Journal_Title :
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMTT.2006.885582