

Type of Document Dissertation Author Kuhn, William B. Author's Email Address none@all URN etd-81197-164118 Title Design of Integrated, Low Power, Radio Receivers in BiCMOS Technologies Degree Doctor of Philosophy Department Electrical Engineering Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title Aicha Elshabini-Riad Committee Chair F. William Stephenson Committee Co-Chair Charles W. Bostian none Lee W. Johnson none Peter M. Athanas none Timothy Pratt none Keywords
- None Provided
Date of Defense 1995-12-01 Availability unrestricted Abstract Despite increasing levels of integration in modern electronic products, radio receiver designs continue to relyon discrete LC, ceramic, and electro-acoustic devices for the realization of RF and IF bandpass filtering.
Although considerable research has been directed at developing suitable switched-capacitor and Gm-C
based replacements for these filters, the resulting designs have yet to see substantial commercial application.
A critical problem faced by existing active filter implementations is found to be the power consumption
required to simultaneously achieve narrow fractional bandwidths and acceptable dynamic range. This power
consumption, which can reach several hundred milliwatts, is incompatible with portable wireless product
design. Additional problems include the complexity of tuning control circuits required to achieve small
fractional bandwidths, and diffculties in extending filter designs to higher frequencies. These problems are
examined in depth, and performace bounds and new implementation techniques are considered.
A detailed study of active filters reveals that their dynamic range limitations are fundamentally the result of
regenerative gain associated with the realization of high-Q poles. Thus, some form of energy storage and
exchange mechanism is shown to be required to decrease the regeneration needed. This leads to an
investigation of on-chip LC filtering. Itis shown that on-chip spiral inductors can be designed to resonate with
both intentional and parasitic capacitances, forming stable tuned circuits operating from 100 MHz to over 1
GHz. Although the Q of the inductors employed is typically small (Q < 10), negative resistance circuits can
be used to increase the effective Q to arbitrarily high values. Hence, very small fractional bandwidths (< 2%)
can be obtained. Moreover, even a small inductor Q is shown to provide significant increases in dynamic
range over that achievable in fully active filter designs.
Important practical considerations surrounding the implementation of Q-enhanced LC filters in silicon
CMOS processes are then investigated, including realizing the necessary on-chip spiral inductors and
Q-enhancement circuits, predicting frequency and Q tolerances and temperature stability, and developing
real-time frequency and Q tuning mechanisms. These issues are studied in depth and two prototype filters
designed to validate theoretical predictions are reported. Performance levels achieved by these prototypes
indicate that Q-enhanced filtering offers a viable approach to solving the on-chip bandpass filtering problem.
These filters can therefore be expected to play an important role in the development of future integrated
receiver products.
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