WIDE DYNAMIC RANGE LOW NOISE P AMPLIFIER MODULE FOR …
Transcript of WIDE DYNAMIC RANGE LOW NOISE P AMPLIFIER MODULE FOR …
WIDE DYNAMIC RANGE LOW NOISEAMPLIFIER MODULE FOR Ka-BANDRADAR APPLICATIONS
Jinho Jeong,1 Youngmin Kim,2 Sangmin Park,3 Younjin Kim,4
Changhyun Park,4 Sangjoo Lee,4 and Youngwoo Kwon21 Department of Electronic Engineering, Sogang University, Korea;Corresponding author: [email protected] School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,Seoul National University, Korea3Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering,Kwangwoon University, Korea4 ISR R&D Lab., LIG Nex1 Co., Ltd., Korea
Received 24 June 2011
ABSTRACT: Ka-band low noise amplifier (LNA) module with widedynamic range is presented using 0.15-lm pseudo-morphic high electron
mobility transistors for radar applications. Two of attenuator-combinedlow-gain LNA microwave monolithic integrated circuits are cascaded to
increase the gain without degrading input power handling capability.There exist two operating modes depending on the level of input power,that is, low power and high power modes. The measurement shows a
high gain of 21.9 dB and low noise figure of 2.7 dB at 35 GHz in lowpower mode at which two attenuators are off. At high input power, the
attenuators are turned on to handle high power, and the modulepresents an attenuation of 6.4 dB with a high input 1-dB gaincompression point (P1dB,in) of 6.5 dBm. The module shows good input
and output return losses better than 9.1 dB in both modes. VC 2012
Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microwave Opt Technol Lett 54:1031–1035,
2012; View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com. DOI 10.1002/
mop.26675
Key words: MMIC; low noise amplifier; attenuator; Ka-band; pseudo-morphic high electron mobility transistors
1. INTRODUCTION
In general, the receiver for radar and wireless communications
should exhibit low noise figure and high conversion gain for
high sensitivity. In addition, it should be capable of a wide
range of input power for wide dynamic range. When strong sig-
nals or interferers are present at the input, they should be suffi-
ciently attenuated to prevent the receiver from saturating and to
protect the receiver. An low noise amplifier (LNA) plays a criti-
cal role in the dynamic range of the receiver, since it is placed
right behind an antenna [1].
Several articles have been published on the design of LNAs
with wide dynamic range as well as low noise figure. Dual-gain
LNA was proposed in Ref. 2, where two gain paths for low gain
and high gain were used. They are switched on and off depend-
ing on the input power levels. That is, the low gain path is
turned on at high input power. In this way, the LNA can handle
high input power, resulting in wide dynamic range. In Ref. 1, a
large size of transistor was used in the design of LNA to
achieve high input power capability at the cost of high DC
power consumption. A GaN device is also good choice for wide
dynamic range LNA, since it allows low noise performance with
high output power capability [3].
For radar applications, attenuators are widely used at the out-
put of LNA [4–6] as illustrated in Figure 1(a). At low input
power, the attenuator is off and LNA provides low noise figure
and high gain. When the strong signal is present at the input,
the attenuator is turned on, which reduces the input power to the
mixer and IF amplifier following the attenuator. Therefore, the
attenuator increases input power capability and dynamic range
of the receivers. In this topology, however, the LNA still limits
the dynamic range, since the maximum input power is limited
by the linearity of the LNA, or P1dB,in. The LNA in Figure 1(a)
suffers from low P1dB,in due its high gain.
In this work, the wide dynamic range LNA module is pre-
sented using two low-gain LNAs with attenuators instead of sin-
gle high-gain LNA, as shown in Figure 1(b). Each microwave
monolithic integrated circuit (MMIC) is designed and fabricated
using 0.15-lm pHEMT technology, and two MMICs are cascaded
on a printed circuit board (PCB). The operating principle is dis-
cussed in Section 2 with a detailed circuit design and simulation
results. The measurement results are presented in Section 3.
2. CIRCUIT TOPOLOGY AND DESIGN
Figure 1(b) shows the schematic diagram of the LNA module
proposed in this work to improve the dynamic range, where two
identical low noise MMICs are cascaded. Each MMIC consists
of two-stage LNA [Fig. 2(a)] and attenuator [Fig. 3(a)]. The
module is designed to provide two operating modes, or low
power and high power modes. At low input power less than
�23.0 dBm, the module is supposed to provide the total gain
higher than 20 dB at Ka-band (35 GHz). Therefore, each LNA
is designed to present half the total gain (or 10 dB) with low
noise performance. The attenuators are off, showing minimum
insertion loss.
At high input power greater than �23.0 dBm, the attenuators
are turned on, reducing the signal power by more than 25 dB
compared with the case of low power mode, which prevents
mixer and IF amplifier from saturating. In this mode, the input
signal is amplified by IF amplifier and the noise figure perform-
ance of LNA can be ignored, since the input power is high
enough. Each LNA is always turned on in order for good input
and output return losses in both modes.
In high power mode, each LNA in Figure 1(b) is expected to
saturate at higher input power due to its lower gain, compared
with the conventional topology in Figure 1(a). In addition, the
input power to the second LNA is dramatically reduced by the
first attenuator. As a result, the proposed LNA module can allow
a linear gain up to high input power, presenting a high P1dB,in
and wide dynamic range. The module is designed to have a
P1dB,in higher than 5 dBm.
Figure 2(a) shows the circuit schematic of the designed LNA
MMIC using 0.15 lm pseudo-morphic high electron mobility
Figure 1 (a) Conventional LNA module using single high-gain LNA
and attenuator. (b) Proposed LNA module using two low-gain LNAs
with attenuators
DOI 10.1002/mop MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS / Vol. 54, No. 4, April 2012 1031
transistors. Two-stage common source FETs are used to achieve
a gain greater than 10 dB which is high enough to minimize the
noise contribution of the insertion loss of the attenuator. The
transistor with a gate width of 100 lm is used for the common-
source FETs. According to the measured noise data up to 26.5
GHz, it also shows the best noise figure performance among the
transistors provided by the foundry. The bias voltages are care-
fully selected, since they strongly affect the gain, noise figure
and output power performance. In low power mode, both gate
bias voltages Vgg1 and Vgg2 are set to �0.8 V at which the tran-
sistor shows a best noise performance with a moderate gain.
The pinch-off voltage is �1.2 V. The noise figure is degraded
by increasing the drain bias voltage as shown in Figure 2(b). In
this figure, the maximum available gain of 100 lm pHEMT is
presented as a function of frequency, together with the minimum
noise figure performance. The measured noise data were extrap-
olated to predict the performance at frequencies higher than
26.5 GHz. Based on this graph, the drain bias voltage is selected
as 2.0 V for low noise figure. However, the low drain bias volt-
age limits the available output power from the transistor, which
results in low P1dB,in. To solve this problem, the drain bias is
increased to 3.0 V in high power mode.
As shown in Figure 2(a), inductive line feedback (L1) is usedat the source of the first FET for simultaneous noise and input
impedance matching. The second stage is designed to provide a
sufficient gain without using source feedback. Impedance match-
ing is performed using distributed elements only such as micro-
strip lines. The bias circuits are designed using quarter-wave
long lines and capacitors as shown in Figure 2(a). The resistors
(Rb2, Rb3, and Rb4) are inserted between the quarter-wave long
lines and capacitors to improve the stability of the amplifier,
even though they may slightly degrade the in-band gain and
noise figure. However, the noise contribution of these resistors
is greatly reduced by the gain of the first FET. The first gate
bias resistor Rb1 is differently connected from others so that it
can’t degrade the in-band noise figure performance. Figure 2(c)
shows the simulated performance of LNA. At a design fre-
quency of 35 GHz, the gain is as high as 13.7 dB with a low
noise figure of 2.4 dB, and input and output return losses are
better than 10 dB.
The attenuator is integrated at the output of two-stage LNA.
In this work, the absorptive type attenuator is designed as shown
in Figure 3(a), since it allows excellent impedance matching
performance in both modes [7]. In low power mode, all the tran-
sistors in the attenuator are off so that the attenuator forms a
conventional 50-X transmission line with half-wave length. The
simulation in Figure 3(b) shows an insertion loss of 1.46 dB at
35 GHz. The transistors are all turned on in high power mode.
The short-ended quarter-wave long transmission lines by on-
transistor Q2 presents very high impedance to input and output.
Thus, the input power is bypassed to the resistor R1 (45 X) andon-transistor Q1. The simulation shows a high attenuation of
15.2 dB at 35 GHz when the attenuator is on. The simulated
return loss at both modes is better than 14.4 dB at 35 GHz. The
Figure 2 LNA design. (a) Circuit schematic of LNA; (b) Maximum
available gain and minimum noise figure of 100 lm pHEMT at various
drain bias voltages (gate bias voltage is fixed to �0.8 V); and (c) Simu-
lated performance of LNA. [Color figure can be viewed in the online
issue, which is available at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 3 Attenuator design. (a) Circuit schematic of attenuator. (b)
Simulated performance of attenuator when it is off (solid) and on (dot-
ted). [Color figure can be viewed in the online issue, which is available
at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
1032 MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS / Vol. 54, No. 4, April 2012 DOI 10.1002/mop
length and impedance of the transmission lines are carefully
determined considering the parasitic inductances and capacitan-
ces of the transistors (all the transistors have a gate width of
100 lm).
3. MEASUREMENT RESULTS
The designed MMIC was fabricated using 0.15-lm GaAs
pHEMT technology. The substrate thickness is 100 lm. The
LNA and attenuator were integrated on a single chip, and its
photograph is presented in Figure 4. The chip size is 2.0 mm �1.0 mm. The basic operation of the fabricated MMIC was veri-
fied by on-wafer measurement. Figure 5(a) shows the measured
small-signal performance (solid lines) of the attenuator-com-
bined LNA MMIC in low power mode, where the attenuator is
off and bias condition is as follows : Vgg1 ¼ Vgg2 ¼ �0.8 V,
Vdd ¼ 2.0 V, and Vatt ¼ �2.0 V. The bias current is 22 mA. At
35 GHz, the gain is as high as 12.5 dB with good noise figure
of 2.5 dB and good output return loss of 22.8 dB. The measured
input return loss is 6.3 dB at 35 GHz, indicating somewhat big
discrepancy with the simulation. In high power mode, the atten-
uator is on and bias condition is changed as follows: Vgg1 ¼�0.9 V, Vgg2 ¼ �1.1 V, Vdd ¼ 3.0 V, and Vatt ¼ 0.4 V. The
gate biases were slightly adjusted to improve the input return
loss and to increase attenuation level. The measured attenuation
or insertion loss is 2.9 dB at 35 GHz, which corresponds to an
Figure 4 Photograph of the fabricated Ka-band attenuator-combined
LNA MMIC. [Color figure can be viewed in the online issue, which is
available at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 5 Measured (solid) and simulated (dotted) small-signal performance of attenuator-combined LNA MMIC: (a) Low power mode; (b) High
power mode. Measured (solid) and simulated (dotted) large-signal performance of attenuator-combined LNA MMIC; (c) Low power mode; and (d) High
power mode. [Color figure can be viewed in the online issue, which is available at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 6 Photograph of the Ka-band LNA module. [Color figure can be
viewed in the online issue, which is available at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
DOI 10.1002/mop MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS / Vol. 54, No. 4, April 2012 1033
attenuation of 15.4 dB compared with the gain of 12.5 dB in
low power mode. The large-signal performance was also meas-
ured as shown in Figures 5(c) and 5(d). The P1dB,in is �4.0 and
6.0 dBm in low power and high mode, respectively. These
measured performances agree well with the simulation and are
good enough to be used in implementing the LNA module of
Figure 1(b).
Two of these MMICs were cascaded on a PCB to increase
the gain without lowering P1dB,in. Figure 6 shows the photo-
graph of the fabricated LNA module. Simple off-chip matching
using transmission lines was performed to compensate for para-
sitic inductances of bond wires. K-connectors were mounted on
the input and output of the module for the measurement (They are excluded in Figure 6 to show the PCB layout and MMICs
with better quality).
The measured S-parameters and noise figure of the module
in low power mode are shown in Figure 7(a). The module shows
the gain higher than 21.9 dB and good noise figure of 2.7 dB at
35 GHz, which is an excellent performance considering the loss
of off-chip matching circuits. The input off-chip matching was
optimized for the noise figure and input return loss. The input
return loss was slightly improved to 9.1 dB at 35 GHz. The out-
put return loss is better than 10 dB over wide bandwidth. Figure
7(b) shows the measured S-parameters in high power mode. The
measured attenuation is 6.4 dB with good input and output loss
better than 20 dB at 35 GHz.
The output power and power gain were also measured as a
function of input power as shown in Figure 7(c). In low power
mode at which the input power is less than �23 dBm, the devel-
oped LNA module exhibits almost constant power gain of 21.9
dB. At input power higher than �23 dBm, two attenuators are
turned on and the module shows an attenuation of 6.4 dB with a
high P1 dB,in of 6.5 dBm. These results indicates that the devel-
oped LNA module can handle high power and provide wide
dynamic range, so that it can be successfully applied for the
millimeter-wave radar receivers.
Comparison with the reported LNA module is presented in
Table 1. It can be found that the developed LNA module in this
work exhibits higher gain and attenuation with comparable noise
figure compared with the X-band LNA module in Ref. 5.
4. CONCLUSIONS
In this article, the Ka-band LNA module with wide dynamic
range was presented using 0.15-lm pHEMT technology for ra-
dar receiver applications. Two low-gain LNAs with attenuators
are cascaded to enhance power handling capability. Attenuators
are placed after each LNA and are normally off at low input
power. Therefore, the module provides high gain and low noise
figure performance. The attenuators are turned on at high input
power to provide signal attenuation, so that the first LNA is sat-
urated at high input power due to its low gain, and the second
LNA doesn’t suffer from power-saturating since its input power
is dramatically reduced by the first attenuator. The second atten-
uator further increases the signal attenuation. In this way, the
proposed LNA module can allow high input power handling
capability or wide dynamic range with high gain and low noise
figure. Therefore, the developed LNA module can be effectively
integrated with the mixer and IF amplifier for high performance
Ka-band radar receivers.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the Acceleration Research Program of
the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology of the Republic
of Korea and the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation.
Figure 7 Measured performance of the fabricated LNA module. (a)
S-parameters and noise figure in low power mode; (b) S-parameters in
high power mode; and (c) Output power and gain as a function of input
power at 35 GHz. [Color figure can be viewed in the online issue, which
is available at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
TABLE 1 Comparison of the Reported LNA Modules
[5] This Work
Technology 0.25 lm pHEMT 0.15 lm pHEMT
Frequency 7–11 GHz 35 GHz
Gain (attenuator off) 17 dB 21.9 dB
Gain (attenuator on) 8 dB �6.4 dB
Noise figure 2.0�2.5 dB 2.7 dB
Input/output return loss > 8.5 dB > 9.1 dB
P1dB,in – 6.5 dBm
1034 MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS / Vol. 54, No. 4, April 2012 DOI 10.1002/mop
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4. S.T. Janesch, K.H.G. Duh, P. Ho, S.C. Wang, and S.M.J. Liu, 0.25
lm PHEMT X band multifunction LNA MMIC with T/R switch
and attenuator achieves 1.85 dB noise figure, IEEE Microwave
Symposium, Albuquerque, NM, 1992, 1179–1182.
5. W. Yau, H. Kanber, C.S. Wu, B.M. Paine, S. Bar, and Z. Bardai,
Design translation of an X-Band multifunction PHEMT MMIC,
IEEE Microwave Symposium, San Diego, CA, 1994, 1155–1158.
6. K. Li, J.-Y. Huang, and J.-F. Teng, Research on receiver dynamic
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7. T. Buber, F. Kolak, N. Kinayman, and J. Bennett, A low-loss high-
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VC 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
AN ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUE TO FASTEVALUATE MUTUAL COUPLINGINTEGRALS IN SPECTRAL DOMAINANALYSIS OF MULTILAYEREDCOPLANAR COUPLED STRIPLINES
M. LucidoUniversity of Cassino, via G. Di Biasio 43, Cassino 03043, Italy;Corresponding author: [email protected]
Received 24 June 2011
ABSTRACT: The analysis of propagation in multilayered coplanarcoupled striplines by means of Galerkin’s method in the spectral domainwith expansion functions factorizing the edge behavior of the surface
current density on each strip leads to the evaluation of slowlyconverging integrals. In this work a new analytical technique to express
the mutual coupling integrals as rapidly converging series is presented.VC 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microwave Opt Technol Lett 54:1035–
1039, 2012; View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com.
DOI 10.1002/mop.26674
Key words: analytical technique; multilayered coplanar coupledstriplines; Galerkin’s method; spectral domain analysis
1. INTRODUCTION
In the past decades and recently, many researchers have devoted
attention to the analysis of propagation in multiple coupled
microstrip transmission lines and striplines, to simultaneously
obtain low computational cost and high accuracy in the evalua-
tion of the dispersion characteristics of the modes (see [1–4]
and the references therein for an overview).
It is well-known that fast convergence can be achieved by means
of Galerkin’s method performed in the spectral domain with analyti-
cally Fourier transformable expansion functions factorising the edge
behavior of the surface current densities on the strips [5, 6].
Unfortunately, the elements of the impedance matrix are
improper integrals of oscillating functions that can have a slow
asymptotic decay. Among these, the mutual coupling integrals
between coplanar strips are particularly troublesome because the
greater the distance between the involved strips is, the much
more rapidly the integrands oscillate.
To guarantee an accurate and efficient evaluation of such
integrals acceleration techniques are typically used. A common
approach consists in the extraction of the asymptotic behavior of
the kernel [7–9]. The slowly converging integrals of the
extracted contributions are independent of frequency and propa-
gation constant and can be expressed in closed form in some
special cases (coefficients of self-contribution or mutual-contri-
bution between two identical coplanar strips). A new very effi-
cient acceleration technique has been introduced in [10], consist-
ing in the extraction of a different contribution from the kernel
so as to obtain exponentially decaying integrands. Moreover, the
slowly converging integrals of the extracted contributions are
expressed as combinations of proper integrals and/or improper
integrals of nonoscillating exponentially decaying functions by
using suitable integration procedures in the complex plane.
In this work, a different approach specially designed to effi-
ciently evaluate the mutual coupling integrals that come out in
the analysis of propagation in multilayered coplanar coupled
striplines is introduced. Observing that the spectral domain
dyadic Green’s functions for such problems are single-valued
meromorphic functions, and the Fourier transforms of the expan-
sion functions are entire functions, such integrals are reduced to
series by means of Jordan’s lemma and residue theorem. The
obtained series are quickly convergent and, instead of what hap-
pens to the mutual coupling integrals, the required computa-
tional time rapidly decreases as the distance between the
involved strips increases. This goal makes the method particu-
larly suited to analyze structures with a large number of strips.
2. FORMULATION OF THE PROBLEM
In Figure 1 L perfectly conducting strips, of dimensions 2ai andcentred at the abscissas �xi with i [ {1,...L}, are located at the
interface between two lossless homogeneous and isotropic
dielectric slabs, of dimensions d1, d2 and relative dielectric per-
mittivity er1, er2, delimited by two perfectly conducting ground
planes.
It is assumed for the fields a behavior with z (longitudinal
direction) of the kind e�jkzz where kz is the propagation constant.
The following homogeneous system of integral equations in
the spectral domain can be obtained by imposing the tangential
components of the electric field to be vanishing on the strips
surfaces [5]
Figure 1 Geometry of the problem
DOI 10.1002/mop MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS / Vol. 54, No. 4, April 2012 1035