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Energy efficient radio frequency system design for mobile WiMax applications. Modelling, optimisation and measurement of radio frequency power amplifier covering WiMax bandwidth based on the combination of class AB, class B, and C operations.Hussaini, Abubakar S. January 2012 (has links)
In today's digital world, information and communication technology accounts for 3%
and 2% of the global power consumption and CO2 emissions respectively. This
alarming figure is on an upward trend, as future telecommunications systems and
handsets will become even more power hungry since new services with higher
bandwidth requirements emerge as part of the so called ¿future internet¿ paradigm. In
addition, the mobile handset industry is tightly coupled to the consumer need for more
sophisticated handsets with greater battery lifetime. If we cannot make any significant
step to reducing the energy gap between the power hungry requirements of future
handsets, and what battery technology can deliver, then market penetration for 4G
handsets can be at risk. Therefore, energy conservation must be a design objective at the
forefront of any system design from the network layer, to the physical and the
microelectronic counterparts. In fact, the energy distribution of a handset device is
dominated by the energy consumption of the RF hardware, and in particular the power
amplifier design. Power amplifier design is a traditional topic that addresses the design
challenge of how to obtain a trade-off between linearity and efficiency in order to avoid
the introduction of signal distortion, whilst making best use of the available power
resources for amplification. However, the present work goes beyond this by
investigating a new line of amplifiers that address the green initiatives, namely green
power amplifiers. This research work explores how to use the Doherty technique to
promote efficiency enhancement and thus energy saving. Five different topologies of
RF power amplifiers have been designed with custom-made signal splitters. The design
core of the Doherty technique is based on the combination of a class B, class AB and a
class C power amplifier working in synergy; which includes 90-degree 2-way power
splitter at the input, quarter wavelength transformer at the output, and a new output
power combiner. The frequency range for the amplifiers was designed to operate in the
3.4 - 3.6 GHz frequency band of Europe mobile WiMAX. The experimental results
show that 30dBm output power can be achieved with 67% power added efficiency
(PAE) for the user terminal, and 45dBm with 66% power added efficiency (PAE) for
base stations which marks a 14% and 11% respective improvement over current stateof-
the-art, while meeting the power output requirements for mobile WiMAX
applications.
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Investigation and Design of New, Efficient and Compact Load Modulation Amplifiers for 5G Base Stations. Design, Simulation, Implementation and Measurements of Radio Frequency Power Amplifiers Using Active Load Modulation Technique for More Compact and Efficient 5G Base Stations AmplifiersAbdulkhaleq, Ahmed M. January 2020 (has links)
High efficiency is an essential requirement for any system, where the energy
can be saved with full retention of system performance. The power amplifier in
modern mobile communications system consumes most of the supplied power
through the dissipated power and the required cooling systems. However, as
new services were added as features for the developed mobile generations, the
required data rate has increased to fulfil the new requirements. In this case, the
data should be sent with the allocated bandwidth, so complex modulation
schemes are used to utilise the available bandwidth efficiently. Nevertheless,
the modulated signal will have a Peak to Average Power Ratio (PAPR) which
increases as the modulation complexity is increasing. In this case, the power
amplifier should be backed off and designed to provide good linearity and
efficiency over high PAPR.
Among the efficiency enhancement techniques, the Doherty technique (Load
modulation technique) is the simplest one, where no additional circuity nor
signal processing is required. In this work, the theory of load modulation
amplifiers is investigated through two asymmetrical Doherty Power Amplifiers
(DPA) targeting 3.3-3.5 GHz were designed and fabricated using two transistors
(25 W and 45 W). In addition, more compact load modulation amplifiers
targeting sub 6-GHz bandwidth of 5G specifically 3.4-3.8 GHz is discussed
including the theory of implementing these amplifiers, where different amplifier
capabilities are explored. Each amplifier design was discussed in detail, in
which the input and output matching networks were designed and tested in
addition to the design of the stability circuit to make sure that the amplifier is
stable and working according to the specified requirements. The fabricated
circuits were evaluated practically using the available instrument test, whereas
Microwave Office software was used for the simulation purpose, each amplifier
was designed separately, where all the designed amplifiers were able to provide
the targeted efficiency at different back-off power points. Besides, some
additional factors that affect the designed load modulation amplifiers such as
the effect of the harmonics at the back-off and mismatching the amplifier is
discussed. / European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (SECRET)
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Energy efficient radio frequency system design for mobile WiMax applications : modelling, optimisation and measurement of radio frequency power amplifier covering WiMax bandwidth based on the combination of class AB, class B, and C operationsHussaini, Abubakar Sadiq January 2012 (has links)
In today's digital world, information and communication technology accounts for 3% and 2% of the global power consumption and CO2 emissions respectively. This alarming figure is on an upward trend, as future telecommunications systems and handsets will become even more power hungry since new services with higher bandwidth requirements emerge as part of the so called 'future internet' paradigm. In addition, the mobile handset industry is tightly coupled to the consumer need for more sophisticated handsets with greater battery lifetime. If we cannot make any significant step to reducing the energy gap between the power hungry requirements of future handsets, and what battery technology can deliver, then market penetration for 4G handsets can be at risk. Therefore, energy conservation must be a design objective at the forefront of any system design from the network layer, to the physical and the microelectronic counterparts. In fact, the energy distribution of a handset device is dominated by the energy consumption of the RF hardware, and in particular the power amplifier design. Power amplifier design is a traditional topic that addresses the design challenge of how to obtain a trade-off between linearity and efficiency in order to avoid the introduction of signal distortion, whilst making best use of the available power resources for amplification. However, the present work goes beyond this by investigating a new line of amplifiers that address the green initiatives, namely green power amplifiers. This research work explores how to use the Doherty technique to promote efficiency enhancement and thus energy saving. Five different topologies of RF power amplifiers have been designed with custom-made signal splitters. The design core of the Doherty technique is based on the combination of a class B, class AB and a class C power amplifier working in synergy; which includes 90-degree 2-way power splitter at the input, quarter wavelength transformer at the output, and a new output power combiner. The frequency range for the amplifiers was designed to operate in the 3.4 - 3.6 GHz frequency band of Europe mobile WiMAX. The experimental results show that 30dBm output power can be achieved with 67% power added efficiency (PAE) for the user terminal, and 45dBm with 66% power added efficiency (PAE) for base stations which marks a 14% and 11% respective improvement over current stateof- the-art, while meeting the power output requirements for mobile WiMAX applications.
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