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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

5 GHz Phase Lock Loop with Auto Band Selection

Chen, Ming-Jing 06 August 2007 (has links)
This thesis presents the CMOS integer-N frequency synthesizer for 5 GHz WCDMA applications with 1.8V power supply. The frequency synthesizer is fabricated in a TSMC 0.18£gm CMOS 1P6M technology process. The frequency synthesizer consists of a phase-frequency detector, a charge pump, a low-pass loop filter, a voltage control oscillator, an auto-band selection, and a pulse-swallow divider. In pulse-swallow divider, this thesis use true single phase clock DFF proposed by Yuan and Svensson to work on high frequency region and to save the circuit area and power. This thesis also proposes an auto-band selection circuit to control the output frequency more precise and easier, and it can also reduce the frequency drift effect caused by technology process or temperature variation.
12

A Cross-Coupled Relaxation Oscillator with Accurate Quadrature Outputs

Peng, Shih-Hao 12 July 2006 (has links)
Because of IC technology evolution and the increase of market demand, the communication industry grows vigorously in recent years. The voltage-controlled oscillator plays a key role in the RF transceiver and provides oscillation signals needed for upconversin and downconvertion. Usually, we separate the signals into I/Q channels for modulation and demodulation in upconversin and downconvertion. Because the quality of the local oscillator influences the performance of communication system, designing a voltage-controlled oscillator that can provide two identical signals in accurate quadrature is necessary. In this thesis, a new quadrature voltage-controlled oscillator is presented. We use two identical relaxation oscillators with adjustable Schmitt triggers to construct the cross-coupled architecture. This oscillator has accurate ( <1¢X) and stable quadrature outputs which are independent of operating frequency and process variations. This oscillator circuit is fabricated in TSMC 0.35£gm CMOS Mixed-Signal process provided by National Chip Implementation Center (CIC). Our design is verified by simulation and measurement results.
13

Design and Implementation of 2.4 GHz Two-Point Voltage-Controlled Oscillators on a Multilayer LTCC Substrate with Embedded Inductors and Capacitors

Lee, Sheng-Feng 24 July 2003 (has links)
In the first, we design and implement a Two -Point Voltage-Controlled Oscillator which applied in Open-Loop and Two-Point Close-Loop Modulation Bluetooth transmitter and include Hybrid and CMOS RFIC design. Second, we design six LTCC embedded components including inductors and capacitors. The extraction result via traditional equivalent £kmodel match the simulation and the frequency response of adopted model can accurate to device¡¦s Self-Resonant-Frequency nearby compare with measurement. In the end, we design and implement a LTCC Two-Point Voltage-Controlled Oscillator module and effective ly reduce the module size.
14

Phase noise reduction in a multiphase oscillator

Alberts, Antonie Craig January 2017 (has links)
Oscillators are ubiquitous to radio frequency circuits, where frequency translations and channel selection play a central role in the analogue communications channel. Oscillators also form part of digital systems as a time reference. Typical heterodyne receivers require an intermediate frequency channel. The associated oscillators and variable filters can only be centred perfectly at a single frequency, and degrade performance at the boundaries of the channel. These circuits also require image-rejecting filters and phase-locked loops in order to enable down-conversion. The penalties for these components are increased circuit area and power consumption. A direct down-conversion circuit will reduce the number of components in the system. A requirement added by the structural change is a passive sub-harmonic mixer. Quadrature oscillators may be achieved by cross-coupling two nominally identical LC differential voltage-controlled oscillators. Because of the widespread use of voltage-controlled oscillators in wireless communication systems, the development of comprehensive nonlinear analysis is pertinent in theory and applications. A key characteristic that defines the performance of an oscillator is the phase noise measurement. The voltage-controlled oscillator is also a key component in phase-locked loops, as it contributes to most of the out-of-band phase noise, as well as a significant portion of in-band noise. Current state-of-the-art modulation techniques, implemented at 60 GHz, such as quadrature amplitude modulation, and orthogonal frequency domain multiplexing, require phase noise specifications superior to 90 dBc/Hz at a 1 MHz offset. It has been shown that owing to the timing of the current injection, the Colpitts oscillator tends to outperform other oscillator structures in terms of phase noise performance. The Colpitts oscillator has a major flaw in that the start-up gain must be relatively high in comparison to the cross-coupled oscillator. The oscillation amplitude cannot be extended as in the cross-coupled case. The oscillator’s bias current generally limits the oscillation amplitude. The phase noise is defined by a stochastic differential equation, which can be used to predict the system’s phase noise performance. The characteristics of the oscillator can then be defined using the trajectory. The model projects the noise components of the oscillator onto the trajectory, and then translates the noise into the resulting phase and amplitude shift. The phase noise performance of an oscillator may be improved by altering the shape of the trajectory. The trajectory of the oscillator is separated into slow and fast transients. Improving the shape of the oscillator’s slow manifold may improve its phase noise performance, and improving the loaded quality factor of the tank circuit may be shown to directly improve upon close-in phase noise. The approach followed describes oscillator behaviour from a circuit-level analysis. The derived equations do not have a closed form solution, but are reformulated using harmonic balance techniques to yield approximate solutions. The results from this closed form approximation are very close to both the numerical solutions of the differential equations, as well as the Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis solutions for the same circuits. The derived equations are able to predict the amplitude and frequency in the single-phase example accurately, and are extended to provide a numerical platform for defining the amplitude and frequency of a multiphase oscillator. The analysis identifies various circuit components that influence the oscillator’s phase noise performance. A circuit-level modification is then identified, enabling the decoupling of some of the factors and their interactions. This study demonstrates that the phase noise performance of a Colpitts oscillator may be significantly improved by making the proposed changes to the oscillator. The oscillator’s figure of merit is improved even further. When a given oscillator is set at its optimum phase noise level, the collector current will account for approximately 85% of the phase noise; with the approach in this work, the average collector current is reduced and phase noise performance is improved. The key focus of the work was to identify circuit level changes to an oscillator’s structure that could be improved or changed to achieve better phase noise performance. The objective was not to improve passive components, but rather to identify how the noise-to-phase noise transfer function could be improved. The work successfully determines what can be altered in an oscillator that will yield improved phase noise performance by altering the phase noise transfer function. / The concept is introduced on a differential oscillator and then extended to the multiphase oscillator. The impulse sensitivity function of the modified multiphase oscillator is improved by altering the typical feedback structure of the oscillator. The multiphase oscillator in this work is improved from -106 dBc/Hz to -113 dBc/Hz when considering the phase noise contribution from the tank circuits’ bias current alone. This is achieved by uniquely altering the feedback method of the oscillator. This change alters the noise-to-phase noise properties of the oscillator, reducing phase noise. The improvement in the phase noise does not account for further improvements the modification would incorporate in the oscillator’s limit cycle. For a given tank circuit, supply current and voltage, compared to an optimised Colpitts oscillator, the modifications to the feedback structure proposed in this work would further improve the figure of merit by 9 dB. This is not considering the change in the power consumption, which would yield a further improvement in the figure of merit by 7 dB. This is achieved by relaxing the required start-up current of the oscillator and effecting an improvement in the impulse sensitivity function. Future research could include further modelling of the phase shift in the feedback network, including the transmission lines in the feedback networks using the harmonic balance technique in a numerical form. The feedback technique can also be modified to be applicable to single and differential oscillators. / Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2017. / National Research Foundation / The Department of Science and Technology, South Africa / GEW Technologies (Pty) Ltd / Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering / MEng / Unrestricted
15

Design and Analysis of a Low-Power Low-Voltage Quadrature LO Generation Circuit for Wireless Applications

Wang, Shen 25 September 2012 (has links)
The competitive market of wireless communication devices demands low power and low cost RF solutions. A quadrature local oscillator (LO) is an essential building block for most transceivers. As the CMOS technology scales deeper into the nanometer regime, design of a low-power low-voltage quadrature LO still poses a challenge for RF designers. This dissertation investigates a new quadrature LO topology featuring a transformer-based voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) stacked with a divide-by-two for low-power low-voltage wireless applications. The transformer-based VCO core adopts the Armstrong VCO configuration to mitigate the small voltage headroom and the noise coupling. The LO operating conditions, including the start-up condition, the oscillation frequency, the voltage swing and the current consumption are derived based upon a linearized small-signal model. Both linear time-invariant (LTI) and linear time-variant (LTV) models are utilized to analyze the phase noise of the proposed LO. The results indicate that the quality factor of the primary coil and the mutual inductance between the primary and the secondary coils play an important role in the trade-off between power and noise. The guidelines for determining the parameters of a transformer are developed. The proposed LO was fabricated in 65 nm CMOS technology and its die size is about 0.28 mm2. The measurement results show that the LO can work at 1 V supply voltage, and its operation is robust to process and temperature variations. In high linearity mode, the LO consumes about 2.6 mW of power typically, and the measured phase noise is -140.3 dBc/Hz at 10 MHz offset frequency. The LO frequency is tunable from 1.35 GHz to 1.75 GHz through a combination of a varactor and an 8-bit switched capacitor bank. The proposed LO compares favorably to the existing reported LOs in terms of the figure of merit (FoM). More importantly, high start-up gain, low power consumption and low voltage operation are achieved simultaneously in the proposed topology. However, it also leads to higher design complexity. The contributions of this work can be summarized as 1) proposal of a new quadrature LO topology that is suitable for low-power low-voltage wireless applications, 2) an in-depth circuit analysis as well as design method development, 3) implementation of a fully integrated LO in 65 nm CMOS technology for GPS applications, 4) demonstration of high performance for the design through measurement results. The possible future improvements include the transformer optimization and the method of circuit analysis. / Ph. D.
16

Wide-Band Multi-Mode Voltage Tuning Oscillators utilizing Phase-Change Switches

Khairi, Ahmad B. 01 September 2016 (has links)
With the emergence of multi-standard and cognitive radios, the need for reconfigurable RF circuits increased. Such circuits require wide-band quadrature voltage controlled oscillators (QVCOs) to provide the local oscillator (LO) signal for up and down conversion. Wide-band QVCOs performance has lagged behind their narrowband VCO counterparts and numerous circuit techniques have been introduced to bridge the gap. This dissertation presents techniques that have been used to implement wide-band reconfigurable QVCOs with focus on dual-resonance based circuits. System and circuit analysis are performed to understand the tuning-range, phase noise, and power tradeoffs and to consider quadrature phase errors. An 8.8-15.0 GHz actively coupled QVCO and a 13.8-20GHz passively coupled QVCO are presented. Both oscillators employ dual-resonance to achieve extended tuning ranges. Impulse sensitivity functions were used to study the impact of different passive and active device noises on the overall phase noise performance of the dual-resonance oscillator and the actively and passively coupled quadrature oscillators. The quadrature phase error due to the different architecture parameters were investigated for the actively and passively coupled quadrature oscillators. The advantages of using switched capacitor tuning as a major part of passive tuning are identified, and the advantage of employing switches with large bandwidths, such as those associated with phase change materials, is mathematically quantified. Furthermore, a novel method for accurate off chip phase error measurement using discrete components and phase shifters that does not require calibration is introduced.
17

Oscilador controlado por tensão para operação programável de 3.7GHz a 8.8GHz para aplicações em múltiplas bandas de frequência / Analysis and design of a voltage-controlled oscillator for multiple frequency bands applications

Henes Neto, Egas January 2015 (has links)
Osciladores Controlados por Tensão (VCOs - Voltage-Controlled Oscillators) são circuitos de grande importância em sistemas de comunicação por radiofrequência atuais. Muitos trabalhos de pesquisa recentes têm focado no desenvolvimento de VCOs para aplicações em uma faixa muito grande de frequências (isto é, suportando amplo tunning range). O desenvolvimento de VCOs com uma ampla faixa de sintonia tem motivação na abertura de bandas de frequência, que até pouco tempo estavam licenciadas apenas para usos específicos, porém agora estão também abertas para a utilização de sistemas de rádios cognitivos. A ideia é que o rádio cognitivo tenha recursos para detectar se um canal (ou faixa de frequência) está sendo usado e, em caso de o canal não estar sendo usado, o rádio cognitivo deve se reconfigurar para operar nesse canal. Desse modo, os rádios cognitivos devem possuir um alto grau de reconfigurabilidade, de forma que possam operar em uma faixa muito ampla de frequências. Esse requisito exige o uso de de VCOs com um amplo tunning range. Este trabalho apresenta um projeto completo de um LC-VCO com uma larga faixa de frequência de operação (widedand). Um amplo tunning range foi obtido a partir do chaveamento (ou programação) do valor da capacitância total do tanque-LC do VCO, gerando assim várias sub-bandas de frequência. O ganho do VCO (KVCO) manteve-se com pequenas variações para todas as subbandas de frequência, com um valor médio de 88.6MHz, sendo 112MHz e 80MHz os valores máximo e mínimo, respectivamente. O ruído de fase variou de -118.4dBc/Hz a -107.4dBc/Hz para as portadores em 3.7GHz e 8.1GHz, respectivamente, enquanto que a potência dissipada do circuito LC-VCO variou de 1.8mW a 5.6mW para todo o tunning range. Para a figura de mérito power-frequency-tunning-normalized (FOMPFTN), os valores obtidos foram na faixa 3.1dB e 11.2dB, comparáveis com a maioria dos trabalhos publicados na área. / Voltage-Controlled Oscillators (VCOs) are very important circuits in current radio frequency communication systems. Much research has been focused recently on developing wideband VCOs in CMOS. The motivation on wideband VCOs is based on the opening of frequency bands, which until recently were licensed for specific uses, for use by cognitive radio systems. The idea is that cognitive radio must have the ability to detect whether a channel (or frequency band) is being used and if the channel is not being used, the cognitive radio must reconfigure itself to operate on that channel. Thus, cognitive radios should possess a high degree of reconfigurability, so that they can operate in a very wide frequency range. This requires the use of VCOs with a wide tunning range. This work presents a complete design of a LC-VCO with a wide operating frequency range (widedand). A wide tunning range has been obtained from the switching (or programming) the value of the total capacitance of the LC-tank of the VCO, thereby generating multiple frequency sub-bands. The VCO gain (KVCO) was maintained with small variations for all frequency sub-bands, with an average value of 88.6MHz, with 80MHz and 112MHz for the minimum and maximum values, respectively. The phase noise ranged from -118.4dBc/Hz to -107.4dBc/Hz for carriers at 3.7GHz and 8.1GHz, respectively, while the power dissipated in the LC-VCO circuit ranged from 1.8mW to 5.6mW for all tunning range. For the figure of merit power-frequency-tuning-normalized (FOMPFTN), the results were in the 3.1dB to 11.2dB range, comparable to most recently published works.
18

Oscilador controlado por tensão para operação programável de 3.7GHz a 8.8GHz para aplicações em múltiplas bandas de frequência / Analysis and design of a voltage-controlled oscillator for multiple frequency bands applications

Henes Neto, Egas January 2015 (has links)
Osciladores Controlados por Tensão (VCOs - Voltage-Controlled Oscillators) são circuitos de grande importância em sistemas de comunicação por radiofrequência atuais. Muitos trabalhos de pesquisa recentes têm focado no desenvolvimento de VCOs para aplicações em uma faixa muito grande de frequências (isto é, suportando amplo tunning range). O desenvolvimento de VCOs com uma ampla faixa de sintonia tem motivação na abertura de bandas de frequência, que até pouco tempo estavam licenciadas apenas para usos específicos, porém agora estão também abertas para a utilização de sistemas de rádios cognitivos. A ideia é que o rádio cognitivo tenha recursos para detectar se um canal (ou faixa de frequência) está sendo usado e, em caso de o canal não estar sendo usado, o rádio cognitivo deve se reconfigurar para operar nesse canal. Desse modo, os rádios cognitivos devem possuir um alto grau de reconfigurabilidade, de forma que possam operar em uma faixa muito ampla de frequências. Esse requisito exige o uso de de VCOs com um amplo tunning range. Este trabalho apresenta um projeto completo de um LC-VCO com uma larga faixa de frequência de operação (widedand). Um amplo tunning range foi obtido a partir do chaveamento (ou programação) do valor da capacitância total do tanque-LC do VCO, gerando assim várias sub-bandas de frequência. O ganho do VCO (KVCO) manteve-se com pequenas variações para todas as subbandas de frequência, com um valor médio de 88.6MHz, sendo 112MHz e 80MHz os valores máximo e mínimo, respectivamente. O ruído de fase variou de -118.4dBc/Hz a -107.4dBc/Hz para as portadores em 3.7GHz e 8.1GHz, respectivamente, enquanto que a potência dissipada do circuito LC-VCO variou de 1.8mW a 5.6mW para todo o tunning range. Para a figura de mérito power-frequency-tunning-normalized (FOMPFTN), os valores obtidos foram na faixa 3.1dB e 11.2dB, comparáveis com a maioria dos trabalhos publicados na área. / Voltage-Controlled Oscillators (VCOs) are very important circuits in current radio frequency communication systems. Much research has been focused recently on developing wideband VCOs in CMOS. The motivation on wideband VCOs is based on the opening of frequency bands, which until recently were licensed for specific uses, for use by cognitive radio systems. The idea is that cognitive radio must have the ability to detect whether a channel (or frequency band) is being used and if the channel is not being used, the cognitive radio must reconfigure itself to operate on that channel. Thus, cognitive radios should possess a high degree of reconfigurability, so that they can operate in a very wide frequency range. This requires the use of VCOs with a wide tunning range. This work presents a complete design of a LC-VCO with a wide operating frequency range (widedand). A wide tunning range has been obtained from the switching (or programming) the value of the total capacitance of the LC-tank of the VCO, thereby generating multiple frequency sub-bands. The VCO gain (KVCO) was maintained with small variations for all frequency sub-bands, with an average value of 88.6MHz, with 80MHz and 112MHz for the minimum and maximum values, respectively. The phase noise ranged from -118.4dBc/Hz to -107.4dBc/Hz for carriers at 3.7GHz and 8.1GHz, respectively, while the power dissipated in the LC-VCO circuit ranged from 1.8mW to 5.6mW for all tunning range. For the figure of merit power-frequency-tuning-normalized (FOMPFTN), the results were in the 3.1dB to 11.2dB range, comparable to most recently published works.
19

Oscilador controlado por tensão para operação programável de 3.7GHz a 8.8GHz para aplicações em múltiplas bandas de frequência / Analysis and design of a voltage-controlled oscillator for multiple frequency bands applications

Henes Neto, Egas January 2015 (has links)
Osciladores Controlados por Tensão (VCOs - Voltage-Controlled Oscillators) são circuitos de grande importância em sistemas de comunicação por radiofrequência atuais. Muitos trabalhos de pesquisa recentes têm focado no desenvolvimento de VCOs para aplicações em uma faixa muito grande de frequências (isto é, suportando amplo tunning range). O desenvolvimento de VCOs com uma ampla faixa de sintonia tem motivação na abertura de bandas de frequência, que até pouco tempo estavam licenciadas apenas para usos específicos, porém agora estão também abertas para a utilização de sistemas de rádios cognitivos. A ideia é que o rádio cognitivo tenha recursos para detectar se um canal (ou faixa de frequência) está sendo usado e, em caso de o canal não estar sendo usado, o rádio cognitivo deve se reconfigurar para operar nesse canal. Desse modo, os rádios cognitivos devem possuir um alto grau de reconfigurabilidade, de forma que possam operar em uma faixa muito ampla de frequências. Esse requisito exige o uso de de VCOs com um amplo tunning range. Este trabalho apresenta um projeto completo de um LC-VCO com uma larga faixa de frequência de operação (widedand). Um amplo tunning range foi obtido a partir do chaveamento (ou programação) do valor da capacitância total do tanque-LC do VCO, gerando assim várias sub-bandas de frequência. O ganho do VCO (KVCO) manteve-se com pequenas variações para todas as subbandas de frequência, com um valor médio de 88.6MHz, sendo 112MHz e 80MHz os valores máximo e mínimo, respectivamente. O ruído de fase variou de -118.4dBc/Hz a -107.4dBc/Hz para as portadores em 3.7GHz e 8.1GHz, respectivamente, enquanto que a potência dissipada do circuito LC-VCO variou de 1.8mW a 5.6mW para todo o tunning range. Para a figura de mérito power-frequency-tunning-normalized (FOMPFTN), os valores obtidos foram na faixa 3.1dB e 11.2dB, comparáveis com a maioria dos trabalhos publicados na área. / Voltage-Controlled Oscillators (VCOs) are very important circuits in current radio frequency communication systems. Much research has been focused recently on developing wideband VCOs in CMOS. The motivation on wideband VCOs is based on the opening of frequency bands, which until recently were licensed for specific uses, for use by cognitive radio systems. The idea is that cognitive radio must have the ability to detect whether a channel (or frequency band) is being used and if the channel is not being used, the cognitive radio must reconfigure itself to operate on that channel. Thus, cognitive radios should possess a high degree of reconfigurability, so that they can operate in a very wide frequency range. This requires the use of VCOs with a wide tunning range. This work presents a complete design of a LC-VCO with a wide operating frequency range (widedand). A wide tunning range has been obtained from the switching (or programming) the value of the total capacitance of the LC-tank of the VCO, thereby generating multiple frequency sub-bands. The VCO gain (KVCO) was maintained with small variations for all frequency sub-bands, with an average value of 88.6MHz, with 80MHz and 112MHz for the minimum and maximum values, respectively. The phase noise ranged from -118.4dBc/Hz to -107.4dBc/Hz for carriers at 3.7GHz and 8.1GHz, respectively, while the power dissipated in the LC-VCO circuit ranged from 1.8mW to 5.6mW for all tunning range. For the figure of merit power-frequency-tuning-normalized (FOMPFTN), the results were in the 3.1dB to 11.2dB range, comparable to most recently published works.
20

High Performance RF Circuit Design: High Temperature, Ultra-Low Phase Noise, and Low Complexity

Lohrabi Pour, Fariborz 21 January 2022 (has links)
Advanced achievements in the area of RF circuit design led to a significant increase in availability of wireless communications in everyday life. However, the rapid growth in utilizing the RF equipment has brought several challenges in different aspects of RF circuit design. This has been motivating researchers to introduce solution to cope with these challenges and further improve the performance of the RF circuits. In this dissertation, we focus on the improvements in three aspects of the circuit design. High temperature and temperature compensated transmitter design, ultra-low phase noise signal generators, and compact and low complexity polar transmitter design. Increase in the ambient temperature can impact the performance of the entire communication system. However, the RF hardware is main part of the system that is under the impact of the temperature variations in which it can change the characteristics of the individual building blocks of the RF chain. Moreover, transistors are the main elements in the circuit whose performance variation must be consider when the design target is compensating the temperature effects. The influence of the temperature variation is studied on the transistors and the building blocks in order to find the most effective approaches to compensate these variations and stabilize the performance of the RF chain at temperatures up to 220 C. A temperature sensor is designed to sense these variations and adjust the characteristics of the circuit components (e.g. bias voltages), accordingly. Further, a new variable gain phase shifter (VGPS) architecture is introduced toward minimizing the temperature impact on its performance in a phased-array transmitter architecture. Finally, a power amplifier as the last stage in a transmitter chain is designed and the variation in its performance with temperature is compensated through the VGPS stage. The transmitter is prototyped to evaluate its performance in practice. Another contribution of this dissertation is to introduce a novel voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) structure to reduce the phase noise level below state-of-the-art. The noise to phase noise mechanism in the introduced doubly tuned oscillator is studied using linear time-variant (LTV) theory to identify the dominant noise sources and either eliminate or suppress these noise sources by introducing effective mechanism such as impedance scaling. The designed VCO is fabricated and measurement results are carried out that justified the accuracy of the analyses and effectiveness of the introduced design approach. Lastly, we introduce a compact and simple polar transmitter architecture. This type of transmitters was firstly proposed to overcome the serious shortcomings in the IQ transmitters, such as IQ imbalance and carrier leakage. However, there is still several challenges in their design. We introduce a transmitter architecture that operates based on charge to phase translation mechanism in the oscillator. This leads to significantly reduction in the design complexity, die area, and power dissipation. Further, it eliminates a number of serious issues in the design such as sampling rate of the DACs. comprehensive post-layout simulations were also performed to evaluate its performance. / Doctor of Philosophy / To keep up with the ever-growing demand for exchanging information through a radio frequency (RF) wireless network, the specification of the communication hardware (i.e. transmitter and receiver) must be improved as the bottleneck of the system. This has been motivating engineers to introduce new and efficient approaches toward this goal. In this dissertation however, we study three aspects of the circuit design. First, variation in the ambient temperature can significantly degrade the performance of the communication system. Therefore, we study these variations on the performance of the transmitter at high temperature (i.e. above 200 C). Then, the temperature compensation approaches are introduced to minimize the impact of the temperature changes. The effectiveness of the introduced techniques are validated through measurements of the prototyped transmitter. Second, signal generators (i.e. oscillators) are the inseparable blocks of the transmitters. Phase noise is one of the most important specifications of the oscillators that can directly be translated to the quality and data rate of the communication. A new oscillator structure targeting ultra-low phase noise is introduced in the second part of this dissertation. The designed oscillator is fabricated and measured to evaluate its performance. Finally, a new polar transmitter architecture for low power applications is introduced. The transmitter offers design simplicity and compact size compared to other polar transmitter architectures while high performance.

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