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Design of RF/IF analog to digital converters for software radio communication receivers

Software radio architecture can support multiple standards by performing analogto-
digital (A/D) conversion of the radio frequency (RF) signals and running
reconfigurable software programs on the backend digital signal processor (DSP). A
slight variation of this architecture is the software defined radio architecture in which the
A/D conversion is performed on intermediate frequency (IF) signals after a single down
conversion.
The first part of this research deals with the design and implementation of a
fourth order continuous time bandpass sigma-delta (CT BP) C based on LC filters
for direct RF digitization at 950 MHz with a clock frequency of 3.8 GHz. A new ADC
architecture is proposed which uses only non-return to zero feedback digital to analog
converter pulses to mitigate problems associated with clock jitter. The architecture also has full control over tuning of the coefficients of the noise transfer function for obtaining the best signal to noise ratio (SNR) performance. The operation of the architecture is examined in detail and extra design parameters are introduced to ensure robust operation of the ADC. Measurement results of the ADC, implemented in IBM 0.25 µm SiGe BiCMOS technology, show SNR of 63 dB and 59 dB in signal bandwidths of 200 kHz
and 1 MHz, respectively, around 950 MHz while consuming 75 mW of power from ±
1.25 V supply.
The second part of this research deals with the design of a fourth order CT BP ADC based on gm-C integrators with an automatic digital tuning scheme for IF
digitization at 125 MHz and a clock frequency of 500 MHz. A linearized CMOS OTA
architecture combines both cross coupling and source degeneration in order to obtain
good IM3 performance. A system level digital tuning scheme is proposed to tune the
ADC performance over process, voltage and temperature variations. The output bit
stream of the ADC is captured using an external DSP, where a software tuning algorithm
tunes the ADC parameters for best SNR performance. The IF ADC was designed in
TSMC 0.35 µm CMOS technology and it consumes 152 mW of power from ± 1.65 V
supply.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/5774
Date17 September 2007
CreatorsThandri, Bharath Kumar
ContributorsMartinez, Silva, Jose
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Format2046279 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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