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Microwave Traveling Wave Amplifiers and Distributed Oscillators ICs in Industry Standard Silicon CMOS. Kalyan Bhattacharyya Supervisors: Drs. J. Mukherjee and M. Shojaei EE, IIT, Bombay E-mail: kalyan@ee.iitb.ac.in. Contents. Introduction Coplanar Waveguide (CPW)
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Microwave Traveling Wave Amplifiers and Distributed Oscillators ICs in Industry Standard Silicon CMOS Kalyan Bhattacharyya Supervisors: Drs. J. Mukherjee and M. Shojaei EE, IIT, Bombay E-mail: kalyan@ee.iitb.ac.in
Contents • Introduction • Coplanar Waveguide (CPW) • Traveling Wave Amplifier (TWA) • TWA Based Distributed Oscillator (DO) • Conclusion
Why CMOS? • Low Cost • 50 GHzcut-off frequency for 0.18µm technology • Maturity of process technology • Higher thermal conductivity • Mechanical stability of substrate • Ease of high level integration
Introduction • Traveling Wave Amplifier (TWA) is for constant gain over a broad frequency range (applic. in high speed networks) • Designs use the parasitic capacitances of the active devices that typically limit the high-frequency performance • coplanar waveguides (CPW) as on-chip inductors • A Distributed Oscillator operates in the forward gain mode of a TWA, our designs use only n-FETs, CPWs and a loop we called ‘folded CPW’
Amplifier with Spiral Inductors • Replace large area inductors with coplanar waveguides • Reduce and use parasitic capacitances in amplifier
Design Challenges • CMOS on silicon presents some challenges for RF design: • Lossy substrate and low impedance transmission lines • Low electron mobility in Si • High gate resistance • Low output impedance at the drain • Low transconductance in Si FETs
Zline, LD L /2 L L /2 Zo D D D CPW CPW CPW OUT Zline, LG L /2 L L /2 Zo G G G Zin CPW CPW CPW IN Basic TWA with CPW as Inductors • Distribution of Gain Producing Cells • Formation of Gate and Drain Artificial Transmission Lines • RF signal travels down the gate line • Each n-FET transfers signal to drain line through its transconductance • Signals add in drain line in forward propagating direction
L=0.5 mm W S Tline TOX Silicon substrate Coplanar Waveguide
Layout of Coplanar Waveguide Measured Loss = 0.32dB at 10GHz Kalyan Bhattacharyya et al, IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, Jan, 2004
Gain Cells of the ICs and One Element of Artificial Transmission Line
Bandwidth of TWA in 0.18micron CMOS 1 L-H Lu et al; IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, Nov, 2005
TWA Based Oscillator Design: OSC-1 • Feedback connection from TWA output to input [1][2] • The length of feedback connection is critical • Measured Oscillation Frequency: 12 GHz • Output Level: 5.77 dBm, n-FET width: 60 micron • Phase Noise: -115.16 dBc/Hz @ 1 MHz offset • Kalyan Bhattacharyya et al; IEEE RAWCON 2004 and WAMICON 2005
OUT OUT Drain Transmission Line Drain Transmission Line Drain Transmission Line Drain Transmission Line n Feedback Feedback Feedback Feedback - n n n n - - - - FET FET FET FET n n n n - - - - FET FET FET FET FET Z Z Gate Transmission Line Gate Transmission Line Gate Transmission Line Gate Transmission Line OUT OUT bias bias TWA-based Distributed OSC-1 Layout Size: 1.5x0.642 sq. mm (including the measuring pads)
Measured Loss of ‘folded CPW’ Loss: 1.259 dB at 10 GHz before pad deembedding
Measured Reflections of ‘folded CPW’ S11 = -24.6 dB and S22 = -24 dB at 12GHz
Measured power spectrum of Osc-1 • Bias: 1.8V / 60mA Fundamental is at 12.00GHz, +5.77dBm Second harmonic at 23.92GHz, -34 dBm
Measured phase noise of Osc-1 • PN = -115.16dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset from the 12GHz carrier • Figure of Merit [9] = -176.41dBc/Hz
VCO-Like Simulation for OSC-1 with Cc • Coupling capacitor allows the independent control of the • dc voltage in the gate and drain lines • VCO operation by tuning the parasitic gate and drain capacitances • (‘inherent varactors’ [5]) of the n-FETs
Cascode Cells DO: OSC-2 • A New circuit • for DO Design • Higher Output • Level expected for • OSC-2 than OSC-1, • when both 5 –stages • Simulated Oscillation Frequency: 12.67 GHz, • with 4-stages of cascode gain cells • Kalyan Bhattacharyya et al, IEEE RAWCON’04 and WAMICON’05
Conclusions • Coplanar Waveguides and folded CPW used for Distributed Oscillators in industry-standard CMOS • OSC-1, high Power Level of +5.77dBm at 12 GHz for Silicon DO • Phase noise of –115.16dBc/Hz at 1 MHz • Anew distributed oscillator is proposed (RAWCON 2004) where each gain cell uses an n-FET cascode • Frequency variation of DOs by non-uniform transmission lines changing one or two L values • VCO-Like simulation using MOS VARACTORs at IIT, Bombay
REFERENCES [1] B. Kleveland, “CMOS interconnects beyond 10 GHz,” PhD thesis, Stanford University, August 2000. [2] Behzad Razavi, “Design of Integrated Circuits for Optical communications,” McGraw Hill, New York, 2003. [3] Kalyan Bhattacharyya and Ted Szymanski, “Performance of a 12GHz Monolithic Microwave Distributed Oscillator in 1.2V 0.18µm CMOS with a New Simple Design Technique for Frequency Changing,” IEEE Wireless and Microwave Technology Conference, WAMICON’2005, Clearwater, Florida, USA, April 7 and 8, 2005, pp 174-177. [4] H. Wu and A. Hajimiri, “Silicon-Based Voltage-Controlled Oscillators,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 493-502, March 2001. [5] Kalyan Bhattacharyya’s MASc Thesis, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, June 2004. [6] Yuhua Cheng, M. Jamal Deen and C-H. Chen, “MOSFET Modeling for RF IC Design,” IEEE Transaction on Electron Devices, vol. 52, No. 7, July 2005. [7] Kalyan Bhattacharyya and M. Jamal Deen, “Microwave CMOS traveling wave amplifiers – performance and temperature effects,” IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 16-18, January 2004. [8] Kalyan Bhattacharyya and Ted Szymanski, “1.2V CMOS 1-10GHz Traveling Wave Amplifiers Using Coplanar Waveguides as On-Chip Inductors,” IEEE Radio and Wireless Conference (RAWCON), Atlanta, Georgia, USA, pp. 219-222, September 19-22, 2004. [9] T. Y. Kim, A. Adams, N. Weste, “High performance SOI and bulk CMOS 5GHz VCOs,” IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits (RFIC) Symposium, pp. 93 – 96, 8-10 June 2003.