Title :
Two-step channel selection-a novel technique for reconfigurable multistandard transceiver front-ends
Author :
Mak, Pui-In ; U, Seng-Pan ; Martins, Rui P.
Author_Institution :
Analog & Mixed-Signal VLSI Lab., Univ. of Macau, Macao, China
fDate :
7/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper starts with a review of the prevailing channel-selection techniques utilized so far in the design of wireless transceiver analog front-ends before describing a novel two-step channel-selection technique, which handles the traditionally unwanted image, in radio frequency-to-intermediate frequency (RF-to-IF) or IF-to-RF frequency conversion, as a useful adjacent channel of the desired one, and selects deliberately either of them from IF to baseband (or baseband to IF). Thus, one more channel-selection possibility is created for both low-IF receivers and two-step-up transmitters. The consequential benefits of introducing channel selection at IF consist of two. First, many design specifications (such as phase noise and settling time) of the RF frequency synthesizer and local oscillator can be substantially relaxed. Second, a low-IF/zero-IF reconfigurable receiver and a direct-up/two-step-up reconfigurable transmitter can be synthesized to match better with narrowband-wideband-mixed multistandard systems. The operating principles of such architectures are presented in easy-to-understand complex-signal spectral-flow illustrations, and their practicability is demonstrated in the design of a Bluetooth/IEEE 802.11FH/HomeRF multistandard receiver. SPECTRE simulation results validate the reconfigurable functionalities mainly implemented by a triple-mode channel-select filter and a multifunctional sampling-mixer scheme.
Keywords :
analogue-digital conversion; channel allocation; frequency synthesizers; mixers (circuits); phase noise; radio receivers; radio transmitters; radiofrequency oscillators; transceivers; Bluetooth; FH/HomeRF multistandard receiver; IEEE 802.11; IF-to-RF frequency conversion; RF frequency synthesizer; SPECTRE; analog front-ends; channel selection techniques; local oscillator; multifunctional sampling-mixer scheme; narrowband-wideband-mixed multistandard systems; phase noise; radio frequency-to-intermediate frequency conversion; reconfigurable multistandard transceiver; reconfigurable receiver; reconfigurable transmitter; wireless transceiver; Baseband; Bluetooth; Frequency conversion; Frequency synthesizers; Local oscillators; Phase noise; Radio frequency; Radio transmitters; Receivers; Transceivers; Analog front-end (AFE); Bluetooth; Home RF; IEEE 802.11 WLANs; channel selection; intermediate frequency (IF); low-IF; multistandard; narrowband; radio frequency (RF); receiver; transceiver; transmitter; wideband; zero-IF;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSI.2005.851722