DocumentCode
1335441
Title
Nanoscale CMOS Transceiver Design in the 90–170-GHz Range
Author
Laskin, Ekaterina ; Khanpour, Mehdi ; Nicolson, Sean T. ; Tomkins, Alexander ; Garcia, Patrice ; Cathelin, Andreia ; Belot, Didier ; Voinigescu, Sorin P.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Volume
57
Issue
12
fYear
2009
Firstpage
3477
Lastpage
3490
Abstract
This paper reviews recent research conducted at the University of Toronto on the development of CMOS transceivers aimed at operation in the 90-170-GHz range. Unique nanoscale CMOS issues related to millimeter-wave circuit design in the 65-nm node and beyond are addressed with an emphasis on transistor and top-level layout issues, low-voltage circuit topologies, and design flow. A Doppler transceiver and two receivers fabricated in a 65-nm GPLP CMOS technology are described, along with a single pole, double throw antenna switch with better than 5-dB insertion loss and 25-dB isolation in the entire 110-170-GHz band. The first receiver has an IQ architecture with a fundamental frequency voltage-controlled oscillator, and is intended for wideband passive imaging applications at 100 GHz. The measured noise figure and downconversion gain are 7-8 and 10.5 dB, respectively, while the 3-dB bandwidth extends from 85 to 100 GHz. The second receiver has double-sideband architecture, operates in the 135-145-GHz range (the highest for CMOS receivers), and features an 8-dB gain LNA, a double-balanced Gilbert cell mixer, and a dipole antenna. The 90-94-GHz Doppler transceiver, the highest frequency reported to date in CMOS, is intended for the remote monitoring of respiratory functions. A Doppler shift of 30 Hz, produced by a slow-moving (4.8 cm/s) target located at a distance of 1 m, was measured with a transmitter output power of approximately + 2 dBm and a phase noise of -90 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset. The range correlation effect is demonstrated for the first time in CMOS by measuring the phase noise of the received baseband signal at 10-Hz offset, clearly indicating that 1/f noise has been canceled and it does not pose a problem in short-range applications, where neither a phase-locked loop nor a frequency divider are needed.
Keywords
CMOS integrated circuits; Doppler shift; dipole antennas; field effect MIMIC; integrated circuit layout; low noise amplifiers; millimetre wave mixers; millimetre wave oscillators; nanoelectronics; network topology; phase noise; transceivers; voltage-controlled oscillators; Doppler shift; Doppler transceiver; GPLP CMOS technology; LNA; bandwidth; dipole antenna; distance 1 m; double throw antenna switch; double-balanced Gilbert cell mixer; double-sideband architecture; downconversion gain; frequency 90 GHz to 170 GHz; fundamental frequency; low-voltage circuit topologies; millimeter-wave circuit design; nanoscale CMOS transceiver; noise figure; output power; phase noise; respiratory functions; single pole antenna switch; size 65 nm; top-level layout; transmitter; velocity 4.8 cm/s; voltage-controlled oscillator; wideband passive imaging; CMOS millimeter-wave integrated circuits (ICs); low-noise receivers; millimeter-wave Doppler sensor; millimeter-wave imaging; nanoscale MOSFETs;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9480
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMTT.2009.2034071
Filename
5337876
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