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
Link To Document :
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