DocumentCode
854144
Title
Broad-band high-power amplifier using spatial power-combining technique
Author
Jia, Pengcheng ; Chen, Lee-Yin ; Alexanian, Angelos ; York, Robert A.
Author_Institution
Electr. Eng. Dept., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Volume
51
Issue
12
fYear
2003
Firstpage
2469
Lastpage
2475
Abstract
High power, broad bandwidth, high linearity, and low noise are among the most important features in amplifier design. The broad-band spatial power-combining technique addresses all these issues by combining the output power of a large quantity of microwave monolithic integrated circuit (MMIC) amplifiers in a broad-band coaxial waveguide environment, while maintaining good linearity and improving phase noise of the MMIC amplifiers. A coaxial waveguide was used as the host of the combining circuits for broader bandwidth and better uniformity by equally distributing the input power to each element. A new compact coaxial combiner with much smaller size is investigated. Broad-band slotline to microstrip-line transition is integrated for better compatibility with commercial MMIC amplifiers. Thermal simulations are performed and an improved thermal management scheme over previous designs is employed to improve the heat sinking in high-power application. A high-power amplifier using the compact combiner design is built and demonstrated to have a bandwidth from 6 to 17 GHz with 44-W maximum output power. Linearity measurement has shown a high third-order intercept point of 52 dBm. Analysis shows the amplifier has the ability to extend spurious-free dynamic range by N23/ times. The amplifier also has shown a residual phase floor close to -140 dBc at 10-kHz offset from the carrier with 5-6-dB reductions compared to a single MMIC amplifier it integrates.
Keywords
MMIC power amplifiers; coaxial waveguides; microstrip lines; wideband amplifiers; 44 W; 5 to 6 dB; 6 to 17 GHz; MMIC amplifiers; broad-band coaxial waveguide; broad-band high-power amplifier; broadband slotline-microstrip line transition; coaxial waveguide; heat sinking; high-power application; microwave monolithic integrated circuit amplifiers; phase noise; residual phase floor; spatial power-combining; spurious-free dynamic range; thermal simulations; third-order intercept point; Bandwidth; Coaxial components; High power amplifiers; Integrated circuit noise; Linearity; MMICs; Microwave amplifiers; Power amplifiers; Power generation; Thermal management;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9480
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMTT.2003.819766
Filename
1256779
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