A 24-30GHz 4-Element Phased Array Transceiver with Low Insertion Loss Compact T/R Switch and Bidirectional Phase Shifter in 65 nm CMOS Technology

Author(s):  
Xiangrong Huang ◽  
Haikun Jia ◽  
Shengnan Dong ◽  
Wei Deng ◽  
Zhihua Wang ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Aparna B. Barbadekar ◽  
Pradeep M. Patil

Abstract The paper proposes a system consisting of novel programmable system on chip (PSoC)-controlled phase shifters which in turn guides the beam of an antenna array attached to it. Four antennae forming an array receive individual inputs from the programmable phase shifters (IC 2484). The input to the PSoC-based phase shifter is provided from an optimized 1:4 Wilkinson power divider. The antenna consists of an inverted L-shaped dipole on the front and two mirrored inverted L-shaped dipoles mounted on a rectangular conductive structure on the back which resonates in the ISM/Wi-Fi band (2.40–2.48 GHz). The power divider is designed to provide the feed to the phase shifter using a beamforming network while ensuring good isolation among the ports. The power divider has measured S11, S21, S31, S41, and S51 to be −14, −6.25, −6.31, −6.28, and −6.31 dB, respectively at a frequency of 2.45 GHz. The ingenious controller is designed in-house using a PSoC microcontroller to regulate the control voltage of individual phase shifter IC and generate progressive phase shifts. To validate the calibration of the in-house designed control circuit, the phased array is simulated using $s_p^2$ touchstone file of IC 2484. This designed control circuit exhibits low insertion loss close to −8.5 dB, voltage standing wave ratio of 1.58:1, and reflection coefficient (S11) is −14.36 dB at 2.45 GHz. Low insertion loss variations confirm that the phased-array antenna gives equal amplitude and phase. The beamforming radiation patterns for different scan angles (30, 60, and 90°) for experimental and simulated phased-array antenna are matched accurately showing the accuracy of the control circuit designed. The average experimental and simulated gain is 13.03 and 13.48 dBi respectively. The in-house designed controller overcomes the primary limitations associated with the present electromechanical phased array such as cost weight, size, power consumption, and complexity in design which limits the use of a phased array to military applications only. The current study with novel design and enhanced performance makes the system worthy of the practical use of phased-array antennas for common society at large.


Micromachines ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 390-395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Dong Deng ◽  
Yihu Li ◽  
Wen Wu ◽  
Yong-Zhong Xiong

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (10) ◽  
pp. 105005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mengyi Cao ◽  
Yang Lu ◽  
Jiaxing Wei ◽  
Jiaxin Zheng ◽  
Xiaohua Ma ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 2569 ◽  
Author(s):  
Van-Viet Nguyen ◽  
Hyohyun Nam ◽  
Young Choe ◽  
Bok-Hyung Lee ◽  
Jung-Dong Park

We present an X-band bi-directional transmit/receive module (TRM) for a phased array system utilized in radar-based sensor systems. The proposed module, comprising a 6-bit phase shifter, a 6-bit digital step attenuator, and bi-directional gain amplifiers, is fabricated using 65-nm CMOS technology. By constructing passive networks in the phase-shifter and the variable attenuator, the implemented TRM provides amplitude and phase control with 360° phase coverage and 5.625° as the minimum step size while the attenuation range varies from 0 to 31.5 dB with a step size of 0.5 dB. The fabricated T/R module in all of the phase shift states had RMS phase errors of less than 4° and an RMS amplitude error of less than 0.93 dB at 9–11 GHz. The output 1dB gain compression point (OP1dB) of the chip was 5.13 dBm at 10 GHz. The circuit occupies 3.92 × 2.44 mm2 of the chip area and consumes 170 mW of DC power.


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