A low-power low-noise direct-conversion front-end with digitally assisted IIP2 background self calibration

Author(s):  
Yiping Feng ◽  
Gaku Takemura ◽  
Shunji Kawaguchi ◽  
Nobuyuki Itoh ◽  
Peter Kinget
Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 1369
Author(s):  
Dongquan Huo ◽  
Luhong Mao ◽  
Liji Wu ◽  
Xiangmin Zhang

Direct conversion receiver (DCR) architecture is a promising candidate in the radio frequency (RF) front end because of its low power consumption, low cost and ease of integration. However, flicker noise and direct current (DC) offset are large issues. Owing to the local oscillator (LO) frequency, which is half of the RF frequency, and the absence of a DC bias current that introduces no flicker noise, the subharmonic passive mixer (SHPM) core topology front end overcomes the shortcoming effectively. When more and more receivers (RX) and transmitters (TX) are integrated into one chip, the linearity of the receiver front end becomes a very important performer that handles the TX and RX feedthrough. Another reason for the requirement of good linearity is the massive electromagnetic interference that exists in the atmosphere. This paper presents a linearity-improved RF front end with a feedforward body bias (FBB) subharmonic mixer core topology that satisfies modern RF front end demands. A novel complementary derivative superposition (DS) method is presented in low noise amplifier (LNA) design to cancel both the third- and second-order nonlinearities. To the best knowledge of the authors, this is the first time FBB technology is used in the SHPM core to improve linearity. A Volterra series is introduced to provide an analytical formula for the FBB of the SHPM core. The design was fabricated in a 0.13 μm complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process with a chip area of 750 μm × 1270 μm. At a 2.4 GHz working frequency, the measurement result shows a conversion gain of 36 dB, double side band (DSB) noise figure (NF) of 6.8 dB, third-order intermodulation intercept point (IIP3) of 2 dBm, LO–RF isolation of 90 dB and 0.8 mW DC offset with 14.4 mW power consumption at 1.2 V supply voltage. These results exhibit better LO–RF feedthrough and DC offset, good gain and NF, moderate IIP3 and the highest figure of merit compared to the state-of-the-art publications.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avish Kosari ◽  
Jacob Breiholz ◽  
NingXi Liu ◽  
Benton Calhoun ◽  
David Wentzloff

This paper presents a power efficient analog front-end (AFE) for electrocardiogram (ECG) signal monitoring and arrhythmia diagnosis. The AFE uses low-noise and low-power circuit design methodologies and aggressive voltage scaling to satisfy both the low power consumption and low input-referred noise requirements of ECG signal acquisition systems. The AFE was realized with a three-stage fully differential AC-coupled amplifier, and it provides bio-signal acquisition with programmable gain and bandwidth. The AFE was implemented in a 130 nm CMOS process, and it has a measured tunable mid-band gain from 31 to 52 dB with tunable low-pass and high-pass corner frequencies. Under only 0.5 V supply voltage, it consumes 68 nW of power with an input-referred noise of 2.8 µVrms and a power efficiency factor (PEF) of 3.9, which makes it very suitable for energy-harvesting applications. The low-noise 68nW AFE was also integrated on a self-powered physiological monitoring System on Chip (SoC) that is used to capture ECG bio-signals. Heart rate extraction (R-R) detection algorithms were implemented and utilized to analyze the ECG data received by the AFE, showing the feasibility of <100 nW AFE for continuous ECG monitoring applications.


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