A broadband RF front-end having a direct conversion architecture has been developed. The RF front-end consists of two broadband quadrature mixers, a multi-band local oscillator, and a broadband low-noise variable gain amplifier (LNVGA). The mixer achieves broadband characteristics through the incorporation of an in-phase power divider and a 45-degree power divider. The in-phase power divider achieves broadband characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor. The 45-degree power divider achieves broadband phase characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor and a compensation resistor. The local oscillator, which is composed of two VCOs, two frequency dividers, and four switches, can cover three systems including one FDD system. The LNVGA achieves its broadband characteristics without the use of reactance elements, such as inductors or capacitors. In a trial demonstration, when the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a demodulator experimentally demonstrated an amplitude balance of less than 1.6 dB and a quadrature phase error of less than 3 degrees. When the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a modulator demonstrated an image ratio of less than -30 dBc. The local oscillator demonstrated multi-band characteristics, which are able to cover the target frequencies for three systems (PDC, PHS, 2.4 GHz WLAN). From 900 MHz to 2.5 GHz, the amplifier shows a noise figure of less than 2.1 dB and a gain of 28
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Munenari KAWASHIMA, Tadao NAKAGAWA, Hitoshi HAYASHI, Kenjiro NISHIKAWA, Katsuhiko ARAKI, "A 0.9-2.6 GHz Broadband RF Front-End Chip-Set with a Direct Conversion Architecture" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications,
vol. E85-B, no. 12, pp. 2732-2740, December 2002, doi: .
Abstract: A broadband RF front-end having a direct conversion architecture has been developed. The RF front-end consists of two broadband quadrature mixers, a multi-band local oscillator, and a broadband low-noise variable gain amplifier (LNVGA). The mixer achieves broadband characteristics through the incorporation of an in-phase power divider and a 45-degree power divider. The in-phase power divider achieves broadband characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor. The 45-degree power divider achieves broadband phase characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor and a compensation resistor. The local oscillator, which is composed of two VCOs, two frequency dividers, and four switches, can cover three systems including one FDD system. The LNVGA achieves its broadband characteristics without the use of reactance elements, such as inductors or capacitors. In a trial demonstration, when the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a demodulator experimentally demonstrated an amplitude balance of less than 1.6 dB and a quadrature phase error of less than 3 degrees. When the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a modulator demonstrated an image ratio of less than -30 dBc. The local oscillator demonstrated multi-band characteristics, which are able to cover the target frequencies for three systems (PDC, PHS, 2.4 GHz WLAN). From 900 MHz to 2.5 GHz, the amplifier shows a noise figure of less than 2.1 dB and a gain of 28
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/communications/10.1587/e85-b_12_2732/_p
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@ARTICLE{e85-b_12_2732,
author={Munenari KAWASHIMA, Tadao NAKAGAWA, Hitoshi HAYASHI, Kenjiro NISHIKAWA, Katsuhiko ARAKI, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications},
title={A 0.9-2.6 GHz Broadband RF Front-End Chip-Set with a Direct Conversion Architecture},
year={2002},
volume={E85-B},
number={12},
pages={2732-2740},
abstract={A broadband RF front-end having a direct conversion architecture has been developed. The RF front-end consists of two broadband quadrature mixers, a multi-band local oscillator, and a broadband low-noise variable gain amplifier (LNVGA). The mixer achieves broadband characteristics through the incorporation of an in-phase power divider and a 45-degree power divider. The in-phase power divider achieves broadband characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor. The 45-degree power divider achieves broadband phase characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor and a compensation resistor. The local oscillator, which is composed of two VCOs, two frequency dividers, and four switches, can cover three systems including one FDD system. The LNVGA achieves its broadband characteristics without the use of reactance elements, such as inductors or capacitors. In a trial demonstration, when the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a demodulator experimentally demonstrated an amplitude balance of less than 1.6 dB and a quadrature phase error of less than 3 degrees. When the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a modulator demonstrated an image ratio of less than -30 dBc. The local oscillator demonstrated multi-band characteristics, which are able to cover the target frequencies for three systems (PDC, PHS, 2.4 GHz WLAN). From 900 MHz to 2.5 GHz, the amplifier shows a noise figure of less than 2.1 dB and a gain of 28
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={December},}
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TY - JOUR
TI - A 0.9-2.6 GHz Broadband RF Front-End Chip-Set with a Direct Conversion Architecture
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SP - 2732
EP - 2740
AU - Munenari KAWASHIMA
AU - Tadao NAKAGAWA
AU - Hitoshi HAYASHI
AU - Kenjiro NISHIKAWA
AU - Katsuhiko ARAKI
PY - 2002
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SN -
VL - E85-B
IS - 12
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Y1 - December 2002
AB - A broadband RF front-end having a direct conversion architecture has been developed. The RF front-end consists of two broadband quadrature mixers, a multi-band local oscillator, and a broadband low-noise variable gain amplifier (LNVGA). The mixer achieves broadband characteristics through the incorporation of an in-phase power divider and a 45-degree power divider. The in-phase power divider achieves broadband characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor. The 45-degree power divider achieves broadband phase characteristics through the addition of a compensation capacitor and a compensation resistor. The local oscillator, which is composed of two VCOs, two frequency dividers, and four switches, can cover three systems including one FDD system. The LNVGA achieves its broadband characteristics without the use of reactance elements, such as inductors or capacitors. In a trial demonstration, when the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a demodulator experimentally demonstrated an amplitude balance of less than 1.6 dB and a quadrature phase error of less than 3 degrees. When the RF frequency was between 900 MHz and 2.5 GHz, the mixer for a modulator demonstrated an image ratio of less than -30 dBc. The local oscillator demonstrated multi-band characteristics, which are able to cover the target frequencies for three systems (PDC, PHS, 2.4 GHz WLAN). From 900 MHz to 2.5 GHz, the amplifier shows a noise figure of less than 2.1 dB and a gain of 28
ER -