RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless ApplicationsRiver Publishers, 2019 - 236 pagina's
While mobile phones enjoy the largest production volume ever of any consumer electronics products, the demands they place on radio-frequency (RF) transceivers are particularly aggressive, especially on integration with digital processors, low area, low power consumption, while being robust against process-voltage-temperature variations. Since mobile terminals inherently operate on batteries, their power budget is severely constrained. To keep up with the ever increasing data-rate, an ever-decreasing power per bit is required to maintain the battery lifetime. The RF oscillator is the second most power-hungry block of a wireless radio (after power amplifiers). Consequently, any power reduction in an RF oscillator will greatly benefit the overall power efficiency of the cellular transceiver. Moreover, the RF oscillators' purity limits the transceiver performance. The oscillator's phase noise results in power leakage into adjacent channels in a transmit mode and reciprocal mixing in a receive mode. On the other hand, the multi-standard and multi-band transceivers that are now trending demand wide tuning range oscillators. However, broadening the oscillator's tuning range is usually at the expense of die area (cost) or phase noise. |
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RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications Masoud Babaie,Mina Shahmohammadi,Robert Bogdan Staszewski Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2022 |
RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications Masoud Babaie,Mina Shahmohammadi,Robert Bogdan Staszewski Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2022 |
RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications Masoud Babaie,Mina Shahmohammadi,Robert Bogdan Staszewski Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2024 |
