A 2.4GHz Low Power, High Gain CMOS RF LNA in 90nm Technology

DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV3IS030646

Download Full-Text PDF Cite this Publication

Text Only Version

A 2.4GHz Low Power, High Gain CMOS RF LNA in 90nm Technology

Vishal P. Jadhav

Electronics and Tele-Communication Department, Sinhgad College of Engineering,

Pune, India.

Dr. M. B. Mali

Electronics and Tele-Communication Department, Sinhgad College of Engineering,

Pune, India.

Abstract-This proposed Low noise amplifier (LNA) consists of a simple design with three common source (CS-CS-CS) stages and cascode as output stage to achieve excellent gain, low power and good figure of merit (FOM) is presented. The inductorless low noise amplifier is designed for low cost and less area consumption on 90nm technology. A 2.4 GHz low noise amplifier has post layout results simulated for the temperature range of -30 to +50 degree Celsius with the performance featuring a record gain of 34 dB without output matching and the noise figure of 3.3-4.7dB. Cascode as end stage of amplifier provides a good reverse isolation with better overall bandwidth of 27.3 GHz, while consuming 1.56mW of power from 1.2v supply and the area is 26.4um by 13.6um with the capability of supporting 802.11b WLAN and Bluetooth applications.

Keywords- CMOS; inductorless; low power; WLAN; 2.4GHz

  1. INTRODUCTION

    In recent years high speed wireless standards such as Bluetooth, wireless local area network (WLAN) and GPS etc. have boosted the rapid enhancement and development of the portable electronics. To keep the overall solution cost of portable devices low, the wireless transceiver should be highly integrated with the baseband as a system-on-chip (SoC) solution, preferably using a low-complexity CMOS process [1]. RF Integrated Circuits (RFICs) using inductors are preferred for reducing noise in LNA, but the inductors are expensive and it requires large chip area with more power consumption. Removing inductors for a good LNA is challenging task. As the scaling urge reduction in supply voltage with increase in noise. The LNA design involves tradeoffs between noise-figure (NF), gain, power dissipation, input matching, and harmonic content in the output signal [1]. For example few techniques with and without inductors such as, Inductorless gain enhanced noise cancelling technique [2], parasitic insensitive linearization topologies [3], low power inductorless double gm enhancement [4], current reuse gm boosted CG LNA [5], power efficient noise suppression technique [6]. However such techniques individually suffers from disadvantages like more power consumption, inadequate noise, less gain, large integrated chip area and imperfect layouts increases the design complexity. The noise cancelling techniques increase power consumption with area.

    The design is focused on high gain at noise reducing condition with low power and good reverse isolation; which is achieved by three stage common source and cascode as output stage. The inductorless design has low complexity with less area requirement. And considered supply voltage variation as well as temperature variation. A supply voltage variation considered of 5% and temperature variation of -30 to +50. A simple design with the excellent gain, low power, better figure of merit, acceptable linearity and noise figure has achieved.

  2. DESIGN OF THE 2.4GHZ CMOS LNA

    A narrow band LNA according to the concept of fig.1 was designed in a 90nm standard CMOS process. The work done was aimed at high gain and low power over a frequency of 2.4GHz. High sensitivity applications were targeted with 2.4GHz frequency. So, no attempt made for linearity as there is tradeoff between gain and linearity.

    The fig.1 shows schematic design Low power, high gain CMOS RF LNA for 2.4GHz LNA. It consists of three common source stages and cascode as end stage. Common source was used in initial stages to keep noise less with input impedance matching of 50 ohm with increase in gain. The end stage provides a good reverse isolation using cascode stage. A load capacitance of 50fF was connected externally. The MOSFETS used were of 30um width for first three common source stages. The design made simple with no linearity improvement, no noise reduction techniques and no inductors just to avoid complexity in 90nm CMOS technology

    Fig.1. Schematic of RF LNA proposed.

    Noise factor for LNA is calculated using,

    (1)

    Noise figure is measured for all stages with respect to the input resistance Rs. A modification of load resistance of each stage in layout reduced the power from 8.7mW to 1.56mW with sacrificing 0.6dB of noise considering nominal temperature with reduction in gain as well.

  3. RESULTS AND ANALYSIS

    The proposed LNA has designed in 90nm RF CMOS technology. Without output matching the design has achieved 34dB of gain through post layout with RC extraction over a temperature range of -30 to +50 at the narrowband frequency of 2.4GHz. The fig.2 shows simulated results for voltage gain versus frequency considering temperature. At 2.4GHz frequency the gain is obtained varying temperature. The nominal temperature gain obtained is 37dB. The lowest LNA gain obtained of 34dB at the 50 temperature, with maximum gain of 39dB at the -30 temperature. And the gain of 38dB obtained at 0 temperature. The overall bandwidth obtained at unity gain is 27.39GHz. The LNA proposed has a capacity to work with positive gain at the obtained frequency. Fig.2 shows the obtained magnitude of output and input of the proposed LNA. The proposed LNA has not matched the output resistance but with input matching of 50ohm resistance LNA has achieved the low power and high gain with the CMOS technology. The gain obtained with less increased at initial stages with reduction in noise simultaneously. And increased more gain at end cascode stage with negligible noise.

    Fig.2. Simulated results for voltage gain magnitude versus frequency.

    The calculated noise has obtained about 3.7dB ithout considering modification in layout which has changed the potential levels of all MOSFETS with positive effect on power reduction.

    The noise figure simulated over a frequency range of 1GHz to 6GHz is as shown in fig.3

    Fig.3. Simulated result for Noise figure versus frequency.

    Fig.4. Simulated result for noise figure versus temperature.

    The simulated noise obtained at 2.4GHz is 4.27dB and is about 4.4dB at 5GHz frequency. The noise figure simulated over a temperature range of -30 to +50 is 3.33dB to 4.7dB as shown in fig.4. A 5 % variation in supply voltage reduces gain to 22dB with overall bandwidth to 10.45GHz with same noise figure.

    The performance comparing gain and noise over a temperature range of -30 to +50 at 2.4GHz is shown in table 1. The comparison is performed specific at temperatures points.

    Frequency GHz

    Output/ Input

    Temperature

    Gain (dB)

    Noise (dB)

    2.4

    Output

    50

    34

    4.7

    2.4

    Output

    27

    37

    4.2

    2.4

    Output

    0

    38

    3.8

    2.4

    Output

    -30

    39

    3.3

    Table 1. Gain and Noise with variable temperature

    Fig.5. Simulated result for IIP3 of RF LNA at 2.4GHz.

    The third order input referred intercept point is shown in fig.5. To get

    OIP3,

    OIP3 (dBm) = Gain (dB) + IIP3 (dBm) (2)

    The third order output referred intercept OIP3 obtained is about 22Bm.

    As there is tradeoff between gain and linearity the high gain reducing linearity. The LNA has ability to provide -15.4dBm of linearity with a gain of 37dB at the nominal temperature.

    The area required for LNA with the post layout simulation is 26.4um x 13.6um, less area due to no use of inductor.

    Table 2.

    Performance comparison with published LNAs

  4. CONCLUSION

A 2.4GHz single ended CMOS RF LNA for Bluetooth and for 802.11b WLAN applications is presented. It achieves a power consumption of 1.56mW. The LNA design has achieved 4.2 dB NF and a large voltage gain of 37dB with IIP3 of -15.44dBm. Inductorless post layout implementation results the area of 26.4um x 13.6um.

REFERENCES

  1. Anuj Madan, Member, IEEE, Michael J. McPartlin, Member, IEEE, Christophe Masse, William Vaillancourt, and John D. Cressler, Fellow, IEEE A 5 GHz 0.95 dB NF Highly Linear Cascode Floating-Body LNA in 180 nm SOI CMOS Technology IEEE Microwave And Wireless Components Letters, Vol. 22, NO. 4, April 2012.

  2. Ke-Hou Chen, Student Member, IEEE, and Shen-Iuan Liu, Fellow, IEEE Inductor less Wideband CMOS Low-Noise Amplifiers Using Noise-Cancelling Technique IEEE Transactions On Circuits And SystemsI: Regular Papers, Vol. 59, No. 2, February 2012.

  3. Wei-Tsung Li, Student Member, IEEE, Jeng-Han Tsai, Member, IEEE, Hong-Yuan Yang, Student Member, IEEE, Wei-Hung Chou, Shyh-Buu Gea, Hsin-Chia Lu, Member, IEEE, and Tian-Wei Huang, Senior

    Member, IEEE Parasitic-Insensitive Linearization Methods for 60-GHz 90-nm CMOS LNAs IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON Microwave Theory And Techniques, VOL. 60, NO. 8, August 2012.

  4. François Belmas, Frédéric Hameau, and Jean-Michel Fournier A Low Power Inductorless LNA with Double gm Enhancement in 130 nm CMOS IEEE Journal Of Solid-state Circuits, Vol. 47, NO. 5, May 2012.

  5. Muhammad Khurram and S. M. Rezaul Hasan, Senior Member, IEEE

    A 35 GHz Current-Reuse gm-Boosted CG LNA for Ultrawideband in 130 nm CMOS IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration Systems, Vol. 20, NO. 3, March 2012.

  6. Chin-Fu Li, Shih-Chieh Chou, Guan-Hong Ke, and Po-Chiun Huang, Member, IEEEA Power-Efficient Noise Suppression Technique Using Signal-Null Feedback for Low-Noise Wideband Amplifiers IEEE Transactions on Circuits And SystemsII: Express Briefs, VOL. 59, NO. 1, JANUARY 2012.

  7. Thomas H. Lee, The Design of CMOS Radio-Frequency integrated circuits, second edition.

  8. Behzad Razavi, Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits, Tata McGraw-Hill, 2002.

  9. Behzad Razavi, RF microelectronics, second edition, Pearson education,INC. publishing as prentice Hall, 2012.

Leave a Reply