Configurable Wideband Split LNA
Methods and devices addressing design of wideband LNAs with gain modes are disclosed. The disclosed teachings can be used to reconfigure RF receiver front-end to operate in various applications imposing stringent and conflicting requirements. Wideband and narrowband input and output matching with gain modes using a combination of the same hardware and a switching network are also disclosed. The described methods and devices also address carrier aggregation requirements and provide solutions that can be used both in single-mode and split-mode operations.
The present application is related to U.S. application Ser. No. 15/342,016 filed Nov. 2, 2016, entitled “Source Switched Split LNA” (now U.S. Pat. No. 9,973,149 issued May 15, 2018) incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The present application may be related to US App. No. ______ (Atty. Docket. No. PER-278-PAP) entitled “5G NR Configurable Wideband RF Front-End LNA” and filed on even date herewith, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND (1) Technical FieldThe present disclosure is related to low noise amplifiers (LNAs), and more particularly, to methods and apparatus for designing wideband split LNAs.
(2) BackgroundThe exponential growth of mobile data and emergence of new standards presents significant challenges to radio frequency (RF) receiver front-end design and architecture.
An additional challenge is the ability to handle the variable signal strength received at wireless RF receiver front-ends, which typically have a wide dynamic range. This is because the signal strength depends on how far or close the receiver is from the nearest base station. In order to accommodate such large dynamic ranges, LNAs are typically designed with adjustable gains or various gain modes.
Historically, in order to meet the conflicting and stringent requirements as described above, circuits and systems have been designed with several switches, filters and LNAs. In such circuits, separate sets of LNAs, switches and filters would be dedicated, for example, to different subsets of the frequency bands to be supported. While such approach may be workable, it comes with the significant drawbacks such as area, component count and cost-effectiveness. For example, a design using several LNAs requires significant allocation of area on the integrated circuit (IC) on which the LNAs are fabricated. The cost of the IC is proportional to the size of the IC (i.e., the amount of “real estate” required). Therefore, relying on several narrowband LNAs significantly increases the overall size and cost of the IC.
Description of Concepts and Terminologies used Throughout the DisclosureIn what follows, some of the concepts later adopted by the methods and devices presented in the disclosure are defined and described. Some relevant performance tradeoffs highlighting implications of designing for stringent/conflicting requirements when designing RF receiver front-ends are also discussed. Exemplary prior art architectures are also described to further illustrate the shortcomings of existing solutions to the challenges encountered when designing for high performance wideband RF receiver front-ends.
Throughout the present disclosure, the term “intra-band non-contiguous” will be used to describe carrier aggregation combinations where the component carriers belong to the same operating frequency band, but have a gap, or gaps, in between. In other words, this carrier aggregation scheme combines channels in the same frequency band that are not next to each other.
A typical RF receiver front-end includes one or more receive chains including an LNA followed by a down-conversion block which essentially includes a local oscillator combined with low pass filtering. Each such receive chain performs a separate down-conversion which essentially involves a local oscillator combined with low-pass filtering. Throughout the present disclosure the term “single-mode” will be used to describe the case where a receiver LNA is connected only with one down-conversion block. This is in contrast with the term “split-mode” which will be used throughout the present disclosure to describe the cases where a receiver LNA is connected with two or more down-conversion blocks.
Throughout the present disclosure, the term “source follower” will be used to describe one of the basic single-stage field effect transistor (FET) amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage buffer. In this circuit, the gate terminal of the transistor serves as the input, the source is the output, and the drain is common to both (input and output). In such circuit, the output impedance as seen from the source of the FET, is equal to
where gm represents the transconductance of the FET device. The source follower configuration is known essentially to be an impedance transformer, providing improved and substantially frequency independent output matching. This is the reason why the source follower is a suitable architecture to be used for wideband applications.
As known in the art, in RF systems bandwidth is sometimes defined in terms of percentage bandwidth, which is defined as the ratio (in percentage) of the absolute bandwidth to the highest frequency at which such RF systems operate. One performance metrics of RF amplifier associated with the bandwidth is represented by gain flatness over the specified bandwidth. Gain bandwidth is typically specified in dB, indicating the gain variation over the frequency range of operation. Throughout the disclosure the terms:
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- “Narrowband” will be used to describe applications where the frequency range of operation represents a percentage bandwidth of less than 7.5%. An example for such a case is band 42 of the Long-Term Evolution (LTE) standard;
- “Extended Narrowband” will be used to describe applications where the frequency range of operation represents a percentage bandwidth between 7.5% and 15%. An example for such a case is the band NR79 of the 5G new radio (NR) standard; and
- “Wideband” will be used to describe applications where the frequency range of operation represents a percentage bandwidth of less between 15% and 25%. An example for such a case is the band NR77 of the 5G new radio (NR) standard.
In view of the design challenges described in the previous section, input and output matching (represented by the S11 and S22 parameters) and gain flatness across the bandwidth are among the key performance metrics while maintaining lowest NF, high gain and linearity. Additionally, lower gain modes requiring higher linearity are also highly desired. Lower power consumption may be achieved when operating in lower gain modes.
Throughout the present disclosure, the term “de-Qing” will be used to describe design techniques where the quality factor (Q) of a circuit is lowered to improve some other performance metrics. As an example, in a typical LNA architecture, de-Qing of the load may be exercised to achieve a desired gain flatness over a wider band at the expense of reducing the gain. De-Qing an LC network is typically performed by increasing the resistance of such network resulting in a lower gain. The same concept could be applied to the input of a typical LNA architecture whereby a wider input match can be achieved by reducing the quality factor of the input matching network, at the expense of NF and gain.
For wideband applications, various approaches may be adopted to design for wider output matching:
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- De-Qing: as described above, such technique resulting in lower gain;
- Designing a multi-stage passive output match which would offer higher bandwidth. However, this approach will require high Q inductors; and
- A source follower topology, which may be used without sacrificing gain while achieving an improved linearity. However, this may not be an ideal solution on its own, when a lower gain and therefore a lower power consumption is required.
As for the receiver front-end input, a wider input match is typically achieved using a resistive negative feedback network, which may offer better tradeoffs among NF, gain and S11 bandwidth. In what follows, and in order to further clarify the various above-mentioned techniques and associated tradeoffs, typical prior art LNA architectures are described.
where gm represents the transconductance of transistor (T3). Such transconductance is practically frequency independent offering improved output matching for wideband applications.
With reference to
In view of the above, cost-effective RF receiver front-end designs using a minimum number of electronic elements and thus offering small footprint, while meeting the above-mentioned stringent and conflicting requirements related to performance metrics such as gain, gain flatness, gain modes, NF, linearity, multiple frequency bands, wide received signal dynamic range and power consumption are highly desired.
In view of the above, cost-effective RF receiver front-end designs using a minimum number of electronic elements and thus offering small footprint, while meeting the above-mentioned stringent and conflicting requirements related to performance metrics such as gain, gain flatness, gain modes, NF, linearity, multiple frequency bands, wide received signal dynamic range and power consumption are highly desired. Methods and devices described in the present disclosure address such need and provide solutions to the technical problems outlines above.
In RF wireless applications, it is common today for receivers in a transceiver, such as a cellular telephone, to have the capability to concurrently receive signals transmitted over multiple supported frequency ranges. The signals within each supported frequency range are combined (or “aggregated”) to be transmitted together at the same time to the receiver. Carrier aggregation represents yet another existing challenge to the design of today's RF receiver front-ends. Referring back to
In a carrier aggregation scenario, and for performance optimization purposes, it is desirable to send each supported frequency range through a separate receive chain optimized for the frequency of the supported frequency range. Each such receive chain performs a separate down-conversion which essentially involves a local oscillator combined with low-pass filtering. This is highly desired more in particular for the case of non-contiguous bands where there might be large gaps in-between the bands.
Historically, the solutions to such design challenges have been to design multiple separate RF front ends consisting of antennas, filters, and LNAs to handle each chain and similar to what was previously described, such solutions are non-optimal and are almost prohibitive as they require larger physical space to be implemented, which means more form-factor restrictions and higher cost.
Methods and devices described in the present disclosure address design challenges and needs as described throughout this section and provide solution to the problem while accommodating, at the same time, carrier aggregation requirements as imposed, for example, by recent standards such as 5G NR.
SUMMARYAccording to a first aspect of the present disclosure, a Radio Frequency (RF) receiver front-end is provided, comprising: an input and a plurality of outputs; a reconfigurable low noise amplifier (LNA) block having an input matching network, and a plurality of electronic elements each having an electronic element output; an output matching network having a plurality of output matching elements; and a switching network; wherein: each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements is connected with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; the switching network is connected to the input matching network, the LNA block and the output matching network; during a first mode of operation: i) in a first configuration, switches of the switching network: enable a single electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements and a corresponding output matching element; and disable remaining electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; ii) the RF receiver front-end is configured to receive an input signal at the input and generate a corresponding output signal at an output of the plurality of outputs, and during a second mode of operation: i) in a second configuration, the switches of the plurality of switches enable two or more electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements of the plurality of output matching elements; and ii) the RF receiver front-end is configured to receive the input signal at the input and generate two or more corresponding output signals at two or more outputs of the plurality of outputs.
According to a second aspect of the present disclosure, a Radio Frequency (RF) receiver front-end is provided, comprising: a plurality of inputs and a plurality of outputs; a reconfigurable low noise amplifier (LNA) block having an input matching network, a plurality of electronic elements; an output matching network having a plurality of output matching elements; and a switching network; wherein: the input matching network comprises a plurality of input matching elements connected with corresponding inputs; each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements is connected with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; the switching network is connected to the input matching network, the LNA block and the output matching network; and the switching network is to: configure or reconfigure the plurality of input matching elements to receive one or more input signals from the plurality of inputs; and configure or reconfigure the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements to generate two or more output signals at two or more outputs.
According to a third aspect of the present disclosure, a method of amplifying an input signal received at an RF receiver front-end is disclosed, providing: providing and input and a plurality of outputs; providing an LNA block with an input matching network and a plurality of electronic elements; providing an output matching network with a plurality of output matching elements; connecting each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; providing a switching network connected with the LNA block, the input matching network and the output marching network; during a first mode of operation, configuring switches of the switching network in order to: enable a single electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; disable remaining electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; and receive an input signal at the input and generate a corresponding output signal at an output of the plurality of outputs; during a second mode of operation, configuring the switches of the switching network in order to: enable two or more electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; and receive the input signal at the input and generate two or more corresponding output signals at two or more outputs of the plurality of outputs.
Further aspects of the disclosure are provided in the description, drawings and claims of the present application.
Throughout the present disclosure, the term “node” will be used to describe any point on a circuit where connections of two or more circuit elements meet or are adapted to meet. Although nodes will be graphically represented by points in the present disclosure, the person skilled in the art will understand that a node may also present part of a line or connection between elements or circuital devices, not just a single point.
With reference to
With reference to
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- feedback resistor (Rf) may be switched in and out by connecting and disconnecting nodes (a, a′) respectively. The feedback resistor (Rf) may be switched in to provide a wider band input matching. According to embodiments of the present disclosure, the feedback resistor (Rf) may be part of a feedback network comprising resistors and reactive elements such as inductors and/or capacitors.
- Depending on the required output matching, a larger or smaller inductor can be used by connecting node (b) to node (b′) or node (b″) respectively. In accordance with further embodiments of the present disclosure, any or a combination of inductors (Ld1, Ld2) may be replaced by a variable inductor.
- Transistor (T3) may be switched in/out by connecting/disconnecting nodes (i, i′) respectively. When transistor (T3) is switched in, a combination of such transistor and current source (Io) provide a source follower configuration. As mentioned previously, such configuration is used when a wider band output matching is desired while minimizing impact on gain and linearity. In narrower band application where transistor (T3) may not be required, the gate of transistor (T3) is connected to ground by connecting nodes (j, j′) to minimize power consumption.
- As mentioned previously, for wideband applications, resistor (Rd) may be switched in by connecting nodes (c, c′). As a result, wider band output matching is achieved at the expense of the gain.
- A combination of capacitors (C1, C2, C3) and inductor (L4) or a subset thereof may be switched in to achieve wideband operation using only passive elements. This represents essentially a multi-stage passive output matching network.
- Nodes (1, 1′) can be connected/disconnected to achieve narrow/wide band input matching. When nodes (1, 1′) are connected, a combination of capacitance (C3) and gate-source capacitance (Cgs) of transistor (T3) with inductances (L1, L2) and feedback resistor (Rf) forms the input matching network (421). Therefore, switching feedback resistor (Rf) and/or capacitor (C4) provides two different mechanisms to provide wider or narrow band input matching depending on desired requirements.
- RF receiver front-end (410) may be configured to receive voltages (Vd1, Vd2) for biasing purposes.
In accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure,
In accordance with further embodiments of the present disclosure,
In accordance with other embodiments of the present disclosure,
In accordance with yet other embodiments of the present disclosure,
With further reference to
With reference to
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- The cascode configuration using transistors (T1, T2) may comprise one or more transistors.
- Transistors (T1, T2, T3) may comprise field-effect transistors (FET) or metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs)
- Constituent switches of the switching network may comprise field-effect transistors (FET) or metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs)
- The switching network may comprise one or more switches depending on the requirements.
- Constituents of such embodiments may be implemented on the same chip or on separate chips.
- A combination of transistor (T3) and current source (Io) or degenerative inductor (Lsf) may be implemented according to a common source or common gate configuration.
With reference to
With further reference to
With further reference to
-
- Single mode (in to out1): in this mode switch (S3) is closed and as a result, transistor (T2b) is disabled as its gate is pulled to ground. Transistor (T3b) is also disabled. This can be done either by opening switch (S4) to disable current source (Ib) or by turning off the bias voltage (V2). Switch (S2) is open and switch (S1) is closed. Transistors (T1, T2a, T3a) are enabled.
- Single mode (in to out2): in this mode switch (S2) is closed and as a result, transistor (T2a) is disabled as its gate is pulled to ground. Transistor (T3a) is also disabled. This can be done either by opening switch (S1) to disable current source (Ib) or by turning off the bias voltage (V2). Switch (S3) is open and switch (S4) is closed. Transistors T1, T2b, T3b) are enabled.
- Split mode: Switches (S1, S4) are closed and switches (S2, S3) are open. As a result, transistors (T2a, T2b) as well as transistors (T3a, T3b) are enabled to amplify the input signal at input (in) to both outputs (out1, out2) simultaneously.
With reference to
As shown in
With further reference to
With reference to
Referring back to
-
- the input matching network (1121) may be implemented using the input matching network (421) of
FIG. 4A - One or more matching elements of the plurality of matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn) of the output matching network (1130) may be implemented using the output matching network (430) of
FIG. 4A - One or more matching elements of the plurality of matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn) of the output matching network (1130) may be implemented using the output matching network (930) of
FIG. 9 - The switching network (1140) may be implemented using the switching network (440) of
FIG. 4B , and based on any configurations as shown in the tables ofFIGS. 5B-8B . - One or more electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En) of the LNA block (1122) may be implemented using a transistor, similar to what was described with regards to embodiments shown in
FIGS. 12-14 .
- the input matching network (1121) may be implemented using the input matching network (421) of
Making further reference to
-
- All electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En) may be the same.
- At least one electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En) may be different from other electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En).
- Each electronic element of plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En) may be different from any other electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements (E1, . . . , En).
- All output matching elements of the plurality of output matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn) may be the same.
- At least one output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn) may be different from other output matching elements of the plurality of output matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn).
- Each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn) may be different from any other output matching elements of the plurality of output matching elements (M1, . . . , Mn).
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- various single-mode operations involving an input signals received from any one of the inputs (in1, . . . , ink) to provide an output signal at any one of the outputs (out1, . . . , outn), and
- various split-mode operations involving ‘i’ input signals received from any ‘i’ inputs (in1, . . . , ink) to provide ‘j’ output signals at any ‘j’ outputs (out1, . . . , outn) wherein ‘i’ and ‘j’ are integers, and wherein ‘i’ is larger or equal to 1 and ‘j’ is larger or equal to ‘i’.
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- Single-mode (in1 to out1): transistors (T1, T2, T3) are active and all other transistors are inactive.
- Single-mode (in1 to out2): transistors (T1, T2′, T3′) are active and all other transistors are inactive.
- Single-mode (in2 to out1): transistors (T1′, T2, T3) are active and all other transistors are inactive.
- Single-mode (in2 to out2): transistors (T1′, T2′, T3′) are active and all other transistors are inactive.
- Split-mode (in1 to out1 and out2): transistors (T1, T2, T3, T2′, T3′) are active. Transistor (T1′) is inactive.
- Split-mode (in2 to out1 and out2): transistors (T1′, T2, T3, T2′, T3′) are active. Transistor (T1) is inactive.
The term “MOSFET”, as used in this disclosure, means any field effect transistor (FET) with an insulated gate and comprising a metal or metal-like, insulator, and semiconductor structure. The terms “metal” or “metal-like” include at least one electrically conductive material (such as aluminum, copper, or other metal, or highly doped polysilicon, graphene, or other electrical conductor), “insulator” includes at least one insulating material (such as silicon oxide or other dielectric material), and “semiconductor” includes at least one semiconductor material.
As should be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art, various embodiments of the invention can be implemented to meet a wide variety of specifications. Unless otherwise noted above, selection of suitable component values is a matter of design choice and various embodiments of the invention may be implemented in any suitable IC technology (including but not limited to MOSFET structures), or in hybrid or discrete circuit forms. Integrated circuit embodiments may be fabricated using any suitable substrates and processes, including but not limited to standard bulk silicon, silicon-on-insulator (SOI), and silicon-on-sapphire (SOS). Unless otherwise noted above, the invention may be implemented in other transistor technologies such as bipolar, GaAs HBT, GaN HEMT, GaAs pHEMT, and MESFET technologies. However, the inventive concepts described above are particularly useful with an SOI-based fabrication process (including SOS), and with fabrication processes having similar characteristics. Fabrication in CMOS on SOI or SOS processes enables circuits with low power consumption, the ability to withstand high power signals during operation due to FET stacking, good linearity, and high frequency operation (i.e., radio frequencies up to and exceeding 50 GHz). Monolithic IC implementation is particularly useful since parasitic capacitances generally can be kept low (or at a minimum, kept uniform across all units, permitting them to be compensated) by careful design.
Voltage levels may be adjusted or voltage and/or logic signal polarities reversed depending on a particular specification and/or implementing technology (e.g., NMOS, PMOS, or CMOS, and enhancement mode or depletion mode transistor devices). Component voltage, current, and power handling capabilities may be adapted as needed, for example, by adjusting device sizes, serially “stacking” components (particularly FETs) to withstand greater voltages, and/or using multiple components in parallel to handle greater currents. Additional circuit components may be added to enhance the capabilities of the disclosed circuits and/or to provide additional functional without significantly altering the functionality of the disclosed circuits.
A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. It is to be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, some of the steps described above may be order independent, and thus can be performed in an order different from that described. Further, some of the steps described above may be optional. Various activities described with respect to the methods identified above can be executed in repetitive, serial, or parallel fashion.
It is to be understood that the foregoing description is intended to illustrate and not to limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the scope of the following claims, and that other embodiments are within the scope of the claims. (Note that the parenthetical labels for claim elements are for ease of referring to such elements, and do not in themselves indicate a particular required ordering or enumeration of elements; further, such labels may be reused in dependent claims as references to additional elements without being regarded as starting a conflicting labeling sequence).
Claims
1. A Radio Frequency (RF) receiver front-end comprising:
- an input and a plurality of outputs;
- a reconfigurable low noise amplifier (LNA) block having an input matching network, and a plurality of electronic elements each having an electronic element output;
- an output matching network having a plurality of output matching elements; and
- a switching network;
- wherein: each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements is connected with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; the switching network is connected to the input matching network, the LNA block and the output matching network; during a first mode of operation: i) in a first configuration, switches of the switching network: enable a single electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements and a corresponding output matching element; and disable remaining electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; ii) the RF receiver front-end is configured to receive an input signal at the input and generate a corresponding output signal at an output of the plurality of outputs, and during a second mode of operation: i) in a second configuration, the switches of the plurality of switches enable two or more electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements of the plurality of output matching elements; and ii) the RF receiver front-end is configured to receive the input signal at the input and generate two or more corresponding output signals at two or more outputs of the plurality of outputs.
2. The RF receiver front-end of claim 1, wherein the switching network is used to configure or reconfigure the RF receiver front-end to operate at one or more frequency ranges.
3. The RF receiver front-end of claim 2, wherein the one or more frequency ranges comprises at least a narrowband, and a wideband frequency range.
4. The RF receiver front-end of claim 3, wherein the narrowband and the wideband frequency ranges are intra-band, non-contiguous frequency ranges.
5. The RF receiver front-end of claim 4, wherein the plurality of output matching elements comprises each one of a) one or more passive elements, b) one or more active elements, or a combination thereof.
6. The RF receiver front-end of claim 5, wherein the RF receiver front-end comprises a feedback network selectively connecting one or more electronic element outputs to a gate of an input transistor, the input transistor being configured to receive the input signal.
7. The RF receiver front-end of claim 6, wherein the feedback network comprises one or more resistors.
8. The RF receiver front-end of claim 7, wherein the input matching network further comprises:
- a first input matching network inductor connected to the gate of the input transistor;
- a second input matching inductor connecting a source of the input transistor to ground; and
- an input matching capacitor selectively connectable across a gate-source of the input transistor.
9. The RF receiver front-end of claim 8, wherein the input matching capacitor is a variable capacitor.
10. The RF receiver front-end of claim 6, wherein the one or more active elements comprise a first source-follower transistor implemented in a source-follower configuration.
11. The RF receiver front-end of claim 10, wherein a source of the first source-follower transistor is connected to a first current source or to a first inductor.
12. The RF receiver front-end of claim 11, wherein a gate of the first source-follower transistor is selectively connectable to a corresponding electronic element output or to ground, and wherein the source of the first source-follower transistor is selectively connectable to a corresponding electronic element output and/or to a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs.
13. The RF receiver front-end of claim 12, wherein a drain of the first source-follower transistor is configured to receive a first bias voltage.
14. The RF receiver front-end of claim 13, wherein two or more passive elements of the one or more passive elements are selectively inter-connectable to one another.
15. The RF receiver front-end of claim 14, wherein the one or more passive elements is configured to receive a second bias voltage, and wherein the one or more passive elements is selectively connectable to a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs.
16. The RF receiver front-end of claim 15, wherein at least one passive element of the one or more passive elements is selectively connectable to a corresponding electronic element output.
17. The RF receiver front-end of claim 16, wherein the one or more passive elements comprises a plurality of inductors, a plurality of capacitors and a plurality of resistors
18. The RF receiver front-end of claim 17, wherein:
- at least one inductor of the plurality of inductors is a variable inductor,
- at least one capacitor of the plurality of capacitors is a variable capacitor; and
- at least one resistor of the plurality of resistors is a variable resistor.
19. The RF receiver front-end of claim 9, wherein a narrowband input matching is performed by a) opening a first switch of the switching network, thereby disconnecting the gate of the input transistor from the corresponding electronic element output, b) closing a second switch of the switching network, thereby connecting the input matching capacitor across the gate-source of the input transistor, or a combination of a) and b).
20. The RF receiver front-end of claim 9, wherein a wideband input matching is performed by a) closing a first switch of the switching network, thereby connecting the gate of the input transistor through the feedback network with the corresponding electronic elements output, and b) opening a second switch of the switching network thereby switching out the input matching capacitor.
21. The RF receiver front-end of claim 16, wherein a wideband output matching is performed by:
- connecting the gate of the first source-follower transistor to the corresponding electronic element output;
- disconnecting the one or more passive element from a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; and
- connecting the source of the first source-follower transistor to a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs.
22. The RF receiver front-end of claim 16, wherein a wideband output matching is performed by closing a subset of switches of the switching network to inter-connect a subset of passive elements of the one or more passive elements.
23. The RF receiver front-end claim 17 configured such that the input signal experiences a first gain or a second gain from the input to an output of the plurality of outputs, wherein:
- the first gain is achieved by selectively switching in a de-Qing resistor of the plurality of resistor;
- the second gain is achieved by selectively switching out the de-Qing resistor of the plurality if resistor; and
- the first gain is smaller than the second gain,
24. The RF receiver front-end of claim 5, wherein the input transistor and the cascode transistor are field-effect-transistors (FETs) or metal-oxide filed-effect-transistors (MOSFETs).
25. The RF receiver front-end of claim 1 implemented on a single die or chip.
26. The RF receiver front-end of claim 12, wherein at least one output matching of the plurality of output matching elements further comprises a second source-follower transistor connected with the first source-follower transistor, a source of the second source-follower transistor connected with a second current source or to a second degenerative inductor.
27. A Radio Frequency (RF) receiver front-end comprising:
- a plurality of inputs and a plurality of outputs;
- a reconfigurable low noise amplifier (LNA) block having an input matching network, a plurality of electronic elements;
- an output matching network having a plurality of output matching elements; and
- a switching network;
- wherein: the input matching network comprises a plurality of input matching elements connected with corresponding inputs; each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements is connected with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs; the switching network is connected to the input matching network, the LNA block and the output matching network; and the switching network is to: configure or reconfigure the plurality of input matching elements to receive one or more input signals from the plurality of inputs; and configure or reconfigure the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements to generate two or more output signals at two or more outputs.
28. A method of amplifying an input signal received at an RF receiver front-end comprising:
- providing and input and a plurality of outputs;
- providing an LNA block with an input matching network and a plurality of electronic elements;
- providing an output matching network with a plurality of output matching elements;
- connecting each output matching element of the plurality of output matching elements with a corresponding output of the plurality of outputs;
- providing a switching network connected with the LNA block, the input matching network and the output marching network;
- during a first mode of operation, configuring switches of the switching network in order to: enable a single electronic element of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; disable remaining electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; and receive an input signal at the input and generate a corresponding output signal at an output of the plurality of outputs;
- during a second mode of operation, configuring the switches of the switching network in order to: enable two or more electronic elements of the plurality of electronic elements and corresponding output matching elements; and receive the input signal at the input and generate two or more corresponding output signals at two or more outputs of the plurality of outputs.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 8, 2019
Publication Date: Jul 9, 2020
Inventors: Emre Ayranci (Costa Mesa, CA), Miles Sanner (San Diego, CA), Phanindra Yerramilli (San Diego, CA)
Application Number: 16/242,883