A DC-6 GHz, Packaged 100 Watt GaN SPDT Switch MMIC
IMS2016_Workshop_SK 03232016
1. Workshop_WMH
Trade-offs in the Design of E-
band Transceiver MMICs for
Gigabit Wireless Link
Application
Sushil Kumar
130 Baytech Dr, San Jose, CA, USA
10. Workshop_WMH
• Pin Total=-23dBm
• Pout_Tot=13dBm (Pout/tone=10dBm)
• L in eu p Gain = 3 6 d B
• TX Noise=-112dBm/Hz
• OIP3 total= 24.0dBm
SiGe Based Tx Architecture
Lineup (RF Chain) Analysis
Max. Gain (SiGe) = 36dB GaAs PA Gain = 16dB
Lineup Max. Gain ~ 50dB
11. Workshop_WMH
Spectral Mask vs Tx Noise & IM3
of a SiGe Based Architecture
64QAM 500 MHz plot image (86 GHz)
64QAM 500 MHz plot image (83.5 GHz)
12. Workshop_WMH
GaAs Based Tx Architecture
Note : Not to the scale
Differential
Diplexer
Differential
Diplexer
Direct Conversion
Architecture
14. Workshop_WMH
Key RF Components of Tx
RF Chain : Differential IQ Modulator + Env. Detector + VVA + VGA
LO Chain : Frequency Tripler + Buffer Amp + Filter + Frequency Doubler +
Saturated Amplifier + BPF
15. Workshop_WMH
Integrated Power Detector
Single Ended LO port
Designed to meet technical specifications of ETSI document ETSI EN 302 217‐2‐2.
SIP Key Parameters Unit Low Band High Band
Frequency Range GHz 71.0 – 76.0 81.0 – 86.0
LO Frequency GHz 11.8 – 12.7 13.5 – 14.4
Baseband Bandwidth GHz > 2 GHz > 2 GHz
Max Conversion Gain dB 25.0 25.0
OIP3 dBm 27.0 27.0
Psat dBm 22.0 22.0
Carrier Rejection dBc >30 >30
Image Rejection dB >35 >35
Gain Control Dynamic Range dB >35 >35
Key Performance of RF
Chain of GaAs Tx (1/4)
20. Workshop_WMH
fin
fOut= 6* fin
LO Chain Lineup
Performance
LO Chain (Output)
fin=12.67GHz, Pin=+2dBmLO Chain (Input)
fout=76.0GHz (6H), Fundamental + other
harmonics & Spurs well suppressed.
Above two screen shots covers 10MHz-80GHz signal from LO Chain
21. Workshop_WMH
Key RF Components of Rx
RF Chain : LNA (GaAs) + VGA + RF Mixer + BB Mixer + BB Circuit
LO Chain : Multiplexer + Frequency Doubler + Buffer Amp + Quadrupler
+ Frequency Divider
22. Workshop_WMH
Single Ended LO port
Integrated SPI
Designed to meet technical specifications of ETSI document ETSI EN 302 217‐2‐2.
SIP Key Parameters Unit Low Band High Band
Frequency Range GHz 71.0-76.0 81.0 – 86.0
LO Frequency GHz 7.88-8.44 9.0 – 9.6
IF Frequency GHz 7.88-8.44 9.0 – 9.6
Input Dynamic Range dBm -85 to -23 -85 to -23
Max Conversion Gain dB 60.0 60.0
IIP3 @ Min Gain dBm -7.0 -7.0
Noise Figure @max gain dB 7.0 7.0
Analog Gain Control dB >80 >80
Key Performance of
Receiver (1/2)
28. 28
• Success at E-band and above will rely on
technologies that provide increased
performance and higher levels of integration
• WIN’s next generation technologies will
address both market needs
Performance
– Ft above 180 GHz
– Hot Via eliminates bond wires and enables
wafer scale packaging
Integration
– 4-metal back end, front side ground plane
– Monolithic schottky or PIN diodes
– Standard E/D logic gates
– Now with monolithic PN diodes for compact ESD
protection
Beyond PP10: Enabling New Functions
And Higher Integration
BS
via
4mil GaAs substrate
Au/Sn Eutectic
Isolated BS metal
Hot
Via
RF Isolated Through Wafer Via
29. Workshop_WMH
Why GaN
High Breakdown Field
10x of Si or GaAs
High Power Density
2-10x of Si or GaAs
Good Thermal Conductivity
Higher Impedances
Best Power Device Figure of Merit
Low Dielectric Constant
Lower Intrinsic Capacitances
JFM = Johnson's figure of merit is a measure of suitability of a semiconductor material
for high frequency power transistor applications and requirements
JFM=(Breakdown, electron velocity product) [Eb*Vbr/2π]
Highest Johnson Figure of Merit
Si=1.0, GaAs=2.7, SiC=20,
GaN=27.5
30. Workshop_WMH
GaN (SiC vs Si)
GaN Operating range ~200 to 200o
C
SiC has higher thermal conductivity, so
better heat management therefore
higher efficiency
Key Parameters GaN on SiC GaN on Si
Thermal Conductivity 3.7 W/Cm C 1.5 W/Cm C
Die Size (for similar design) small
15-20% bigger compared to SiC for thermal
management
Cost High Low (very low on 8” or 12” Si in future).
Volume Low High
Wafer Size 3” to 6” 3” (up to 8 or 12”, possible in future)
T(°C) = T(K) - 273.15
Thermal conductivity of GaAs is much lower (0.43 W/cmK) compared to Si and SiC, so the GaAs based device channel
temperature is high. If operated at high channel temperature MTTF of GaAs based power circuit would be poor)
31. Workshop_WMH
Technology Advantages for a
given Circuit for E-band Transceiver
Process GaAs (pHEMT) SiGe BiCMOS
Mixer
Active
OK gain, Poor 1/f noise,
Complex design
Best suited, 1/f noise good for HBT
Poor 1/f Noise for MOSFET based
design
Passive
Best IP3, High CL and LO
Drive Level
Moderate IP3, CL and much higher
LO drive compared to Gilbert cell
based topology
Low Noise Amplifier Lower NF and High IP3
compared to SiGe
Moderate NF, IP3, similar gain
compared to GaAs
Gain Blocks Both are good. SiGe would be smaller in dimension
Power Amplifier Much higher P1dB & IP3 Moderate Power & IP3, similar gain
compared to GaAs
VVA/Switch GaAs has slight advantage Si CMOS is very comparable to GaAs
Freq. Multipliers Either can be used unless Pout requirement is very high
32. Workshop_WMH
Technology Advantages for a
given Circuit for E-band Transceiver
Process GaAs (pHEMT) SiGe BiCMOS
VCO
InGaP (not GaAs) based VCO has best in
class close in Phase Noise. A VCO in
combination with GaAs multiplier
provides best E-band close in phase Noise
Close in Phase Noise not
comparable to InGaP
based VCO
Passives (Baluns,
90o Hybrids)
GaAs has some performance advantage,
slightly lower loss, a little better balance
for hybrid
A little lossy but Very
comparable
Passive
(µstrip/CPW
Lines/Spiral)
GaAs offer wide range impedance but has
size disadvantage. It has larger dimension
for same aspect ratio (W/H, H=50um)
TxL Geometries are much
smaller due to TFMS.
Limited Impedance range
& low Q
Level of Integration Limited Best
Logic Circuits Limited (GaAs Foundries are integrating E/D logic FETs now) Best
Other consideration : Bias Supply, Ground Via, ESD etc.
33. Workshop_WMH
Summary
GaAs and SiGe based Tx/Rx architecture were discussed
and results were shown
GaAs based Direct Conversion Architecture suits best to
meet tough spec of IM3 and Tx Noise with higher
modulation with BW≥500MHz.
GaAs LNA and SiGe Rx combination results best for SNR
and IM3
It is best to combine GaAs and SiGe as and where spec
demands to keep the performance high and cost low.
Various E-Band Package options were also discussed
34. Workshop_WMH
Acknowledgements
Author is thankful to all Team members, especially to Andrea Betti-Berutto
(CTO) for his guidance and design support. Shawn Parker for his outstanding
designs. Neir Chen, Yunzhou, Linda for their tireless effort to provide best
possible test, software development and board designs. James Little, Jeff
Illinger, Jack Kennedy, Chris Saints for IC design and layout support. Steve
Chaote, Matin Vagues, Ratan Chaudhary for their Op & Qual support. Phuong
Vo and Hoa Ho for all their assembly work.
Special thanks to Avi Katz (CEO), Raluca Dinu (EVP), for their constant
encouragement.