The Impact of On-Chip Interconnections on CMOS RF Integrated Circuits

Achieving power- and area-efficient fully integrated transceivers is one of the major challenges faced when designing high-frequency electronic circuits suitable for biomedical applications or wireless sensor networks. The power losses associated with the parasitics of on-chip inductors, transistors...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on electron devices 2009-09, Vol.56 (9), p.1882-1890
Hauptverfasser: El-Desouki, M.M., Abdelsayed, S.M., Deen, M.J., Nikolova, N.K., Haddara, Y.M.
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container_end_page 1890
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1882
container_title IEEE transactions on electron devices
container_volume 56
creator El-Desouki, M.M.
Abdelsayed, S.M.
Deen, M.J.
Nikolova, N.K.
Haddara, Y.M.
description Achieving power- and area-efficient fully integrated transceivers is one of the major challenges faced when designing high-frequency electronic circuits suitable for biomedical applications or wireless sensor networks. The power losses associated with the parasitics of on-chip inductors, transistors, and interconnections have posed design challenges in the full integration of power-efficient CMOS radio-frequency integrated circuits (RF ICs). In addition, the parasitics of on-chip passive components that are integrated on lossy silicon substrates have made CMOS-based integrated circuits inferior to their compound-semiconductor counterparts. The parasitic effects of on-chip interconnections play a key role in RF circuit performance, particularly as the frequency of operation increases. Neglecting these effects leads to the significant degradation in circuit performance or even failure of operation in some cases. Furthermore, unlike transistors, miniaturization of interconnections does not improve their performance. This paper demonstrates the impact of metal layer resistivity and layout parasitics on an RF power amplifier (PA) and a low-noise amplifier (LNA). A nonlinear fully integrated 2.4-GHz class-E PA, with a class-F driver stage, and a 5-GHz LNA are discussed. The circuits were fabricated in a standard 0.18- mum CMOS technology. The layouts of the presented CMOS amplifiers were designed by carefully modeling the interconnection wires during the simulations and optimizing their widths for minimum parasitic effects and hence optimum measured circuit performance. Due to the careful layout design and interconnection optimization, the implemented amplifier circuits showed a good match between the measured and simulated performance characteristics.
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subjects Amplifier
Amplifiers
Circuit design
Circuits
class-E
class-F
CMOS
CMOS integrated circuits
CMOS radio-frequency integrated circuits (RF ICs)
Integrated circuit interconnections
Integrated circuit modeling
Integrated circuits
Interconnections
Layout
low-noise amplifier (LNA)
low-power
Metals
Optimization
parasitic-aware design
power amplifier (PA)
Radio frequencies
Radio frequency
radio frequency (RF)
Semiconductor device modeling
Semiconductors
title The Impact of On-Chip Interconnections on CMOS RF Integrated Circuits
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