Archive for June, 2010

RF System Tutorial

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Besser Associates instructor Rick Fornes gave June’s webcast on RF System Design principles. This tutorial summarizes some of the major points of the presentation.

One issue that most systems encounter is the fact that the transmitter and receiver share the same antenna. For for simplex or half-duplex systems, where the transmitter and receiver are on at different times, this is not a major problem. For full duplex systems, tremendous care must be taken to isolate the high power transmit signal from the very low level receive circuitry.

In the receiver, the LNA and mixer are the most important blocks (from an RF signal standpoint). When designing LNA’s, a tradeoff must be made between low noise performance and gain. Both parameters are important because while you obviously don’t want to introduce extra noise to your signal (noise figure), gain is needed to boost the signal to a relatively high power level, where the contribution of noise from the other blocks is minimal by comparison.

Intermodulation products – distortions that occur when the receiver encounters a very strong signal – limit the dynamic range of the receiver at the high end of the power scale. Thus both the LNA and mixer should have a high IP3 value, a parameter which describes the strongest signal that can be tolerated before distortion becomes problematic. Unfortunately, high IP3 designs usually require more power from the battery, thus reducing the time between recharges for mobile transcievers. This is another tradeoff in RF system design.

Most receiver designs employ a downconverter that shifts the signal down to an intermediate frequency (IF). The major motivation for this architecture is that filter performance is limited by the Q value of real-world components (bandwidth = f/q). In most cases it is not possible to build a filter to separate individual channels at RF frequencies. A major problem with this architecture is that spurious signals that are separated from each other by the same offset as your IF frequency can enter the mixer and be output on top of your desired signal. Careful planning must be done when choosing the IF frequency to avoid this problem as much as possible.

Another strategy is to simply downconvert the signal all the way to DC. This is called a direct conversion or “zero IF”/ZIF receiver. The advantage of this architecture is that you avoid the spur problems and also reduce the part count in your receiver. A major problem encountered is that since the local oscillator and the desired signal are at the same frequency, LO leakage in the mixer can cause a DC offset at the output. Since the LO level may vary due to reflections, this can wreak havoc with your A/D conversion process.

Yet another architecture is to use a very low IF, on the order of 100 kHz. This offers good selectivity, reduces the problems with spurs, and avoids the DC offset problem. Low IF receivers are gaining in popularity currently.

Other important considerations in RF system design are the modulation format, as well as the type of filtering that is applied to the baseband waveform to constrain its occupied spectrum. The tradeoff with modulation formats is between spectral efficiency and power efficiency. FM based modulation (FSK or MSK in the digital world) uses more spectrum than other formats, but since the RF waveform has a constant amplitude, the power amplifier in the transmitter can be operated at saturation without distorting the signal. This results in more efficient conversion of battery power to RF signal power than other formats. Conversely, other formats such as phase shift keying tranmit the same data using less bandwidth, but the RF amplitude of the signal varies with time and thus the power amplifiers need to operate with more linearity to faithfully reproduce the signal. Since the amplifiers cannot run at saturation, they are less efficient in using the battery power to produce the RF signal for transmission. Power amplifier designers are constantly researching ways to offer more linearity in the output, while achieving the highest efficiency possible.

Besser Associates offers several courses on RF System Design as well as power amplifier design for high efficiency. Our next RF System design course will be this August with Rowan Gilmore. Call or email the office if you are interested in this course and we can add you as a pending registration. This is very helpful for our planning purposes.

Wireless System Design and Simulation
Aug 23-Aug 27, 2010 Course 150-4276
Presented by Rowan Gilmore Register by 7/19/2010 and pay $1995, otherwise pay $2195 Register Online

Featured Course: Wireless System Design and Simulation

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

The purpose of this five day course is to understand the tradeoffs in designing wireless systems, and to show how to seamlessly move between both the circuit and system level in radio transceivers and other RF systems. We do this by looking at typical radio architectures, exploring the design tradeoffs, and simulating at both the circuit and system level. The course treats digitally coded signals in RF and IF components, and explores the compromises that are inherent in the design of a radio transceiver. From the RF perspective, the need to minimize interference from nearby unwanted stronger signals and to allow detection of a desired signal in noise is critical. Avoiding corruption of other signals sharing the spectrum is equally critical. Achieving both together is not so simple! In wireless LAN for instance, we will see how tradeoffs made to solve one problem, like multipath reception, have placed tight constraints on other parts of the system, such as the linearity of the power amplifier. We will interactively simulate a double super-heterodyne, dual-band radio receiver, a direct conversion receiver, and an I-Q modulator and transmitter, as well as multiple components. This provides the opportunity to explore ‘what if?’ scenarios.

Wireless System Design and Simulation
Aug 23-Aug 27, 2010 Course 150-4276
Presented by Rowan Gilmore Register by 7/19/2010 and pay $1995, otherwise pay $2195 Register Online

Tutorial: Impedance Matching

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Last month, instructor Bob Froelich gave a brief introduction to the concepts behind impedance matching for RF circuits. A recorded version of his presentation can be viewed on the Microwave Journal website. Some of the main points of the presentation are summarized as follows.

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Webcast: RF System Architecture

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

The 2010 Webinar series from Microwave Journal and Besser Associates continues with a tutorial on RF System Architecture by instructor Rick Fornes.

Topics for RF Transceiver Block Diagrams

Key Components:
• LNA’s
• Mixers
• Modulators (IQ)
• Power Amplifiers
• Key System Characteristics (NF, Sensitivity, Dynamic Range, Blocking, Spurious products, Linearity, Efficiency, ACPR etc.)

Don’t miss out on this opportunity to see the presentation and ask questions in the Q&A session that follows. Visit the Microwave Journal Webinars page for more information about the upcoming webcast, and to sign up. You can also view the recorded sessions of previous webcasts in the series.

The webinar will run Tuesday, June 22, 2010; 8:00 am PT.

To learn more about system architectures and design, sign up for our course this August 23-27 in San Jose, CA:

Wireless System Design and Simulation
Aug 23-Aug 27, 2010 Course 150-4276
Presented by Rowan Gilmore Register by 7/19/2010 and pay $1995, otherwise pay $2195 Register Online

RF Fundamentals Web Classroom Course June 14-18

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

This course provides circuit-level designers with the essential concepts needed to work effectively with high frequency electronics. Participants gain analytical, graphical, and computer-aided techniques to analyze and optimize RF circuits in practical situations. The course addresses linear active circuit design, focusing on stability, bandwidth, and noise considerations. (more…)