Fabio Peinetti
Analysis and Design of Compound Semiconductor Stacked Power Amplifiers.
Rel. Chiara Ramella, Marco Pirola. Politecnico di Torino, Corso di laurea magistrale in Ingegneria Elettronica (Electronic Engineering), 2021
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Abstract: |
The thesis concerns the stacked amplifier topology for high frequency applications, and in particular, the goal of the following analysis is the design of a 3-stages stacked amplifier, working at 26 GHz. The possibility to overcome the problem linked to the breakdown voltage limitation on V DS and modularity makes the stacked topology particularly interesting at RF. In particular the output power and gain are directly proportional to the number of stacked stages. From a schematic point of view, a stacked amplifier is made up of a Common Source (CS) and a Pseudo-Common Gate (CG), which corresponds to a Common Gate with a capacitance connected on the its Gate terminal. Two technologies of pHEMT are taken into account and compared in the following discussion: commercial GaN and InGaAs pHEMT processes. Through a load-pull simulation, the optimum load impedance for the GaN is obtained, enhancing a maximum output power of about 32 dBm and a gain of about 12 dB for the single CS stage. An inter-stage matching network (InMN) is necessary between stages, in order to get the maximum output power. As for the 3-stages amplifier the first InMN will be made up of a shunt inductance of 175pH (with a 0.22pF gate capacitance), while for the second one, the best solution seems to be use of a 296 pH shunt inductor (which leads to a Cg = 105 fF). Unfortunately the GaN device results to be unstable out-of-the-band. On the other hand, according load-pull analysis on the GaAs device, it is able to provide a 25dBm maximum output power and a gain of 12.3dB. Also in this case, the best solution for the middle inter-stage matching, resulted to be a 332.3pH shunt inductance, together with a Cg = 0.175pF; the third stage required a C g = 80 fF and a 580 pH shunt inductance. Even if the GaAs device results to be unstable, it can be successfully stabilized. The ideal amplifier is characterized by a gain of 18dB and an output power close to 29dBm. An asymmetrical layout was chosen, in order to enhance compactness and cross-talk immunity. Two layouts, one based on lines and one with lumped inductors were proposed; the use of inductors does not strongly change performance with respect to the previous case, but a more compact layout can be obtained. In particular for a 3-stages GaAs amplifier (with lines) the obtained gain is about 17.29dB, while the corresponding output power is close to 29dBm. The use of real components leads to a narrow-band amplifier, as conformed by frequency simulations in the (24 − 29) GHz. Only around 26 GHz can be profitably used, without a performance worsening. |
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Relatori: | Chiara Ramella, Marco Pirola |
Anno accademico: | 2020/21 |
Tipo di pubblicazione: | Elettronica |
Numero di pagine: | 156 |
Soggetti: | |
Corso di laurea: | Corso di laurea magistrale in Ingegneria Elettronica (Electronic Engineering) |
Classe di laurea: | Nuovo ordinamento > Laurea magistrale > LM-29 - INGEGNERIA ELETTRONICA |
Aziende collaboratrici: | NON SPECIFICATO |
URI: | http://webthesis.biblio.polito.it/id/eprint/17872 |
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