## Abstract This article presents the design and experimental results of a low‐power dual‐band RF receiver front‐end including a dual‐band low‐noise amplifier (LNA) and a downconversion mixer based on the IEEE 802.15.4 standard for sensor node applications. A dual‐band LNA with two inputs is tuned
A 2.4/5.7-GHz dual-band low-power CMOS RF receiver with embedded band-select switches
✍ Scribed by D.-R. Huang; C.-L. Lu; H.-R. Chuang
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 279 KB
- Volume
- 51
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0895-2477
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
This article presents a 2.4‐/5.7‐GHz dual‐band low‐power direct‐conversion CMOS RF receiver for the 802.11a/b/g WLAN applications. The RF receiver includes a low noise amplifier (LNA) with dual input stages and dual switches for each of 2.4/5.7‐GHz applications. This design can substitute the use of two LNAs in conventional structure and eliminate the use of the costly external band‐select switches. It also alleviates the difficulty of single matching for multiple frequency bands. The RF receiver also includes a Gilbert‐cell‐based broadband mixer which is designed to be both low power consumption and relatively high conversion gain. Fabricated in 0.18‐μm CMOS technology, the RF receiver exhibits a conversion gain of 25.8/20.6 dB, DSB noise figure of 4.4/5.6 dB, and input IP~3~ of −18/−12.5 dBm at 2.4/5.7 GHz frequency band, respectively. The measured EVM for IEEE 802.11a/b/g is 1.2/1.6/1.1% at data rate of 11/54/54 Mbps. The power consumption under 1.8 V supply is 10.6 mW for the 2.4 GHz mode, and 17.2 mW for the 5.7 mode. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microwave Opt Technol Lett 51: 593–597, 2009; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/mop.24120
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A concurrent 2.4/5.2‐GHz dual‐band monolithic low‐noise amplifier implemented with a 0.18‐μm mixed‐signal CMOS technology is reported for the first time. This LNA only consumed 3‐mW power, and achieved minimum noise figures of 3.3 and 3.26 dB and 2.4 and 5.2 GHz, respectively. Input and