Patent classifications
H03F2200/301
Power amplifier
A power amplifier including: a main power amplification device having an output; an auxiliary power amplification device having an output; a load modulation circuit operably connected to the output of the main power amplification device and the output of the auxiliary power amplification device; and a post-matching circuit operably connected to load modulation circuit. The load modulation circuit is arranged to enable fundamental frequency load modulation and to enable modulated harmonic terminations of at least the second and third harmonic frequencies. The modulated harmonic terminations may include drain terminations.
Multiphase buck-boost amplifier
A first system includes first and second buck-boost amplifiers. The first amplifier is connected to a battery, includes a first inductor and a first plurality of switches connected to the first inductor, and drives first and second loads. The second amplifier is connected to the battery, includes a second inductor and a second plurality of switches connected to the second inductor, and drives the first and second loads. A controller drives the first and second plurality of switches to operate each of the first and second amplifiers in a single inductor multiple output mode. A second system includes multiple buck-boost amplifiers connected to a battery and driving respective loads. Each amplifier includes inductors and switches connected to the inductors. A controller drives the switches to utilize one or more inductors based on an amount of power used by each amplifier to drive the respective loads.
Cascode Amplifier Bias Circuits
Bias circuits and methods for silicon-based amplifier architectures that are tolerant of supply and bias voltage variations, bias current variations, and transistor stack height, and compensate for poor output resistance characteristics. Embodiments include power amplifiers and low-noise amplifiers that utilize a cascode reference circuit to bias the final stages of a cascode amplifier under the control of a closed loop bias control circuit. The closed loop bias control circuit ensures that the current in the cascode reference circuit is approximately equal to a selected multiple of a known current value by adjusting the gate bias voltage to the final stage of the cascode amplifier. The final current through the cascode amplifier is a multiple of the current in the cascode reference circuit, based on a device scaling factor representing the relative sizes of the transistor devices in the cascode amplifier and in the cascode reference circuit.
RF amplifiers with input-side fractional harmonic resonator circuits
A radio frequency amplifier includes a transistor, an input impedance matching circuit (e.g., a single-section T-match circuit or a multiple-section bandpass circuit), and a fractional harmonic resonator circuit. The input impedance matching circuit is coupled between an amplification path input and a transistor input terminal. An input of the fractional harmonic resonator circuit is coupled to the amplification path input, and an output of fractional harmonic resonator circuit is coupled to the transistor input terminal. The fractional harmonic resonator circuit is configured to resonate at a resonant frequency that is between a fundamental frequency of operation of the RF amplifier and a second harmonic of the fundamental frequency. According to a further embodiment, the fractional harmonic resonator circuit resonates at a fraction, x, of the fundamental frequency, wherein the fraction is between about 1.25 and about 1.9 (e.g., x≈1.5).
Generation And Synchronization Of Pulse-Width Modulated (PWM) Waveforms For Radio-Frequency (RF) Applications
Described are concepts, systems, circuits and techniques directed toward methods and apparatus for generating one or more pulse width modulated (PWM) waveforms with the ability to dynamically control pulse width and phase with respect to a reference signal.
RECONFIGURABLE AMPLIFIER
A reconfigurable amplifier configured to decrease radio frequency (RF) signal distortion and increase dynamic range is disclosed. The reconfigurable amplifier includes an amplifier having an RF signal input, an RF signal output, and a bias signal input. A distortion detection network has a detector input coupled to the RF signal output and a detector output, wherein the distortion detector network is configured to generate a detection signal that is proportional to distortion at the RF signal output. A bias controller has a detection signal input coupled to the detector output and a bias output coupled to the bias signal input. The bias controller is configured to generate a bias signal that dynamically shifts level at the bias output to reduce the distortion at the RF signal output in response to the detection signal.
RF damping structure in inductive device
A spiral inductor includes a spiral trace and a plurality of first projections extending along a first edge of the spiral trace. The spiral inductor may further include a plurality of second projections extending along a second edge of the spiral trace, the second edge being opposite the first edge.
OPEN LOOP PROCESS AND TEMPERATURE INDEPENDENT BIAS CIRCUIT FOR STACKED DEVICE AMPLIFIERS
An open loop process and temperature independent bias circuit for stacked device amplifiers is disclosed herein. In one or more embodiments, a method for biasing a stacked high-voltage signal amplifier with a voltage divider bias module comprises generating, by the voltage divider bias module from a power supply voltage (VDD), a plurality of control voltage biases, which comprise a plurality of voltage references plus an offset voltage term (Vtemp). In one or more embodiments, the plurality of voltage references are each proportional to a division of the power supply voltage (VDD), and the offset voltage term (Vtemp) is proportional to temperature and is a function of process variation. The method further comprises biasing, a plurality of devices of the stacked high-voltage signal amplifier, with the control voltage biases.
HIGH-FREQUENCY AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT
According to one embodiment, a high frequency amplifier circuit includes a first transistor including a gate to which an input signal is input; a second transistor including a gate grounded, and a source coupled to a drain of the first transistor; a first switch coupled between a first output terminal and a first node located between the drain of the second transistor and an inductor; a third transistor including a gate to which the input signal is input; a fourth transistor including a gate that is grounded, and a source coupled to a drain of the third transistor; a second switch coupled between a second output terminal and a second node located between the drain of the fourth transistor and an inductor; and a third switch coupled between the first node and the second node.
Transformer circuitry
Transformer circuitry comprising: a transformer having a primary coil and a secondary coil, the primary coil having first and second primary terminals and the secondary coil having first and second secondary terminals, and a secondary coil driver configured to drive a secondary voltage signal V2 across the secondary terminals which has a target relationship with a primary voltage signal V1 driven across the primary terminals by a primary coil driver so that an inductance value measured between the primary terminals is governed by the target relationship.