CIRCUITS FOR PROVIDING CLASS-E POWER AMPLIFIERS
20190319592 ยท 2019-10-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03F2200/222
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/387
ELECTRICITY
H03F1/56
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/402
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
In some embodiments, circuits for providing Class-E power amplifiers are provided, the circuits comprising: a first switch having a first side and a second side; a first Class-E load network coupled to the first side of the first switch; a second Class-E load network; and a second switch having a first side and a second side, the first side of the second switch being coupled the second side of the first switch and the second Class-E load network. In some embodiments, the circuits further comprise: a third switch having a first side and a second side; a third Class-E load network coupled to the first side of the third switch; a fourth Class-E load network; and a fourth switch having a first side and a second side, the first side of the fourth switch being coupled the second side of the third switch and the fourth Class-E load network.
Claims
1. A circuit for forming an amplifier comprising: a first switch having a first side and a second side; one of a first inductor and a first transmission line, the one of the first inductor and the transmission line having a first side connected to the first side of the first switch and having a second side connected to a non-ground power supply voltage; one of a second inductor and a second transmission line, the one of the second inductor and the second transmission line having a first side and a second side, the second side of the one of the second inductor and the second transmission line connected to a non-ground power supply voltage; and a second switch having a first side and a second side, the first side of the second switch being directly connected to the second side of the first switch and the first side of the one of the second inductor and the second transmission line.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] Circuits for providing Class-E power amplifiers are provided.
[0014] In accordance with some embodiments, circuits for providing Class-E power amplifiers that employ stacked switching devices, each having a Class-E load network, are provided. In some embodiments, a Class-E load network (which can include a DC-feed inductor to a power supply in parallel with a series resonant filter connected to a Class-E load impedance) is connected at the drain node of each stacked device. The resulting topology can result in a stacking of two (or more) single-device Class-E PAs that each retain individual Class-E characteristics. In some embodiments, output power can be derived from the intermediary node(s) in addition to the drain of the top stacked device.
[0015]
[0016] As shown, topology 100 can include two stacked switching devices 102 and 104, two Class-E load networks 106 and 108, and two Class-E load impedances 110 and 112.
[0017] Devices 102 and 104 can be any suitable switching devices. For example, in some embodiments, switching devices 102 and 104 can be MOSFETs, BJTs, and/or any other suitable switching devices in some embodiments.
[0018] Switching devices 102 and 104 can be represented by switches S.sub.1 and S.sub.2 with output capacitances C.sub.1 and C.sub.2 and ON resistances R.sub.s1 and R.sub.s2, respectively. Each of switches 102 and 104 can be driven by a square wave input with 50% duty-cycle (not shown), sine wave, and/or any other suitable input signal. In this representation, the output capacitance C.sub.1 consists of the C.sub.gd (gate to drain capacitance) and C.sub.db (drain to bulk capacitance) of the top device, and the output capacitance C.sub.2 consists of the C.sub.gs (gate to source capacitance) and C.sub.sb (source to bulk capacitance) of the top device, and C.sub.gd and C.sub.db of the bottom device.
[0019] Because each switch has a Class-E load network of its own and because each switch has an equal duty cycle, each switch can exhibit independent Class-E-like behavior and Class-E design equations can apply directly to each switch 102 and 104 and its load network 106 and 108, respectively. Thus, the switches can be sized to drive independent load impedances 110 and 112.
[0020] As described above and as shown in
[0021] Class-E load impedances 110 and 112 can be any suitable Class-E load impedances. As shown in
[0022] In some embodiments, V.sub.DD;bot can be chosen so that the maximum instantaneous drain-source voltage swing for the bottom device is twice the nominal supply voltage. V.sub.DD;top can be adjusted so that drain-source voltage swings for top and bottom devices are similar in some embodiments.
[0023] An example of a circuit 200 consistent with topology 100 in accordance with some embodiments is shown in
[0024] As shown, circuit 200 can receive an input signal at input pad 218. Any suitable input signal can be used to drive circuit 200 in some embodiments. For example, in some embodiments, circuit 200 can be driven be a sinusoidal source at input 218. Input impedance transformation network 228 can provide impedance matching so that input 218 matches the impedance of the input signal source. The resulting signal from network 228 can then be biased by resistor 232 and provided to the gate of switch 204.
[0025] Similarly, the gate of switch 202 can be DC biased by resistor 222 and AC coupled to ground by bypass capacitor 224.
[0026] In some embodiments, in order to utilize the power available from intermediary node 206 as well as the power from the drain of switch 202, the load currents of switches 202 and 204 can be power combined. Power combining can be performed in any suitable manner. For example, as shown in
[0027] In some embodiments, to design an impedance transformation network 236 as shown in
wherein:
[0028] C.sub.in is the input capacitance the switch;
[0029] C.sub.out is the output capacitance of the switch;
[0030] f.sub.0 is the operating frequency;
[0031] i.sub.L,OFF is the current through the choke (here, transmission line 220 or 226) when the switch is not conducting;
[0032] i.sub.L,ON is the current through the choke when the switch is conducting;
[0033] k is a constant of proportionality;
[0034] L is the inductance of the choke;
[0035] P.sub.in is the input power expended for switching;
[0036] P.sub.loss,cap is the power loss in the output capacitance of the switch;
[0037] P.sub.loss,choke is the power loss in the choke;
[0038] P.sub.loss,switch is the switch power loss in the switch when it is conducting;
[0039] R.sub.choke is the resistance of the choke;
[0040] R.sub.on is the on resistance of switch when conducting;
[0041] T is the period of operation;
[0042] V.sub.on is the amplitude of the input signal;
[0043] V.sub.S,ON is the voltage across switch when conducting;
[0044] V.sub.S,OFF is the voltage across switch when not conducting; and
[0045] .sub.0 is the operating frequency in radians.
[0046] In some embodiments, because the power combined output at output pad 208 may be required to drive a 50 ohm load (not shown) (e.g., when driving a 50 ohm impedance antenna, test equipment, etc.), the load resistances for each of switches 202 and 204 can be selected so that their parallel combination is 50 ohms. For example, as illustrated in
[0047] In some embodiments, the load resistances seen at output pad 208 for the top and the bottom switches 202 and 204 can additionally or alternatively be chosen to be equal (e.g., each 100 ohms) so that the top and bottom switches 202 and 204 deliver equal output power.
[0048] In some embodiments, the load voltages for the top and bottom switches 202 and 204 can be selected to be identical or similar in swing and phase as shown in
[0049] Another example of waveforms V.sub.top and V.sub.bot that can be produced at the drains of switches 202 and 204, respectively, in response to a sinusoidal input signal in accordance with some embodiments is shown in
[0050] In some embodiments, two such Class-E power amplifier unit cells, as shown in
[0051] As illustrated in
[0052] As described above in connection with
[0053] In some embodiments, the DC-feed inductances and the transmission lines in the impedance matching networks can be implemented using Coplanar Waveguides (CPWs) with continuous ground plane. As shown in
[0054] In some embodiments, such CPWs can have a measured quality factor of 15-18 in the Q-band, and the measured quality factor of a W=7.3 mL=8 m 70 fF VNCAP and a W=19 mL=9 m 214 fF VNCAP can be 13 and 7, respectively, at 45 GHz.
[0055] In some embodiments, Class-E power amplifiers as described herein can be fabricated in IBM's 45 nm SOI CMOS technology using 56-nm body-contacted N-type Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (NMOS) devices stacked as described above. Chip microphotographs of two such Class-E power amplifiers like those shown in
[0056] More particularly, for example, in some embodiments, the top switch 202 in
[0057] As another more particular example, the top switch in
[0058] In some embodiments, with IBM's 45 nm SOI CMOS technology, the 2.225 m thick topmost metal layer (LB) can constitute a signal conductor while the three lowermost metal layers (M1-M3) can be used for a ground plane.
[0059] In some embodiments, usage of 40 nm floating-body devices and splitting the overall device into several smaller devices wired appropriately in parallel can be used to improve the f.sub.max, and hence the gain available from the device.
[0060] In some embodiments, power amplifiers as described herein can be used in any suitable application. For example, in some embodiments, these power amplifiers can be used in applications that involve the use of efficient, high-power wireless transmitters. More particularly, for example, potential applications can include handset and base-station power amplifiers for cellular telephony, transmitters for wireless LAN, Bluetooth and other radio-frequency wireless applications, millimeter-wave vehicular radar currently being explored and deployed in the 22-29 GHz and 77 GHz frequency ranges, and transmitters for 60 GHz wireless personal area networks (WPANs).
[0061] Although the invention has been described and illustrated in the foregoing illustrative embodiments, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made only by way of example, and that numerous changes in the details of implementation of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which is limited only by the claims that follow. Features of the disclosed embodiments can be combined and rearranged in various ways.