Abstract

This paper concerns the design consideration, fabrication process, and performance results for an ultra-broadband, low-voltage, low-power, BiCMOS-based transceiver chip for cellular-satellite-LAN wireless communication networks. The transceiver chip incorporates an RF amplifier, a Gilbert down-mixer, and an IF amplifier in the receive path, and an IF amplifier, a Gilbert up-mixer, and an RF amplifier in the transmit path. For an RF frequency in the 1-10 GHz band and an IF frequency in the 100-1000 MHz band, the developed transceiver chip consumes less than 60 mW at 2 V, to yield a downconversion gain of 40 dB at 1 GHz and 10 dB at 10 GHz and an upconversion gain of 42 dB at 1 GHz and 11 dB at 10 GHz. To avoid possible start-up problems caused during "stand-by" to "enable" mode transition, a simple switching technique is employed for enabling either the receive or the transmit path, by changing the value of a reference voltage applied to both the down- and the up-mixers. While the developed transceiver chip exhibits the best performance for a dc supply voltage of 2 V, it shows a graceful degradation for a /spl plusmn/0.15 V voltage deviation. The transceiver's chip size is 1.04 mm/spl times/1.04 mm.

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