Abstract
SUMMARYA new energy‐efficient tunable pulse generator is presented in this paper using 0.13‐µm CMOS technology for short‐range high‐data‐rate 3.1–10.6 GHz ultra‐wideband applications. A ring oscillator consisting of current‐starved CMOS inverters is quickly switched on and off for the duration of the pulse, and the amplitude envelope is shaped with a variable passive CMOS attenuator. The variable passive attenuator is controlled using an impulse that is created by a low‐power glitch generator (CMOS NOR gate). The glitch generator combines the falling edge of the clock and its delayed inverse, allowing the duration of the impulse to be changed over a wide range (500–900 ps) by varying the delay between the edges. The pulses generated with this technique can provide a sharp frequency roll off with high out‐of‐band rejection to help meet the Federal Communications Commission mask. The entire circuit operates in switched mode with a low average power consumption of less than 3.8 mW at 910 MHz pulse repetition frequency or below 4.2 pJ of energy per pulse. It occupies a total area of 725 × 600 µm2 including bonding pads and decoupling capacitors, and the active circuit area is only 360 × 200 µm2. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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More From: International Journal of Circuit Theory and Applications
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