Abstract

Direct conversion receiver (DCR) is an alternative wireless architecture to the well established super-heterodyne, particularly for low-power and low-cost terminals [A. A. Abidi, December 1995]. A new Ka-band high-speed direct conversion wideband six-port receiver was designed for wireless communications. This QPSK six-port receiver operates using analog signal processing (ASP). The QPSK DCR consists of a receiver front-end, a QPSK demodulator and a carrier recovery module. A reverse modulation loop (RML) was used to provide a rapid carrier recovery. The maximum bit rate, around 120 MB/s, is limited by the speed of the base-band circuits. The new hardware receiver is proposed for use in wide Ka-band wireless mass-market QPSK communications such as LMDS services. Bit error rate (BER) results versus the noise and reference signal phase shift are presented.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call