Abstract

A single-stage stacked field-effect transistor (FET) linear power amplifier (PA) is demonstrated using 0.28-?m 2.5-V standard I/O FETs in a 0.13-?m silicon-on-insulator (SOI) CMOS technology. To overcome the low breakdown voltage limit of MOSFETs, a stacked-FET structure is employed, where four transistors are connected in series so that their output voltage swings are added in phase. With a 6.5-V supply, the measured PA achieves a small-signal gain of 14.6 dB, a saturated output power of 32.4 dBm, and a maximum power-added efficiency (PAE) of 47% at 1.9 GHz. Using a reverse-link IS-95 code division multiple access modulated signal, the PA shows an average output power of up to 28.7 dBm with a PAE of 41.2% while meeting the adjacent channel power ratio requirement. Using an uplink wideband code division multiple access modulated signal, the PA shows an average output power of up to 29.4 dBm with a PAE of 41.4% while meeting the adjacent channel leakage ratio requirement. The stacked-FET PA is designed to withstand up to 9 V of supply voltage before reaching its breakdown limit. This is the first reported stacked-FET linear PA in submicrometer SOI CMOS technology that delivers watt-level output power in the gigahertz frequency range with efficiency and linearity performance comparable to those of GaAs-based PAs.

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