Abstract

In this paper, the design of a wide-swing low-noise transconductance amplifier (LNTA) is presented in the context of passive mixer-based direct-conversion RF receivers, noting that the compression performance of such systems is limited by the initial voltage-to-current conversion. The proposed LNTA utilizes a stacked PMOS/NMOS common-gate configuration with its input common-mode voltage maintained by a class-AB operational transconductance amplifier (OTA). Linearization mechanisms and design procedures are explained both quantitatively and intuitively. Simulations of the LNTA at the typical corner, when ideally loaded, show an IIP3 + 32.8 dBm extrapolated at +12.5 dBm/-16.5 dBm CW blocking condition and an out-of-band 1-dB desensitization point of +22 dBm. These results are also shown to qualitatively agree with those extracted from an analytical model of the LNTA.

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