Abstract

The growing demand for broadband mobile access drives the deployment of sophisticated and increasingly spectrum-efficient modulation techniques and access technologies resulting in communication signals with highly varying envelopes and increasing peakto-average power ratios (PAPRs). These communication signals call for advanced transmitter architectures and design techniques. This is particularly the case for the constituent radio frequency (RF) power amplifiers (PAs), which are required to amplify communication signals efficiently while maintaining signal quality and minimizing out-of-band emissions in adjacent channels. The Doherty [1] technique has been successfully applied to develop highly efficient solid-state PAs for wireless communication applications. Benefiting from recent advancements in laterally diffused metal oxide semiconductors (LDMOSs), and taking advantage of the advent of gallium nitride (GaN) technology, Doherty PA (DPA) demonstrators with average drain efficiencies approaching 50% were reported in [2]-[4]. Unfortunately, the underlying narrow bandwidth of these demonstrators currently restricts their use to infrastructure supporting third-generation (3G) wireless networks. Communication signals required by the 3G Partnership Project (3GPP) specifications for long-term evolution (LTE) will have to utilize carrier aggregation to meet the need for transmission bandwidth. Carrier aggregation refers to the use of more than one spectrum portion to deploy multiple component carriers to yield aggregated channels of wider transmission bandwidth (up to 100 MHz). Figure 1 illustrates the three carrier aggregation scenarios that are envisaged: 1) intraband contiguous carrier aggregation (contiguous component carriers aggregated in the same operating band), 2) intraband noncontiguous carrier aggregation (noncontiguous carriers aggregated in the same operating band), and 3) interband carrier aggregation (carrier aggregation of component carriers in different operating bands that may be contiguous or noncontiguous within each band).

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