Abstract

In this letter, we analyze the effects of temperature (from -50/spl deg/C to 200/spl deg/C) and substrate impedance on the noise figure (NF) and quality factor (Q-factor) performances of monolithic RF inductors on silicon. The results show a 0.75 dB (from 0.98 to 0.23 dB) reduction in minimum NF (NF/sub min/) at 8 GHz, an 86.1% (from 15.1 to 28.1) increase in maximum Q-factor (Q/sub max/), and a 4.8% (from 16.5 to 17.3 GHz) improvement in self-resonant frequency (f/sub SR/) were obtained if post-process of proton implantation had been done. This means the post-process of proton implantation is effective in improving the NF and Q-factor performances of inductors on silicon mainly due to the reduction of eddy current loss in the silicon substrate. In addition, it was found that NF increases with increasing temperature but show a reverse behavior within a higher frequency range. This phenomenon can be explained by the positive temperature coefficients of the series metal resistance (R/sub s/), the parallel substrate resistances (R/sub sub1/ and R/sub sub2/), and the resistance R/sub s1/ of the substrate transformer loop. The present analyzes are helpful for RF designers to design less temperature-sensitive high-performance fully on-chip low-noise-amplifiers (LNAs) and voltage-controlled-oscillators (VCOs) for single-chip receiver front-end applications.

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