1. Wireless Synchronization and Spatial Combining of Widely Spaced mm-Wave Arrays in 65-nm CMOS.
- Author
-
Chen, Charles and Babakhani, Aydin
- Subjects
- *
WIRELESS communications , *COMPLEMENTARY metal oxide semiconductors , *TELECOMMUNICATION systems , *LOGIC circuits , *MICROSTRIP antennas - Abstract
This paper presents the first wirelessly synchronized multichip array (WSMA) in 65-nm CMOS. The proposed architecture makes use of a central wireless signal to synchronize an mm-wave array, eliminating the need for connecting wires between the array elements. Wireless injection locking of a single chip is successfully demonstrated, and a 3-dB linewidth of 400 Hz at a carrier frequency of 50 GHz is achieved (stability ratio of 8 ppb). In addition, a two-element WSMA with an array aperture greater than 20 wavelengths is demonstrated using the proposed transceiver architecture. The reported transceiver includes a receiving on-chip antenna, a low-noise amplifier, an injection-locked voltage-controlled oscillator, a buffer amplifier, an in-phase/quadrature generator, a phase shifter, a power amplifier, and a transmitting on-chip antenna. The chip is fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process and occupies an area of 1.7 mm $\times 3.8$ mm. This paper sets the foundation for increasing the array aperture through wireless injection locking, extending traditional array systems into the high-resolution, narrow-beamwidth regime. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF