Faculty Publications

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    A 61.2-dB?, 100 Gb/s Ultra-Low Noise Graphene TIA over D-Band Performance for 5G Optical Front-End Receiver
    (Springer, 2021) Gorre, P.; Vignesh, R.; Song, H.; Kumar, S.
    This work reports in first time a 100-Gb/s, ultra-low noise, variable gain multi-stagger tuned transimpedance amplifier (VGMST-TIA) over the D-band performance. The whole work is binding into two phases. The first phase involves the modeling and characterization of graphene field-effect transistor (GFET) with an optimized transition frequency of operation. While in the second phase, a TIA design employs a T-shaped symmetrical L-R network at the input, which mitigates the effect of photo diode capacitance and achieves a D-band of operation. The proposed work uses a VGMST to establish TIA, which realizes optimum noise performance. The high gain 3-stage VGMST-TIA effectively minimizes the white noise and illustrates a sharp out-of-band roll-off to achieve considerable noise reduction at high frequencies. The active feedback mechanism controls the transimpedance gain by tuning the control voltage which results better group delay. Besides, an L-C circuit is employed at the output to enhance bandwidth. The full TIA is implemented and fabricated using a commercial nano-manufacturing 9-nm graphene film FET on a silicon wafer using 0.065-?m process. The TIA achieves a flat transimpedance gain of 61.2 dB? with ± 9 ps group delay variation over the entire bandwidth. The proposed TIA measured an impedance bandwidth of 0.2 THz with ultra-low input-referred noise current density of 2.03 pA/?Hz. The TIA supports a 100-Gb/s data transmission due to large bandwidth; therefore, a bit-error-rate (BER) less than 10?12 is achieved. The chip occupies an area of 0.92 * 1.34 mm2 while consuming power of 21 mW under supply of 1.8 V. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC part of Springer Nature.
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    A 64 ?dB?, 25 ?Gb/s GFET based transimpedance amplifier with UWB resonator for optical radar detection in medical applications
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2021) Gorre, P.; Vignesh, R.; Song, H.; Kumar, S.
    This work reports a novel Graphene Field Effect Transistor (GFET) based transimpedance amplifier (TIA) for optical radar detection in medical applications. Design-I includes a microstrip line (MSL) based UWB resonator circuit which enables the TIA design to operate in UWB range of frequency with high Q-factor. Design-II comprises MSL UWB resonator integrated stagger-tuned CR-RGC TIA which enhances the transimpedance limit and mitigates the effect of photodiode capacitance results in higher bandwidth performance. The proposed TIA realizes a 2.6 times lesser noise compared to the conventional CR-RGC TIA. A flat transimpedance gain of 64 ?dB? and ultra-low input-referred noise current density of 8.9 pA/?Hz are achieved using gain and noise optimization methods. Additionally, a dynamic range of 49 ?dB with a group delay variation (GDV) of ±25 ps is achieved over the entire UWB range. The TIA demonstrates a 25 ?Gb/s data rate while a bit-error-rate (BER) less than 10?10 is achieved. The chip occupies an area of 0.67?0.72 ?mm2 while consuming power of 19 ?mW under the supply voltage of 1.8 ?V. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
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    A novel wide bandwidth FBSSIR integrated low noise amplifier for satellite navigational receiver system
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2021) Vignesh, R.; Gorre, P.; Kumar, S.
    This paper presents a Folded Butterfly Stub Stepped Impedance Resonator (FBSSIR) integrated low noise amplifier (LNA) implemented using packaging technology for the satellite navigation receiver system. By employing a novel structural deformation of a stepped-impedance-resonator (SIR), the proposed FBSSIR is achieved with a more compact structure, controllable transmission zero, adjustable center frequency, and adjustable bandwidth. The designed FBSSIR acts as a filter, and the input-output matching network is integrated into the proposed core LNA circuit. The Design-of-experiment (DoE) analysis is performed to analyze the passive component's sensitivity becoming desensitized, while statistical analysis is presented for the proposed FBSSIR integrated LNA to predict the percentage error tolerance. Its measurement result provides gain above 22 dB in the wide bandwidth from 1.6 GHz to 2.5 GHz, minimum NF of 2.7 dB at 1.8 GHz, which varies from 3 dB to 4.5 dB. The calculated area of FBSSIR integrated LNA is 10.7 × 2 cm2, while LNA is 3.3 × 1.6 cm2. It exhibits an input and output 1-dB compression point (IP1dB & OP1dB) of ?23dBm and +2.3dBm. © 2021
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    A strip line technique based 1 Gb/s, 70-dB linear dynamic range transimpedance amplifier towards LiDAR unmanned vehicle application
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Gorre, P.; Vignesh, R.; Kumar, S.
    1This work reports a Microstrip Line (MSL) based Dual-Gate MOSFET (DGMOSFET) Transimpedance amplifier (TIA) for LIDAR unmanned vehicle application under different weather conditions. TIA (Design-I) is proposed under normal weather, while TIA (Design-II) for foggy weather conditions. TIA (Design-I) employs a variable gain common gate topology with post-amplification, resulting in high gain, wide bandwidth, and high dynamic range (DR). TIA (Design-II) incorporates a series MSL section at the input of TIA (Design-I), which further enhances the bandwidth performance. TIA (Design-I) realizes a fractional bandwidth of 104.3% with a transimpedance gain of 100.4 dBΩ and low input-referred noise (IRN) density of 4.29 pA/√Hz. TIA (Design-II) achieves a fractional bandwidth of 178.4% with transimpedance gain, IRN, and DR of 100.42 dBΩ, 3.81 pA/√Hz, and 70 dB, respectively. TIA (Design-II) demonstrates a 1 Gb/s data rate with a bit-error-rate < 10−10. The TIA (Design-I) and TIA (Design-II) consume the power of 33 mW and 39 mW under the supply voltage of 2 V. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
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    A wideband, 25/40dBm high I/O power GaN HEMT ultra-low noise amplifier using even-odd mode techniques
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Gupta, M.P.; Gorre, P.; Kumar, S.; Nulu, V.
    This paper presents a performance analysis of the low noise amplifier (LNA) for the first time using even-odd mode matching techniques in Gallium Nitride (GaN) HEMT Technology for marine communication. The proposed GaN LNA circuit consists of broadband stage I, main amplifier, and inverted broadband stage II, which provides a high input/output power, and ultra-low noise over wide bandwidth ranging from 0.5 GHz to 2.7 GHz with fractional impedance bandwidth of 138%. Broadband Stage I and Inverted broadband stage II are employed to provide input/output impedance matching transformation. The proposed LNA circuit with the incorporation of input/output broadband stages relax a 50Ω matching constraints and achieved high input and output power with good stability. The GaN HEMT LNA is analyzed and simulated using the RF simulator (ADS tool). The proposed GaN HEMT LNA is fabricated on RT Duroid substrate using Microwave Integrated Circuit (MIC) technology. The proposed LNA achieves a measured gain of 16 dB, while the simulated one is 17 dB with good insertion loss. An ultra-low noise figure of 0.6 dB flat is achieved over a wide bandwidth. In addition, the high output power is achieved 40dBm while input power is 25dBm which could overcome weak signal strength received by RF receiver for marine communication. A stability factor greater than one is achieved over a broad band ranging from 0.5 GHz to 2.7 GHz. The fabricated GaN HEMT LNA circuit has consumed power of 120 mW under a supply of 28 V. The area of the fabricated RF GaN HEMT LNA is 32 × 26 mm2. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
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    A 2.71-pA/√Hz ultra-low noise, 70-dB dynamic range CMOS transimpedance amplifier with incorporated microstrip line techniques over extended bandwidth
    (John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2023) Gorre, P.; Vignesh, R.; Kumar, S.; Song, H.; Roy, G.M.
    Recent advancements in the area of telemedicine have focused on remote patient monitoring services as a new frontier in medical applications. The present work reports a 65-nm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS)-based transimpedance amplifier (TIA) in an optical radar system for non-contact patient monitoring. A T-shaped microstrip line (MSL) integrated with variable gain common source TIA using MSL peaking technique and off-chip post-amplification integration is a newly proposed architecture to achieve a ultra-low noise, high dynamic range (DR) and high figure of merit over broadband than a traditional TIAs. First, the integrated T-shaped MSL develops an additional resonant frequency that resonates with a photodiode capacitance improving the bandwidth performance at higher Q values. Second, the shunt MSL peaking technique that introduces an additional conjugate pole-pair that cancels the effect of input capacitance helps to further improve the bandwidth of the TIA. Finally, an active feedback concept achieves a wide linear dynamic range enabling high TIA detectability. The proposed TIA realizes an impedance bandwidth of 770 MHz ranging from 7.12 to 7.89 GHz with a transimpedance gain of 105.1 dBΩ and ultra-low input-referred noise (IRN) density of 2.71 pA/√Hz. A high linear DR of 70 dB is achieved by employing a variable gain control scheme with a low group delay variation of 0.81 ns. The proposed work demonstrates a 1-Gb/s data rate while a bit-error rate less than 10−12 is achieved. The TIA consumes a power of 0.82 mW under the supply voltage of 1.2 V. © 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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    A 28 nm CMOS low-noise amplifier with novel redundant noise cancellation technique beyond ultra-wideband for 6G-based wireless systems
    (Elsevier GmbH, 2024) Naik, D.N.; Gorre, P.; Prasad Gupta, M.; Kumar, S.; Al-Shidaifat, A.; Song, H.
    In the current scenario, almost 5G-based wireless systems have been deployed everywhere but still performance trade-offs of RF amplifiers in the sub-nanometer regime are challenging. In this work, a high-performance low-noise amplifier (LNA) is realized in a 28 nm CMOS process with a novel redundant noise cancellation technique (RnC). The proposed technique improves the noise figure (NF) beyond the ultra-wideband of a low-noise amplifier (LNA) and minimizes the trade-off in the 28 nm process. An ultra-low NF is achieved in two approaches; Firstly, a current mirror network is employed in the primary path to cancel the thermal noise of the dominant transistor of a common gate-common source (CG-CS) without an extra power supply. Secondly, an auxiliary amplifier stage is introduced here to reduce the noise which contributes to the current mirror circuit and cancels the distortion in CG-CS topology without violating the traditional noise cancellation condition. In addition, an analytical approach is followed to optimize the input impedance, gain bandwidth and noise figure. Hence, the proposed RnC LNA benefits in achieving good tradeoffs among gain, bandwidth, NF, and power consumption in 28 nm technology node. The proposed RnC LNA is analyzed and fabricated using CMOS 28 nm technology, occupying an area of 0.011 mm2. The proposed design achieves an optimum performance: nearly flat gain of 15.3 dB, minimum NF of 1.7 dB over 1.7 to 12.52 GHz, and an IIP3 of − 2.6 dBm at 6.5 GHz. The proposed LNA consumes ultra-low power consumption of 1.8 mW under the power supply of 1 V. © 2023