Faculty Publications
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Item An integrated cascode DE power amplifier for RF calibration system towards measurement of bio-sensor applications(John Wiley and Sons Inc. P.O.Box 18667 Newark NJ 07191-8667, 2019) Kumar, R.; Kumar Kanaujia, B.K.; Dwari, S.; Kumar, S.; Song, H.The integrated cascode DE power amplifier for RF calibration system toward measurement of bio-sensor applications is presented in this paper. The proposed architecture includes cascode class-D and class-E amplifier stages that could provide better calibration accuracy in terms of wide bandwidth, power efficiency, high gain, minimum group delay, and lowest calibration system. The achieved high performance of proposed amplifier overcomes conventional measurement issues toward bio-sensor application. The inductive ?-shape matching network drives RF input to class-D stage and provides wide bandwidth of operation. While class-E stage with T-shape matching network maintains stable gain and high efficiency in desired band of operation. The performance of the CMOS proposed amplifier is executed in RF ADS simulator along with fabricated chip using commercial TSMC 65 nm manufacturing process. The simulated and measured data achieves Ku band (12 GHz to 18 GHz) with almost flat gain of 30 dB. The DE amplifier provides an output and saturated power of 17 dBm with highest power efficiency of 45%. The measured calibration factor at maximum resonant frequency of 13.5 GHz achieves best value of less than 2 dB within input power range of ?50 dBm to 0 dBm. The lowest calibration factor provides best accuracy along with the other parameters and could be beneficial toward bio-sensor measurement in the various applications. The calculated area of the fabricated chip is as 0.45*0.45mm2 where class-E consuming area of 38% and class-D of 44%. The fabricated chip consumes less power consumption of 3.2 mW under power supply of 1 V. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Item Active feedback supported CMOS LNA blended with coplanar waveguide-fed antenna for Wi-Fi networks(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2021) Roy, G.M.; Dwari, S.; Kumar Kanaujia, B.K.; Kumar, S.; Song, H.This study presents integration of complementary CMOS active feedback low noise amplifier with coplanar waveguide fed patch antenna for Wi-Fi networks. The LNA design-I, involves a cascode amplifier followed by active feedback common source amplifier offering wideband impedance matching with lowered parasitic losses. The inductor-less feedback mechanism is used to nullify noise effect with extended bandwidth in the range of 2.2 to 5.8 GHz and a peak forward gain of 22.5 dB. It is implemented on agilent's advance design system using 45 nm CMOS process. The noise figure (NF) is approximately 2 dB while the stability factors µ and µ prime are well above 1 dB with IIP3 of about 15 dBm. The chip area is 0.57 x 0.57 mm2 under dc power supply of 1V while power consumption of 0.8 mW. A CPW fed antenna design-II, achieves a wide band response similar to the bandwidth of LNA. The size of the fabricated antenna is calculated as 40 x 40 mm2. The peak gain is approximately 4.1 dBi at 3.9 GHz. The codesign-III, proposes a receiver achieving a much wider band of 1.6 to 6 GHz with a gain of 16.5 dB and NF of 2.59 dB at 2.06 GHz. The codesign improves the system integration by reducing overall chip area and offers saving in the effective cost. © 2021 The Authors. IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Institution of Engineering and Technology.Item A highly robust RF 65 nm CMOS power amplifier design using Quasi-Newton control algorithm for wireless system(Elsevier B.V., 2023) Kumar, K.; Kumar, S.; Kumar Kanaujia, B.K.This article reports a novel robust approach towards CMOS power amplifier (PA) using Quasi-newton (QN) control algorithm in 65 nm CMOS process which provides best performance parameters over redundant wide bandwidth ranging from 2.4 to 16.4 GHz frequency band. Each stage are designed and optimized using QN algorithm to get desired goals such as high linearity, small group delay variations and high PAE across the entire frequency band of interest. Moreover, pole-zeros compensation technique is adopted and derived to get better stability of the proposed PA. The simulation and measurement results of PA achieved a small signal power gain of 10.5–16.8 dB with input return loss of better than 10 dB over the frequency band of 2.4 GHz to 16.4 GHz. A small group delay variation of ±58 ps over full frequency band of operation is achieved by optimizing the design parametric analysis. It is also observed that within the frequency of 6.5 to 14.6 GHz, an excellent small group delay variation of only ±11 ps is achieved and this is due to stage-2 tuning compensation technique. It also demonstrates the achieved input power in 1 dB compression points are −3.1 to 4.3 dBm, leading to maximum power added efficiency of 36.3%, respectively. The proposed PA consumes a lower DC power of 20.5 mW under supply voltage of 1.5. In addition, Process, voltage and temperature (PVT) analysis is executed at different conditions in order to achieve a robustness of the proposed PA over the entire band of operation. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.Item Analytical modelling of ultra-small group delay variation of ultra-broadband RF power amplifier using NSGA-II algorithm(John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2024) Kumar, K.; Kumar, S.; Kumar Kanaujia, B.K.This paper proposes a ± 9.4 ps ultra-small group delay (GD) variation of fully integrated 65 nm complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) power amplifier (PA) over 6.5–17 GHz broadband for wireless application. The proposed CMOS PA is realised by using broadband stage, RLC inter-stage and power stage topologies. The non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) is employed for PA parameter optimisation to ensure a small GD variation of ±9.4 ps over broadband with an excellent small signal gain flatness of 23.65 ± 1.85 for 6.5–17 GHz. The small GD variation of ±9.4 ps and ± 11.05 ps are attained under two cases of DC supply voltages of 2.4/1.2 V and 1.2/1.2 V, respectively. To the best of author's knowledge, the achieved GD variations are lowest among all CMOS PAs as reported so far. In addition, an analytical modelling of GD is derived to validating the minimum GD variation using zero-pole compensation. With supply voltages of 2.4/1.2 V at 6.5 GHz, the large signal power gain, Psat and OP1dB are 26 dB, 19.3 dBm and 17.94 dBm, respectively, while peak power added efficiency (PAE) is 38.196%. At reduced supply voltages of 1.2/1.2 V, the PA achieves maximum power gain of 17.7 dB and peak PAE of 35% at 6.5 GHz. The CMOS PA occupies an area of 0.206 mm2. © 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
