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Survey on parameter optimization of mobile communication band low noise amplifier design
Author(s) -
Roobert A. Andrew,
Rani D. Gracia Nirmala
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of rf and microwave computer‐aided engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.335
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1099-047X
pISSN - 1096-4290
DOI - 10.1002/mmce.21720
Subject(s) - noise figure , low noise amplifier , figure of merit , bandwidth (computing) , amplifier , electronic engineering , cmos , linearity , power gain , computer science , amplifier figures of merit , electrical engineering , effective input noise temperature , telecommunications , engineering , computer vision
Abstract A comparative study on recent works on low noise amplifiers (LNAs) designed to be operated at mobile communication band is performed in this article. Here, specifications of different generations of mobile communication are listed, which are considered to classify recent works on LNAs. Even though gain and noise figure (NF) are the primary parameters of LNA; other parameters like power, linearity, bandwidth, and area also get importance. Due to this, optimization techniques handpicked for all those parameters are discussed. The inverse relation between gain and NF is exploited to achieve low noise and high gain together. While increasing the gain, power consumption is increased by drain current. Each LNA is found as good in terms of gain and other parameters to satisfy the requirements. The figure of merit is opted to find the performance of each LNA, and the comparison is performed. The best parameters reported in the comparison are 31.53 dB of gain, 0.7 dB of NF, 0.03 mw of power consumption, 18.14 dBm of third‐order input intercept point (IIP3), 24 GHz bandwidth and 0.0052 mm 2 of area at different frequencies and technology nodes. In this survey, as per the optimized FoM for mobile communication, cross‐coupled common gate differential LNA, which was designed to be operated at 0.3 to 2.96 GHz gives better results among CMOS LNAs.

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