학술논문

A 0.31-THz Orbital-Angular-Momentum (OAM) Wave Transceiver in CMOS With Bits-to-OAM Mode Mapping
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of. 57(5):1344-1357 May, 2022
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Computing and Processing
Antenna arrays
Phased arrays
Antenna radiation patterns
Transceivers
Security
Patch antennas
Wireless communication
Amplifier-multiplier chain
CMOS
far-field
OAM modes
orbital angular momentum (OAM)
orthogonal
security
terahertz (THz)
uniform circular antenna array
Language
ISSN
0018-9200
1558-173X
Abstract
This article reports the first chip-based demonstration (at any frequency) of a transceiver front end that transmits and receives electromagnetic waves with a helical distribution of wavefront phase [namely, orbital angular momentum (OAM)]. The CMOS chip consists of eight 0.31-THz modulator/detector units, with an integrated patch antenna, which are placed in a uniform circular pattern with a diameter of one free-space wavelength. The chip transmits OAM modes that are digitally switched among the $m\,\,=0$ (plane wave), +1 (left-handed), −1 (right-handed), and $(+1)+(-1)$ (superposition) states. The chip is also reconfigurable into a receiver mode that identifies different OAM modes with >10-dB rejection of mismatched modes. The array, driven by only one 310-GHz signal generation path, has a measured EIRP of −4.8 dBm and consumes 154 mW of dc power in the OAM source mode. In the receiver mode, it has a measured conversion loss of $\sim 30$ dB and consumes 166 mW of dc power. Using a low-cost 65-nm bulk CMOS technology, the terahertz (THz)-OAM chip has an area of only 2.1 $\times $ 2.6 mm 2 , which is the smallest among all prior OAM prototypes. The output OAM beam profiles and modes’ orthogonality are experimentally verified. The dynamic mode switching capability of the chip is also verified in the time domain across 1-m distance, and a full-silicon OAM link is demonstrated.