학술논문

A 60–90 GHz Mixer-First Receiver With Adaptive Temperature-Compensation Technique
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Microwave and Wireless Technology Letters IEEE Microw. Wireless Tech. Lett. Microwave and Wireless Technology Letters, IEEE. 34(4):443-446 Apr, 2024
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Mixers
Transistors
Temperature measurement
Linearity
Gain
Noise measurement
Logic gates
CMOS
high linearity
millimeter wave (mm-wave)
mixer-first receiver
temperature compensation
wideband
Language
ISSN
2771-957X
2771-9588
Abstract
This letter demonstrates a high-linearity mixer-first receiver (RX) covering a frequency range of 60–90 GHz for radar applications. Its core mixer is realized by a passive double-balanced ring structure to achieve both high linearity and low local-oscillator (LO) leakage. To improve robustness of millimeter-wave (mm-wave) radar systems to temperature variation, two temperature-compensation bias circuits are proposed for the mixer and amplifiers in the RX, which are implemented by devices with different temperature coefficients. Measured characteristics show that it achieves a peak conversion gain (CG) of 18.5 dB at 76 GHz, a 3-dB gain bandwidth of >30 GHz, and LO-to-RF isolation of >35 dB across 60–90 GHz. The RX’s tested 1-dB input compression point ( $\text {IP}_{\mathrm{ 1\,dB}}$ ) and noise figure (NF) are −4 dBm and 7.7 dB at 78.5 GHz. Thanks to the proposed temperature-compensation techniques, the RX supports a wide temperature range, and tested CG, $\text {IP}_{\mathrm{ 1\,dB}}$ , and NF variations are less than 1.6, 1.0, and 2.9 dB across from −20 °C to +100 °C, respectively.