Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis

Abstract This article presents a power amplifier (PA) linearisation approach based on synthesising a negative impedance termination at the baseband frequency. Negative baseband termination has been previously shown to suppress intermodulation distortion (IMD) products in power amplifiers. Here, this...

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Main Authors: William Sear, Taylor W. Barton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-06-01
Series:IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1049/mia2.12075
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spelling doaj-7492bcbd44b14ee5ab9d33aa2dc29cff2021-07-14T13:20:57ZengWileyIET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation1751-87251751-87332021-06-0115772874310.1049/mia2.12075Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesisWilliam Sear0Taylor W. Barton1Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USADepartment of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USAAbstract This article presents a power amplifier (PA) linearisation approach based on synthesising a negative impedance termination at the baseband frequency. Negative baseband termination has been previously shown to suppress intermodulation distortion (IMD) products in power amplifiers. Here, this effect is synthesised using a passive feedback network between the drain and gate bias paths of the PA, so that the IMD is suppressed without an increase in the system complexity. The design targets IMD3 suppression at the PA's 3‐dB compression point (P3dB), enabling linear operation into compression, therefore, resulting in improved device utilisation and efficiency. Based on simulation of the feedback response over a 1‐200 MHz frequency range, a network topology is designed that provides both the bias structure and the appropriate transfer function for IMD3 suppression, demonstrating the first reported practical structure to realize this behaviour over a wide range of baseband frequencies. Two different transfer functions are implemented and compared in performance to the nominal design case with standard baseband terminations. Due to the feedback nature of the approach, stability is also addressed. The 2.14‐GHz proof‐of‐concept prototype with feedback exhibits up to 9.5 dB suppression of the two‐tone IMD3 over 10‐150 MHz tone spacing, without reducing the CW performance of the PA.https://doi.org/10.1049/mia2.12075
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William Sear
Taylor W. Barton
spellingShingle William Sear
Taylor W. Barton
Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation
author_facet William Sear
Taylor W. Barton
author_sort William Sear
title Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
title_short Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
title_full Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
title_fullStr Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Wideband IMD3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
title_sort wideband imd3 suppression through negative baseband impedance synthesis
publisher Wiley
series IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation
issn 1751-8725
1751-8733
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract This article presents a power amplifier (PA) linearisation approach based on synthesising a negative impedance termination at the baseband frequency. Negative baseband termination has been previously shown to suppress intermodulation distortion (IMD) products in power amplifiers. Here, this effect is synthesised using a passive feedback network between the drain and gate bias paths of the PA, so that the IMD is suppressed without an increase in the system complexity. The design targets IMD3 suppression at the PA's 3‐dB compression point (P3dB), enabling linear operation into compression, therefore, resulting in improved device utilisation and efficiency. Based on simulation of the feedback response over a 1‐200 MHz frequency range, a network topology is designed that provides both the bias structure and the appropriate transfer function for IMD3 suppression, demonstrating the first reported practical structure to realize this behaviour over a wide range of baseband frequencies. Two different transfer functions are implemented and compared in performance to the nominal design case with standard baseband terminations. Due to the feedback nature of the approach, stability is also addressed. The 2.14‐GHz proof‐of‐concept prototype with feedback exhibits up to 9.5 dB suppression of the two‐tone IMD3 over 10‐150 MHz tone spacing, without reducing the CW performance of the PA.
url https://doi.org/10.1049/mia2.12075
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AT taylorwbarton widebandimd3suppressionthroughnegativebasebandimpedancesynthesis
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