Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver

The low-power wireless transceiver is the basic silicon building block of wireless sensor networks and the internet of things. In this paper, two digital calibration and compensation techniques for low-power wireless multiband transceiver are presented to adjust the VCO's tuning curves in the f...

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Main Authors: Shouyi Yin, Jianwei Cui, Leibo Liu, Shaojun Wei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-05-01
Series:International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/754206
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spelling doaj-ddbee8f35eeb4f2b899044b01b1888ff2020-11-25T02:59:18ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks1550-14772013-05-01910.1155/2013/754206Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband TransceiverShouyi Yin0Jianwei Cui1Leibo Liu2Shaojun Wei3 Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, ChinaThe low-power wireless transceiver is the basic silicon building block of wireless sensor networks and the internet of things. In this paper, two digital calibration and compensation techniques for low-power wireless multiband transceiver are presented to adjust the VCO's tuning curves in the frequency synthesizer and eliminate the DC offset voltage in the intermediate frequency (IF) pathway. The fuzzy binary search method is applied to VCO calibration, and gain-based DC offset cancellation (DCOC) is applied. Based on these proposed methods, a multiband transceiver is designed and fabricated in 0.18  μ m CMOS with 1.8 V voltage supply. Experimental results show that with 24 MHz system clock, frequency synthesizer calibration can be completed within 450 without requiring any additional calibration prescaler, achieving a calibration resolution of 1 MHz; DC offset voltage can be reduced to less than 3.5 mV for 0 to 60 dB gain, with each calibration process taking only 1.28 ms time. The proposed techniques and corresponding circuits are proved to be cost-efficient while maintaining high performance, which is suitable for multiband and multimode transceiver integration.https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/754206
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shouyi Yin
Jianwei Cui
Leibo Liu
Shaojun Wei
spellingShingle Shouyi Yin
Jianwei Cui
Leibo Liu
Shaojun Wei
Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
author_facet Shouyi Yin
Jianwei Cui
Leibo Liu
Shaojun Wei
author_sort Shouyi Yin
title Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
title_short Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
title_full Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
title_fullStr Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
title_full_unstemmed Calibration Techniques for Low-Power Wireless Multiband Transceiver
title_sort calibration techniques for low-power wireless multiband transceiver
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
issn 1550-1477
publishDate 2013-05-01
description The low-power wireless transceiver is the basic silicon building block of wireless sensor networks and the internet of things. In this paper, two digital calibration and compensation techniques for low-power wireless multiband transceiver are presented to adjust the VCO's tuning curves in the frequency synthesizer and eliminate the DC offset voltage in the intermediate frequency (IF) pathway. The fuzzy binary search method is applied to VCO calibration, and gain-based DC offset cancellation (DCOC) is applied. Based on these proposed methods, a multiband transceiver is designed and fabricated in 0.18  μ m CMOS with 1.8 V voltage supply. Experimental results show that with 24 MHz system clock, frequency synthesizer calibration can be completed within 450 without requiring any additional calibration prescaler, achieving a calibration resolution of 1 MHz; DC offset voltage can be reduced to less than 3.5 mV for 0 to 60 dB gain, with each calibration process taking only 1.28 ms time. The proposed techniques and corresponding circuits are proved to be cost-efficient while maintaining high performance, which is suitable for multiband and multimode transceiver integration.
url https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/754206
work_keys_str_mv AT shouyiyin calibrationtechniquesforlowpowerwirelessmultibandtransceiver
AT jianweicui calibrationtechniquesforlowpowerwirelessmultibandtransceiver
AT leiboliu calibrationtechniquesforlowpowerwirelessmultibandtransceiver
AT shaojunwei calibrationtechniquesforlowpowerwirelessmultibandtransceiver
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