Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers

Characterisation of high-power communications-based amplifiers (PAs) has generated many thousands of research papers and much of this work assumes the transistors at the heart of these (PAs) to be a ‘large’ holistic entity. Given that high-power communications-based transistors are made up of multip...

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Main Author: Al-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta
Published: Cardiff University 2018
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.738421
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7384212019-01-08T03:23:30ZContactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiersAl-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta2018Characterisation of high-power communications-based amplifiers (PAs) has generated many thousands of research papers and much of this work assumes the transistors at the heart of these (PAs) to be a ‘large’ holistic entity. Given that high-power communications-based transistors are made up of multiple, parallel transistors on a single substrate, it is this intermediate scale range, within the periphery of the device, but much larger than the geometrical scale of the epitaxy and the lithography, that requires deeper investigation. Raman-based thermography may add a dimension of spatially varying heat dissipation but ‘lifting the bonnet’ of the transistor and making internal contactless measurements of current and voltage is the only way to fully account for the myriads of parasitic effects that have been observed by countless researchers. To date, however, very little research has been conducted on quantifying the individual spatial voltages within the transistor in order to fully characterise it. Miniaturised contactless current and voltage probes are theorised, designed, characterised and optimised in this thesis to deliver a robust and reliable means of transistor characterisation at these internal spatial dimensions. The contactless voltage probe presented in this work has a spatial resolution four times finer than the previously reported voltage probe, with a useful bandwidth up to 7 GHz and a controllable passive gain up to 20 dB at the desired operating frequency. The pinnacle of this thesis delivers a novel shielded contactless current probe, capable of high-resolution scanning, culminating in a ‘quasi-calibrated’ measurement of the distributed currents within a multi-finger LDMOS transistor operating at high power and high frequency. The spatial resolution of this shielded contactless current probe is 62.5 μm with 22.7 dB average rejection ratio to the electric field, and it has a broad bandwidth up to 9 GHz. To date, this type of contactless current measurement has not been reported elsewhere.Cardiff Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.738421http://orca.cf.ac.uk/110309/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description Characterisation of high-power communications-based amplifiers (PAs) has generated many thousands of research papers and much of this work assumes the transistors at the heart of these (PAs) to be a ‘large’ holistic entity. Given that high-power communications-based transistors are made up of multiple, parallel transistors on a single substrate, it is this intermediate scale range, within the periphery of the device, but much larger than the geometrical scale of the epitaxy and the lithography, that requires deeper investigation. Raman-based thermography may add a dimension of spatially varying heat dissipation but ‘lifting the bonnet’ of the transistor and making internal contactless measurements of current and voltage is the only way to fully account for the myriads of parasitic effects that have been observed by countless researchers. To date, however, very little research has been conducted on quantifying the individual spatial voltages within the transistor in order to fully characterise it. Miniaturised contactless current and voltage probes are theorised, designed, characterised and optimised in this thesis to deliver a robust and reliable means of transistor characterisation at these internal spatial dimensions. The contactless voltage probe presented in this work has a spatial resolution four times finer than the previously reported voltage probe, with a useful bandwidth up to 7 GHz and a controllable passive gain up to 20 dB at the desired operating frequency. The pinnacle of this thesis delivers a novel shielded contactless current probe, capable of high-resolution scanning, culminating in a ‘quasi-calibrated’ measurement of the distributed currents within a multi-finger LDMOS transistor operating at high power and high frequency. The spatial resolution of this shielded contactless current probe is 62.5 μm with 22.7 dB average rejection ratio to the electric field, and it has a broad bandwidth up to 9 GHz. To date, this type of contactless current measurement has not been reported elsewhere.
author Al-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta
spellingShingle Al-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta
Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
author_facet Al-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta
author_sort Al-Ziayree, Ali Mahdi Lafta
title Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
title_short Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
title_full Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
title_fullStr Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
title_full_unstemmed Contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
title_sort contactless, high resolution characterization of current and voltage waveforms within high power communication amplifiers
publisher Cardiff University
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.738421
work_keys_str_mv AT alziayreealimahdilafta contactlesshighresolutioncharacterizationofcurrentandvoltagewaveformswithinhighpowercommunicationamplifiers
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