Title: Compact Integrated Receivers Using Custom and Commercial MMIC Technology
1Compact Integrated Receivers UsingCustom and
Commercial MMIC Technology
2Compact Integrated Receivers
- 1. critical for focal plane arrays
- ? beam spacing
- ? field of view
- 2. lower mass
- ? more efficient cryogenics
- ? tighter temperature control
- ? reduced mechanical load
- 3. fewer connectors and cables
- ? greater reliability
- ? reduced VSWR effects
- ? reduced gain slopes
- ? fewer entry points for RFI
3MMIC Modules are More Compact, Lightweightand
Manufacturable than Conventional Assemblies
Assembly of Individually Packaged Components
Multi-Chip Module
4Many MMICs available Commercially
- Most things below 50 GHz are available
off-the-shelf for less than 50 - Exceptions include
- ? balanced port configurations
- ? non-standard impedance
- ? some wide IF-Band mixers
- Some things in the 50-100 GHz range can be found
in commercial product - listings, but
- ? sparse frequency coverage
- ? usually narrow-band, targeted for specific
applications - (communication and radar bands, etc.)
- ? some exotic functions not supported (compound
switches, etc.) - Finally, there is a large pool of proven custom
designs to draw from, - designed by NRAO and our collaborators (JPL, ATA,
universities, - foundry IRAD designs, etc.)
5Some Examples W-Band Signal Source
2.5 cm
6Some Examples Compact Water Vapor Radiometer
All Commercial MMICs!
7Some Examples ALMA Active Multiplier Chain
8Some Examples DSN Array Ka-Band Downconverter
9Working Toward an All-MMIC Receiver
- 1. Once a design is set, MMIC components and
assemblies can be mass- - produced with exceptional repeatability
- ? especially in the cm-wave range, where most
MMICs are - commercially available chips are screened by
the manufacturer - and their specs guaranteed.
- ? module assembly is insensitive to small
variations bondwires are - used for 50 ? interconnects, not for tuning!
- 2. Repairs are relatively easy to diagnose and
repair - ? because of the inherent uniformity in
performance, device failure is - usually apparent from the DC bias alone.
- ? when it isn't, the chips are cheap enough to
simply replace them one - at a time until the culprit is found.
- It is therefore reasonable to think about
implementing even very sophisticated - front-ends in a single module using all MMIC
technology. - ? no internal connectors!
- ? no internal cables!
- ? only 1 block to machine
- ? small, lightweight, manufacturable
10Shall we take integration a step
furtherReceiver-on-a-Chip?
- I would say no...
- ? LNAs, mixers, and multipliers have all been
demonstrated on common - semiconductor technologies, but with
compromised performance better - to pick the right MMIC process for the right
chip - ? even if it works, the yield is too low on
III-V semiconductors for large-scale - integration
- ? a lot of expensive wafer real estate is wasted
on passives - ? can no longer take advantage of commercial
components have to design - it all from scratch
- ? no opportunity for chip reuse
- ? Microwave substrates are thin! A large,
floppy chip would be too hard to - handle and mount without damaging it.
11Could We Put the Whole Receiver in OneModule and
Cool Everything?
- Not if it is a heterodyne receiver, because
- ? LO generation dissipates too much power for
cryogenics - ? IF components are usually Silicon, which will
not function cold - However, special-purpose direct detection
receivers could occupy - a single cold module
- ? even more compact
- ? better sensitivity
- ? better temperature stability
- ? better component lifetime
12Another Problem Why are those bias boards so
big?
- Because we put a lot on them!
- ? linear regulators
- ? potentiometers for tuning and gain
- control
- ? digital logic for configuration switching
- and channel selection
- ? Op-Amps for gate servo loops and
- monitor points
- ? IF circuitry
- It makes for a user-friendly module, but
- if we're serious about compactness,
- particularly for focal plane arrays, then we
- must find a way to trim this part down.
13Option 1 Develop Common Bias Blocks in Die
Formor Integrated SMT Packages
- Two external resistors
- set the desired drain
- voltage and current.
Probably very expensive! (unless we buy millions
of them) Not suitable for cooling if done in
Silicon.
14Option 2 Limit DC inputs to analog bias voltages
- Put nothing in the block except
- basic EMI and over-voltage
- protection.
- All current control, monitoring,
- and tuning functions can be
- implemented in a central MC
- unit (more efficiently, in fact...)
15Option 2 continued...
- With all monitor functions in one place, some
parts can be shared.
16What About LNAs?
MMIC LNAs
MIC LNAs
? higher-Q passive components ? allows
pre-selection of active devices for
optimum performance
- ? more compact
- ? easier to integrate in large
- multi-function modules
- ? easy to replicate
- ? module assembly can be
- done commercially
Pros
? difficult to transfer assembly "know-how" to
commercial manufacturers.
? larger development cost
Cons
17A "Nearly Monolithic" LNA
Discrete stage
MMIC stage
- Maybe we can compromise between optimum
performance and large-scale - manufacturability by using a hand-picked
first-stage discrete device followed - by a MMIC.
18Case Study Ka-Band All-MMIC Receiver
- Calculated Performance
- ? noise temperature 10 K
- ? gain 60 dB
- ? P1dB -45 dBm (input)
- ? LO 2 mW (6-9 GHz)
- ? power dissipation 150 mW (cold part), 3.5 W
(warm part)
19All-MMIC Cold Receiver Module
IF outputs
IF hybrids
MMICs
LO input (underneath)
20All-MMIC Cold Receiver Module
- The size of a well-designed MMIC module is
typically - dominated by connectors and waveguide flanges.
21MMIC-Based Cold Receiver Assembly
Cooled Focal Plane Array
MMIC Module
Bias/MC
IF
LO
IF
22Backup slides follow
23If the entire receiver is cooled anyway, should
we considerusing superconducting passive
elements (couplers, filters, etc)?
- I don't think so
- ? excellent LNA performance can be achieved at
20K, but a good - microwave superconductor would force you to
much lower - temperatures (5K)
- ? not really a commercial process your passive
elements - could be more expensive than the MMICs!
- ? you lose the ability to test it at room
temperature - ? not much to gain anyway? superconductors are
not lossless - at high frequency, and cooled copper may be
competitive if it is - reasonably pure