CMOS wireless transceiver design

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Bibliographic Information

CMOS wireless transceiver design

by Jan Crols and Michiel Steyaert

(The Kluwer international series in engineering and computer science, SECS 411 . Analog circuits and signal processing)

Klwuer Academic Publishers, c1997

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Bibliography : p. 225-236

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The world of wireless communications is changing very rapidly since a few years. The introduction of digital data communication in combination with digital signal process ing has created the foundation for the development of many new wireless applications. High-quality digital wireless networks for voice communication with global and local coverage, like the GSM and DECT system, are only faint and early examples of the wide variety of wireless applications that will become available in the remainder of this decade. The new evolutions in wireless communications set new requirements for the trans ceivers (transmitter-receivers). Higher operating frequencies, a lower power consump tion and a very high degree of integration, are new specifications which ask for design approaches quite different from the classical RF design techniques. The integrata bility and power consumption reduction of the digital part will further improve with the continued downscaling of technologies. This is however completely different for the analog transceiver front-end, the part which performs the interfacing between the antenna and the digital signal processing. The analog front-end's integratability and power consumption are closely related to the physical limitations of the transceiver topology and not so much to the scaling of the used technology. Chapter 2 gives a detailed study of the level of integration in current transceiver realization and analyzes their limitations. In chapter 3 of this book the complex signal technique for the analysis and synthesis of multi-path receiver and transmitter topologies is introduced.

Table of Contents

Symbols, Conventions, Notations and Abbreviations. Preface. 1. Wireless Communications. 2. Transmitters and Receivers. 3. Transceivers in the Frequency Domain. 4. Performance of Transceivers. 5. High-Level Synthesis. 6. Building Blocks for CMOS Transceivers. 7. Realizing A CMOS Transceiver. 8. General Conclusions. Appendices. A-Process Information. Bibliography. Index.

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