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Transistor and Circuit Technologies for Tomorrow’s Base Station Power Amplifiers Raymond S. Pengelly Cree Microwave Durham, NC 27703 USA 2002 IEEE Topical Workshop on Power Amplifiers for Wireless Communications Slide 1 More and More Power! • Assuming GSM as the reference with 0 dB Peak to Average Ratio to cover a radius of X miles – EDGE requires 2 x power for same coverage – CDMA requires 4 x power for same coverage – W-CDMA requires 8 x power for same coverage – OFDM requires 15 x power for same coverage Slide 2 “There are No Free Lunches” • More data per unit time requires more bandwidth or clever modulation schemes • Digital transmission techniques require more peak power for the same bit error rate for greater capacity • In order to minimize spectral re-growth and interference transmitters have to be more linear Slide 3 Competitive Power Transistor Technologies Price/Watt POWER DENSITY SUPPLY VOLTAGE LINEARITY FREQ. PAE Si BJT LOW COST MEDIUM 26 V POOR < 2 GHz LOW SiGe BJT LOW COST MEDIUM < 20 V GOOD > 2 GHz HIGH Si LDMOS LOW COST LOW 26 V V. GOOD < 3 GHz MEDIUM GaAs MESFET COMPETITIVE MEDIUM 12 V GOOD > 2 GHz MEDIUM GaAs PHEMT MEDIUM MEDIUM 8 V to 12 V V. GOOD > 2 GHz HIGH GaAs HBT COMPETITIVE HIGH 8 V to 26 V GOOD > 2 GHz HIGH SiC MESFET COMPETITIVE VERY HIGH 48 V GOOD > 4 GHz MEDIUM N/A VERY HIGH 48 V PROMISING > 12 GHz HIGH TECHNOLOGY GaN HEMT Slide 4 New Devices • High Power Density – – – – Reduced Size Higher Working Impedances Simpler Circuits Easier Manufacture • Wide Bandgap transistors on 4H-SiC and AlGaN/GaN provide superior performance to GaAs or Si counterparts – 4 to 6 Watts/mm for SiC MESFETs – 10 to 12 Watts/mm for AlGaN/GaN HFETs More inherent DC to RF Efficiency and Linearity are Key Slide 5 Envelope Distribution Functions • Power capability is a direct function of where a power amplifier starts to saturate • Average spectral re-growth is a function of – Power capability – Envelope statistics – Clipping, even for short periods of time, is a serious issue Slide 6 • Peak to Average Ratio is 15 dB Slide 7 W-CDMA • For the majority of the time (> 90%) the basestation transmitter delivers power at 1/8 its peak power capability (but it needs to be able to deliver any power level up to the peak) • At peak power the overall base-station is typically 20% efficient but for most of the time it is only 6% efficient since the PA’s become less efficient when backed-off 2.35 Kilowatts in for 140 watts out! Slide 8 Typical Amplifier Line-up 10 30 125 Numbers are Peak Watts 750 watt peak amplifier contains 30 LDMOSFETs @ a total price of $3,000 Slide 9 Wide-Band Power Modules Parameter PFM21020 PFM21020WB RF Band Typical Gain Gain Flatness 2110-2170 MHz 28 dB 0.25 dB Phase Linearity Time Delay In/Out VSWR Typical P1dB 2 Tone IMDs 1.5 degree 4.1 nanosec 1.7/1.4 20 W 2080-2200 MHz 26 dB 0.10 dB (allows 0.4 dB linear slope) 1.2 degree 3.6 nanosec 1.3/1.3 20 W -37 dBc -42 dBc -45 dBc -42 dBc -46 dBc -50 dBc (+24<Pave<36 dBm) a) 3rd order IMs b) 5th order IMs c) 7th order IMs 0 32 IM3L IM3U -10 28 IM5L IMD Rejection (dBc) 24 IM7L P.A.E. IM7U -30 20 SPEC PAE -40 16 3rd Order IM Specification 3rd Order IMs -50 12 5th Order IMs -60 8 7th Order IMs -70 4 -80 0 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 Average Output Power (dBm) Slide 10 36 38 40 Power Added Efficiency (%) IM5U -20 Typical Basestation Power Amplifier • OLD - Lots of Silicon Power (400 watts)! - But physically LARGE • Power Density of < 10 watts per sq. inch • NEW LDMOS Power FET Modules increase Power Density to 25 to 100 Watts per sq. inch Slide 11 The Need for Smaller PA’s Macrocell Basestation Hut - “Lots” of Space! Power Amplifiers with Fans • Going to Microcell • Higher powers in the same space • Tower Top Arrays with no fans Slide 12 ….The Difference between an LDMOS Transistor and a Silicon Carbide MESFET for 30 Watts Output Power LD-MOSFET SiC MESFET Slide 13 GaN Amplifier- Comparison to GaAs pHEMT • GaN based amplifier: 6 W out to 50 W • GaAs based amplifier: 0.6 W out to 50 W -without impedance transformation Device GaAs p-HEMT GaN HEMT Input I max Vmax f t /fmax Load Power Capacitance mA/mm (V) GHz impedance (W) Ohms 3 pF 600 20 30/90 33 ~1 3 pF 1200 60 30/90 50 ~6 - 10x less impedance transformation - 5-10 x Higher Bandwidth - Simpler, Smaller circuits, High Yield, Low cost Slide 14 Thermal Conductivity is Critical for High Power • Die size is constrained by wavelength - Y-dimension is limited by gate R and L - X-dimension is limited by phasing issues Gate Width Power Transistor < l/4 Key figure of merit is how much power the device can handle in terms of W/mm2 of die area Slide 15 GaN on SiC: The Thermal Advantage • SiC has a very high thermal conductivity of 4.9 W/cm-K - GaAs: 0.4, Si: 1.5, Sapphire: 0.4 Gate pitch with Silicon Gate pitch with SiC Gate pitch with Silicon Gate pitch with SiC SiC delivers higher power from given chip area => SiC has higher W/mm2 => reduces $/W Slide 16 3” SiC Vs. 4” Si Wafer • 100 W GaN HEMTs: Die size on SiC: 1 x 4 mm2, Die size on Si: 2 x 6 mm2 • Fabrication (not Substrate) is the more expensive cost component 4” Si 3” SiC Total die Non-edge die 3-inch SiC 860 788 4-inch Si 532 484 Slide 17 High Power Density & PAE from SiC MESFETs 34 P2dB = 5.2 W/mm GAssoc = 11.1 dB PAE = 63% PAE Output Power (dBm) 40 30 28 20 Gain 24 14 40 Gain = 10 dB 40 30 35 20 W G = 8 mm 30 10 0.25-mm SiC MESFET Freq. = 3.5 GHz VDS = 50 V, VGS = -8 V 12 PAE = 45% 45 0 16 18 Input Power (dBm) 20 22 PAE (% ) POUT 26 P 3dB = 48 W (6 W/mm) PAE (%) or Gain (dB) 50 30 50 60 Output Power (dBm ) 32 50 70 10 Freq. = 3 GHz V DS = 60 V 25 10 15 20 25 30 35 0 40 Input Power (dBm) • Pulsed on-wafer power densities of 5-6 W/mm consistently achieved on large FETs Slide 18 SiC MESFET with 7.2 W/mm 8.0 Power Density = 7.2 W /m m Power Density (W /m m ) 7.0 Efficiency = 48% 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 W G = 0.25 m m Freq. = 3 G Hz 1.0 0.0 0.00 V DS = 70 V 0.05 0.10 Input Power (W ) 0.15 0.20 • Power density of 7.2 W/mm with 45% PAE at S-band demonstrates the capability of the technology Slide 19 Mobile Telephone Frequency Allocations Slide 20 20-Watt Broadband SiC MESFET Amplifier 16 44 14 42 12 40 10 38 3GPP Test Model 1 with 16 DPCH 8 6 36 34 Gain P1dBm W-CDMA 4 P1dB (dBm) Gain (dB) CR22010 Balanced Broadband Amp Vds=48V, Idq=500mA/Device; Untuned Prototype 32 2 30 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Frequency (GHz) Balanced Amplifier with 10-Watt, CRF22010 FETs • 22 W at P1dB across a 400 MHz band • Advantage of wide bandgap transistors: power-bandwidth product greatly exceeding Si LDMOS Slide 21 75-Watt SiC MESFET Amplifier 2 GHz test fixture for 60 W MESFET development 50 Power PAE 48 40 46 30 44 20 42 10 Freq. = 2.0 GHz 40 28 30 32 34 36 Input Power (dBm) 38 0 40 • 75 W CW, 11 dB gain demonstrated from a single SiC MESFET • Currently 60-Watt Class A/B MESFET transistor being optimized, targeted for production release by the end of 2002 • REAL POWER! Slide 22 PAE (% ) Output Power (dBm ) 50 Broadband SiC MESFET Amplifier 200 MHz to 2200 MHz 100 190 ohms Drain Bias In Out 0.6 0.6 1.1 2.4 Gate Bias All capacitor values in pF Slide 23 0.5 Ultra Broadband Amplifiers • Broadband for Multi-Frequency and Multi-Mode Slide 24 GaN HEMTs for Power Amplifiers Enabling Feature Performance Advantage High Power/Unit Width- Higher Smaller die size per Watt of output power Watts/pF(10 x GaAs) Ease of matching, HIGHER BANDWIDTH High Voltage Operation (3-5 x GaAs, 1.5-2 x LDMOS) Eliminate / reduce step down Capable of 10-50 Volt operation High Efficiency (> 60%) Power saving, reduced cooling High Cutoff Frequencies High gain, high efficiency operation (GaAs like, 15 GHz-mm ftLg ) Superior Thermal Conductivity Higher junction temperature, smaller pitch+ higher device density, ease of packaging For GaN on SiC Slide 25 GaN HEMT with 12 W/mm 42 Pout Gain 40 12.1 W /mm Output Power (dBm) 38 36 34 32 3.5 GHz V ds = 90V V gs = -2.4V 10 ms Pulses, 0.1% Duty Cycle 30 28 26 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 Gain (dBm) 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 28 Input Power (dBm) • Peak pulsed power density of 12 W/mm on a 0.5-mm HEMT • CW power from same device of 9 W/mm Slide 26 -1.1 dB compression Pout = 12.5 W PAE = 46 % 50 f = 4 GHz 45 40 35 Pout 800 Vds = 30 V Gain 700 PAE Id 600 30 500 25 20 400 15 10 5 0 300 200 10 15 20 25 Pin (dBm) 30 P1dB of 12 W, 46% PAE at 4 GHz at 30 Volts Slide 27 35 Id (mA) Pout (dBm), Gain(dB), PAE(%) Packaged GaN HEMTs Characterization of AlGaN/GaN HEMTs Using Fixed Load at Varying Voltage Supply Power sweep Pout W=300mm 70 Vdd (V): 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40 8 50 7 40 6 30 5 20 4 10 3 Drain efficiency at 3dB gain compression vs. supply voltage 60 0 Increasing Vds 2 -1 0 1 -2 0 0 -3 0 70 60 50 DE(%) 9 Pout (W/mm) f=8GHz PAE (%) PAE; 10 40 30 20 10 0 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 5 15 25 Vdd (V) Pin (dB) Slide 28 35 45 Cellular Base-Station Application Slide 29 10-Watt Broadband GaN HEMT Amplifier 44 24 P1dB (dBm) 42 22 40 20 38 18 36 16 34 14 32 12 30 10 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Frequency (GHz) • 11 W at P1dB across the 400 MHz to 2200 MHz band • 17 dB gain with only ±0.5 dB ripple • Great for a generic driver amplifier Slide 30 Small Signal Gain (dB) P1dB (dbm) SS Gain (dB) GaN HEMTs for Infrastructure: 2 GHz, CW Power from a 24-mm HEMT Record Power exceeding 100 Watts 50 Peak Power= 108 W CW Power Density = 4.5 W/mm 35 30 48 25 20 46 15 10 44 32 f = 2 GHz, Vds = 52 V 34 36 38 40 42 Input Power (dBm) • 103 W at 2.6 dB gain compression • Peak Drain Efficiency of 54 % Slide 31 5 0 44 Gain(dB) Output Power (dBm) 40 High Temperature Operation • Demonstrated that at a TJ of 180OC (case temperature of 120OC) SiC MESFET has a mission life of > 20 years (3 confidence level) – Equivalent maximum junction temperature for Si LDMOS is 130 OC – Equivalent maximum junction temperature for GaAs MESFET is 110 OC Slide 32 So, what does this mean for next generation infrastructure power amplifiers? • Easier and more tolerant designs • Higher operating temperatures • Removal of DC-DC converters (voltage versus current) • Ruggedness • Wider Band Designs • Smaller Units Slide 33 Wide Bandgap is an Enabling Technology • Wide Bandgap can provide a paradigm shift in the 4G infrastructure sector: – Allows Tower Top Installations – lowers power requirements by at least a factor of 2 by eliminating cable losses – Fan-less Operation will be possible – enabled by higher transistor operating temperatures – Will make cost-effective Smart Antennas viable – Integration of SiC with other technologies in standard “Lego” modules – economies of scale Slide 34 Wide Bandgap enables Tower-Top Power Amplifiers Efficiency = 50% x 85% x 30% = 12% If you’re really lucky! Antenna with Power amplifiers @ 48 volts ½ X watts Antenna ½ X watts 3dB Loss in Cable Efficiency = 30% Power Amplifiers @ 28 volts (X watts) Conventional New Approach Slide 35 Summary of Features of Wide Bandgap Transistors • High Power density and high operating voltage • More convenient impedance levels than Si LDMOS or GaAs FET – easier and more tolerant design – broadband amplifiers • High Temperature Operation • High Voltage Operation – allows drain modulation techniques (28 volts avg. 48 volts peak) for increased efficiency • Rugged Slide 36 Next Steps? • • • • • • Productization Customer “Education” Reliability Facts Acceptable Dollars/Watt Introduction of RFICs Nothing we haven’t been through with other technologies – WATCH THIS SPACE! Slide 37