* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download BDTIC
Audio power wikipedia , lookup
Variable-frequency drive wikipedia , lookup
Power inverter wikipedia , lookup
Stage monitor system wikipedia , lookup
Power engineering wikipedia , lookup
Chirp spectrum wikipedia , lookup
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Electronic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Spectral density wikipedia , lookup
Voltage optimisation wikipedia , lookup
Resistive opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
Pulse-width modulation wikipedia , lookup
Utility frequency wikipedia , lookup
Surge protector wikipedia , lookup
Distribution management system wikipedia , lookup
Power MOSFET wikipedia , lookup
Power electronics wikipedia , lookup
Mains electricity wikipedia , lookup
Switched-mode power supply wikipedia , lookup
Rectiverter wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
BA T15 -04 W BDTIC The Lo w Bar ri er Sc hottk y Di o de BA T15 -04 W as a Mi xe r f or Ku -Ba nd LN Bs Appl i c ati o n N ote A N 198 Revision: Rev. 1.0 2010-09-29 RF and P r otec ti on D evi c es www.BDTIC.com/infineon BDTIC Edition 2010-09-29 Published by Infineon Technologies AG 81726 Munich, Germany © 2010 Infineon Technologies AG All Rights Reserved. Legal Disclaimer The information given in this document shall in no event be regarded as a guarantee of conditions or characteristics. With respect to any examples or hints given herein, any typical values stated herein and/or any information regarding the application of the device, Infineon Technologies hereby disclaims any and all warranties and liabilities of any kind, including without limitation, warranties of non-infringement of intellectual property rights of any third party. Information For further information on technology, delivery terms and conditions and prices, please contact the nearest Infineon Technologies Office (www.infineon.com). Warnings Due to technical requirements, components may contain dangerous substances. For information on the types in question, please contact the nearest Infineon Technologies Office. Infineon Technologies components may be used in life-support devices or systems only with the express written approval of Infineon Technologies, if a failure of such components can reasonably be expected to cause the failure of that life-support device or system or to affect the safety or effectiveness of that device or system. Life support devices or systems are intended to be implanted in the human body or to support and/or maintain and sustain and/or protect human life. If they fail, it is reasonable to assume that the health of the user or other persons may be endangered. www.BDTIC.com/infineon BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Application Note AN198 Revision History: 2010-09-29 Previous Revision: prev. Rev. x.x Page Subjects (major changes since last revision) BDTIC Trademarks of Infineon Technologies AG A-GOLD™, BlueMoon™, COMNEON™, CONVERGATE™, COSIC™, C166™, CROSSAVE™, CanPAK™, CIPOS™, CoolMOS™, CoolSET™, CONVERPATH™, CORECONTROL™, DAVE™, DUALFALC™, DUSLIC™, EasyPIM™, EconoBRIDGE™, EconoDUAL™, EconoPACK™, EconoPIM™, E-GOLD™, EiceDRIVER™, EUPEC™, ELIC™, EPIC™, FALC™, FCOS™, FLEXISLIC™, GEMINAX™, GOLDMOS™, HITFET™, HybridPACK™, INCA™, ISAC™, ISOFACE™, IsoPACK™, IWORX™, M-GOLD™, MIPAQ™, ModSTACK™, MUSLIC™, my-d™, NovalithIC™, OCTALFALC™, OCTAT™, OmniTune™, OmniVia™, OptiMOS™, OPTIVERSE™, ORIGA™, PROFET™, PRO-SIL™, PrimePACK™, QUADFALC™, RASIC™, ReverSave™, SatRIC™, SCEPTRE™, SCOUT™, S-GOLD™, SensoNor™, SEROCCO™, SICOFI™, SIEGET™, SINDRION™, SLIC™, SMARTi™, SmartLEWIS™, SMINT™, SOCRATES™, TEMPFET™, thinQ!™, TrueNTRY™, TriCore™, TRENCHSTOP™, VINAX™, VINETIC™, VIONTIC™, WildPass™, X-GOLD™, XMM™, X-PMU™, XPOSYS™, XWAY™. Other Trademarks AMBA™, ARM™, MULTI-ICE™, PRIMECELL™, REALVIEW™, THUMB™ of ARM Limited, UK. AUTOSAR™ is licensed by AUTOSAR development partnership. Bluetooth™ of Bluetooth SIG Inc. CAT-iq™ of DECT Forum. COLOSSUS™, FirstGPS™ of Trimble Navigation Ltd. EMV™ of EMVCo, LLC (Visa Holdings Inc.). EPCOS™ of Epcos AG. FLEXGO™ of Microsoft Corporation. FlexRay™ is licensed by FlexRay Consortium. HYPERTERMINAL™ of Hilgraeve Incorporated. IEC™ of Commission Electrotechnique Internationale. IrDA™ of Infrared Data Association Corporation. ISO™ of INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR STANDARDIZATION. MATLAB™ of MathWorks, Inc. MAXIM™ of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. MICROTEC™, NUCLEUS™ of Mentor Graphics Corporation. Mifare™ of NXP. MIPI™ of MIPI Alliance, Inc. MIPS™ of MIPS Technologies, Inc., USA. muRata™ of MURATA MANUFACTURING CO. OmniVision™ of OmniVision Technologies, Inc. Openwave™ Openwave Systems Inc. RED HAT™ Red Hat, Inc. RFMD™ RF Micro Devices, Inc. SIRIUS™ of Sirius Sattelite Radio Inc. SOLARIS™ of Sun Microsystems, Inc. SPANSION™ of Spansion LLC Ltd. Symbian™ of Symbian Software Limited. TAIYO YUDEN™ of Taiyo Yuden Co. TEAKLITE™ of CEVA, Inc. TEKTRONIX™ of Tektronix Inc. TOKO™ of TOKO KABUSHIKI KAISHA TA. UNIX™ of X/Open Company Limited. VERILOG™, PALLADIUM™ of Cadence Design Systems, Inc. VLYNQ™ of Texas Instruments Incorporated. VXWORKS™, WIND RIVER™ of WIND RIVER SYSTEMS, INC. ZETEX™ of Diodes Zetex Limited. Last Trademarks Update 2009-10-19 www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 3 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer List of Content, Figures and Tables Table of Content 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................ 5 2 RF Schottky Diode ............................................................................................................................. 6 3 3.1 Design concept of a singly balanced mixer .................................................................................... 8 Simulation results ................................................................................................................................. 9 Author 11 List of Figures BDTIC Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4 Figure 5 Figure 6 Figure 7 Blockdiagram of a universal Ku-Band LNB .......................................................................................... 5 Specified Frequencies for LNB (Ku-Band) ........................................................................................... 6 The serial resistance Rs causes at high currents (Ih) a voltage drop ∆U between the extrapolated straight line and the measured I(U) curve. The ideality factor n corresponds to the gradient of the IU-characteristic in forward operation and can be extracted within the linear region of the log(I(U)) diagram ................................................................................................................................................ 7 Mixer Topology ..................................................................................................................................... 8 Conversion Gain over RF frequency with LO Power at 10.6 GHz as a parameter. ............................ 9 Conversion Gain over LO power at 10.6 GHz, RF power is -30 dBm at 12.1 GHz ............................. 9 Conversion Gain vs RF power at 12.1 GHz, LO power is 0 dBm at 10.6 GHz .................................. 10 List of Tables Table 1 Universal LNB specification ................................................................................................................. 5 www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 4 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Introduction 1 Introduction This application note shows Infineon’s BAT15-04W low barrier Schottky diode used in a singly balanced mixer for Ku-band applications. The frequency band covered in this report is the high band from 11.55 GHz to 12.75 GHz. A functional block diagram of a universal LNB is shown in Figure 1. The building blocks for which Infineon offers devices are depicted in red. The abbreviation H (horizontal) and V (vertical) represents the electrical polarization of the electromagnetic wave transmitted by the satellite. At first the received linearly polarized wave is amplified via a multistage amplifier chain and afterwards down converted by the active mixer. The IF signal is further amplified so that the following data processing can be applied. BDTIC DRO1 LNA1 9.75 GHz H LNA2 LNA3 IF Amplifiers 10.7 – 12.75 GHz IF 950-2150MHz V 10.6 GHz DRO2 Figure 1 Blockdiagram of a universal Ku-Band LNB An overview of the occupied frequencies is shown in Table 1. A graphical view of the frequency bands is depicted in Figure 2 which visualizes also the down conversion of the received RF signal bands from the RFLowband / RF-Highband to the IF-Band (0.95GHz to 2.15GHz). These received bands include the TV-channels which are transmitted from the geostationary satellites. Table 1 Universal LNB specification Lowband Highband Switching Mode LO 9.75 GHz 10.6 GHz RF (10.70 – 11.9) GHz (11.55 – 12.75)GHz - Switching between the two frequency bands (local oscillators) is done by a 22kHz tone generated by the receiver when selecting a certain channel - Switching between horizontal and vertical polarization is done by the voltage of the power supply when selecting a certain channel www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 5 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer RF Schottky Diode BDTIC Figure 2 Specified Frequencies for LNB (Ku-Band) 2 RF Schottky Diode The device characteristic of the Schottky diode is similar to a typical one sided abrupt pn diode which follows the same current voltage characteristic as being shown in equation (1). However, there are some magnificent differences between the pn junction diode and the Schottky diode. For example, the Schottky diode exhibits a lower forward voltage drop (0.15V to 0.45V) than the pn diode (0.7V to 1.7V). Furthermore, the voltage drop of Schottky diodes in forward direction can be adjusted by the applied contact material and also zero biased Schottky diodes can be processed based on p-doped materials. Moreover, pn junction diodes belong to minority semiconductor devices suffering on the recombination velocity of the minority carriers in the space charge region, whereas, the Schottky diodes are controlled by the charge transport over the barrier from the majority carriers. This leads to very fast switching action of the Schottky diodes and makes it very attractive for RF application in the mm wave range like mixers. qU d − 1 I = I S (T ) ⋅ exp n k T (1) (k: Boltzmann factor, n: ideality factor, IS: saturation current, Ud: voltage, T: temperature) 17 In normal forward operation at room temperature and moderate doping concentration (Nd < 10 following charge transports can be identified: − − − − -3 cm ) the Transport of electrons from semiconductor over the barrier to the metal Tunneling of electrons through the barrier Recombination in the space charge region Injection of holes from the metal to the semiconductor The ideality factor n corresponds to the gradient of the IU-characteristic in forward operation and can be extracted within the linear region of the log(I(U)) diagram as shown in Figure 3Figure 3. Furthermore, the nonlinear behavior of the device corresponds to the fast switching from the conductive state to the nonconductive state by the LO signal. As the ideality factor n increases, the nonlinearity of the device is reduced www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 6 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer RF Schottky Diode and the capability for frequency mixing is reduced, as well. Therefore, for mixer applications the ideality factor of the Schottky diode should be as small as possible, typically, smaller than 1.1. The voltage dependent junction capacitance Cj follows the equation (2) with the model parameter Uj which refers to the junction voltage and M as the grading coefficient (Μ = 0.5 for a uniformly doped diode). U C j (U d ) = C j 0 ⋅ 1 − d U j −M (2) Based on the small signal equivalent circuit the frequency conversion is also directly influenced by the serial resistance Rs and the junction capacitance Cj as shown in equation (3). Both Cj0 and Rs should be as small as possible and this characteristic figure of merit is represented by the cutoff frequency fc which should be as high as possible (3). The serial resistance Rs decreases and the junction capacitance Cj0 increases by increasing the device area A so that a first order analysis shows that the cut off frequency is independent of the junction area. However, second order effects reveal that the cut off frequency can be increased by decreasing the junction area. BDTIC These and the non-linear junction capacitance Cj affect the mixer performance directly so that we have to optimize the Schottky diode appropriately in order to meet the mixer specification. Figure 3 The serial resistance Rs causes at high currents (Ih) a voltage drop ∆U between the extrapolated straight line and the measured I(U) curve. The ideality factor n corresponds to the gradient of the IU-characteristic in forward operation and can be extracted within the linear region of the log(I(U)) diagram www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 7 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Design concept of a singly balanced mixer 3 Design concept of a singly balanced mixer The topology of the mixer used in this concept study is shown in Figure 4. It is a simplified schematic of the schematic actually used in simulation. The amplified RF signal and the LO signal are applied at the sum port and the delta port of a 180°-hyb rid (e.g. a rat-race coupler). The balanced LO signal at the hybrid’s output drives (“pumps”) the two Schottky diodes included in the BAT15-04W package. The IF signal is fed from the common pin of the two diodes though a lowpass filter to the IF output pin. Additionally a radial open stub suppresses the RF and LO signal at the IF output Two shorted stubs are used to shorten the IF mixing products on the “RF side” of the mixer while providing a high impedance at LO and RF frequency. Shortening unwanted signal at the single ports reduces conversion loss significantly. BDTIC W=0.2 mm L=2.2 mm P=1 Z=50 Ohm 2 RF 1 P=2 Z=50 Ohm 3 0 0 2 IND ID=L1 L=4.2 nH 1 0 180 P=3 Z=50 Ohm IF NET="BAT1504W" 4 LO 3 CAP ID=C1 C=0.8 pF CAP ID=C2 C=0.8 pF W=0.2 mm L=2.2 mm Figure 4 Mixer Topology www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 8 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Design concept of a singly balanced mixer 3.1 Simulation results Conversion Gain vs. RF frequency -4 p6 -5 p5 Gconv (dB) -6 p4 p3 p2 BDTIC -7 p1 -8 -9 p1: P_LO = 0 p2: P_LO = 2 p3: P_LO = 4 p4: P_LO = 6 p5: P_LO = 8 p6: P_LO = 10 -10 11.6 11.7 11.8 11.9 Figure 5 12 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 Frequency (GHz) Conversion Gain over RF frequency with LO Power at 10.6 GHz as a parameter. Conversion Gain vs. P_LO -4 -5 Gconv (dB) -6 -7 -8 -9 -10 -4 0 4 8 12 16 Power (dBm) Figure 6 Conversion Gain over LO power at 10.6 GHz, RF power is -30 dBm at 12.1 GHz www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 9 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Design concept of a singly balanced mixer Conversion Gain vs. P_RF -5 Gconv (dB) -6 -7 BDTIC -8 -9 -10 -30 Figure 7 -25 -20 -15 Power (dBm) -10 -5 0 Conversion Gain vs RF power at 12.1 GHz, LO power is 0 dBm at 10.6 GHz www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 10 / 12 2010-09-29 BAT15-04W BAT15-04W LNB Mixer Author Author Dietmar Stolz, Staff Engineer of Business Unit “RF and Protection Devices” BDTIC www.BDTIC.com/infineon Application Note AN198, Rev. 1.0 11 / 12 2010-09-29 BDTIC w w w . i n f i n e o n . c o m www.BDTIC.com/infineon Published by Infineon Technologies AG AN198