Applied RF Techniques II
Course 003
Request an onsite quote for this courseSummary:
This five-day course is a follow up course to Applied RF Techniques I and provides participants with the critical tools to design, analyze, test, and integrate nonlinear transmitter and receiver circuits and subsystems. Circuit level engineers will master the latest nonlinear design techniques to both analyze and design transceiver circuits. System engineers will examine commercially available integrated circuit functions; learn the performance limits and how to establish specifications. Test engineers will learn how to test and evaluate circuits. Transceiver circuits to be covered include power amplifiers and the critical receiver elements: oscillators and mixers. Receiver architecture and synthesizer design to meet critical requirements will be presented. Techniques to successfully integrate circuit functions for the transceiver will be presented.Students are encouraged to bring their laptop computers to class. The design software available for use in this public course is from Applied Wave Research (AWR).
Learning Objectives:
Upon completing the course, the participant will be able to: Understand and quantify nonlinear effects of transmit and receive systems
Use CAD nonlinear models to analyze/design circuits and transceivers
Design efficient linear power amplifiers, using load pull data, as well as full nonlinear techniques for digital and analog input signals
Compare and select various transmitter distortion reduction techniques
Design high dynamic range sensitive receivers with multiple input signals
Design signal sources using advanced phased lock loop techniques
Design/specify/test low noise oscillators (DROs, Crystal, VCOs, VCXOs) and predict/minimize phase noise
Design/specify/test passive and active mixers with various configurations and compare performance
Integrate circuit functions considering PCB selection, grounding, interconnection techniques, isolation, and component interaction
Target Audience:
Component and system designers, engineering managers, test and engineering technicians will benefit from this course. Applied RF Techniques I or equivalent practical experience is recommended for this course.Outline:
Day One
Nonlinear Circuits & ConceptsHigh Efficiency Power Amplifier Design
Transmitter elements and modulation PA transistors Matching for maximum gain or output power Load-pull measurement techniques Predicting output power contours, design examples High efficiency techniques Class A, B, C, D, E, F, harmonic termination consideration Power combining
Nonlinearities in RF Amplifiers
Day Two
Power Amplifier Distortion Reduction Techniques power back-off Cartesian feedback fixed predistortion RF predistortion digital predistortion feed-forward LINC
Alternate transmitters
Kahn, Polar, Doherty, Chierix-Outphasing
CAD of Nonlinear Circuits
Nonlinear circuit analysis and transistor nonlinear models Complete BJT and FET CAD circuit design example
Day Three
Receivers and Their Architecture RF receiver types, performance characteristics, comparison A/D considerations Receiver nonlinearities
Modulation Techniques
AM, FM, digital Receiver architectures and design : amplification, filtering, LO selection, mixing, demodulation Testing
Frequency synthesis, PLL design
Day Four
Feedback and negative resistance oscillator design RF stability, pushing, pulling considerations
AM FM Noise Considerations
Low phase-noise design Post tuning drift
Dielectric Resonators
Dielectric resonator stability techniques
VCOs and crystal oscillators
Electronic tuning strategies Oscillator specification, testing Commercially available VCO’s
Day Five
Diode and Transistor Mixers resistive and active, design examples Mixer types : single, balanced, doubly balanced, image reject, image enhanced, harmonic Conversion loss/gain
Harmonic suppression, linearity, and dynamic range
Integrated assemblies
PCB materials, grounding, layout and interconnection techniques, isolation, component interaction
Transceiver Integration
Commercially available transceiver IC chips
Subject Areas Covered
RF Circuit Design (Nonlinear): Power Amps, Mixers, OscillatorsRF Power Amplifier Design
RF & Wireless Circuit Components
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