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"Chapter 1 - The Op Amp's Place in the World" - HTL Wien 10

"Chapter 1 - The Op Amp's Place in the World" - HTL Wien 10

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Wireless Communication: Signal Condition<strong>in</strong>g<br />

for IF Sampl<strong>in</strong>g<br />

13.1 Introduction<br />

Perry Miller and Richard Cesari<br />

High-speed operational amplifiers (op amps) are used extensively <strong>in</strong> wireless communication<br />

systems. <strong>The</strong>se amplifiers typically operate at <strong>in</strong>termediate frequencies (IF)<br />

≤ 500 MHz and most frequently operate below 25 MHz. Applications for high-speed op<br />

amps <strong>in</strong>clude filter<strong>in</strong>g circuits <strong>in</strong> radio receivers, IF amplifiers, mixer circuits, and bandpass<br />

amplifiers.<br />

13.2 Wireless Systems<br />

<strong>Chapter</strong> 13<br />

This chapter focuses on <strong>the</strong> requirements for <strong>the</strong> op amp and a number of techniques<br />

used <strong>in</strong> wireless communication systems to <strong>in</strong>terface high-speed op amps to analog-todigital<br />

converters (ADCs) and digital-to-analog converters (DACs). This section provides<br />

several examples of different op amp usage.<br />

Figure 13–1 shows an example of a dual-IF receiver. In this application, several stages<br />

with different IF frequencies are used to get <strong>the</strong> desired performance. <strong>The</strong> receiver converts<br />

<strong>the</strong> received radio frequency (RF) <strong>in</strong>put from <strong>the</strong> antenna to a baseband signal. This<br />

type of system requires <strong>the</strong> ability to receive and operate over a wide range of signal<br />

strength. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>herent system noise level determ<strong>in</strong>es <strong>the</strong> lower operat<strong>in</strong>g limit and is a<br />

critical factor <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> overall performance of <strong>the</strong> receiver. <strong>The</strong> receiver performance is measured<br />

<strong>in</strong> terms of receiver sensitivity, which is def<strong>in</strong>ed as <strong>the</strong> ratio between <strong>the</strong> power of<br />

<strong>the</strong> wanted baseband signal at <strong>the</strong> output of <strong>the</strong> ADC and <strong>the</strong> total power of all unwanted<br />

signals (<strong>in</strong>clude random noise, alias<strong>in</strong>g, distortion, and phase noise contributed by <strong>the</strong> local<br />

oscillator) <strong>in</strong>troduced by <strong>the</strong> different circuit elements <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> receiver. A low-sensitivity<br />

receiver can cause signal saturation <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> ADC <strong>in</strong>put.<br />

13-1

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