TED BPSK modulator/demodulator integrated circuit development
Abstract
This program had two basic objectives: to develop processing techniques suitable for the fabrication of small scale gallium arsenide (GaAs) integrated circuits, and to fabricate and evaluate GaAs biphase shift-keyed (BPSK) integrated circuit modulators and demodulators operating at 5 GHz carrier frequencies. GaAs integrated circuits require, as a minimum, field effect transistors (FET's), resistors, and interconnection metals. Previous TRW studies had shown that the addition of planar, gate controlled transferred electron devices (TED's), capacitors, and multilevel metals for undercrossings would facilitate the implementation of circuits which could perform useful microwave functions with a low device count and at fairly high frequencies. The design goals for the modulator and demodulator circuits were operational at 5 GHz carrier frequency and 1 Gbps data rate with minimum dc power. The circuit designs are distinctly nonconventional, having been developed specifically for implementation with the TED's. The TED's are used basically as phase logic AND gates, while the FET's are used as linear amplifiers. Both circuits generally exceeded the design goals: the modulator circuit operates from 4.5 to 8 GHz carrier frequency, 0 to 1.4 Gbps data rate, and 440 mW dc power; the demodulator operates from 4 to 10 GHz carrier frequency, 0 to 1.6 Gbps data rate, and 235 mW dc power. The IC chips are roughly 75 mils square and are mounted in test fixtures whose volume is 0.75 cu.in.
- Publication:
-
Final Technical Report
- Pub Date:
- January 1978
- Bibcode:
- 1978trw..reptQ....C
- Keywords:
-
- Demodulators;
- Electron Transfer;
- Integrated Circuits;
- Modulators;
- Phase Shift Keying;
- C Band;
- Field Effect Transistors;
- Gallium Arsenides;
- Microwave Equipment;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering