Design and status of the RF-digitizer integrated circuit
Abstract
An integrated circuit currently under development samples a bandpass-limited signal at a radio frequency in quadrature and then performs a simple sum-and-dump operation in order to filter and lower the rate of the samples. Downconversion to baseband is carried out by the sampling step itself through the aliasing effect of an appropriately selected subharmonic sampling frequency. Two complete RF digitizer circuits with these functions will be implemented with analog and digital elements on one GaAs substrate. An input signal, with a carrier frequency as high as 8 GHz, can be sampled at a rate as high as 600 Msamples/sec for each quadrature component. The initial version of the chip will sign-sample (1-bit) the input RF signal. The chip will contain a synthesizer to generate a sample frequency that is a selectable integer multiple of an input reference frequency. In addition to the usual advantages of compactness and reliability associated with integrated circuits, the single chip will replace several steps required by standard analog downconversion. Furthermore, when a very high initial sample rate is selected, the presampling analog filters can be given very large bandwidths, thereby greatly reducing phase and delay instabilities typically introduced by such filters, as well as phase and delay variation due to Doppler changes.
- Publication:
-
The Telecommunications and Data Acquisition Report
- Pub Date:
- August 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991tdar.nasa..155R
- Keywords:
-
- Analog To Digital Converters;
- Data Sampling;
- Design Analysis;
- Digital Techniques;
- Integrated Circuits;
- Radio Frequencies;
- Signal Processing;
- Synthesizers;
- Bandpass Filters;
- Bandwidth;
- Carrier Frequencies;
- Chips (Electronics);
- Gallium Arsenides;
- Integers;
- Multiplexing;
- Quadratures;
- Void Ratio;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering