12 units
This course covers the design and analysis of radio-frequency integrated systems at the transistor level using state-of-the-art CMOS and bipolar technologies. It focuses on system-level trade-offs in transceiver design, practical RF circuit techniques, and physical understanding for device parasitics. Accurate models for active devices, passive components, and interconnect parasitics are critical for predicting high-frequency analog circuit behavior and will be examined in detail.
The course will start with fundamental concepts in wireless system design and their impact on design trade-offs in different transceiver architectures. Following that, RF transistor model passive matching networks will be discussed. Noise analysis and low-noise amplifier design are studied next. The effects of nonlinearity are treated along with mixer design techniques. Practical bias circuit for RF design will be illustrated. Then, the importance of phase noise and VCO design will be considered together. The course will conclude with a brief study of frequency synthesizer and power amplifier design.
4 hrs. lec.
Prerequisites: 18-623 (was 18-523 before Fall 2005) and senior or graduate standing.
Last updated on March 21, 2007
Circuits
Circuits
Depth
S09
S08, S07, F06, F05, S05, S04, S03, S02, S01, S00, S99, S98
Please note that the course history information is incomplete and/or may reflect different courses offered under the same course number.