This paper describes a low-power multiband blocker-tolerant receiver (RX) with three steps of filtering among two transconductance (Gm) stages. To consistently achieve low noise figure (NF) and high linearity over… Click to show full abstract
This paper describes a low-power multiband blocker-tolerant receiver (RX) with three steps of filtering among two transconductance (Gm) stages. To consistently achieve low noise figure (NF) and high linearity over a wide range of operating frequency, a single-Gm low-noise amplifier (LNA) heads the RX with embedded N-path filtering, and feed-forward out-of-band (OB) blocker cancellation to surmount the tradeoff between the passband bandwidth (BW) and OB rejection without sacrificing the power budget. A filtering-by-aliasing (FA) block embeds another single-Gm baseband (BB) amplifier to allow a steep roll-off lowpass response with a clock-rate-defined passband BW. Prototyped in 28-nm CMOS, the RX achieves a 3.1-dB NF and a 5.4-dBm OB-IIP3 at 2 GHz, while consuming only 22 mW, measured at a gain of 22 dB. The tunable passband BW is 2.5 to 20 MHz, and the RF-to-BB composite filtering slope is 20 to 50 dB/10 MHz at 1.75xBW offset. The RX occupies a 0.24 mm² active area.
               
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