A mm-wave digital transmitter based on a 60 GHz all-digital phase-locked loop (ADPLL) with wideband frequency modulation (FM) for FMCW radar applications is proposed. The fractional-N ADPLL employs a high-resolution 60 GHz digitallycontrolled oscillator (DCO) and is capable of multi-rate two-point FM. It achieves a measured rms jitter of 590.2 fs, while the loop settles within 3 µs. The measured reference spur is only -74 dBc, the fractional spurs are below -62 dBc, with no other significant spurs. A closed-loop DCO gain linearization scheme realizes a GHz-level triangular chirp across multiple DCO tuning banks with a measured frequency error (i.e., nonlinearity) in the FMCW ramp of only 117 kHz rms for a 62 GHz carrier with 1.22 GHz bandwidth. The synthesizer is transformer-coupled to a 3-stage neutralized power amplifier (PA) that delivers +5 dBm to a 50 Ω load. Implemented in 65 nm CMOS, the transmitter prototype (including PA) consumes 89 mW from a 1.2 V supply.
Precisely quantifying the heterogeneity or disorder of a network system is very important and desired in studies of behavior and function of the network system. Although many degree-based entropies have been proposed to measure the heterogeneity of real networks, heterogeneity implicated in the structure of networks can not be precisely quantified yet. Hence, we propose a new structure entropy based on automorphism partition to precisely quantify the structural heterogeneity of networks. Analysis of extreme cases shows that entropy based on automorphism partition can quantify the structural heterogeneity of networks more precisely than degree-based entropies. We also summarized symmetry and heterogeneity statistics of many real networks, finding that real networks are indeed more heterogenous in the view of automorphism partition than what have been depicted under the measurement of degree-based entropies; and that structural heterogeneity is strongly negatively correlated to symmetry of real networks.PACS numbers:
The performance characteristics of transmission lines, silicon integrated waveguides, tunable LC resonators and passive combiners/splitters and baluns are described in this paper. It is shown that Q-factor for an on-chip LC tank peaks between 20 and 40 GHz in a 65 nm RF-CMOS technology; well below the bands proposed for many mm-wave applications. Simulations also predict that the Q-factor of differential CPW transmission lines on-chip can exceed 20 at 60 GHz in RF-CMOS when a floating shield is applied, outperforming unshielded variants employing more advanced metal stacks. A PA circuit demonstrator for advanced on-chip passive power combiners, splitters and baluns realizes peak-PAE of 18% and better than 20 dBm into a load at 62 GHz. An outlook to the enablement of digitally intensive mm-wave ICs and low-loss passive interconnections (0.15 dB/mm measured loss at 100 GHz) concludes the paper.Index Terms-Coplanar waveguide, integrated waveguide, mm-wave, monolithic inductors and capacitors, power amplifier, RF-CMOS, SiGe-BiCMOS.
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