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October 31, 2005
UCSD Researchers Report World Record Efficiency
for High-Power Amplifiers for Cellular Base Stations
By Doug Ramsey
San Diego and Palm Spring, CA, October 31, 2005 – Wireless base stations are only as good as the amplifiers that extend their range to provide coverage for cell-phone users. Yet efficiency is typically only 10 percent for high-power amplifiers used in the base stations of third-generation wireless systems, which means they require ten times more power than they generate. Now engineers at the University of California, San Diego and industry collaborators have achieved greater than 50 percent efficiency—a record which could foretell more powerful base stations.
The record was announced
today at the 2005 Compound Semiconductor IC Symposium in Palm
Springs.
“Using our device we achieved more power with less heat,
while maintaining better gain,” said Don Kimball, principal
development engineer in the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology (Calit2) at UCSD. “This technology
could also boost the life span of base stations, which are designed
to last ten years but often last less than three.”
The 50.7 percent power added efficiency (PAE) is believed to
be the best efficiency reported for a single stage base station
power amplifier. At 50 percent PAE, 60 watts of output power
would require only 120 watts of DC power, rather than the 600
watts required by today’s high power base stations which
operate at roughly 10 percent efficiency (although previous
studies have recorded peak efficiencies of approximately 25
percent).
The record was achieved during recent tests in the High-Power
Amplifier Laboratory of the UCSD Division of Calit2. The research
was partly funded by Nokia and the UC Discovery Grant program.
Kimball's co-authors on the study include Electrical and Computer
Engineering professors Peter Asbeck and Larry Larson; UCSD graduate
students Chin Hsia and Jinho Jeong; QUALCOMM researcher and
UCSD grad student Paul Draxler; Nokia's Sandro Lanfranco; as
well as Kevin Linthicum and Walter Nagy, researchers from Nitronex,
the company that fabricated the amplifier design.
High PAE is a critical factor in thermal management, reliability
and cost. According to Kimball, the improvement was possible
for two principal reasons. First, his team used a transistor
made of gallium nitride (GaN), one of several advanced materials
that promise better characteristics than the silicon on which
most current amplifiers are based. GaN transistors – specifically,
heterojunction field effect transistors, or HFETs -- can provide
higher voltage and higher power density than other high power
‘compound’ semiconductors based on materials such
as gallium arsenide (GaAs), indium phosphide (InP), and silicon
germanium (SiGe).
“These research results will help to cement gallium nitride
as the transistor of the future for high-powered radio frequency
amplifiers,” said Kimball, lead author on the paper.
Secondly, the UCSD amplifier employed a novel architecture based
on ‘envelope tracking,’ a technique involving variable
power signals, instead of the constant feed of DC voltage that
is common in high-power amplifiers. The technique achieves both
efficiency and high linearity.
According to their paper*, the researchers
found that “the efficiency attained in the envelope tracking
amplifier is dramatically better than that obtained with constant
drain voltage, because 1) the amplifier operates closer to saturation,
2) the transistor temperature is maintained at a lower value,
and 3) the dynamic peak voltage reaches higher values than can
be used for constant drain bias voltages.” In short, adjusting
the voltage dynamically provides superior results as compared
to the constant voltage employed by most of today’s high-power
amplifiers.
“By combining gallium nitride with this advanced amplifier
architecture, it is now clear that we can achieve dramatic improvements
in base station power amplifiers,” noted Kimball.
The researchers developed a WCDMA base station power amplifier
using GaN HFETs on silicon substrates and envelope tracking,
and demonstrated “very high efficiency and precise output
performance.” The average efficiency of 50.7 percent accompanied
an average output power of 37.2 watts and gain of 10 decibels
(dB). The signal envelope had a peak-to-average power ratio
of 7.67 dB.
Today’s announcement comes just days after Kimball and
his colleagues demonstrated the envelope tracking technique
during a research exhibit to dedicate Calit2’s new building
on the UCSD campus.
At the Palm Springs meeting Nov. 2, Kimball will also participate
in a panel discussion on “GaN: The Ultimate High Power,
High Voltage Reliable Basestation PA Technology?”
The IEEE Compound Semiconductor IC Symposium (CSICS) -- formerly
the IEEE GaAs IC Symposium -- is the preeminent international
forum on developments in integrated circuits using compound
semiconductors.
________
* “50%
PAE WCDMA Basestation Amplifier Implemented with GaN HFETs”,
Don Kimball, Paul Draxler, Jinho Jeong, Chin Hsia, Sandro Lanfranco,
Walter Nagy, Kevin Linthicum, Larry Larson and Peter Asbeck.
CSICS 2005.
Media Contact: Doug Ramsey, (858) 822-5825.
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