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IEICE Transactions on Electronics
Online ISSN : 1745-1353
Print ISSN : 0916-8524
Special Section on Microwave and Millimeter-Wave Technology
Performance Analysis of a 10-Gb/s Millimeter-Wave Impulse Radio Transmitter
Yasuhiro NAKASHANaoki HARAKiyomichi ARAKI
Author information
  • Yasuhiro NAKASHA

    Fujitsu Limited

  • Naoki HARA

    Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.

  • Kiyomichi ARAKI

    Tokyo Institute of Technology

Corresponding author

ORCID
Keywords:impulse radio,millimeter-wave,pulse generator,band-pass filter,jitter,intersymbol interference
JOURNALRESTRICTED ACCESS

2011 Volume E94.CIssue 10Pages 1557-1564

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1587/transele.E94.C.1557
Details
  • Published: October 01, 2011Received: January 31, 2011Available on J-STAGE: October 01, 2011Accepted: -Advance online publication: -Revised: -
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Abstract
This paper presents the analytical results of the effects of jitter and intersymbol interference (ISI) on a millimeter-wave impulse radio (IR) transceiver, compared with the performance of a developed 10-Gb/s W-band IR-transmitter prototype. The IR transmitter, which is compact and cost-effective, consists of a pulse generator (PG) that creates an extremely short pulse, a band-pass filter (BPF) that shapes the short pulse to the desired millimeter-wave pulse (wavelet), and an optional power amplifier. The jitters of the PG and ISI from the BPF are a hindrance in making the IR transceiver robust and in obtaining excellent performance. One analysis verified that, because of a novel retiming architecture, the random jitter and the data-dependent jitter from the PG give only a small penalty of < 0.5-dB increase in the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for achieving a bit error rate (BER) of < 10-12. An alternative analysis on the effect of ISI from the BPF indicated that using a Gaussian BPF enables a transmission with a BER of < 10-12 up to a data rate of 1.4 times as large as the bandwidth of the BPF, which is twice as high as that of a conventional amplitude shift keying (ASK) system. The analysis also showed that the IR system is more sensitive to the ISI than the ASK system and suggested that the mismatching of the skirt characteristics of the developed BPF with those of a Gaussian BPF causes tail lobes following the wavelet, resulting in an on/off ratio of 15dB and hence, an SNR penalty of 6dB.
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© 2011 The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers
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