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Course Catalog 2014-2015
ELT-47266 Active RF Circuits, 5 cr |
Additional information
Suitable for postgraduate studies
Person responsible
Olli-Pekka Lunden
Lessons
Study type | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | Summer | Implementations | Lecture times and places |
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Requirements
To pass the course, students need to collect points from various tasks, including homework submissions and a seminar report.There is no exam in this course.
Completion parts must belong to the same implementation
Learning Outcomes
After completing the course, student will understand the basic and some advanced RF circuit design concepts. Student will be able to analyze and design active RF circuits. For example, he or she will understand how a low-noise amplifier is constructed and how it operates; he or she is able to tell what each component is there for. In addition, student will have the ability to write a technical report dealing with some basic topic on RF circuit design and present its contents to others in a seminar.
Content
Content | Core content | Complementary knowledge | Specialist knowledge |
1. | RF transistor amplifiers: Transistor modeling using linear circuit parameters (Y, Z, S and ABCD), small-signal equivalent circuits, and nonlinear ("spice") models. Stability (against oscillation). Impedance matching of two-ports, noise figure optimization, linearity. | Matlab RF toolbox, RF circuit simulations. Aspects in practical implementations. | |
2. | RF oscillator design: modeling an oscillator as 1) a positive feedback amplifier and 2) as a negative resistance device. Clapp-type (single transistor) and cross-coupled (two-transistor) oscillators. Frequency control using varactors (aka "varicaps" or "capacitance diodes") Crystal oscillators. Design rules-of-thumb and their origins. | Frequency stability, jitter and phase noise. DC-to-RF efficiency. | Oscillator design trade-offs and optimization. |
3. | RF mixers: understanding mixer as 1) a circuit made of one or more switches 2) a circuit made of one or more nonlinear components. Active and passive mixers. Conversion loss/gain, mixing products (the wanted and unwanted output frequencies), linearity, port-to-port isolation. | Mixer noise figure. | |
4. | Other active RF circuits: frequency dividers, prescalers, frequency multipliers, phase detectors, the phase locked loop (PLL), modulators, demodulators. |
Instructions for students on how to achieve the learning outcomes
- RF is "something else" but not difficult. This course makes it easy. - This course is very interactive. Students are encouraged to co-operate. Concepts are discussed in class until everyone understands them. - Students solve homework problems in the first period and prepare for their seminar presentation on the second period. According to student feedback, putting effort to homework and especially to own seminar paper is very educative and rewarding. - It is recommended (but not mandatory) that students take this course together with ELT-47286 RF Project. These courses support each other. - In this course English language has never been a problem to any nationality.
Assessment scale:
Numerical evaluation scale (1-5) will be used on the course
Partial passing:
Study material
Type | Name | Author | ISBN | URL | Edition, availability, ... | Examination material | Language |
Book | Microwave Engineering, 4th ed | David M. Pozar | 1118213637, 9781118213636 | John Wiley & Sons, 2011 | No | English | |
Book | Microwave Transistor Amplifiers Analysis and Design | Guillermo Gonzales | Second Edition, Prentice Hall, 1997. | No | English | ||
Book | RF Circuit Design: Theory and Applications, 2nd ed | Reinhold Ludwig, Gene Bogdanov | 0131471376, 9780131471375 | Pearson 2007 | No | English | |
Book | RF Design Guide, Systems, Circuits, and Equations | Peter Vizmuller | Artech House, 1995. | No | English |
Prerequisites
Course | Mandatory/Advisable | Description |
ELT-47206 Basics of RF Engineering | Advisable | 1 |
1 . ELE-6057 Basics of RF Engineering (5 op)
Prerequisite relations (Requires logging in to POP)
Correspondence of content
Course | Corresponds course | Description |
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More precise information per implementation
Implementation | Description | Methods of instruction | Implementation |
Fall 2014 course |
Contact teaching: 33 % Distance learning: 9 % Self-directed learning: 58 % |