Wireless

GaN power amplifier has highest output for W-Band transmissions

25th January 2016
Jordan Mulcare
0

Fujitsu Limited and Fujitsu Laboratories have announced the development of a GaN High-Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT) power amplifier for use in W-band (75-110GHz) transmissions. This can be used in a high-capacity wireless network with coverage over a radius of several kilometers.

In areas where fiber-optic cable is difficult to lay, to achieve high-speed wireless communications of several gigabits per second, one promising approach is to use high-frequency bands, such as the W band, which uses a wide frequency band. In order to get good long-distance coverage in these frequencies, however, it is necessary to increase the output power of the power amplifier to the scale of watts.

Fujitsu succeeded in developing a power amplifier for W-band transmissions using GaN-HEMT technology capable of high output at 100GHz. Evaluations of the newly developed power amplifier confirmed it to have 1.8 times increased output performance than before, which would translate to an increase of over 30% in transmission range when used in a high-speed wireless network.

A portion of this research was conducted as part of a project of the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) on "Agile Deployment Capability of Highly Resilient Optical and Radio Seamless Communication Systems." Details of this technology are being presented at Power Amplifiers for Wireless and Radio Applications (PAWR2016), opening January 24th in Austin, Texas.

Background High-frequency wireless communications, using the frequency band known as the W band (75-110GHz), are drawing increasing interest, both as a way to temporarily set up high-capacity communications channels for handling special events where large numbers of people gather, or for responding to disasters, and also as a way to bring communications to remote areas where fiber-optic cables are difficult to lay.

Compared to today's mobile phones, which use frequencies in the 0.8-2.0GHz range, the W band uses a frequency band more than 50 times as broad with 50 times the speed, meaning it is a frequency band that is well-suited to these high-capacity wireless communications. Issues In order to transmit wireless signals over a distance of several kilometers, the transmission antenna needs a power amplifier capable of a high output on the order of several watts.

Existing power amplifiers for high-frequency transmissions in the millimeter-wave band (30-300GHz), which are built using gallium arsenide or CMOS semiconductors, are limited by their operating voltage to an output of about 0.1W and it has not been possible to increase this. GaN-HEMT power amplifiers have achieved high output performance in the microwave range (3-30GHz), but the problem up until now was that their output performance declined in the W-band range. To solve these problems, Fujitsu developed a GaN-HEMT device with a unique structure capable of increasing output in the millimeter band.

This uses a layer of indium-aluminum-gallium-nitride (InAlGaN), and double-layer silicon nitride (SiN) passivation film to increase current density by a factor of about 1.4, resulting in 3.0W of output power from a transistor per 1mm of gate width, at a high frequency of 100GHz. In developing this transistor, Fujitsu collaborated with Professor Yasuyuki Miyamoto of the Tokyo Institute of Technology in developing a device-simulation technology.

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