A Study of a Millimeter-Wave Transmitter Architecture Realizing QAM Directly in RF Domain

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Abstract

Realization of high-order modulation schemes directly in the RF domain enables the generation of spectrally efficient 4M quadrature-amplitude-modulated (4M QAM) symbols using the vectorial summation of M quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) signals whose amplitudes are progressively scaled by a constant factor of two. Called RF-QAM, this approach leads to numerous advantages including the elimination of power-hungry digital-to-analog converter (DAC) and the mitigation of stringent linearity requirement of the front-end power amplifier (PA). This paper presents a comprehensive comparative study of RF-QAM and conventional transmitters. The design issues associated with the front end and the mixed-signal blocks for both architectures are investigated, and the performance of these two designs is compared. Various circuit- and system-level simulations verify the superior performance of the RF-QAM transmitter compared to the conventional counterpart.

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Oveisi, M., Wang, H., & Heydari, P. (2023). A Study of a Millimeter-Wave Transmitter Architecture Realizing QAM Directly in RF Domain. IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, 70(6), 2243–2256. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCSI.2023.3255109

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