Home
Police Radio Frequency News
Wideband High Power Microwave Amplifier Links
Sitemap

Sponsored Links

 

Navigation

Radio frequency scanner
Brazil radio frequency chart
Exposure 18 power amplifiers
Radio and frequency and identification or rfid
Bose 1800 power amplifier
New york scanner radio frequencies
Ham radio power amplifier
Rf pulse power amplifier
Heat sinks for power amplifiers
Tsunami amplifier power kit
Synthesizer
2 meter medium power rf amplifier
Radio frequency radiation
144 mhz rf power amplifier
Best value for a live sound power amplifier



RF Power Amplifier

Power, efficiency, linearity: pick any three ¡ª such a choice just about summarizes the challenges presented to the power amplifier (PA) designer in 2005. As wireless systems pack more data into limited bandwidths, power amplifiers carry a bigger burden but are still required to be efficient. Simultaneously, in order to maintain high information throughput from an ever-increasing number of users, the specifications on adjacent channel interference keep getting more stringent, and more efficient modulation systems keep demanding more dynamic range and higher instantaneous signal bandwidth. Meeting these challenges has evolved into an interesting blend of old and new techniques in device technology, PA architecture, and an ever-increasing intrusion of high speed digital signal processing (DSP) into the very traditional analog preserve of RF power engineering.

 

From the PA viewpoint, things did not quite go to plan for GaAs fabrication shareholders. Two new transistor technologies emerged to dominate both ends of the mobile phone PA markets: silicon laterally diffused metal oxide semiconductor (LDMOS) for high power base stations and GaAs heterojunction bipolar transistor (HBT) for handsets. Neither technology would have attracted backers in the early ¡®90s to dominate the scene in the way they have done; their emergence is an interesting case study. At the high power end, cost matters most, and although LDMOS needed careful stretching to meet performance goals at 2 GHz, the lavishly over-performing GaAs FET technology appeared to be more expensive on a dollar-per-watt basis. In the battery-powered environment of the mo- problem, which all carry the name of their accredited inventors: Kahn, Doherty and Chireix.2¨C4 It is probably a fair statement to say that just about any company or research group involved with PA design is putting major R&D efforts into at least one of these techniques at the present time.



 

Radio Frequency Recommended Products


Military Radio Frequencies News

Retro wireless: Hoffman RT-159A/URC-4 survival radio - EETimes.com


Retro wireless: Hoffman RT-159A/URC-4 survival radio
EETimes.com - Nov 30, 2008
Likewise the radio could receive signals on the same two frequencies used for transmitting--121.5 MHz and 243 MHz, designated as VFH and UHF, respectively. ...

Read more...


Episode 9 – Secret Identities - News Telegram


Episode 9 – Secret Identities
News Telegram, TX - Nov 30, 2008
Gunners are closest to the MRAP bank of radios and they are always pulling duty of changing radio frequencies. As soon as SFC Colon switched the freq. ...

Read more...


RFID in embedded designs: Your move - EDN.com


EDN.com

RFID in embedded designs: Your move
EDN.com, MA - Nov 26, 2008
RFID (radio-frequency-identification) technology has the potential to become a common and important element in embedded-system design. ...

Read more...


A Hollywood siren's wireless revolution - Trading Markets (press release)


A Hollywood siren's wireless revolution
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Nov 9, 2008
Believe it or not, the original idea of making information hop between radio frequencies belongs to Hedy Lamarr, a stunning Hollywood actress who worked ...

Read more...


Canadian cops warned of cell phone jammers - United Press International


Canadian cops warned of cell phone jammers
United Press International - Nov 19, 2008
In some jurisdictions, prosecutors also file theft charges against jammers, as cell phone operators pay to use the public radio frequencies, ...

Read more...