L o w C o s t F M R a d i o L NA u s i n g BFR340 F Matched to 50 Ohm at I nput and Ou tput App lication No te AN205 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 RF and Protect i on Devi ces Edition 2010-08-19 Published by Infineon Technologies AG 81726 Munich, Germany © 2010 Infineon Technologies AG All Rights Reserved. Legal Disclaimer The information given in this document shall in no event be regarded as a guarantee of conditions or characteristics. With respect to any examples or hints given herein, any typical values stated herein and/or any information regarding the application of the device, Infineon Technologies hereby disclaims any and all warranties and liabilities of any kind, including without limitation, warranties of non-infringement of intellectual property rights of any third party. Information For further information on technology, delivery terms and conditions and prices, please contact the nearest Infineon Technologies Office (www.infineon.com). Warnings Due to technical requirements, components may contain dangerous substances. For information on the types in question, please contact the nearest Infineon Technologies Office. Infineon Technologies components may be used in life-support devices or systems only with the express written approval of Infineon Technologies, if a failure of such components can reasonably be expected to cause the failure of that life-support device or system or to affect the safety or effectiveness of that device or system. Life support devices or systems are intended to be implanted in the human body or to support and/or maintain and sustain and/or protect human life. If they fail, it is reasonable to assume that the health of the user or other persons may be endangered. Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Application Note AN205 Revision History: 2010-08-19, Revision 1.2 Previous Revision:1.10 Page Subjects (major changes since last revision) 11l ESD Appendix updated Trademarks of Infineon Technologies AG A-GOLD™, BlueMoon™, COMNEON™, CONVERGATE™, COSIC™, C166™, CROSSAVE™, CanPAK™, CIPOS™, CoolMOS™, CoolSET™, CONVERPATH™, CORECONTROL™, DAVE™, DUALFALC™, DUSLIC™, EasyPIM™, EconoBRIDGE™, EconoDUAL™, EconoPACK™, EconoPIM™, E-GOLD™, EiceDRIVER™, EUPEC™, ELIC™, EPIC™, FALC™, FCOS™, FLEXISLIC™, GEMINAX™, GOLDMOS™, HITFET™, HybridPACK™, INCA™, ISAC™, ISOFACE™, IsoPACK™, IWORX™, M-GOLD™, MIPAQ™, ModSTACK™, MUSLIC™, my-d™, NovalithIC™, OCTALFALC™, OCTAT™, OmniTune™, OmniVia™, OptiMOS™, OPTIVERSE™, ORIGA™, PROFET™, PRO-SIL™, PrimePACK™, QUADFALC™, RASIC™, ReverSave™, SatRIC™, SCEPTRE™, SCOUT™, S-GOLD™, SensoNor™, SEROCCO™, SICOFI™, SIEGET™, SINDRION™, SLIC™, SMARTi™, SmartLEWIS™, SMINT™, SOCRATES™, TEMPFET™, thinQ!™, TrueNTRY™, TriCore™, TRENCHSTOP™, VINAX™, VINETIC™, VIONTIC™, WildPass™, X-GOLD™, XMM™, X-PMU™, XPOSYS™, XWAY™. Other Trademarks AMBA™, ARM™, MULTI-ICE™, PRIMECELL™, REALVIEW™, THUMB™ of ARM Limited, UK. AUTOSAR™ is licensed by AUTOSAR development partnership. Bluetooth™ of Bluetooth SIG Inc. CAT-iq™ of DECT Forum. COLOSSUS™, FirstGPS™ of Trimble Navigation Ltd. EMV™ of EMVCo, LLC (Visa Holdings Inc.). EPCOS™ of Epcos AG. FLEXGO™ of Microsoft Corporation. FlexRay™ is licensed by FlexRay Consortium. HYPERTERMINAL™ of Hilgraeve Incorporated. IEC™ of Commission Electrotechnique Internationale. IrDA™ of Infrared Data Association Corporation. ISO™ of INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR STANDARDIZATION. MATLAB™ of MathWorks, Inc. MAXIM™ of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. MICROTEC™, NUCLEUS™ of Mentor Graphics Corporation. Mifare™ of NXP. MIPI™ of MIPI Alliance, Inc. MIPS™ of MIPS Technologies, Inc., USA. muRata™ of MURATA MANUFACTURING CO. OmniVision™ of OmniVision Technologies, Inc. Openwave™ Openwave Systems Inc. RED HAT™ Red Hat, Inc. RFMD™ RF Micro Devices, Inc. SIRIUS™ of Sirius Sattelite Radio Inc. SOLARIS™ of Sun Microsystems, Inc. SPANSION™ of Spansion LLC Ltd. Symbian™ of Symbian Software Limited. TAIYO YUDEN™ of Taiyo Yuden Co. TEAKLITE™ of CEVA, Inc. TEKTRONIX™ of Tektronix Inc. TOKO™ of TOKO KABUSHIKI KAISHA TA. UNIX™ of X/Open Company Limited. VERILOG™, PALLADIUM™ of Cadence Design Systems, Inc. VLYNQ™ of Texas Instruments Incorporated. VXWORKS™, WIND RIVER™ of WIND RIVER SYSTEMS, INC. ZETEX™ of Diodes Zetex Limited. Last Trademarks Update 2009-10-19 Application Note AN205 3 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Introduction 1 Introduction FM Radio has a long history to its credit starting from its development in 1933. Today, FM radio is an integral part of almost all mobile phones, including the ultra low cost phones. FM Radio broadcast today is not just used to listen to songs and news, but also used for RDS (Radio Data System) to receive various services including TMC (Traffic Message Channel) which gives traffic information for navigation purposes. In addition, some handsets are being equipped with FM Radio transimission capability to send voice signals to car audio systems or Hi-Fi systems. Therefore, FM system design in a phone is getting more and more complex. Till recently, the headset served as the antenna for FM Radio reception, wherein the antenna size is a bit relaxed and the antenna performance is satisfactory. A new trend has emerged to be able to use FM radio also without the headset, wherein the antenna embedded into the phone. But in this case, the space constraint poses a challenge on the antenna design. Shrinking the size of the antenna reduces antenna gain and bandwidth, which introduces a high loss into the system which deteriorates the receiver performance, namely the receiver sensitivity. This application note presents Infineon solution to the aforementioned challenges leading to the design of a high performance RF front end with the lowest power consumption. A general topology for the RF front-end of FM Radio is as shown in Figure 1. Variations of the given application schematic are possible based on the complete system design and concept. These may include systems with only external headset antenna, only internal embedded antenna or both antennas co-existing. Infineon offers the complete chain of RF front-end parts between the antenna and the receiver IC for FM Radio, which include ESD protection devices, RF switches and LNAs. The focus of this application note is Low Noise Amplifier for FMR. A ESD protection circuit is needed at the antenna to protect the front-end system from ESD strikes, as the antenna is susceptible to ESD events. More details and Infineon solutions for ESD protection can be found in app. A Single Pole Double Throw or SPDT RF switch is used to toggle between the headset and embedded antenna. The switch being in front of the LNA and in the vicinity of strong cellular signals should introduce minimal loss to the system and offer high linearity. To know more about Infineon solutions for RF Switches, please refer to Reference [2]. Headset Antenna ESD Protection SPDT LNA FM Transceiver IC Rx Embedded Antenna Figure 1 ESD Protection FM_Application _Diagram .vsd FM Radio RF Front-End schematic A Low Noise Amplifier or LNA follows the switch, which significantly reduces the noise figure of the whole receiver chain, thereby improving the receiver sensitivity. However, there are a few challenges in the design of the LNA for this purpose. Using it in a hand held device demands low current consumption and high linearity due to the coexistence of cellular bands. In a system with internal antenna, due to the very small size, the antenna impedance is very high and thus the LNA has to be matched to this high impedance and in addition offer a low noise figure. Application Note AN205 4 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Infineon Solution 2 Infineon Solution Infineon offers its LNA solution using a ultra low cost discrete transistor BFR340F, which fulfills all these performance criteria. The LNA is designed for worldwide FM band (76-108 MHz). The LNA finds its application in all kinds of mobile devices like mobile phones, PDAs, portable FM radio, MP3 players etc. The following table gives a quick overview on the performance of the FM Antenna LNA described in this application note. Table 1 Electrical characteristics at TA = 25°C, VCC = 1.8V, ICCq =3.0 mA, f = 100MHz All measurements done in a 50 Ohm system Parameter Symbol Values Min. Insertion power gain |S21| Input return loss Output return loss Typ. 2 Unit Max. 15.6 dB RLIN 10.5 dB RLOUT 18.1 dB ISO 27.3 dB F50ohm 1.85 dB Input 1dB gain compression point P-1dB,in -25 dBm Output 1dB gain compression point P-1dB,out -9 dBm Input 3rd Order Intercept Point2) IIP3 -16 dBm 0 dBm Isolation Noise figure (Zs=50Ohm) 1) Output 3rd Order Intercept OIP3 Point3) 1) Does not include PCB and SMA connector losses, can be improved to 1.6 dB by using high Q, wire wound chip inductors e.g. Murata LQW series. 2) IP3 value depends on termination of all intermodulation frequency components. Termination used for the measurement is 50 Ω from 0.1 to 6 GHz 3) IP3 value depends on termination of all intermodulation frequency components. Termination used for the measurement is 50 Ω from 0.1 to 6 GHz Application Note AN205 5 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Application Circuit 3 Application Circuit The FM Radio application schematic for the BFR340F is shown in Figure 2 and the function of each component is explained in Table 2. Vc c 1.8V R3 10Ω C3 R1 RFin C2 47n 33kΩ R2 BFR340F B L1 100n C1 12p 330p 100 Ω E C4 RFout C 330p N1 R4 1.5kΩ Figure 2 Application schematic for FM Radio Table 2 Bill of material C5 Appl _Ckt.vsd 330p Component Value Manufacturer / Type Function N1 BFR340F Transistor Infineon Technologies / TSFP-3 LNA Active device C1 12 pF Various / 0402 Input Matching C2 330 pF Various / 0402 DC blocking C3 47 nF Various / 0402 DC stabilization C4 330 pF Various / 0402 DC blocking C5 330 pF Various / 0402 RF Feedback R1 33 kOhm Various / 0402 Biasing R2 100 Ohm Various / 0402 Biasing, Matching, Stability R3 10 Ohm Various / 0402 Biasing and DC operating point stabilization over temperature & transistor hfevariation R4 1.5 kOhm Various / 0402 RF Feedback L1 100 nH Murata/ LQG series Input Matching Application Note AN205 6 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Evaluation Board 4 Evaluation Board To enable a fast and stand alone evaluation of the Application circuit described in this document, Infineon offers an application board, which is as shown in the Figure 3. PCB.vsd Figure 3 Evaluation Board The PCB cross-section of the evaluation board is shown in Figure 4. Copper Top FR4, 0.2mm Copper Middle Cu 35µm FR4, 0.8 mm Copper Bottom Figure 4 PCB_Cross_Section.vsd PCB Cross-section Application Note AN205 7 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Measurement Results 5 Measurement Results This section presents the measurement results of the aforementioned application circuit on the evaluation board. The measurements were performed at 25°C and include the losses of both SMA connectors and the PCB microstrip lines. 5.1 Narrowband Results Gain 20 15 10 5 0 85 Figure 5 90 95 100 Frequency (MHz) 105 110 NB_GainAN 205.vsd Power Gain (dB) Return Loss 0 DB(|S(1,1)|) bfr340F_loq_finala -5 DB(|S(2,2)|) bfr340F_loq_finala -10 -15 -20 -25 -30 85 Figure 6 90 95 100 Frequency (MHz) 105 110 RLan205.vsd Input and Output Reflection Coefficient (dB) Application Note AN205 8 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Measurement Results Isolation -20 -40 -60 -80 DB(|S(1,2)|) bfr340F_loq_finala -100 85 Figure 7 90 95 100 Frequency (MHz) 105 110 Input to Output Isolation (dB) Application Note AN205 9 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Measurement Results 5.2 Wide-Band Results Below is a graph depicting wide-band LNA characteristics up to 10 GHz. DB(|S(1,2)|) bfr340F_loq_finala DB(|S(1,1)|) bfr340F_loq_finala DB(|S(2,1)|) bfr340F_loq_finala DB(|S(2,2)|) bfr340F_loq_finala WB Results 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 -70 10 Figure 8 1010 2010 3010 4010 5010 6010 Frequency (MHz) 7010 8010 9010 10010 8010 9010 10010 Wide-Band: Gain, Input/Output Matching, Isolation Stability 4 B1() bfr340F_loq_finala 3 K() bfr340F_loq_finala 2 1 0 10 Figure 9 1010 2010 3010 4010 5010 6010 Frequency (MHz) 7010 Stabilityan205 .vsd Stability Factor (necessary and sufficient condition for “Unconditional Stability”: k>1 & B1>0) Application Note AN205 10 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Appendix 1: ESD protection circuit for system level ESD robustness Appendix 1: ESD protection circuit for system level ESD robustness Introduction With the advancement in miniaturization of semiconductor structures, ESD handling capability of the devices is becoming a concern. Increasing ESD handling capability of the I/O ports costs additional chip size and affects the I/O capacitance significantly. This is very important for high frequency devices, especially when high linearity is required. Therefore, tailored and cost effective ESD protection devices can be used to build up an ESD protection circuit. To handle ESD events during assembly, devices normally have on-chip ESD protection according to the device level standards e.g. “Human Body Model” JEDEC 22-A-115. To fulfill the much more stringent system level ESD requirements according to IEC61000-4-2 as shown in Figure 10, the external ESD protection circuit has to handle the majority of the ESD strike. The best external ESD protection is achieved using a TVS diode assisted by additional passive components. ESD_current, A 60 m6 Reference Pulse 15kV contact discharge according IEC61000-4-2 40 m6 time=1.507nsec ESD_current=57.68 A m7 time=30.01nsec ESD_current=29.43 A m7 m8 20 m8 time=60.01nsec ESD_current=15.18 A 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 time, nsec Figure 10 140 160 180 200 ESD_Pulse .vsd ESD test pulse according to system level specification IEC61000-4-2 – Contact Discharge 15kV Some examples of RF applications addressed by the Infineon ESD protection proposal are given below: • • • • • • FM Radio (76 MHz -110 MHz) WLAN 802.11b/g/n (2.4 GHz, Tx ~ +20 dBm) Bluetooth (2.4 GHz, Tx ~ +20 dBm) Automatic Meter Reading, AMR (900 MHz, TX ~ +20 dBm) Remote Keyless Entry, RKE (315 MHz - 434 MHz - 868 MHz - 915 MHz, Tx~13 dBm) GPS (1575 MHz, Rx only but can be affected by RF interferer) For an ESD protection device tailored for medium power RF signals (=< +20 dBm), following requirements are essential: 1. RF requirements a) Bidirectional characteristic to handle DC free signals without clipping / signal distortion b) A highly symmetrical behavior of the ESD device for positive and negative voltage swings is mandatory to keep the power level of even Harmonics low c) Breakdown voltage of 5 V-10V, to avoid signal distortion at high RF voltage swing applied at the TVS diode, located close to the antenna d) High linearity e) Low leakage current and stable diode capacitance vs. RF voltage swing f) Ultra low diode capacitance is mandatory Application Note AN205 11 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Appendix 1: ESD protection circuit for system level ESD robustness 2. ESD requirements: a) Lowest dynamic resistance Rdyn to offer best protection for the RFIC; Rdyn is characterized by Transmission Line Pulse (TLP) measurement b) Very fast switch-on time (<<1nsec) to ground the initial peak of an ESD strike according to IEC61000-4-2 c) No performance degradation over a large number of ESD zaps (>1000 Two-step ESD Protection approach General structure for a 2-step ESD approach according to Figure 11 enables to split the entire ESD current between the internal and external ESD protection device. The external device is much more robust and handles the majority of the ESD current. To avoid any impact on the RF behavior of the system and to minimize non linearity effects, the TVS diode should possess an ultra low device capacitance. Therefore the bi-directional (symmetrical) Infineon TVS Diode ESD0P2RF is well suited, which provides a diode capacitance as low as 0.2 pF and a Rdyn of only 1 Ohm. The additional insertion loss in the 50 Ohm environment caused by the ESD0p2RF is less than 0.05dB up to 3Ghz. + Vcc Figure 11 PCB line or Resistor ESD current Main ESD curr ent Internal ESD protection External ESD Pprotection U_ cla mp e xtern LNA/ Switch/ Filter V_Clamp Internal OUT Residual ESD current ESD strike PCB- line ESD_protection_1.vsd Smart 2-step ESD protection approach based on external and internal ESD protection structure For further ESD improvement it is highly recommend to add a serial capacitor (C1). The capacitor cuts off most of the high energy created by the ESD strike. For an improved ESD robustness, C1 should be as small as possible, but has to match to the intended application frequency as well. For a broadband ESD protection (80MHz…3GHz) C1 should be about 150pF…50pF. Optional matching can be implemented with a serial inductor L1 for a dedicated frequency. In combination with L1, C1 can be reduced significantly which improves the ESD performance further more. The serial inductor should be a low Q type serving a (small) serial resistor which is helpful for the ESD performance. An serial resistor of e.g. 2.2 Ohm costs 0.2dB IL, but limits the residual ESD current significant to reduce the ESD stress for the IC input. OUT LNA/ Switch/ Filter Internal ESD Protection RF IC input C1 R1 Residual ESD current ESD_protection_2b.vsd Figure 12 RX antenna Low Q inductor or optional Resistor L1 ESD Diode Vcc ESD current Standard ESD protection topology with optional ESD resistor, blocking capacitor and a serial inductor Application Note AN205 12 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F Appendix 1: ESD protection circuit for system level ESD robustness Alternatively another TVS diode (ESD5V3L1U-02LRH/LS, unidirectional) can be used for ESD performance improvement in order to reduce the residual stress for the IC (FM-LNA) in case of high IEC61000-4-2 ESD strikes. The ESD5V3L1U-02LRH/LS provides a dynamic resistance of 0.31 Ohm only (1 Ohm for ESD0P2RF) and a diode capacitance of 1pF typically. For the FM radio frontend the low diode capacitance of 1pF is not affecting the circuit matching performance, the very low dynamical resistance (0.31 Ohm) makes the serial resistor (2.2 Ohm in Figure 2/3) obsolete. However designers have to obey that in packed design with possible high RF interference level e.g. from the TX path of GSM the unidirectional ESD5V3L1U could clip the signal in the negative direction. In a more "non hostile" environment the ESD5V3L1U-02LRH/LS works very fine and provides lower R_dynamic/lower clamping voltage, resulting in in a lower residual ESD stress for the FM radio LNA. For hostile interfering environment, the bidirectional ESD0P2RF is the preferred ESD solution for FM radio, for other FM radio environments, the ESD5V3L1U-02LRH/LS is the better alternative. Application Note AN205 13 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 Low Cost FM Radio LNA BFR340F References References [1] BFR340F Datasheet, Infineon Technologies AG. [2] Application Note AN175, RF CMOS SPDT Switches, Infineon Technologies AG Authors 1. Deepak Bachu, Senior Application Engineer of the Business Unit “RF and Protection Devices” 2. Ralph Kuhn, Senior Staff Engineer of the Business Unit “RF and Protection Devices” Application Note AN205 14 Revision 1.2, 2010-08-19 w w w . i n f i n e o n . c o m Published by Infineon Technologies AG AN205