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Artech House USA
RF Passive Network Design and Synthesis for Mobile Communications - Volume 2

RF Passive Network Design and Synthesis for Mobile Communications - Volume 2

By (author): Peter V. Wright
Copyright: 2025
Pages: 450
ISBN: 9781685690915

Hardback $164.00 Qty:
Digital download and online $122.00 Qty:

RF Passive Network Design and Synthesis for Mobile Communications, Volume 2, presents advanced network architectures that define today’s compact, high-performance mobile systems, building on the analytic foundations established in Volume 1. This authoritative second volume explores the sophisticated design techniques necessary to achieve maximum efficiency and dynamic range within critical RF front ends. Author Peter V. Wright delivers a powerful, new approach required for modern mobile communications platforms, ensuring optimal system integrity and performance.

 

Gain access to precise, closed-form methods for designing the next generation of essential passive components, including couplers, splitters, and combiners. Analysis moves beyond fundamental devices and into advanced network topologies such as the SILC lattice-balun splitter/combiner, branch-line, ladder, and three-port quadrature couplers. New high-performance Chireix and Doherty PA architectures, exploiting the new SILC architecture, are proposed and analyzed. Extensive comparisons and derivations reveal how subtle impedance choices and phase characteristics directly influence crucial system metrics like linearity and bandwidth. The material then transitions to the integration of these networks with sophisticated multiphase power amplifier architectures such as Doherty and Chireix. Master techniques to exploit novel combiners, T-based networks, and differential layouts for optimal performance extraction.

 

Structured for fast, equation-based synthesis and verification using widely available tools, this hands-on toolkit serves as an essential resource for RF and microwave circuit designers, mobile and 5G front-end engineers, and advanced students seeking to master passive network synthesis. This new volume provides over 700 new equations, hundreds of annotated figures, and detailed appendixes covering complex subjects including coupled-inductor modeling, multiport S- and Y- parameter transformations, and polynomial curve fitting. This expertise equips professionals to rapidly deploy high-efficiency architectures that meet the rigorous demands of the next-generation mobile standards.

1 SILC – A Novel Lattice-balun Splitter/combiner
1.1 SILC splitter/combiner design basics
1.2 SILC coupler performance characteristics
1.3 SILC coupler versus “transformers” for differential PA architectures

2 Branch-Line Four-Port Quadrature Couplers
2.1 Branch-line coupler – Type 1
2.2 Branch-line coupler – Type 2
2.3 Branch-line coupler – Type 2 alternative topology
2.4 Branch-line coupler – Type 2X
2.5 Branch-line coupler – Type 3
2.6 Branch-line coupler – Type 4
2.7 Comparison summary of branch-line splitter characteristics
2.8 Branch-line coupler with differing line impedances design
2.9 Dual-section branch-line coupler design

3 Ladder Four-Port Quadrature Couplers
3.1 Low-pass ladder couplers
3.2 Modified low-pass ladder for loose coupling
3.3 High-pass ladder couplers
3.4 Modified high-pass ladder for loose coupling
3.5 Comparison summary of ladder splitter characteristics

4 Three-Port Quadrature Couplers, Design and Applications
4.1 Comparison of quadrature coupler configurations
4.2 Exploiting quadrature couplers in PA architectures

5 Development of Advantageous Multi-phase PA Architecture
5.1 Moderate phase-shift impedance-matching network
5.2 Balanced PA architecture basic characteristics
5.3 Three PA configuration with unique advantages
5.4 Four PA configuration characteristics

6 Novel High-Performance Doherty Power Amplifier Architectures
6.1 Characteristics of Conventional Doherty Architecture
6.2 Improved Compact Doherty Architecture
6.3 Improved Compact Doherty Architecture Wide Bandwidth Advantage
6.4 New T-Based Combiner for Dual-Power State Designs
6.5 A New Differential Doherty Architecture
6.5.1 Proposed New Circuit Architecture and Performance
6.6 Wide-band Differential Doherty Characteristics

7 Novel High-Performance Chireix Power Amplifier Architecture
7.1 Basic Differential Chireix Configuration
7.2 Single-ended Chireix Configuration
7.3 Lattice-based Chireix Configuration
7.4 Lattice-based Chireix Design Guide
7.5 Consequences of Non-perfect Voltage Sources

8 A Compact Discrete Wilkinson Coupler
8.1 Discrete Wilkinson Combiner Design
8.2 Discrete Wilkinson Combiner Analysis
8.3 Discrete Wilkinson Splitter Analysis
8.4 Discrete Wilkinson Combiner Design Examples
8.5 Discrete Wilkinson Splitter Design Examples

Bibliography
Appendixes A - H

  • Peter V. Wright

    graduated with an engineering degree from Cambridge University, UK. and began work as a microwave engineer for Marconi Communications, Chelmsford, UK. Subsequently, he took up an engineering position with Microwave Associates, Burlington, MA., before entering the PhD program in Electrical Sciences Department at MIT. His thesis work was in the area microwave, acoustics, and optical component design and modelling. Working under Professor Haus, he pioneered the application of coupling-of-modes theory (COM) to the design of surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices.

     

    After graduating from MIT, he became a staff member at Lincoln Laboratories, Bedford, MA, where he worked on superconducting signal processing circuits, and acousto-optic spectrum analyzers. Anxious to apply his COM theory to the design of practical SAW devices, he joined RF Monolithics in Dallas, TX, where he wrote most of the software for designing the company’s wide range of SAW resonators and filters. As an outcome of this work, he received multiple patents for numerous innovative architectures. He was Technical Program Chair of the 2000 IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium in Puerto Rico.

     

    Dr. Wright also worked in the acoustic field for Schlumberger in Clamart, France. There, he created an innovative acoustic signal processing algorithm to rapidly process logs for evaluating image cement integrity on the outside of a bore-hole casing. This algorithm was widely employed by the company in its tools used in the oil industry.

     

    Returning to his roots in the field of microwave design, he joined Thomson Microsonics in Sophia-Antipolis, France, which manufactured RF cellphone modules. Continuing in that field he joined TriQuint Semiconductor, later Qorvo in Hillsboro, OR, where he worked for eighteen years. During that time, he expanded on the device modelling capabilities he had previously developed and applied them predominantly to cellphone power amplifier RF modules. These techniques pointed the way to many innovative and advantageous device architectures, many of which are described in the two books of this series.

     

    The author was awarded around fifty issued patents and is currently retired in Cascais, Portugal. There he enjoys writing historical and science fiction novels. He is also an avid gardener.

     

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