通信设计应用
W-CDMA电源极大地提高了发送效率
Abstract: The MAX1820 switch-mode power supply is optimized to improve the transmit efficiency in WCDMA handsets. By dynamically reducing the VCC headroom in the power amplifier (PA), the battery current is dramatically reduced at all power levels below maximum transmit power. The design of the MAX1820 has been solely optimized for this application.
As the planned introduction of 3rd-generation (3G) cellular phones approaches, handset designers have been busy developing new solutions to accommodate the demands of high-speed data transmission. Among the greatest of these demands are software, screen technology, data-processing bandwidth, and the preservation of reasonable battery life. In 2nd-generation (2G) voice-only low-data-rate handsets, the demands are not as great, allowing for many simplifications and cost savings. For example, the typical 2G handset's transmit power amplifier (PA) is powered directly from the battery, but it yields less-than-optimum efficiency. In 3G handsets, the transmission of high-speed data requires increased bandwidth and increased power at the antenna; therefore, a more efficient solution is needed to maintain long battery life. One architecture that is now gaining widespread favor among cell-phone manufacturers entails the use of a highly specialized step-down DC-DC switching regulator to power the PA.
The principle behind the use of a switching regulator is that the PA's supply-voltage headroom can be dynamically adjusted to barely accommodate the RF signal amplitude in the PA (see Figure 1). By efficiently accomplishing this with a switching regulator, the power savings are greatest when operating at anything less than peak transmit power. Because peak power is needed only when the handset is very far away from the base station and the transmitting data, the overall power savings are tremendous. If the PA supply voltage can be efficiently varied over a wide enough dynamic range, a fixed-gain linear PA can be utilized, negating the need for a separate bias-control signal (as presently used in 2G phones). Of course, a bias-control signal can still be used for an added degree of control, and some cell-phone manufacturers are actively pursuing this topology; however, one of the leaders in W-CDMA technology insists that bias control is unnecessary.
Figure 1. A switching regulator (MAX1820) dynamically adjusts the supply power of the W-CDMA power amplifier (PA). By efficiently adjusting the supply headroom of the PA to match the PA's transmit power, wasted energy is greatly reduced and the handset's battery life is extended.
Another major consideration in system performance is the specialized characteristics required of the step-down switching regulator. To understand these requirements, the PA must first be studied in terms of its load profile. A major cell-phone manufacturer provided Figure 2, which is the load profile for a bipolar, fixed-gain, W-CDMA power amplifier. Under peak transmit power, the PA requires 3.4V supply rail and draws between 300mA and 600mA. Under lowest transmit power, close to a base station and transmitting voice only, the PA draws as little as 30mA with supply voltage between 0.4V and 1V. This corresponds to PA power consumption of 2040mW maximum and 12mW minimum.
Figure 2. The typical load profile of a fixed-gain, bipolar, W-CDMA power amplifier has a significant resistive component. The supply voltage and current varies from as little as 0.4V at 30mA (12mW) to 3.4V at 600mA (2040mW), with typical voice transmission at approximately 1.5V at 150mA (225mW) and typical high-speed data transmission at 2.5V at 400mA (1000mW).
Optimization for this type of PA as a load is no trivial task for the switching regulator. Maxim has developed the MAX1820, W-CDMA, cellular-phone, step-down regulator to meet the requirements. Below is a list of the specific characteristics that set the MAX1820 apart from other switching regulators:
Figure 3. The MAX1820 step-down switching regulator is optimized for highest efficiency during data transmission where battery drain is the highest. Constant fixed-frequency switching at 1MHz provides for low output ripple and noise while still maintaining relatively high efficiency and low power loss during voice transmission.
Due to the unique performance of the MAX1820, there is now widespread 3G-handset design activity implementing this system architecture. As the efficiency benefits of using a step-down switching regulator to power a W-CDMA PA are proven, this topology may be adopted across more 3G standards and a variety of end equipment, helping to make the promise of small, feature-laden data handsets and wireless mobile computing a reality.
全部0条评论
快来发表一下你的评论吧 !