RF Pulse Modulation_ Fundamentals, Applications & Design Techniques - Mini-Circuits Blog
RF Pulse Modulation_ Fundamentals, Applications & Design Techniques - Mini-Circuits Blog
using 455 MHz radio waves, he studied the ability of radio waves to be reflected from
2
metallic objects and refracted by dielectric media. Hertz confirmed James Clerk
Maxwell’s work from 1865, which was simplified by Oliver Heaviside in 1884. Hertz’s
work also spawned early target detection when, in 1904, a patent for “an obstacle
detector and ship navigation device,” based on the principles demonstrated by Hertz,
2
was issued in several countries to German Engineer Christian Hülsmeyer.
Hülsmeyer’s British patent (September 23, 1904) was for a spark-gap-type, full 600
3
MHz pulsed radar system that he called a telemobiloscope.
Subsequent radar system development took place in many countries, but about three
decades after Hülsmeyer’s patent, Robert Watson-Watt of Great Britain’s Air Ministry
played a key role in ensuring the deployment of radar systems along the East and
South coasts of England in time for the outbreak of World War II in 1939, a collection
3
3
of stations known as “Chain Home”. Once Winston Churchill approved Henry
Tizard’s mission to transfer technology secrets to the United States in 1940, a trunk
containing those secrets was entrusted to Edward George Bowen, who almost lost
4
sight of it in transit at Euston Station. When the British scientists’ American
counterparts saw the performance of the compact 3 GHz, 10kW cavity magnetron
known as “Number 12” developed by John Randall and Harry Boot, they were stunned,
4
as their own efforts had stalled. In the years that followed, one million of these
4
magnetrons would be produced in the United States, many installed in Allied fighter
and bomber aircraft, ushering in the age of the airborne early warning radar system.
These stunning early achievements and those whose work went into them opened the
door to the sophisticated radar systems of today. But radars are only one application
applications include the treatment of tumors, cardiac arrhythmias, pain, edema, bone
fractures, and soft tissue wounds. Even magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) depends
upon pulsed RF modulation. In what follows, we will study the fundamentals of the
appears in the time domain and has the Fourier transform (frequency domain
5
equivalent) shown in Figure 1. The magnitude of the Fourier transform, often
5
referred to as the amplitude spectrum, is also shown in Figure 1. The Fourier
transform of the rectangular pulse takes for the form of sin(x)/x, or the sinc(x)
function. The detailed computation of the Fourier transform and its coefficients can
the time domain has infinite bandwidth in the frequency domain. While it is clearly
undesirable for any real RF system to occupy infinite bandwidth, keep in mind that this
is also true only if the rise and fall times are zero, which is theoretically impossible.
What happens to the amplitude spectrum in the frequency domain if the rise and fall
times are finite? Take the extreme case of the triangular pulse in Figure 2. The rise
and fall times of the waveform are A/τ and -A/τ on the negative and positive sides of
2
the y-axis, respectively. Note first that the Fourier transform is now the sinc (x)
Secondly, the amplitude of the maximum at f=0 (the “main lobe”) is still Aτ, but the
amplitude of the maxima on either side of the main lobe (the “side lobes”) declines
far more dramatically when compared to the spectrum of its rectangular pulse
radically slowing the rise and fall time, is known as “sidelobe suppression.” The
system operation; the disadvantage is that less precision is available in the detection
Taken to yet another extreme, the Gaussian pulse can be shown to have a Fourier
This type of pulse shaping may be used to further limit the occupied bandwidth of a
system.
Figure 3: Gaussian pulse with a standard deviation of 0.1 s and associated Fast Fourier
signal. The pulse width is determined at the 50% point of the voltage scale, or where
the waveform crosses 0V. The rise and fall times are each approximately 2 ns. Often,
voltage detector so that only the envelope is shown. Figure 4 was rendered so that the
Figure 4: 1 GHz RF carrier in the time domain with a pulse width of 20 ns at the 50%
Figure 5 exhibits the amplitude spectrum of a similar signal in the frequency domain
with 1W (30 dBm) pulses, a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 1 MHz, and zero rise
and fall times. Note that the power level of the peak of the main lobe appears below 0
dBm which differs considerably from the nominal power of the pulse. Since the
pulsed signal has its power distributed over a large number of spectral components
or “lines” (i.e. each marker on the plot is effectively the tip of a vertical line in the
Fourier transform), and each component represents a small fraction of the peak pulse
8
power, we must use what is known as the pulse desensitization factor, αL, defined
as:
Applying the desensitization factor -34 dB to the 30 dBm pulsed waveform results in
-4 dBm, which corresponds to the maximum of the main lobe in the spectrum profile
in Figure 5.
Figure 5: Frequency domain envelope of the 1W, 1 GHz, 20 ns, 1 MHz RF pulse train
Notice that the spacing between the markers, or spectral lines in the plot is exactly 1
MHz, equal to the PRF (sometimes referred to as the “rep rate”). Additionally, the
width of the sidelobes is the reciprocal of the pulse width, such that:
operators on the ground often, using modulation schemes no more sophisticated than
systems were effective for command and control at long range due to the output
power of both the ground-based and onboard transponders. Some drone telemetry
even worked its way back to the ground using RF pulse modulation. One function on
the U.S. test ranges of the 1980s and 1990s relegated to RF pulse modulation was the
that era were the U.S. Navy AN/DPN-90(V)1 (5.4 to 5.9 GHz) and the AN/DPN-90(V)2
coupled many hundreds of Volts from a pulse transformer to the cathode of the
Military test range safety has changed dramatically in recent decades due to the
maturation of GPS-based tracking, more sophisticated and capable radars, and the
unique “squawk code” and at a transmit frequency of 1090 MHz. Mode S was
developed in 1975 at MIT Lincoln Labs and is being used not just to make the aircraft
the simplest way is to start with a CW source, insert a simple single-pole, double-
throw (SPDT) RF switch in-line, and toggle the switch with digital pulses.
Amplification can follow to achieve the desired RF power level. Figure 6 illustrates
mount MMIC SPDT absorptive switch, which operates from 100 MHz to 6 GHz. CW is
present at the common port, and the switch state toggles between RF 1 and OFF
according to the state of Control 1 and Control 2 as shown in the truth table on the
model datasheet. The insertion loss of the switch is typically 1 dB between 2 and 3
GHz, while isolation is typically 62 dB. High on/off isolation is commonly found in
absorptive switches since, in the off position, the switch ports RF1 and RF2 are
terminated internally, as shown in the schematic. While the delay from the control
inputs to RF switching is typically 300 ns, the rise and fall times are impressive at 67
ns. If high on/off isolation is not required, reflective switches such as the MSW2-50+
can provide switching at almost instantaneous speeds of 4 ns rise time and 7 ns fall
time. Insertion loss for the reflective switch is still 1 dB between 2 and 3 GHz, and
pulses, so can the on/off switching of bias conditions in solid-state amplifiers. Since
the advent of commercially available, high-power LDMOS and GaN just after the turn
st
of the 21 century, many systems over the last 2 decades have adopted a solid-state
approach and undergone RF tube replacement. Solid-state devices are far and away
more reliable than their tube counterparts and with LDMOS and GaN power devices,
source. An abundance of stable TCXO, VCXO, VCSO, DRO, etc. components are
available on the market, and we’ll simply assume any one of them to be our CW
Figure 7: Generalized block diagram of a 4-stage amplifier with rudimentary drain bias
(VDD) switching.
with an input, output, VDD (bias) pin, and ground. Note that all the VDD pins have
been notionally connected and plumbed through an SPDT analog switch. This
illustrates the basic concept of bias control. When the analog switch is on, the
amplifier is biased, and the CW source is amplified and appears at the output of the
final stage. Conversely, when the analog switch is off, all stages of the amplifier are
off, and no signal is present at the output of the final stage. Since VDD implies that
the drain of a field effect device is being biased, regardless of whether it’s the drain of
a GaAs LNA MMIC or that of a high-power GaN MESFET, the method illustrated in
Figure 7 is referred to as “drain switching.” While there are faster ways to turn
amplifiers on and off, or to pulse modulate CW RF within the amplifier itself, drain
20 dB per stage.
Figure 8: 2 GHz amplifier with Mini-Circuits’ PMA2-252LNA+, PHA-202+, Wolfspeed
Figure 8, each device is shown along with its gain, output P1dB, and required drain
voltage. The drain voltage is applied to each device through a notional P-channel
MOSFET. While P-channel MOSFETs are easier to utilize under certain circumstances
such as for low drain voltage devices, once the required drain voltage reaches the
in. The two main disadvantages of drain switching are that high DC currents often
have to be switched by the MOSFETs and the capacitance on the device side of the
MOSFET must be limited to only the amount necessary for stable operation.
Another method for creating RF pulse modulation through amplifier bias control is
known as “gate switching.” In gate switching, the gate of each field effect device is
toggled between a state in which the device is “pinched off” and a state in which the
device is biased on at IDQ (quiescent drain current). One primary advantage of gate
switching is that the switching networks operate at very low power, moving
storage capacitance can be located right on the drain of the RF devices. Finally, rise
and fall times can be considerably faster than with drain switching for the same
amplifier. One main disadvantage is that the switching of the gate is a delicate
operation. For example, the difference between on and off for a device is often just a
difference of 0.5V on its gate, and not every device will react the same given the same
gate voltage.
Finally, the combination of Figure 6 and Figure 8 often makes for very nice pulsed RF
system that switches at blistering fast speeds and has excellent on/off isolation. The
RF switch either resides at the input of the RF amplifier or is embedded between
generated, gate or drain switching can be used in conjunction with the toggling of an
in-line RF switch to achieve both high isolation and optimum rise and fall times.
1990’s, the Impulse Radio Ultra-Wideband (IR UWB) system has gained traction in
many technologies. Much of the early work in the UWB field prior to 1994, particularly
in the area of Impulse Radio, was performed under classified U.S. Government
programs. This technology utilizes sub ns pulses, similar in form to the pulse
such as that shown in Figure 4. Due to the proliferation of UWB applications, the FCC
has allocated the 3.1 to 10.6 GHz in 500 MHz channels to UWB with tight radiation
limits, of course, in light of the fact that the emissions are spread over such a broad
and densely utilized bandwidth. UWB systems are low power and low cost, and
because of the excellent timing constraints that can be placed upon narrow pulses
It is not uncommon for a UWB system to utilize a pulse of approximately 100 ps and a
PRF of anywhere from 1 to 50 MHz. At times, data encoding is even performed using
changes in the PRF itself. Specially designed pulse shaping networks ensure that the
frequency domain spectral content of these narrow pulses remains within the
prescribed bandwidth. While their range is somewhat limited to the tens of meters,
due to the transmitted power constraints, these systems have matured through the
multitude of functions.
Pulse-modulated UWB systems have shown promise as a safer alternative to X-rays in medical imaging.
UWB medical imaging has become a focus of much research, with an emphasis on
the breast, brain, and heart. UWB (microwave) techniques do not use ionizing
radiation like x-rays, so scans can be performed frequently without the exposure risk
of traditional imaging methods. UWB technology has also emerged as one of the
rescue and emergency operations, allowing responders to see the layout of buildings,
Radars in the UWB domain have a myriad of military applications like buried land mine
even demonstrated the ability of UWB systems to detect the motion of vocal cords
instantaneously.
Commercial applications of UWB systems also abound, with real-time asset location
industrial position sensing to name just a few. The invention of the UWB system is
scientific, and engineering pioneers and their respective achievements which brought
Gaussian) in both the time and frequency domains. With an understanding of the
pulse in the time domain and its corresponding amplitude spectrum in the frequency
applications for RF pulse modulation on both military aircraft test ranges and on
transponders.
switches (one absorptive and one reflective) was provided. An amplifier comprised of
real-world circuit operation for typical drain switching. Gate switching was also
discussed, and the two methods of generation of an RF pulse using amplifier bias
control, gate and drain switching, were assessed and the performance
characteristics of UWB radar. In light of how far pulse modulation has pushed the
th
envelope of technology since its inception as a spark-gap transmitter in the 19
st
century to its 21 century counterpart, the UWB system that can see through walls, it
is undoubtedly one of the most important and versatile modulation schemes in all of
RF engineering.
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