This book describes the design of fully digital multistandard
transmitter front-ends which can directly drive one or more switching
power amplifiers, thus eliminating all other analog components. After
reviewing different architectures, the authors focus on polar
architectures using pulse width modulation (PWM), which are entirely
based on unclocked delay lines and other continuous-time digital
hardware. As a result, readers are enabled to shift accuracy concerns
from the voltage domain to the time domain, to coincide with submicron
CMOS technology scaling. The authors present different architectural
options and compare them, based on their effect on the signal and
spectrum quality. Next, a high-level theoretical analysis of two
different PWM-based architectures - baseband PWM and RF PWM - is made.
On the circuit level, traditional digital components and design
techniques are revisited from the point of view of continuous-time
digital circuits. Important design criteria are identified and different
solutions are presented, along with their advantages and disadvantages.
Finally, two chips designed in nanometer CMOS technologies are
described, along with measurement results for validation.