Analyst Loring Wirbel covers programmable logic from an application perspective, providing a sneak peek at the vertical applications that help drive FPGA complexity, performance, and density. The blog will feature videos allowing engineers to spotlight their latest designs, along with news of products and corporate trends at FPGA vendors and the developers of third-party tools for programmable logic.
Oct 26 2009 8:59AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
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It may not be news to place an FPGA close to an IF/RF interface in a handheld or base station design, but Lattice Semiconductor Corp. has taken integration a step further this week. The company announced on Oct. 26 a collaborative project with Affarii Technologies Ltd. on development of an integrated Remote Radio Head (RRH).
We have seen a handful of designs in Multiple-Input/Multiple-Output systems, used in WiMax access points and software-defined 4G base stations, in which an FPGA of a Virtex or Stratix class is used close to the antenna. Lattice’s innovation was to leverage the expertise of Affarri to develop a more cost-effective RRH based on theECP3.
Affarii’s specific claim to fame was the development of digitalTRX processors and algorithms for implementation of digital pre-distortion (DPD) and crest-factor reduction (CFR). Consequently, the radio head in this case implements all DPD, CFR, and digital up- and down-conversion. The ECP3 FPGA also implements Ethernet interfaces and common base station profiles defined by CPRI/OBSAI (Common Public Radio Interface/Open Base Station Architecture Initiative).
The two companies are offering a demonstration platform that can scale to provide baseband support for up to two transmit and four receive antennas on a single chip, with each antenna supporting four carriers and 20 MHz modulation bandwidth. When the RRH is used with a Doherty amplifier, DPD can provide up to 30 dB of ACLR correction per transmit antenna.
Remember what we said about programmable DSPs disappearing from a range of RF/IF subsystems? If this keeps up, DSP-based ASSPs may be just as threatened in baseband designs as full-fledged DSP processors.