Sensors (Nov 2021)

An X-Band CMOS Digital Phased Array Radar from Hardware to Software

  • Yue-Ming Wu,
  • Hao-Chung Chou,
  • Cheng-Yung Ke,
  • Chien-Cheng Wang,
  • Chien-Te Li,
  • Li-Han Chang,
  • Borching Su,
  • Ta-Shun Chu,
  • Yu-Jiu Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21217382
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 21
p. 7382

Abstract

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Phased array technology features rapid and directional scanning and has become a promising approach for remote sensing and wireless communication. In addition, element-level digitization has increased the feasibility of complicated signal processing and simultaneous multi-beamforming processes. However, the high cost and bulky characteristics of beam-steering systems have prevented their extensive application. In this paper, an X-band element-level digital phased array radar utilizing fully integrated complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) transceivers is proposed for achieving a low-cost and compact-size digital beamforming system. An 8–10 GHz transceiver system-on-chip (SoC) fabricated in 65 nm CMOS technology offers baseband filtering, frequency translation, and global clock synchronization through the proposed periodic pulse injection technique. A 16-element subarray module with an SoC integration, antenna-in-package, and tile array configuration achieves digital beamforming, back-end computing, and dc–dc conversion with a size of 317 × 149 × 74.6 mm3. A radar demonstrator with scalable subarray modules simultaneously realizes range sensing and azimuth recognition for pulsed radar configurations. Captured by the suggested software-defined pulsed radar, a complete range–azimuth figure with a 1 km maximum observation range can be displayed within 150 ms under the current implementation.

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