Friday, November 18, 2011

Why is power transfer and power quantities used in RF/MMIC circuits?

It is seen that in high frequency circuits, power transfer and power quantities are used. Typically dBm will be a standard unit in use. The question is: why? The answer to this question is found in relative performance of circuits at high and low frequencies. When frequencies are low, a voltage or current signal applied at an input of a circuit or chip is reproduced quite faithfully in the chip or at the operating terminals of the circuit. The same is true at the outputs. The reason is that parasitic quantities do not play as large a role at low frequencies.The situation is quite different at high or microwave frequencies. At these frequencies the voltage or current signal applied to the input terminal of a device package is not what the active device sees inside the package. The reason is of course, the parasitics of the circuit.If instead of input current or input voltage as the signal quantities we use power delivered to the input port then this problem goes away since reactances do not dissipate power. At the output, if the true available power gain of the device is given, we can calculate accurately what to expect assuming no power is dissipated in the parasitic elements. These reasons are why RF/MMIC circuits are almost always designed with power flow or power transfer considerations.

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