<\/a>Figure 1: AMO architecture adapted for mm-wave transmitter. <\/p><\/div>\n
The purpose of this project is to design a building block for communications systems that produces a phase-modulated output based on a digital input. Although this particular work is intended in particular for the Asymmetric Multilevel Outphasing (AMO) architecture ( S. Chung, P. A. Godoy, T. W. Barton, Z. Li, T. W. Huang, D. J. Perreault, J. L. Dawson, \u201cAsymmetric multilevel outphasing architecture for multi-standard transmitters,\u201d in Proc. of IEEE Symposium on Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits<\/em>, Boston, MA, June, 2009.)) , the basic function it performs is necessary in a variety of transmitter architectures. In most modulation schemes, information is encoded in the phase of the transmitted signal, so the transmitter must be capable of producing a precise phase-modulated signal. This capacity is certainly true of phase-shift keying (PSK), where the phase alone is modulated, as is quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM), in which information is encoded in both the amplitude and phase of the transmitted signal. Likewise, in architectures that rely on outphasing as in LINC [