Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tom Jung is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tom Jung.


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2004

All-digital TX frequency synthesizer and discrete-time receiver for Bluetooth radio in 130-nm CMOS

Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Khurram Muhammad; Dirk Leipold; Chih Ming Hung; Yo Chuol Ho; John Wallberg; Chan Fernando; Ken Maggio; Roman Staszewski; Tom Jung; Jinseok Koh; Soji John; Irene Yuanying Deng; Vivek Sarda; Oscar Moreira-Tamayo; Valerian Mayega; Ran Katz; Ofer Friedman; Oren Eliezer; Elida de-Obaldia; Poras T. Balsara

We present a single-chip fully compliant Bluetooth radio fabricated in a digital 130-nm CMOS process. The transceiver is architectured from the ground up to be compatible with digital deep-submicron CMOS processes and be readily integrated with a digital baseband and application processor. The conventional RF frequency synthesizer architecture, based on the voltage-controlled oscillator and the phase/frequency detector and charge-pump combination, has been replaced with a digitally controlled oscillator and a time-to-digital converter, respectively. The transmitter architecture takes advantage of the wideband frequency modulation capability of the all-digital phase-locked loop with built-in automatic compensation to ensure modulation accuracy. The receiver employs a discrete-time architecture in which the RF signal is directly sampled and processed using analog and digital signal processing techniques. The complete chip also integrates power management functions and a digital baseband processor. Application of the presented ideas has resulted in significant area and power savings while producing structures that are amenable to migration to more advanced deep-submicron processes, as they become available. The entire IC occupies 10 mm/sup 2/ and consumes 28 mA during transmit and 41 mA during receive at 1.5-V supply.


international solid-state circuits conference | 2004

A discrete-time Bluetooth receiver in a 0.13/spl mu/m digital CMOS process

Khurram Muhammad; Dirk Leipold; Bogdan Staszewski; Yo-Chuol Ho; Chih-Ming Hung; Kenneth J. Maggio; Chan Fernando; Tom Jung; John Wallberg; Jinseok Koh; Soji John; Irene Yuanying Deng; O. Moreira; Roman Staszewski; Ran Katz; Ofer Friedman

A discrete-time receiver architecture for a wireless application is presented. Analog signal processing concepts are used to directly sample the RF input at Nyquist rate. Maximum receiver sensitivity is -83dBm and the chip consumes a total of 41mA from a 1.575V internally regulated supply. The receiver is implemented in a 0.13/spl mu/m digital CMOS process.


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2006

The First Fully Integrated Quad-Band GSM/GPRS Receiver in a 90-nm Digital CMOS Process

Khurram Muhammad; Yo-Chuol Ho; Terry Mayhugh; Chih-Ming Hung; Tom Jung; C. Lin; Irene Deng; Chan Fernando; John Wallberg; Sudheer Vemulapalli; S. Larson; Thomas Murphy; Dirk Leipold; Patrick Cruise; J. Jaehnig; Meng-Chang Lee; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Roman Staszewski; Kenneth J. Maggio

We present the receiver in the first single-chip GSM/GPRS transceiver that incorporates full integration of quad-band receiver, transmitter, memory, power management, dedicated ARM processor and RF built-in self test in a 90-nm digital CMOS process. The architecture uses Nyquist rate direct RF sampling in the receiver and an all-digital phase-locked loop (PLL) for generating the local oscillator (LO). The receive chain uses discrete-time analog signal processing to down-convert, down-sample, filter and analog-to-digital convert the received signal. A feedback loop is provided at the mixer output and can be used to cancel DC-offsets as well to study linearization of the receive chain. The receiver meets a sensitivity of -110 dBm at 60mA in a 1.4-V digital CMOS process in the presence of more than one million digital gates


international solid-state circuits conference | 2008

A 24mm 2 Quad-Band Single-Chip GSM Radio with Transmitter Calibration in 90nm Digital CMOS

Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Dirk Leipold; Oren Eliezer; Mitch Entezari; Khurram Muhammad; Imran Bashir; Chih-Ming Hung; John Wallberg; Roman Staszewski; Patrick Cruise; Sameh Rezeq; Sudheer Vemulapalli; Khurram Waheed; Nathen Barton; Meng-Chang Lee; Chan Fernando; Kenneth J. Maggio; Tom Jung; S. Larson; Thomas Murphy; Gennady Feygin; Irene Yuanying Deng; Terry Mayhugh; Yo-Chuol Ho; K.-M. Low; C. Lin; J. Jaehnig; J. Kerr; Jaimin Mehta; S. Glock

The RF transceiver is built on the Digital RF Processor (DRP) technology. The ADPLL-based transmitter uses a polar architecture with all-digital PM-FM and AM paths. The receiver uses a discrete-time architecture in which the RF signal is directly sampled and processed using analog and DSP techniques. A 26 MHz digitally controlled crystal oscillator (DCXO) generates frequency reference (FREF) and has a means of high-frequency dithering to minimize the effects of coupling from digitally controlled PA driver (DPA) to DCXO by de-sensitizing its slicing buffer.


custom integrated circuits conference | 2005

A discrete time quad-band GSM/GPRS receiver in a 90nm digital CMOS process

Khurram Muhammad; Yo-Chuol Ho; Terry Mayhugh; Chih-Ming Hung; Tom Jung; C. Lin; Irene Yuanying Deng; Chan Fernando; John Wallberg; Sudheer Vemulapalli; S. Larson; Thomas Murphy; Dirk Leipold; Patrick Cruise; J. Jaehnig; Meng-Chang Lee; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Roman Staszewski; Kenneth J. Maggio

We present the receiver in the first single-chip GSM transceiver that incorporates full integration of quad-band receiver, transmitter, memory, power management, dedicated ARM processor and RF built-in self test in a 90 nm digital CMOS process. The architecture uses direct RF sampling in the receiver and an all-digital PLL in the transmitter. The receive chain uses discrete-time analog signal processing to down convert, down- sample, filter and analog-to-digital convert the received signal. An auxiliary feedback is provided at the mixer output that can linearize the entire receive chain. The receiver meets a sensitivity of -110 dBm at 60 mA in a 1.4V digital CMOS process


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2010

Software Assisted Digital RF Processor (DRP™) for Single-Chip GSM Radio in 90 nm CMOS

Roman Staszewski; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Tom Jung; Thomas Murphy; Imran Bashir; Oren Eliezer; Khurram Muhammad; Mitch Entezari

This paper proposes and describes a new software and application programming interface view of an RF transceiver. It demonstrates benefits of using highly programmable digital control logic in an RF wireless system realized in a digital nanoscale CMOS process technology. It also describes a microprocessor architecture design in Digital RF Processor (DRPTM) and how it controls calibration and compensation for process, temperature and voltage variations of the analog and RF circuits to meet the required RF performance. A few calibration examples to reduce a DCO bias current and improve device reliability, as well as to optimize transmit modulation and receive performance, are given. The presented circuits and techniques have enabled successful implementation of a commercial single-chip GSM radio in 90 nm CMOS.


custom integrated circuits conference | 2006

Software Assisted Digital RF Processor for Single-Chip GSM Radio in 90 nm CMOS

Roman Staszewski; Tom Jung; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Khurram Muhammad; Dirk Leipold; Thomas Murphy; Steven Sabin; John Wallberg; S. Larson; Mitch Entezari; Jose Fresquez; Steven L. Dondershine; Sirajuddin Syed

This paper proposes and describes a new software and application programming interface view of an RF transceiver as implemented in the first single-chip GSM radio in 90 nm CMOS. It demonstrates benefits of using programmable digital control logic in deep-submicron CMOS RF system. It also describes a micro-processor architecture design in digital RF processor (DRP) and how it controls compensation for process, temperature and voltage variations of the analog and RF circuits to meet the required RF performance


radio frequency integrated circuits symposium | 2009

A low-cost quad-band single-chip GSM/GPRS radio in 90nm digital CMOS

Khurram Muhammad; Chih-Ming Hung; Dirk Leipold; Terry Mayhugh; Irene Yuanying Deng; Chan Fernando; Meng-Chang Lee; Thomas Murphy; John Wallberg; Roman Staszewski; S. Larson; Tom Jung; Patrick Cruise; V. Roussel; Sudheer Vemulapalli; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Oren Eliezer; Gennady Feygin; K. Kunz; Kenneth J. Maggio

In this paper we present a quad-band single-chip GSM/GPRS radio in 90nm digital CMOS process based on the Digital RF Processor (DRP™) technology. This chip integrates all functions from physical layer to the protocol stack and peripheral support in a single chip RF SoC. The transmitter uses a low-area small-signal digital polar architecture merging amplitude and phase information directly in an RF DAC. The receiver is based on direct RF sampling and discrete-time analog signal processing. A dedicated internal microprocessor manages the digital RF controls to provide best achievable RF performances. The transceiver exceeds all 3GPP specifications demonstrating a receive NF of 1.8 dB and a margin of 8dB on TX spectral mask at 400 KHz offset in GSM850/900 bands. The transceiver is best-in-class in area and occupies only 3.8 mm2 of silicon area.


custom integrated circuits conference | 2005

A low-area decimation filter for ultra-high speed 1-bit /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ A/D converters

Khurram Muhammad; Tom Jung

We present a low-area and low-power implementation of the first antialiasing and decimation filter following an ultra-high speed 1-bit /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ A/D converter operating between 430-600Msps in a wireless transceiver. This filter is implemented as a sinc/sup 4/ polyphase structure that decimates by 16. Reduction in area is achieved by interleaving I and Q data and by implementing each phase of the filter as a hard-wired lookup table. The filter provides more than 150 dB of rejection in 400 kHz band and more than 87 dB of rejection in 4 MHz band making it suitable for multistandard wireless applications. It is implemented in 90-nm digital CMOS process and the combined area for both I and Q channels is less than 3800 gates.


international conference on ic design and technology | 2007

Software Aspects of the Digital RF Processor (DRP TM )

Roman Staszewski; Tom Jung; Robert Bogdan Staszewski; Dirk Leipold; Thomas Murphy

This paper presents an overview of software aspects of the first-ever single-chip GSM radio realized in 90 nm CMOS. It demonstrates benefits of using highly programmable digital control logic in a wireless SoC system. It also describes a micro-processor design in the digital RF processor (DRP) and how it controls compensation for process, voltage, temperature (PVT) variations of the analog and RF circuits to meet the required RF performance.

Collaboration


Dive into the Tom Jung's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge