4.8 Article

A 2.4-GHz CMOS Differential Class-DE Rectifier With Coupled Inductors

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER ELECTRONICS
Volume 36, Issue 9, Pages 9864-9875

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPEL.2021.3061703

Keywords

Rectifiers; Zero voltage switching; Zero current switching; Impedance; Impedance matching; Manganese; Band-pass filters; Class-DE rectifier; CMOS differential rectifier; coupled inductors; radio frequency (RF); wireless power transfer (WPT)

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [61974046]
  2. Science and Technology Development Fund, Macau SAR [145/2019/A3]
  3. SKL-AMSV(UM)
  4. Research Committee of the University of Macau [MYRG2020-00117-IME]

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This article presents a 2.4-GHz differential class-DE synchronous rectifier with near-optimum ZVS, ZCS, and impedance matching achieved through a differential topology. An adaptive bias circuit is used to adjust gate bias voltages with input power for ZVS/ZCS operation within a wide power range. The chip fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process achieves peak power conversion efficiency of 68.5% at 9-dBm input power with 250-ohm load resistance, with a measured input power range of 16 dB when PCE > 40%.
In this article, we present a 2.4-GHz differential class-DE synchronous rectifier. First, we investigate zero-voltage switching (ZVS), zero-current switching (ZCS), and impedance matching requirements for the single-ended class-DE rectifier. Then, we propose a differential topology that achieves near-optimum ZVS, ZCS, and impedance matching with a reduced number of LC networks. We use a coupled inductor structure to reduce the cost overhead of the differential topology and discuss its design considerations. To maintain the ZVS/ZCS operation within a wide input power range, we employ an adaptive bias circuit to adjust the gate bias voltages with the input power. Additionally, we discuss the imperfections caused by load variation. The chip, fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process, measures the peak power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 68.5% at a 9-dBm input power with a 250-omega load resistance. The measured input power range when PCE > 40% is 16 dB.

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