4.7 Article

Power Scaling Laws for Radio Receiver Front Ends

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCSI.2021.3062185

Keywords

Analog circuits; receivers; low power; energy efficiency; circuit theory; communication systems; wireless communication

Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF)

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This paper combines circuit theory and communication theory to derive theoretical expressions linking analog front-end power consumption with system design and environment parameters. The obtained scaling laws show the relationship between AFE power consumption and bandwidth, SNDR, SIR, as well as other important communication system parameters. These results can be used to determine system design strategies for low-power applications.
In this paper, we combine practically verified results from circuit theory with communication-theoretic laws. As a result, we obtain closed-form theoretical expressions linking fundamental system design and environment parameters with the power consumption of analog front ends (AFEs) for communication receivers. This collection of scaling laws and bounds is meant to serve as a theoretical reference for practical low power AFE design. We show how AFE power consumption scales with bandwidth, SNDR, and SIR. We build our analysis based on two well established power consumption studies and show that although they have different design approaches, they lead to the same scaling laws. The obtained scaling laws are subsequently used to derive relations between AFE power consumption and several other important communication system parameters, namely, digital modulation constellation size, symbol error probability, error control coding gain, and coding rate. Such relations, in turn, can be used when deciding which system design strategies to adopt for low-power applications. For instance, we show how AFE power scales with environment parameters if the performance is kept constant and we use these results to illustrate that adapting to fading fluctuations can theoretically reduce AFE power consumption by at least 20x.

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