A wideband monolithic optoelectronic integrated receiver with a high-speed photo-detector,completely compatible with standard CMOS processes,is designed and implemented in 0.6μm standard CMOS technology.The experimen...A wideband monolithic optoelectronic integrated receiver with a high-speed photo-detector,completely compatible with standard CMOS processes,is designed and implemented in 0.6μm standard CMOS technology.The experimental results demonstrate that its performance approaches applicable requirements,where the photo-detector achieves a -3dB frequency of 1.11GHz,and the receiver achieves a 3dB bandwidth of 733MHz and a sensitivity of -9dBm for λ=850nm at BER=10-12.展开更多
Based on the equivalent circuit model of a two-port optical receiver front-end,the relationship between the equivalent input noise current spectral density and the noise figure is analyzed. The derived relationship ha...Based on the equivalent circuit model of a two-port optical receiver front-end,the relationship between the equivalent input noise current spectral density and the noise figure is analyzed. The derived relationship has universal validity for determining the equivalent input noise current spectral density for optical receiver designs, as verified by measuring a 155Mb/s high-impedance optical receiver front.end. Good agreement between calculated and simulated results has been achieved.展开更多
文摘A wideband monolithic optoelectronic integrated receiver with a high-speed photo-detector,completely compatible with standard CMOS processes,is designed and implemented in 0.6μm standard CMOS technology.The experimental results demonstrate that its performance approaches applicable requirements,where the photo-detector achieves a -3dB frequency of 1.11GHz,and the receiver achieves a 3dB bandwidth of 733MHz and a sensitivity of -9dBm for λ=850nm at BER=10-12.
文摘Based on the equivalent circuit model of a two-port optical receiver front-end,the relationship between the equivalent input noise current spectral density and the noise figure is analyzed. The derived relationship has universal validity for determining the equivalent input noise current spectral density for optical receiver designs, as verified by measuring a 155Mb/s high-impedance optical receiver front.end. Good agreement between calculated and simulated results has been achieved.