SLYT839 july   2023 ADC32RF54

 

  1.   1
  2. 1Introduction
  3. 2Why the noise figure matters in digital receiver designs
  4. 3Calculating a system’s noise figure
  5. 4Conclusion

Why the noise figure matters in digital receiver designs

The digital receiver operates in one of two distinct scenarios as illustrated in Figure 1. In the blocking condition, an interferer or jammer is present and the receiver has to operate with reduced RF gain in order not to saturate the ADC. In this setup, the ADC is driven close to full scale by the interferer; thus, the large-signal signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the ADC determines how weak a signal can be detected. There are additional degrading mechanisms such as phase noise and spurious free dynamic range.

In the second scenario, there is no interferer present. Detecting the weakest signal possible is solely dependent on the inherent noise floor of the receiver, a condition typically measured as receiver sensitivity. The noise figure measures the SNR degradation caused by components in the receiver signal chain.

GUID-20230216-SS0I-ZWQM-DK9Z-VPF6KQHJH49K-low.svg Figure 1 Comparison between blocking or jamming and receiver sensitivity scenarios.

The noise figure of the ADC is typically the weakest link of the receiver (approximately 25 to 30 dB), while low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) have noise figures as low as <1 dB. It is possible, however, to improve the ADC noise figure by adding gain to the analog RF front end (close to the antenna) using LNAs. The difference between a 1-dB receiver system noise figure and a 2-dB receiver system noise figure translates to approximately 20%. This difference means that a receiver with a 1-dB noise figure can detect signals with approximately 20% weaker amplitude. In a software-defined radio (SDR), that translates to radios with reduced output power – saving battery life – while in radar, that makes it possible to cover a longer distance.

Modern receiver designs in SDRs or digital radars use direct RF-sampling ADCs in order to reduce size, weight and power. This architecture simplifies receiver designs by eliminating the RF downconversion mixing stage. The better the ADC noise figure, the less gain required, which results in additional savings. Furthermore, using less additional RF gain means that when a jammer is present, there is less gain to reduce, with a higher dynamic range maintained in the receiver.