Direct RF Digitization Receivers Demystified A Practical No Nonsense Guide To Analog Circuits DSP Integration And System Level Tradeoffs For Real World Radio Designs
✔️ Softcover reprint, 178 pages, English edition, single copy
This softcover reprint of the original 1st edition (2014) covers direct RF digitization receiver design. It presents a practical, no-nonsense system-level framework for analyzing impairments in the RF-to-digital signal path and applies these concepts to a cable multi-channel RF direct digitization receiver. The book discusses optimum RF signal conditioning and DSP integration, along with tradeoffs in cost, power, and performance.
✅ Direct RF digitization receiver system-level framework for RF and DSP domains
✅ In-depth noise analysis: thermal, quantization, saturation, signal-dependent
✅ Sampling strategies and time-interleaved ADC mismatch considerations
✅ Case study: two-chip BiCMOS and 65 nm CMOS implementation with measurements
✅ AGC and RF front-end amplitude control for relaxed ADC requirements
💡 What is a direct RF digitization receiver used for?
Direct RF digitization receivers pull RF signals directly into the digital domain for flexible DSP processing and system-level tradeoff analysis.
- They convert RF signals directly to digital for DSP processing - They enable quick evaluation of tradeoffs in noise, distortion, and power - They are used in multi-channel RF receiver designs and experimental setups