New Technologies and Energy Harvesting
NXP – World’s smallest GPS LNA for portable navigation devices (NXP - BGU800)
Aug 14 2012 - New Technologies and Energy Harvesting [More New Technologies and Energy Harvesting Articles]NXP Semiconductors has introduced the BGU8006 low-noise amplifier – the smallest GPS LNA on the market today designed for very small portable devices. Available in an extraordinarily tiny WLCSP (wafer-level chip-scale package), the GPS LNAs have a footprint of just 0.65mm x 0.44mm x 0.2mm and require only two external components, saving 38 percent in PCB space compared to the smallest solution on the market today, says the company.
Also featuring an extremely low noise figure of 0.60dB, the LNAs offer the best reception for weak GPS signals by dynamically suppressing strong cellular and WLAN transmit signals.
“Smartphones, tablets, personal navigation devices and automotive telematics applications all suffer from communication delays when network reception is poor, and have to wait for data to refresh as the GPS searches for satellite signal. Our new BGU8006 LNA helps to maintain optimal GPS signal reception for as long as possible – on a chip that is so small, it isn’t even visible to the naked eye,” said Erick Olsen, marketing director, RF small signal product line, NXP Semiconductors. “As GPS functionality becomes ubiquitous, the ability to deliver better accuracy and faster Time to First Fix will vastly improve user experience and enable operators to provide more sophisticated Location Based Services down the line.”
The new BGU8006 LNA uses adaptive biasing techniques – enabled by NXP’s state-of-the-art QuBIC4Xi SiGe:C BiCMOS process technology – to instantly detect any output power from jammers, and compensate by temporarily increasing the current. Adaptive biasing dynamically suppresses strong cellular, WLAN and Bluetooth signals, which can drive typical GPS LNAs into compression, lowering gain, generating intermodulation and harmonics that can overpower weak signals, and causing poor GPS reception. With the BGU8006, adaptive biasing improves linearity with a 10dB better IP3 under -40 to -20dBm jamming conditions and provides effective GPS output with jammer power up to -15dBm.
The BGU8006 LNA uses wafer-level chip-scale package (WLCSP) technology, which is ideal for space-constrained applications. WLCSP minimizes parasitic inductance because there are no leads, bond wires or interposer connections, and optimizes package size, cost and thermal characteristics. In addition to the BGU8006, NXP also offers the BGU8007 LNA in a 1.45mm x 1mm x 0.5mm 6-pin leadless SOT886 package. Both LNAs require only one external matching inductor and one external decoupling capacitor for easy design-in and savings in component costs and PCB area.
NXP’s BGU800x series LNAs are ideally suited to a wide range of applications using GPS technology today, including smartphones, feature phones, tablets, personal navigation devices (PNDs), digital still cameras (DSCs), digital video cameras (DVCs), RF front-end modules for phones, and complete GPS chipset modules. For automotive telematics applications such as emergency call (eCall) and toll collection systems, NXP also offers the BGU7004 and BGU7008, which are AEC-Q100 qualified, says the company.
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