Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 08:00 - 09:40
Room: 252AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session presents recent advances in highly integrated RF transceiver and beamforming architectures that enable next-generation wireless infrastructure and high-resolution sensing. The talks span a wide range of mm-wave applications, including a 57–67GHz four-channel transmitter with fine-resolution phase shifting and built-in self-test for Doppler-offset FMCW radar, a high-linearity K-band multi-beam transmitter IC targeting LEO SATCOM, and a high-power SiGe TXSIP delivering more than 32dBm across the 71–86GHz E-band for point-to-point backhaul. Complementing these mm-wave front-ends, the session also features a single-chip ORAN-compliant 4TX-4RX 5G radio-unit transceiver that bridges Ethernet to RF for compact, power-efficient base-station deployments.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 08:00 - 09:40
Room: 254AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session features four papers on high-performance Ku- and Ka-band CMOS oscillators utilizing innovative architectures including: triple-tank resonators for flicker-noise suppression; area-efficient Gm boosted cores; series-resonance tank with 3rd harmonic extraction; and quad-mode inductive switching. These designs achieve high figures-of-merit and ultra-wide tuning ranges across a frequency span of 9.9 to 30GHz, addressing key challenges in next-generation frequency synthesis.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 08:00 - 09:40
Room: 257AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session highlights circuit techniques that advance fully digital PAs and transmitters toward higher output power, broader bandwidth, and cleaner spectra. It begins with a reconfigurable multi-standard IoT digital transmitter using IQ-shared PA. Next, a 28.5dBm all-digital Wi-Fi 7 polar transmitter employing triple-stacked class-G Doherty PA is demonstrated. The third paper presents a Wi-Fi Doherty polar transmitter that suppresses out-of-channel noise using a mixed-domain FIR technique. The session concludes with a wideband RF power DAC achieving -47.2dB EVM.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 08:00 - 09:40
Room: 253ABC
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
The future of computing requires innovations in connectivity and architectures that can solve complex problems. This session presents novel components that enable the next wave of high-speed connectivity solutions to meet today's significant compute demand. Innovative wide-band circuit components driven by new technologies such as phase-change materials and high-speed NPN-PNP bipolar transistor architecture will be presented. In addition, the session showcases a high-speed galvanically isolated data link. Finally, a cryogenic controller for color centers in diamond will be introduced to enable scalable quantum computing and networking.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 08:00 - 11:50
Room: 157C
DetailsRFTT
RFIC
RFSA
Workshops
Abstract
The exponential demands for higher power densities, broader frequency coverage, and enhanced reliability in microwave systems have exposed fundamental limitations in conventional thermal design approaches. As next-generation applications push beyond traditional thermal boundaries — from 5G/6G infrastructure to automotive radar and space-based communications — the industry faces a critical inflection point where incremental improvements in thermal management are essential to meet performance requirements. This workshop addresses these challenges through a comprehensive exploration of advanced thermal characterization, materials innovation, and holistic design methodologies that span from fundamental materials science to industrial-scale implementation. The program brings together leading researchers, and industry practitioners to present breakthrough approaches that are reshaping thermal management across the RF and microwave ecosystem. The technical foundation begins with the innovations in wide-bandgap materials presented by Prof. Srabanti Chowdhury of Stanford University, whose pioneering work on ultra-wide bandgap materials demonstrates how diamond integration with Beta-Gallium Oxide enables unprecedented reduction in thermal boundary resistance while maintaining RF performance. These materials advances provide the essential building blocks for next-generation thermal management solutions, particularly in high-power RF applications where conventional thermal interface materials reach fundamental limitations. Oscar D. Restrepo offers industrial thermal modeling and characterization perspectives from GlobalFoundries, where a unique combination of theoretical expertise in phonon transport and practical TCAD thermal simulation experience bridges fundamental physics with manufacturing-scale implementation. His work spans from first-principles calculations of defect formation energies to real-world thermal assessments across advanced technology nodes, including 22FDX and 12LP platforms. Building upon materials foundations, the workshop explores state-of-the-art thermal characterization techniques through both academic research and commercial implementation. Advanced thermoreflectance imaging, POSH-TDTR technology, and emerging measurement approaches demonstrate how nanosecond temporal resolution combined with submicron spatial accuracy reveals previously inaccessible thermal phenomena in operating RF devices. These characterization advances enable predictive thermal design that was previously impossible with conventional measurement techniques. Standards and validation methodologies receive dedicated attention through participation by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which presents traceable thermal measurement techniques and validation protocols essential for industry adoption. NIST’s gate resistance thermometry methods and RF power metering standards provide the measurement foundation necessary for reliable thermal characterization across different technology platforms. The workshop culminates in a holistic design philosophy that integrates materials innovation, advanced characterization, and system-level optimization. Live demonstrations showcase how this integrated approach enables thermal-electromagnetic co-design, abandoning traditional component-level optimization in favor of system-wide performance optimization. Real-world case studies span from mm-wave antenna-in-package modules to high-power GaN amplifiers, illustrating a direct correlation between materials properties, thermal imaging data, and system performance. Interactive sessions throughout the workshop foster direct dialogue between materials researchers, device designers, and manufacturing engineers. These discussions address practical implementation challenges while exploring emerging opportunities that could reshape thermal management approaches over the next decade. The format emphasizes knowledge transfer and collaborative problem-solving rather than traditional presentation-only formats.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 10:10 - 11:50
Room: 252AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session highlights state-of-the-art mm-wave and sub-THz transmitters and receivers, spanning a heterogeneously integrated InP-FinFET CMOS sliding-IF transmitter, a packaged InP HBT transceiver module, emerging direct digital demodulation architectures, advanced glass/antenna-in-package integration, a D-band receiver with injection-locking-based quadrature correction, and a 28nm CMOS transceiver enabling Dielectric Waveguide (DWG) communication.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 10:10 - 11:50
Room: 254AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session presents advanced CMOS frequency-generation circuits, including a D-band self calibrated quadrature generator, two E-band low-phase-noise LO with quadrature calibration and with harmonic extraction, and a series resonance 40GHz VCO.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 10:10 - 11:50
Room: 257AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session highlights recent advances in LEO SATCOM and FR3 transmitter front-ends and power amplifiers, covering devices, circuits, packaging, and design automation. The first paper demonstrates a high-power, high-efficiency complementary BiCMOS PA using both high-speed NPN and PNP devices. The second introduces a Ka-band 4-element beamforming transmitter front-end for LEO ground terminals with a negative-feedback-based interstage matching network. The third presents a compact, watt-level, thermally robust BiCMOS flip-chip PA module for SATCOM transmit front-ends. The final paper showcases a fast specs-to-silicon mm-wave RFIC design framework using AI-assisted specs-to-layout with layout-to-silicon constraint integration.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 12:00 - 13:20
Room: 253ABC
DetailsRFIC
Panel Sessions
Abstract
A quiz show battle for RFIC knowledge supremacy is brewing between students and experienced professionals. Will it be the experience of the career RFIC veterans or the students who have been in the classroom more recently? Come join this fun and interactive panel to find out!
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 13:30 - 15:10
Room: 252AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
The broadband circuit performance is critical for high-data-rate communications and to cover different frequency bands. In this session, various design techniques on broadband RF amplifiers and switches are introduced. For RF amplifiers, in addition to distributed topologies, a reconfigurable architecture is adopted. As for RF switches, a distributed structure as well as power combining is illustrated. These papers demonstrate the state-of-the-art performance for broadband operations.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 13:30 - 15:10
Room: 254AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session presents cutting-edge advances in frequency conversion and filtering for wireless receivers, spanning FR3 to W-band frequencies. Featured papers introduce novel circuit architectures, including passive mixer-first diplexers, subharmonic mixers, and switched-Gm topologies, all optimized for high linearity and low noise. These works collectively push the performance boundaries of integrated front-ends for next-generation communication systems.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 13:30 - 15:10
Room: 257AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This technical session highlights state-of-the-art Power Amplifier (PA) architectures for D-band and mm-wave applications in bulk CMOS and FD-SOI. Key innovations include a D-band variable-gain PA using Guanella transformers for 36% Fractional Bandwidth (FBW) and 20Gb/s 16-QAM signaling, alongside ultra-compact 145GHz PAs featuring adaptive back-gate biasing and diode-based linearization. Ultra-broadband performance is showcased through a 9.5–40GHz linear PA utilizing compensated coupled-line transformers (126.5% FBW) and a 15.5–46.0GHz PA with high-efficiency matching networks. Finally, a 40GHz load-isolated Doherty PA is presented, offering enhanced VSWR resiliency and high efficiency for robust, high-speed wireless communication.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 15:40 - 17:20
Room: 252AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session highlights advances in integrated RF sensing and radars. The first paper presents a 16-VRX radar using analog I/Q correlators with state-of-the-art efficiency. The next paper discusses a 2 to 20GHz RF signal processor based on a looped phase–time array that enhances frequency resolution. The third paper presents a 405GHz 2×2 scalable transceiver with increased frequency locking range. The fourth paper presents a radar transceiver featuring a hybrid Doppler-CW/PMCW operation to achieve unambiguous range accuracy of tens of µm. Finally, a W-band PMCW transmitter using an RWTO and edge combiner concludes the session.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 15:40 - 17:20
Room: 254AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
The front-ends and LNAs are essential building blocks of modern transceivers. The session presents a mm-wave novel self-synchronizing receiver array, a high-efficiency FR2 transmit front-end, a cryo LNA, a FR3 LNA and a mm-wave LNA exploiting noise cancelling.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 15:40 - 17:20
Room: 257AB
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
This session will present new design techniques for sub-THz power amplifiers to achieve high output power, wide bandwidth, and compact chip area. This session will also present a compact, high-gain sub-THz bidirectional amplifier.
Mon
8
Mon 8 Jun | 15:40 - 17:20
Room: 253ABC
DetailsRFIC
Technical Sessions
Abstract
Low RMS-error and broadband phase shifters are essential building blocks for beamforming. This session features four broadband phase shifters spanning 8–110GHz, 91–125GHz, 8–28GHz, and 24–30GHz, all implemented in silicon (22nm and 65nm CMOS/FD-SOI). Highlights include a 10-bit distributed vector-summing PS with <0.22dB RMS gain error and <1.99° RMS phase error, a 91–125GHz beamforming receive channel with sub-dB gain and sub-few-degree phase error, a wideband all-passive variable gain phase shifter with calibration-free gain control, and a compact 7-bit passive hybrid achieving <1.1°/<0.61dB RMS errors. Also included is a bi-directional reflection-amplifier phase shifter for ultra-low-power RIS enabling large-scale beyond-5G deployments.