RFFC2072
RFFC2072 is 2.7GHz RF SYNTHESIZER/VCO manufactured by RF Micro Devices.
- Part of the RFFC2071 comparator family.
- Part of the RFFC2071 comparator family.
Features
- 85MHz to 2700MHz LO Frequency Range
- Fractional-N Synthesizer with Very Low Spurious Levels
- Typical Step Size 1.5Hz
- Fully Integrated Low Phase Noise
VCO and LO Buffers
- Integrated Phase Noise
0.18°rms at 1GHz
- High Linearity RF Mixer(s)
- 30MHz to 2700MHz Mixer
Frequency Range
- Input IP3 +23d Bm
- Mixer Bias Adjustable for Low
Power Operation
- Full Duplex Mode (RFFC2071)
- 2.7V to 3.3V Power Supply
- Low Current Consumption
- 3- or 4-Wire Serial Interface
Applications
- CATV Head-Ends
- Digital TV Repeaters
- Multi-Dwelling Units
- Diversity Receivers
- Software Defined Radios
- Frequency Band Shifters
- Point-to-Point Radios
- Cellular Repeaters
- Wi Max/LTE Infrastructure
- Cellular Jammers
- Satellite munications
- VHF/UHF Radios
Phase det.
Synth
Ref. divider
Phase det.
Synth
Ref. divider
Functional Block Diagram
Product Description
The RFFC2071 and RFFC2072 are re-configurable frequency conversion devices with integrated fractional-N phased locked loop (PLL) synthesizer, voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) and either one or two high linearity mixers. The fractional-N synthesizer takes advantage of an advanced sigma-delta modulator that delivers ultra-fine step sizes and low spurious products. The PLL/VCO engine bined with an external loop filter allows the user to generate local oscillator (LO) signals from 85MHz to 2700MHz. The LO signal is buffered and routed to the integrated RF mixers which are used to up/down-convert frequencies ranging from 30MHz to 2700MHz. The mixer bias current is programmable and can be reduced for applications requiring lower power consumption. Both devices can be configured to work as signal sources by bypassing the integrated mixers. Device programming is achieved via a simple 3-wire serial interface. In addition, a unique programming mode allows up to four devices to be controlled from a mon serial bus. This eliminates the need for separate chip-select control lines between each device and the host...