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This entry was posted in RFIC Design and tagged Examples on February 20, 2014 by Radio Geek
Receiver sensitivity is defined as the minimum signal power (Pi,min) at which a receiver
can detect a signal while providing an adequate SNR at analog receiver output (BER at
digital receiver output).
This is minimum detectable signal(MDS) power. In a multi-standard receiver, the sensitivity requirements vary
depending on mode of operation, band, bandwidth, etc.,
For example,
In this post, let us go through the receiver sensitivity calculation using kTB, noise figure, and SNR of the receiver.
GSM sensitivity and WLAN sensitivity calculations are explained through examples.
(1)
where,
– SNR at the input receiver
– SNR at the output of receiver
The minimum SNR required at the output of receiver is obtained from system level design calculations or
simulations.
SNR at the input (SNRi) of a receiver is determined by input signal power(Pi) and noise floor(NFloor).
(2)
The noise floor at the input of the receiver is mainly due to thermal noise. Available thermal noise power at
temperature and an equivalent noise bandwidth of is given by . The reference
temperature of 290 K is utilized to calculate noise floor. At ,
. Therefore noise floor is given by
(3)
where is the bandwidth of receiver in Hz.
Using Eq-(1) to Eq-(3), the noise figure of a receiver is given by
(4)
From Eq-(4), knowing the noise figure and minimum SNR requirement of the receiver, we can calculate the
receiver sensitivity as
(5)
From the above equation, we can observe that sensitivity depends on receiver bandwidth, receiver noise figure
and SNR(or BER) at the output of receiver. Receiver bandwidth is not same as channel bandwidth. Receiver
bandwidth is mainly determined by IF filter or channel selection filter, but trade-off with lot other parameters.
For circuit designers, the design variable noise figure is of interest than the receiver sensitivity. For a
communication standard given the receiver sensitivity, Eq-(4) is useful to find the noise figure of receiver. Then
using Friss equation, noise figure for each block in the cascaded chain can be distributed.
In case of digital receivers, sensitivity is defined as minimum power level at which the receiver demodulate the
received data with a specified BER, FER or PER or below that. The maximum BER dictates the minimum output
SNR(SNRo,min) necessary for satisfactory reproduction or demodulation of the desired signal.
The relation between SNR and BER at the output of receiver is given as,
(6)
R – Bit rate
B – Channel bandwidth
Eb/No – Energy per bit to noise power spectral density ratio
BER as a function of Eb/No is shown in Figure 1. Given the modulation scheme and BER required, pick the value
of Eb/No from Figure 1 and compute the required output SNR using Eq-(6).
Table below shows the required minimum sensitivity of a WLAN 802.11a receiver at different data rates[1].
Rx Sensitivity (dBm) -82 -81 -79 -77 -74 -70 -66 -65
References
[1] “Receiver minimum input level sensitivity, agilent technologies.” [Online; Accessed June 2014].
Available: http://www.home.agilent.com/agilent/editorial.jspx?
ckey=339504&id=339504&nid=-11143.0.00&lc=eng&cc=IN