the transmitter, the data signal (RF voltage) from the
pulse-pattern generator was applied to the module
with an appropriate DC bias voltage through a bias-
T. For the receiver, just a DC bias voltage was
applied to the RTD to maximize the sensitivity. The
demodulated baseband data signal was amplified
with the preamplifier followed by the limiting
amplifier.
The oscillation frequency depends on the parallel
inductance and capacitance of RTD chip, and the
output power is proportional to the widths of the
current and voltage of the NDR region (Asada et al.,
2008). The oscillation frequency and the output
power of the RTD used for the experiments were
approximately 300 GHz and several μW,
respectively.
Figure 13: BER characteristics plotted against the DC bias
voltage and eye diagram at 1.5 Gbit/s.
Figure 14: Demodulated eye diagram at 2.5 Gbit/s.
Figure 13 shows a dependence of the BER on the
applied DC bias voltage when the amplitude of the
data signal was 160 mVp-p. At 0.85 V, an error-free
transmission at 1.5 Gbit/s was achieved as shown in
the eye diagram of Fig. 13. There were optimum DC
bias voltages depending on the RF voltage
amplitude. By carefully adjusting the DC bias
voltage, the achieved maximum data rate was 2.5
Gbit/s (Fig. 14), which is mainly limited by the
frequency-dependent radiation pattern as discussed
in Sec. 3.2, and the bandwidth of the packaging
(Shiode et al., 2011, 2012). Use of RTD transceiver
modules with MgO lens will increase the bit rate
over 10 Gbit/s.
5 CONCLUSIONS
We have described a small and cost-effective
transceiver module employing resonant-tunnelling
diodes (RTDs) towards wide-spread consumer THz
wireless applications such as a close-proximity
instantaneous data transfer and a wireless
interconnection.
The RTD-based receiver module with MgO
hyper-hemispherical lens has exhibited over 10-
Gbit/s performance at 300 GHz. Using the RTD-
based transmitter and receiver, a close-proximity
wireless transmission at 2.5 Gbit/s has been
demonstrated with an error-free condition. Future
works should be placed on the increase of data rate
and transmission distance by improving the
packaging and the antenna structure, respectively.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This work was supported in part by the Strategic
Information and Communications R&D Promotion
Programme (SCOPE), from the Ministry of Internal
Affairs and Communications, Japan.
REFERENCES
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Kleine-Ostmann, T., Nagatsuma, T., 2011. A review on
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Mukai T., M. Kawamura, M., Takada, T., Nagatsuma, T.,
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MF42, Santa Barbara.
Bit error rate
0.7 0.8 0.9
DC bias voltage (V)
1.5 Gbit/s
1E-2
1E-4
1E-6
1E-8
1E-10
1E-12
1
250 ps