25 Gb/s NRZ and 50 Gb/s PAM-4 Transimpedance Amplifier with
Active Feedback and Equalization in 90 nm CMOS Technology
Hao-Wen Hsu, Chih-Chen Peng, Jau-Ji Jou, Tien-Tsorng Shih, Yaw-Dung Wu, Shao-I Chu,
Chih-Yuan Lien and Bing-Hong Liu
Department of Electronics Engineering, National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology,
No. 415, Jiangong Rd., Sanmin Dist., Kaohsiung City 80778, Taiwan
Keywords: Transimpedance Amplifier (TIA), Active Feedback, Equalizer, Four-level Pulse Amplitude Modulation
(PAM-4).
Abstract: In this paper, a high-linearity transimpedance amplifier (TIA) was designed in 90 nm CMOS technology.
The input stage of the TIA was a regulated cascade circuit for low input impedance. The active feedback
structure was used to replace the feedback resistor and to reduce the chip size. An equalizer was also used in
the TIA to compensate the high-frequency response. Within input current amplitude of 1.1 mA, the total
harmonic distortion of the TIA can be below 5%. The bandwidth of the TIA was about 26 GHz and its
input-referred current density was below 74 pA/√Hz within the bandwidth. The TIA can be applied in 25
Gb/s non-return zero (NRZ) and 50 Gb/s (25 Gbaud) four-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4)
optical receivers. The power dissipation of the chip is 11.6 mW and the chip area is 0.151 mm
2
.
1 INTRODUCTION
Since the advent of optical fiber transmissions, the
data transmission speed is increasing in recent years
and is widely used in local area networks, regional
networks, and data centers. Therefore, more people
have invested in the research and promotion of high-
speed fiber optic circuit design. The multi-level
modulation signals can reduce the channel symbol
rate and the circuit bandwidth, so the high-speed
circuit for optical communications can be designed
easier. In the same transmission bandwidth, the data
bit rate of the 4-level pulse amplitude modulation
(PAM-4) signal can be doubled than the non-return
to zero (NRZ) signal (Szczerba, 2012). Therefore,
the PAM-4 signal is defined as a kind of the standard
signal formats in the 200 and 400 Gb/s Ethernets
(Bhoja, 2017; Baveja, 2018). Using eight channels
that operate at 25 Gb/s NRZ or 50 Gb/s PAM-4, the
200 Gb/s or 400 Gb/s transceiver modules can be
achieved.
In the optical receiver module, the
transimpedance amplifier (TIA) and the main
amplifier are usually used. If the nonlinear distortions
can be tolerated, the limiting amplifier (LA) can
become the main amplifier. However, the distortion
of the PAM-4 signal is highly dependent on the
linearity of transmission and circuit. The LA can
introduce nonlinear distortions and will degrade the
PAM-4 signal quality. Therefore, in the PAM-4
optical receiver, the high-linearity TIA will be
needed and the LA cannot be used. The 100 Gb/s
PAM-4 linear TIA was designed in 16 nm FinFET
CMOS process (Lakshmikumar, 2018), and the low-
noise high-linearity 56 Gb/s PAM-4 optical receiver
was designed in 45 nm SOI CMOS technology (Xie,
2018). Our TIA circuit was designed in 90 nm
CMOS technology, so the bandwidth compensation
skills were needed for the high-speed TIA (Salhi,
2017; Hiratsuka, 2018). Therefore, an equalizer (EQ)
circuit was added in our inductor-less TIA. In this
paper, a high- linearity TIA with an EQ is designed
in 90 nm CMOS technology for 25 Gb/s NRZ and 50
Gb/s PAM-4 transmissions.
2 CIRCUIT ARCHITECTURE
Figure 1 shows the block diagram of our TIA circuit.
The TIA was designed as a fully differential circuit
structure. A differential circuit can effectively reduce
the noise interference from the power supply or the