In radio frequency communications, the speed and efficiency of the radio transceivers used to send and receive data are crucial. A research team at the University of California, Irvine, has developed ...
The transceiver achieves 15 GB/s, vastly surpassing the bandwidth of existing consumer wireless systems Analog signal processing drastically reduces energy consumption while maintaining extreme data ...
Abstract: This article presents the design methodology and the measurements of a DC-coupled wideband Active Balun fabricated in a 40-nm CMOS process. An auxiliary balun-based phase and amplitude ...
Abstract: The growing number of security threats and vulnerabilities in automotive and industrial control systems motivates the design of Controller Area Network (CAN) bus components with enhanced ...
UC Irvine engineers announced last Wednesday they developed a wireless transceiver achieving 120 Gbps speeds, matching fiber optic performance for the first time in wireless data transmission. The ...
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