This special report discusses the present state-of-the-art in S-Band high power amplifier design. A 10 kW CW solid state power amplifier (SSPA) has been designed using solid state technology at 2 GHz. The SSPA utilizes the latest GaN HEMT device technology to meet the needs of high power S-Band Satcom amplifiers to replace current traveling wave tube amplifier (TWTA) systems.

Solid state power amplifiers (SSPA) have been dramatically evolving over the past thirty years. Microwave amplifiers have been a driving force in EW and radar systems, terrestrial communication, wireless infrastructure, instrumentation and EMC applications as well as satellite communications. Satellite communication (Satcom) amplifiers are used in base station — earth station installations and have some of the most stringent requirements of all amplifier applications. Satcom amplifiers are required to operate continuously and must provide linear power amplification. This presents a challenge to the amplifier engineer in that both efficiency and power density are of paramount importance in the design of Satcom amplifiers. The requirement for linear output power means that the amplifier must be operated at an output power level far below its maximum saturated output power capability. Often a Satcom amplifier is operating in a multicarrier environment carrying anywhere from ten to over fifty carriers.

Satcom Amplifier Technology

Due to the very high linear output power levels required to transmit multicarrier signals to a satellite, Satcom earth station amplifiers have been dominated by klystron and traveling wave tube amplifiers in the past. Because of the continuous operation requirement and extremely high collector operating temperatures, tube-based amplifiers have experienced some reliability problems. Since the emergence of GaAs power transistors in the late 1970s, solid state amplifiers gradually began to replace klystron and traveling wave tube amplifiers (TWTA) in applications where sufficient linear power could be produced. Over the past two decades, GaAs devices have evolved such that SSPAs have become the preferred choice for earth station amplifier installations. Output power levels up to 1 kW have been achieved at S-Band, 4 kW at C-Band, 1 kW at X-Band and Ku-Band and 50 W at Ka-Band, using GaAs FET technology. A combination of innovative power combining techniques and redundant, soft-fail architectures have given SSPAs a dominant position in the market. Despite this evolution, there remain applications that require even greater linear output power levels that until recently have still required the use of traveling wave tube amplifiers. As the available output power levels from GaAs FET devices have reached their limit, amplifier designers have been in need of solid state devices with greater power density along with higher channel temperature operation. The advent of GaN solid state device technology gives amplifier designers the ability to take SSPA power levels three to five times higher than what is presently possible with GaAs technology.

Gallium Nitride Device Technology

Cree has recently released 40 V, 0.25 µm and 50 V, 0.4 µm GaN HEMT processes that extend the frequency range of the previous 28 V, 0.4 µm through Ku-Band and support larger power requirements, allowing the best fit to the application. These include multi-octave, high power pulsed and CW, linear applications for markets such as point-point radio, satellite communications, cellular, instrumentation, medical and military. The Teledyne application is an example of an innovative approach to achieving the power and efficiency advantages of GaN HEMT for S-Band applications.

The market adoption for GaN HEMT devices has accelerated in recent years for high power, high frequency SSPAs. GaN HEMT technology has proven itself to be reliable and rugged with companies such as Cree fielding over 2 billion GaN HEMT devices hours with a field FIT rate of less than 10. The technology is thermally rugged and supports operational junction temperatures of 225°C at excellent mean time to failure (MTTF) exceeding 2 million hours.

Figure 1

Figure 1 CGH21240F typical device power vs. frequency (a) and typical swept power performance (b).

S-Band SSPA Module design

The 10 kW S-Band SSPA system is designed around an internally input matched 28 V, 240 W GaN HEMT transistor, optimized for operation in the 1.8 to 2.2 GHz range. The transistor offers greater than 16 dB power gain, greater than 53 dBm output power and greater than 64 percent drain efficiency under pulsed conditions (see Figure 1).

Figure 2

Figure 2 800 W S-Band SSPA module block diagram.

The amplifier system is designed using an array of phase combined SSPA modules. The SSPA module uses one device driving four phase combined devices as shown in Figure 2. This results in a module that produces a minimum output power of 800 W in the 2 GHz range. The devices are then driven by a preamplifier section. The preamplifier contains additional GaN and GaAs FET driver stages along with a variable attenuator for amplifier gain adjustment. Also included in the preamplifier section is an analog predistortion linearizer. The linearizer serves to shape the GaN HEMT’s power transfer curve shown in Figure 1b to behave similar to a GaAs FET’s hard limiting characteristic. This increases the 1 dB compression point of the amplifier and improves the overall intermodulation distortion performance.

Figure 3

Figure 3 800 W S-Band SSPA module assembly.

The device is biased in mid-Class AB mode. The initial impedance matching was performed using the large signal device impedance.1 The matching networks are then optimized using the nonlinear device model in a Harmonic Balance simulator. The nonlinear modeling allows the designer to optimize the tradeoffs among output power, efficiency and intermodulation performance. The module is physically realized using softboard microstrip techniques. The 800 W module along with preamplifier and linearization circuitry is shown in Figure 3.

SSPA System Design

The amplifier system is a modular soft-fail architecture based on Teledyne Paradise Datacom’s patented PowerMAX technology.2 Eight discrete (800 W) SSPA modules are phase combined to produce over 5 kW of saturated CW output power after the RF combining losses. The eight modules are arranged in a single cabinet and are powered by n+1 redundant (28 VDC) power supplies. The eight SSPA modules are phase combined using specially designed spatial and waveguide combiner arrays integrated in the amplifier cabinet. The 5 kW SSPA cabinet block diagram is shown in Figure 4.

Figure 4

Figure 4 5 kW, S-Band SSPA block diagram.

The architecture is considered a self-redundant system. The failure of one entire SSPA module results in a reduction of 1.2 dB in output power capability from the cabinet. The architecture allows modular amplifier systems to achieve very high output power levels. The sophisticated embedded control circuitry allows the system to be operated as a ‘single-box’ amplifier.

Figure 5

Figure 5 10 kW S-Band phase combined amplifier system.

The SSPA modules as well as the power supply modules are removable from the front panel of the equipment chassis. This facilitates very easy maintenance and replacement of the modules.  Forced convection air cooling is used for the heat transfer through the cabinet. The thermal design maintains device flange temperatures at less than 50°C. The low-loss passive combining array provides a robust, soft-fail architecture.

Two identical 5 kW SSPA cabinets (see Figure 5) are then phase combined using a waveguide hybrid combiner in WR430. This creates a system comprised of 16 parallel combined 800 W SSPA modules. The PowerMAX system architecture enables system configurations up to 16 modules. In a 16 module system, the failure of one SSPA module results in a reduction of 0.6 dB in output power capability.3

Conclusion

There has been much published about very high power SSPAs in the pulsed and radar genre. Many have held the position that solid-state power amplifiers are not able to achieve multi-kilowatt CW power levels. The maturation of GaN technology now dispels this myth with amplifier systems, such as the 10 kW S-Band HPA described in this article. The marriage of GaN HEMT technology and the redundant system architecture described here produces a high performance HPA system for demanding Satcom earth station installations.  The combination of mid-Class AB bias and analog predistortion enable the GaN HEMT SSPA to have a similar intermodulation characteristic as its GaAs FET counterpart.  The two-tone intermodulation versus back off plot is shown in Figure 6.

Figure 6

Figure 6 10 kW two-tone intermod distortion performance.

The soft-fail characteristics and hot-swap field replaceable modules achieve system reliability figures that TWTA systems cannot achieve. GaN technology enables this system to approach similar prime power to linear RF output power efficiency as TWTAs. As device manufacturers continue to push the envelope of GaN technology, SSPA systems will become more versatile, covering wider bandwidths and higher frequency bands. GaN-based PowerMAX systems have already been manufactured in all of the major Satcom frequency bands ranging from 1 kW at Ka-Band to 10 kW at S-Band.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of the amplifier design team members: Craig Harris, Oleg Karpenko, Sithorn Prak, Dave Johnson and Jason Fetters.

References

  1. A.A. Behagi and S.D. Turner, “An Electronic Design Automation Approach,” Microwave and RF Engineering, Vol. 1, BT Microwave LLC, 2011.
  2. Paradise Datacom LLC, “Power Amplifier System” U.S. Patent 8,189,338 B2, May 29, 2012.
  3. S.D. Turner, “Concepts in Communication Amplifier Redundancy Systems,” Armed Forces International, December 2004.