Graduate student Hossein Jalili displays the millimeter wave/terahertz phased array chip that he and Assistant Professor Omeed Momeni prototyped in the UC Davis Millimeter Wave Research Center at the College of Engineering. Maria Ines Perez-Vargas/UC Davis

A novel, high frequency IC, potentially capable of transmitting tens of gigabits of data per second — a rate orders of magnitude above the fastest internet speeds available today — has been developed by engineers at the University of California, Davis.

Omeed Momeni, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at UC Davis, and doctoral student Hossein Jalili designed the IC as a phased array antenna system. Phased array systems funnel the energy from multiple sources into a single beam that can be narrowly steered and directed to a specific location.

“Phased arrays are pretty difficult to create, especially at higher frequencies,” Momeni said. “We are the first to achieve this much bandwidth at this frequency.”

The IC prototyped by Momeni and Jalili successfully operates at 370 GHz with 52 GHz of bandwidth. For comparison, FM radio waves broadcast between 87.5 and 108 MHz; 4G and LTE cellular networks operate in bands between 800 MHz and 2.6 GHz, with up to 20 MHz of bandwidth.

Most modern electronics are designed to operate at lower frequencies. However, the growing demand for faster communication and new and emerging applications of sensing and imaging are driving the creation of technologies that function at higher frequencies.

Reaching the limit of 4G networks

“Theoretically, 4G cellular networks have reached their data rate limit,” Momeni said. “As we continue to migrate to systems like cloud computing and next-generation cellular networks, the need for speed is growing. Higher frequencies mean more bandwidth and more bandwidth means higher data rate.”

The tiny piece of hardware designed by Momeni and Jalili is evidence that it is possible to harness the large available bandwidth at millimeter wave and terahertz bands with a single, compact chip. This is an important step toward the development of scalable systems that can be used to improve the capabilities of technologies like spectroscopy, sensing, radar, medical imaging and communication. In future work, Momeni plans to integrate the IC into imaging and communication systems.

The research was supported by a five-year National Science Foundation CAREER grant awarded to Momeni. The ongoing project is titled “Scalable Traveling and Standing Wave Structures for High Power and High Efficiency Terahertz and mmWave Radiator and Phased Array Systems.”

Momeni and Jalili presented the IC and related research at the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference earlier this year. A journal article is forthcoming.