Jt. Colvin et al., Effects of substrate resistances on LNA performance and a bondpad structure for reducing the effects in a silicon bipolar technology, IEEE J SOLI, 34(9), 1999, pp. 1339-1344
The effects of substrate resistances on the performance of 5.8-GHz low-nois
e amplifiers (LNA's) have been evaluated through a combination of experimen
tal and simulation studies. The substrate resistive network for the LNA has
been constructed by fabricating and measuring a test structure. The substr
ate resistances can be significantly affected by the die area and thickness
, which raises a serious concern for on-wafer testing and optimization of c
ircuits using the test results. The substrate resistances reduce the simula
ted gain by more than 10 dB and increase the noise figure by 2.7 dB, The si
mulation study has shown that the dominant substrate resistances are those
associated with the bondpads, To reduce the effects of the substrate resist
ances, a ground-shielded bondpad structure, which consists of a Metal 2 pad
and an n(+) plug grounded shield separated by a composite oxide layer, has
been developed. It reduces the resistance to ground to almost zero by cond
ucting the signal away from the substrate to ground through the low-resisti
vity n(+) plug layer. The pad structure in addition improves the interpad i
solation by as much as 35 dB, However, to harness this isolation improvemen
t, the inductance between the IC and PC board ground should be made small b
y using a low ground inductance package. Using this ground-shielded bondpad
, the measured gain and noise figure of a 4.5-GHz tuned amplifier were impr
oved by 10 and 2 dB, respectively, over the same circuit implemented using
the conventional bondpad.