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Texas Instruments, Altera collaborate to speed RF system design

This week’s International Microwave Symposium in Montreal is sure to be the launchpad for several product announcements, and today Texas Instruments (TXN) and Altera (ALTR) are starting things off with an RF development kit that they say will cut the time needed to design and verify RF systems from months to weeks.

The Arria V FPGA RF Development Kit uses Altera’s 28 nanomenter field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) and TI’s analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) and digital-to-analog converters (DACs). FPGAs are chipsets that can be programmed and reprogrammed by customers. The primary benefit between a more costly FPGA vs. the more common application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) are that while ASICs can be mass produced at much lower cost points than FPGAs, the programmable circuits allow customization on a customer-by-customer basis.  In Altera’s case, this allows its development kit to fit into a variety of RF system design scenarios much more nimbly.

Advances in RF testing and system design tools will be key LTE deployment enablers as RF paths must be designed to support a variety of modulation schemes over a variety of air interfaces in cells that combine macro and micro cellular coverage.  Taken together, this adds up to a cumbersome process that can delay initial site design, and ongoing optimization.

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Per the two companies’ joint press release the key technical specs of the solution are:

The Arria V FPGA RF Development Kit includes TI reference designs for RF transmit, digital pre-distortion feedback and wide-band dual receiver. The kit will be sold by Arrow Electronics at a list price of $6300.

The International Microwave Symposium is the world’s largest gathering of RF and microwave professionals. It begins today in Montreal and continues through Thursday.

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