文档介绍:GPS & Galileo: Dual RF Front-end Receiver
and Design, Fabrication, and Test
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
JAIZKI MENDIZABAL received his MS and PhD degrees in electrical engineer-
ing from the Technological Campus of the University of Navarra (UN)
in San Sebastian, Spain. As a radio frequency–integrated circuit designer,
he has worked as part of the RFIC research group at Fraunhofer Institut
für Integrierte Schaltungen in Erlangen, Germany, from 2000 to 2002; the
RF design group of the Electronics munication Department at the
Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones icas (CEIT) in San Sebastian from
2002 to 2005; and the Mixed Signal research group of the Frontier Devices
Department at SANYO Electric, Ltd., in Gifu, Japan, from 2005 to 2006. His
PhD research was focused in low IF conversion Global Navigation Satellite
System (GNSS) front-ends. He is now involved with RFICs and analog sys-
tems for the railway industry at CEIT and lectures at the RF Measurement
Laboratory and Electronic Circuits at UN.
ROC BERENGUER received MS and PhD degrees from UN in San
Sebastian in 1996 and 2000, respectively. His PhD research was focused in
direct digitalisation front-ends design for GPS. In 1999 he joined CEIT as
Associated Researcher. He has collaborated in the design of several front-ends
for wireless standards such as Wireless Local work (WLAN), Digital
Video Broadcasting–Handheld (DVB-H), Galileo, and GPS. He has also
worked as external consultant for Siemens, Hitachi, Epson, and others. He is
currently interested in low-power analogue circuit design, particularly low-
power RFIDs for wireless works. Currently he is also an assistant
professor of analogue integrated circuits at UN. He is author of Design
and Test of Integrated Inductors for RF Applications.
JUAN MELÉNDEZ received his MS and PhD degrees in Industrial Engineering
from UN in San Sebastian in 1998 and 2002, respectively. He worked
towards his PhD in the field of monolithic RF