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can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna? (Read 1310 times)
sapphire
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can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Sep 04th, 2007, 5:34pm
 
I am planning to use bond wire to serve as on-chip antenna? One end of bond wire will be attached to output pad, while the other end will point to the air. The measured output power level with Spectrum Analyzer is about -10dBm. The receiver would be placed in several meters range.

Can the bond wire be good monopole or dipole antenna, and works well?

Thanks

Sapphire
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didac
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #1 - Sep 5th, 2007, 7:05am
 
Hi sapphire,
Assuming that you are at a high frequency(λ/4 at 15GHz are 5 mm which is a long bondwire) and you are using your IC as chip on-board without any epoxy  above, I think that several aspects will limit the performance of this kind of antenna:
1)This antenna is by definition a monopole,not a dipole, you are taking the feeding point at the contact point not in a balanced manner in the middle of the antenna. The monopole need a ground plane under it and what you will have is the IC and probably the first layer of dielectric material of the PCB(unless you put a ground plane just under the chip that can complicate the PCB design).
2)Adjacent bondwires can modify the impedance of  the antenna due to the proximity, this is important to take into account.
3)From a electromagnetic point of view I don't know in which angle the bondwire will be floating, a monopole has a radition null along it's axis, also I don't know if the bonding pad will suffer from mechanical stress. Another possibility is that the floating bondwire could move and short-circuit to adjacent bondwires.

The most common integrated antennas I've seen are from the printed family(using microstrip), try a fetch at IEEE and take a look

Hope it helps,
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sapphire
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #2 - Sep 7th, 2007, 5:16pm
 

Hi Didac,

Appreciate for your insightful reply!! I will try to use bondwire for testing first. Actually my design is only 2.4GHz VCO with some modulation. But the receiver can be very close to the antenna. I saw a paper for similar application just use the big on-chip inductor for transmitting RF signal. Their carrier frequency is even lower, around 500MHz.

By the way, what kind of bondwire material you think it's better? Gold or Aluminum? How about thickness? how to control the antenna impedance roughly? Thank you very much! My chip will be embedded into rodent's head, so I want to make it as small and light as possible.

Le


didac wrote on Sep 5th, 2007, 7:05am:
Hi sapphire,
Assuming that you are at a high frequency(λ/4 at 15GHz are 5 mm which is a long bondwire) and you are using your IC as chip on-board without any epoxy  above, I think that several aspects will limit the performance of this kind of antenna:
1)This antenna is by definition a monopole,not a dipole, you are taking the feeding point at the contact point not in a balanced manner in the middle of the antenna. The monopole need a ground plane under it and what you will have is the IC and probably the first layer of dielectric material of the PCB(unless you put a ground plane just under the chip that can complicate the PCB design).
2)Adjacent bondwires can modify the impedance of  the antenna due to the proximity, this is important to take into account.
3)From a electromagnetic point of view I don't know in which angle the bondwire will be floating, a monopole has a radition null along it's axis, also I don't know if the bonding pad will suffer from mechanical stress. Another possibility is that the floating bondwire could move and short-circuit to adjacent bondwires.

The most common integrated antennas I've seen are from the printed family(using microstrip), try a fetch at IEEE and take a look

Hope it helps,

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didac
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #3 - Sep 9th, 2007, 12:11pm
 
Hi sapphire,
Could you please post the reference to this paper you say?-it's always good to learn something new. Without more info I will make a wild guess that is an RFID tag or a biomedical device but I'm curious anyway about this paper.
Now let me make some comments:

1)Coils as antennas are used usually at "low frequencies" due to the problems of making a physical length equivalent to a fraction of a wavelength, but their efficiency tends to diminish with increasing frequency, so what it works at 500MHz not necessarily needs to work at 2.4GHz,are they using the chip in the near field region?-distance<λ/2π?.
2)If you could go for Gold I think it's better over aluminum,less resistivity translates into a lower loss resistance that dissipates power in the antenna instead of radiating it.
3)The rule of thumb that I think it's valid is five skin depths(If i did correctly the numbers the skin depth for Gold at 2.4GHz is more or less 1.6um so 8um thick will be ok),making more thick the bondwire won't help to reduce much more the resistance. I suppose the more limiting factor is the availability of a bonding machine that cab handle different thicks.
4)To control roughly the impedance you should take into account what surrounds the antenna, most important in this case adjacent bondwires. Also packaging and the environment could modify the behaviour(radiation pattern) of the antenna, so I think you should make use of a 3D-EM simulator and model as closely to reality as you can.
5) in your previous post you say that the receiver would be at several meters range, and now you say that it can be very close, take this into account when modeling the antenna(near field/far field behaviour).

As always any comments and further discussion will be appreciated.

Hope it helps,
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sapphire
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #4 - Sep 11th, 2007, 11:49am
 
Hi Didac,

Just saw your reply. Very insightful and helpful. I don't have much experience in antenna-related stuff, but I will try several ways to see the effect. The paper is "A Low-Power Integrated Circuit for a Wireless 100-Electrode Neural Recording System", JSSC, vol. 42, no. 1, January 2007.

Thanks a lot again

Sappire
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didac
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #5 - Sep 14th, 2007, 2:02am
 
You're welcome sapphire, was a pleasure. Thanks for the reference, pretty interesting to read, thank you very much.
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Re: can bond wire be used as on-chip antenna?
Reply #6 - Sep 19th, 2007, 1:31pm
 
It amazes me there is so much research in high-tech ways to torture small animals.
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