A High Power Density Ku-Band GaN Power Amplifier Based on Device-Level
Thermal Analysis
Abstract
This paper introduces a new design method for a high-power density GaN
MMIC amplifier operating in the Ku-band. A thermal model to investigate
the thermal distribution of power amplifiers is proposed to achieve
optimal performance in terms of power density, chip size and channel
temperature. The thermal distribution of a single device, an eight-way
parallel device combination, and the entire PA layout are obtained by
finite element simulation. The channel temperature characteristics of
the single device, eight-way parallel device combination, and the entire
PA are compared under pulse excitation. The thermal coupling effects of
high-power MMICs are analyzed in detail. The thermal resistances are
extracted from the simulation to design a Ku-band amplifier. Measurement
results demonstrate that the designed amplifier achieves 43.0-44.2 dBm
output power and 22.7-34.5% PAE at 28 V drain voltage with a 100 µs
pulse width and 10% duty cycle within 12-18 GHz. The proposed design
method enables the amplifier to have a compact layout of 10.88 mm
2 and a power density between 1.84 W/mm and 2.42 W/mm.
This design method can offer valuable insights for future development of
high-power MMIC amplifiers.