Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?

[TechView: Digital]

Multistandard Wireless Accelerator Enables Emerging Basestation Technologies



Daniel Harris  |   ED Online ID #19451  |   July 24, 2008

Article Rating: Not Rated

A famous cartoon coyote once called Apetitius Giganticus wanted to catch a roadrunner that sometimes went by Accelerati Incredibilus. The coyote always used some outdated technology to try to catch the roadrunner, who relied on speed and simplicity to avoid becoming lunch. So if FPGAs and ASICs are the coyote and Freescale’s MSBA8100 wireless basestation accelerator is the roadrunner, then, well, you get the picture (Fig. 1).

The MSBA8100 is the very first wireless accelerator to support Third Generation Long Term Evolution (3G-LTE), along with the Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX), Evolved High Speed Packet Access (HSPA+), and Time Division Duplex LTE (TDD-LTE) protocols. If you’re in the business of manufacturing wireless infrastructure equipment, it can help lower costs and future-proof your system while still supporting legacy 2G/3G standards.

And by eliminating the need to both develop and buy an expensive FPGA or ASIC with the equivalent capabilities, you’ll keep that pesky coyote at bay. The device is typically used in conjunction with Freescale’s MSC8144 quad-core DSP, which is an established solution for a variety of basestation designs. Put it all together and you have a wireless basestation solution that handles data rates over 100 Mbits/s, provides low-latency packet I/O, and yet is practically cheap enough to purchase with leftover bird feed.

The MSBA8100’s Multi Accelerator Platform Engine for Baseband (MAPLE-B) block handles Fourier transforms, algorithm acceleration, and Turbo/Viterbi decoding (Fig. 2). The Fourier transform calculation engine can handle a variable number of points up to 200 Msamples/s (FFT/IFFT) and 130 Msamples/s (DFT/IDFT). The Turbo decoder can handle up to 150 Mbits/s and the Viterbi decoder can handle 85 Mbits/s, and each supports various standards.

The device also includes an internal 512-kbyte low-latency M2 memory. Its double-data rate (DDR) SDRAM controller supports both DDR and DDR2 at up to 333 MHz for devices up to 4 Gbits (x8 and x16). For inter-device communications, the MSBA8100 provides two Serial RapidIO (SRIO) 1.2 ports and a PCI port. Each SRIO port supports up to four lanes operating at up to 3.125 Gbaud, and the SRIO blocks include a RapidIO messaging unit (RMU) and a RapidIO DMA unit. The 32-bit PCI 2.2 port can operate at 33 and 66 MHz.

Tying everything together and policing the device, a chip-level arbitration and switching system (CLASS) arbitrates the MAPLE-B bus, the SRIO controllers, the internal memory interface, the DDR SDRAM controller, the PCI target, and the device configuration control and status registers. Two configurable RISC engines can handle any required updates just in case Mr. Giganticus devises some new plan to thwart poor Mr. Incredibilus. The MSBA8100 devices should be sampling sometime this quarter.

Freescale Semiconductor

www.freescale.com/dsp




Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?


  • Cadence Comes At Power From Two Perspectives
  • Collaboration Results In First IEEE 1149.7 cJTAG Semiconductor IP Core
  • Yield Enhancement Software To Aid Solar Cell Fabs
  • Audio Engine Codec Library Expands With Dolby Pro Logic Additions
  • Accellera Rolls New Version of Analog, Mixed-Signal Standard
  • 45-nm Via-Programmable ASICs Add High-Speed I/O Transceivers To Feature Mix
  • Verification Evolves Into Lean, Mean Bug-Stomping Machines
  • User Advisory Group To Guide Open Verification Methodology’s Evolution
    1) Build A Smart Battery Charger Using A Single-Transistor Circuit
    (305 views today)
    2) Use Inexpensive Components To Create An Infrared Close-Object Alert Circuit
    (207 views today)
    3) Easily Convert Decimal Numbers To Their Binary And BCD Formats
    (156 views today)
    4) Narrow-Shift Digital Discriminator Detects Differential GPS Corrections
    (156 views today)
    5) Embedded: FPGA Toolkit Supports Hard And Soft Processor Designs
    (139 views today)
    ALL TOP 20







    POST YOUR COMMENTS HERE

    Name:

    Email:
    Rate this article:

     less useful more useful 
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    Your Comments:

    Enter the text from the image below




    Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.
     
     

    PartFinder

    Find real-time pricing, stock status, same-day/next-day shipping options and more. Brought to you by Digi-Key. Go to PartFinder.    
    GlobalSpec

    PART SEARCH :
    Powered by: GlobalSpec - The Engineering Search Engine
    Sponsored Links

    Electronic Design Europe Electronic Design China EEPN Power Electronics Auto Electronics Microwaves & RF RF Design
    Schematics Find Power Products Military Electronics Featured Vendors EE Events Free Design Resources