RF Transceiver ICs

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
SI1081-A-GMR

SI1081-A-GMR

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM<1GHZ 36-WFQFN

0

CC2652P1FRGZR

CC2652P1FRGZR

Texas Instruments

2.4GHZ WIRELESS MCU

4704

CC1352R1F3RGZT

CC1352R1F3RGZT

Texas Instruments

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 48VQFN

11

EFR32FG12P433F1024GM48-C

EFR32FG12P433F1024GM48-C

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU 48VFQFN

177

AX8052F143-3-TX30

AX8052F143-3-TX30

Sanyo Semiconductor/ON Semiconductor

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM<1GHZ 40VFQFN

3569

NRF24LU1P-O17Q32-T

NRF24LU1P-O17Q32-T

Nordic Semiconductor

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM>1GHZ 32VFQFN

0

NRF5340-QKAA-R

NRF5340-QKAA-R

Nordic Semiconductor

BLE 5.2 SOC

2630

ESP8089

ESP8089

Espressif Systems

IC RF TXRX+MCU WIFI 32VFQFN

1908

NRF24LE1-O17Q24-R7

NRF24LE1-O17Q24-R7

Nordic Semiconductor

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM>1GHZ 24VFQFN

0

CC1310F64RHBR

CC1310F64RHBR

Texas Instruments

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM<1GHZ 32VFQFN

2406

EFR32MG1V132F256GM48-C0

EFR32MG1V132F256GM48-C0

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 48VFQFN

0

CYRF69303-40LFXC

CYRF69303-40LFXC

IR (Infineon Technologies)

MICROPROCESSOR CIRCUIT, CMOS

0

CC430F5133IRGZR

CC430F5133IRGZR

Texas Instruments

IC RF TXRX+MCU ISM<1GHZ 48VFQFN

2331

QN9030HN/001Z

QN9030HN/001Z

NXP Semiconductors

QN9030 BLE SOC

915

EFR32FG1V131F64GM32-C0R

EFR32FG1V131F64GM32-C0R

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 32VFQFN

0

EZR32WG230F256R61G-B0

EZR32WG230F256R61G-B0

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 64VFQFN

33

NRF52840-QIAA-R

NRF52840-QIAA-R

Nordic Semiconductor

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 73VFQFN

0

ATSAMR34J16BT-I/7JX

ATSAMR34J16BT-I/7JX

Roving Networks / Microchip Technology

IC RF TXRX+MCU 802.15.4 64TFBGA

0

EZR32HG320F64R67G-C0R

EZR32HG320F64R67G-C0R

Silicon Labs

64 KB M0+ USB +13 DBM EZRADIOPRO

0

EFR32MG13P632F512GM32-CR

EFR32MG13P632F512GM32-CR

Silicon Labs

IC RF TXRX+MCU BLUETOOTH 32QFN

0

RF Transceiver ICs

1. Overview

RF (Radio Frequency) and IF (Intermediate Frequency) transceiver ICs are integrated circuits that enable wireless communication by transmitting and receiving radio signals. These devices are critical in modern technologies, supporting applications from cellular networks to IoT (Internet of Things). RFID (Radio-Frequency Identification) RF transceivers specialize in short-range communication for identification and tracking systems. Their miniaturization, energy efficiency, and reliability have driven advancements in connectivity across industries.

2. Major Types and Functional Classification

Type Functional Features Application Examples
Low-Power RF Transceivers Optimized for energy efficiency, supports sub-1GHz and 2.4GHz bands IoT sensors, smart meters, wearable devices
High-Performance RF Transceivers High output power (up to +20dBm), low phase noise 5G base stations, military communication systems
Multi-Band RF Transceivers Supports multiple frequency bands (e.g., 400MHz-6GHz) Dual-mode radios, global navigation systems
Integrated RFID Transceivers Embedded protocol handling, on-chip modulation/demodulation Inventory tracking, access control systems

3. Structure and Components

Typical RF transceiver ICs include:

  • Transmitter Section: Power Amplifier (PA), up-conversion mixer, frequency synthesizer
  • Receiver Section: Low-Noise Amplifier (LNA), down-conversion mixer, channel filter
  • Digital Baseband: ADC/DAC, error correction, protocol engine
  • Process Technology: CMOS, SiGe, or GaAs for high-frequency performance
  • Package Types: QFN (Quad Flat No-leads), BGA (Ball Grid Array)

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Description Importance
Frequency Range Operational bandwidth (e.g., 868MHz-915MHz, 2.4GHz-5.8GHz) Determines application compatibility
Output Power Transmit power level (e.g., -20dBm to +20dBm) Impacts transmission distance and regulatory compliance
Receiver Sensitivity Minimum detectable signal level (e.g., -120dBm) Defines signal quality in noisy environments
Data Rate Maximum throughput (e.g., 1Mbps-1Gbps) Affects real-time data transmission capability
Power Consumption Operating current/voltage requirements Crucial for battery-powered devices

5. Application Areas

  • Telecommunications: 5G small cells, Wi-Fi 6 access points
  • Industrial IoT: Predictive maintenance sensors
  • Automotive: Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems (TPMS), keyless entry
  • Healthcare: Remote patient monitoring devices
  • Retail: Smart shelves with RFID inventory tracking

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

Manufacturer Representative Product Key Features
TI (Texas Instruments) CC1352P Sub-1GHz & 2.4GHz dual-band, +7dBm output power
Nordic Semiconductor nRF52840 Bluetooth 5.2, 2.4GHz, 128-bit AES encryption
STMicroelectronics S2-LP Very low-power (14mA RX), sub-GHz transceiver
Infineon Technologies BTS720 Automotive-grade RFID transceiver for immobilizers

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations include:

  • Frequency band alignment with regulatory standards (FCC, ETSI)
  • Power budget vs. transmission range requirements
  • Integration level (e.g., on-chip MCU, external PA needs)
  • Environmental factors (temperature range, EMI resilience)
  • Cost vs. performance trade-offs for mass production

8. Industry Trends

Future developments include:

  • Ultra-low-power designs for energy-harvesting IoT nodes
  • Massive MIMO integration for 6G infrastructure
  • AI-enhanced spectrum management algorithms
  • Expanded use of mmWave bands (24GHz+) for high-speed applications
  • Standardization of RFID protocols for global supply chains
RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top