Hoofddorp, Netherlands: Murata has announced new surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices for RF filtering and duplexer duties. The devices address the ongoing and ever increasing need to reduce the size of components in mobile phones, especially with the coming of 5G.
Murata’s SAYAV/SAYAR (https://www.murata.com/en-eu/
For use in smart phones, WiFi home routers, M2M modules (industrial) and other IoT devices with LTE and WiFi, Murata’s SAW devices will appeal to engineers who are developing consumer and/or industrial devices with an LTE/Wifi function.
As smartphones now deliver more functions and performance, they need a larger battery capacity, and they tend to have more elaborate, space-hungry, built-in cameras. To create more space to mount components that enable extra functions and higher performance levels, smaller RF substrates are required for handling wireless signals.
At the same time, modern smartphones support multiple bands while LTE now adopts wireless technologies that improve signal reception quality such as carrier aggregation and multiple-input and multiple-output (MIMO). This has made RF circuits increasingly complex. Also, to support the upcoming implementation of the fifth-generation mobile communications system (5G), RF circuits will inevitably become more complex at a faster pace.
To address these advancements in smartphone technologies, smaller RF circuit components are required. This is particularly true in the case of SAW devices which are placed between antennas and transmitting/receiving circuits to extract wireless signals at certain frequencies. They are components with a higher demand for smaller size because smartphones, even mid range models for specific regions, feature 14 to 15 SAW devices, while premium-class models that can be used worldwide have as many as 30 to 40 SAW devices. Demonstrably, there’s clearly a need for a space-saving solution to the size of SAW devices, one that Murata has addressed and achieved with this new range of devices.
Using its in-house experience and technology, Murata has successfully designed the devices to be smaller-sized products that support low frequencies despite the technical challenges in doing so. One of the chief benefits of this to the designer being that the tiny devices handle frequency bands from 800 MHz to 2.6 GHz. So in their smaller sizes, the devices equal or have better performance characteristics than similar products from the competition. Murata will gradually add new models to the range to support the LTE communications standard worldwide.