The present disclosure generally relates to transmitter architectures. More specifically, the present disclosure is concerned with a digital transmitter architecture using low-frequency Delta-Sigma Modulators (DSMs) cascaded with an up-sampler and modulator block working at higher frequency.
The new generation of communication standards uses complex modulation techniques in order to gain more spectrum efficiency. These modulation types generate signals with high varying envelopes that generally impose stringent constraints on the linearity versus power efficiency trade-off of power amplifiers. Traditional transmitter architectures include linear power amplifiers (class A or class AB) operated in back-off, which results in poor efficiency performances.
On the other hand, the proliferation and diversity of communication standards motivates the research to design a multi-standard transceiver that can be used for different communication standards. One expensive approach consists in dedicating one transmitter for each standard and switch between them depending of the input signal type or standard.
The digital transceiver, generally consisting in implementing a great portion of a transceiver in the digital domain, is another solution. Indeed, the digital transceiver is easily configured to be compliant with different standards. One approach in the design of such a digital transmitter is the use of Delta-sigma modulation (DSM) technique. This technique is used to transform the envelope and phase modulated baseband signal in one digital bit stream representing the signal. This technique also shapes the quantization noise outside of the useful bandwidth.
In the appended drawings:
In accordance with an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure, there is provided a digital transmitter producing multiple binary stream output signals at a desired RF carrier frequency from an amplitude or amplitude and phase varying baseband modulated or IF modulated input signal, the digital transmitter comprising:
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a digital transmitter producing a digital stream output signal at a desired RF carrier frequency from an amplitude or amplitude and phase varying baseband modulated or IF modulated input signal, the digital transmitter comprising:
The present description refers to other documents listed at the end of the present disclosure. These documents are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The use of the word “a” or “an” when used in conjunction with the term “comprising” in the claims and/or the specification may mean “one”, but it is also consistent with the meaning of “one or more”, “at least one”, and “one or more than one”. Similarly, the word “another” may mean at least a second or more.
As used in this specification and claim(s), the words “comprising” (and any form of comprising, such as “comprise” and “comprises”), “having” (and any form of having, such as “have” and “has”), “including” (and any form of including, such as “include” and “includes”) or “containing” (and any form of containing, such as “contain” and “contains”), are inclusive or open-ended and do not exclude additional, unrecited elements or process operations.
Other objects, advantages and features of the present disclosure will become more apparent upon reading of the following non-restrictive description of illustrative embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The present disclosure uses Delta-Sigma modulators (DSMs). As is generally known to those skilled in the art, these modulators generate a digital flow stream representing the baseband or the low-IF signal to be transmitted. The digital flow stream may, without limitation, be in the form of a binary stream, a multiple binary stream, a multi-level stream, of a stream having two or more bits per symbol. Generally stated, the present disclosure proposes the implementation of an up-sampler and modulator block that follows the DSMs to generate the RF equivalent of the baseband signal to be transmitted. The RF signal is also a higher frequency bit stream signal. As will be apparent from the following disclosure, the up-sampler and modulator block is simple to implement and contains only one or a few multiplexers implemented in high speed logic technology. Only the multiplexer works at the RF frequency.
Consequently, the proposed technology reduces the constraints on the speed of the DSMs allowing a possible increase in their order and consequently an improvement in the signal quality.
Generally stated, the present disclosure concerns the implementation of a digital transmitter for wireless or wired communication networks such as, for example, terrestrial wireless communication, satellite communication, data networks and audio and video wireless and wired broadcasting. The digital transmitter has many advantages compared to the traditional analog transmitter. As non-limiting examples, the digital transmitter results in better signal quality, it is easy to be configured to comply with different standards without duplicating the hardware, it may also increase the transmitter over all power efficiency by reducing the energy consumption of the power amplifier and the analog components.
In both cases, the input signal to the digital transmitter 1 is an envelope or an envelope and phase modulated signal. The input signal can be analog or digital, real or complex envelope, and baseband or modulated around an IF frequency. The digital transmitter 1 transforms the envelope varying signal into a high speed digital stream signal 4 representing the signal up-converted to the RF frequencies. Due to the signal transformation from envelope varying to digital stream, quantization noise is present in the signal spectrum adjacent to signal band. In addition, signal 4 contains harmonics with power level less than the signal power level around the fundamental.
In the first scenario of
In the second scenario of
The scenarios of
Turning now to
The digital transmitter 1 includes an input 10, first and second DSMs 11 and 12, an up-sampler and modulator 13 and a clock generator 30.
It is to be noted that the clock generator 30 could be separate from the other elements of the digital transmitter 1.
Each of the I and Q signal components may be baseband or translated around an IF frequency. They may be analog or digital. The first and second DSMs 11 and 12 transform the envelope varying signals I and Q into complementary digital stream pairs 21, 22 and 23, 24 that may include multiple complementary binary stream pairs. DSMs 11 and 12 operate at low clock frequencies compared to the RF carrier frequency. The frequency of operation of the DSMs 11 and 12 is independent from the carrier frequency and depends only on the signal bandwidth and specification. The architecture of DSMs 11 and 12 can be the same for all types of signals and will be discussed hereinbelow with reference to
The complementary digital stream pair 21, 22 is the complementary digital stream pair corresponding to I component of the input signal and the complementary digital stream pair 23, 24 is the complementary digital stream pair corresponding to Q component of the input signal. The up-sampler and modulator block 13 processes these two pairs of signals to provide the RF pulse-shaped digital stream signal 4 as the output of the digital transmitter 1. The RF pulse-shaped digital stream signal 4 may comprise multiple binary stream output signals. The up-sampler and modulator 13 operates at higher frequency than the DSMs 11 and 12. Indeed, contrary to the DSMs 11 and 12, the frequency of operation of the up-sampler and modulator 13 depends mainly on the carrier frequency of the signal. The frequency of operation of the up-sampler and modulator 13 is related to the carrier frequency according to the following formulae:
where f33 is the frequency of clock 33; f34 is the frequency of clock 34; fc is the desired RF carrier frequency; fb is the IF carrier frequency of the signals I and Q at the input of the DSMs 11 and 12 (fb=0 if I and Q are baseband signals; and N is the number of the harmonic of the signal 4 considered as useful signal.
Another combination having three 4:1 multiplexers mounted in a configuration as shown on
In various embodiments of the up-sampler and modulator block 13 of
The illustrative embodiments of
Turning now to
where f133 is the frequency of clock 133; fc is the desired RF carrier frequency; fb′ is the IF carrier frequency of the input signal of the DSM 111 (fb′=0 if this signal is a baseband signal); and N is the number of the harmonic of the signal 4 considered as useful signal.
In the illustrative embodiment of
It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that other types of delta-sigma modulators, such as, for example band pass or a different topology of low pass, can be used in the illustrative embodiments presented in
Wireless data network standards: IEEE802.11a, IEEE802.11b, IEEE802.11g, HiperLAN I, HiperLAN II, WiMAX;
Wireless Communication standards: UMTS, GSM, GPRS, EDGE;
Satellite Communications;
Satellite broadcasting applications: GPS, satellite radio, DVB; and
Custom signal waveforms for specific purpose applications such as military applications. The signal modulation can be BPSK, QPSK, QAM, PSK, FSK, GMSK. These signals can be combined with any channel division multiplex techniques and/or any multiple access technique such as FDMA, TDMA, CDMA, OFDM, WCDMA.
The EDGE signal of
In the illustrative case of the measurement results given in
The illustrative embodiments described hereinabove are easily configured for a given standard and are suitable for multi-standard applications since they offers a low cost, low complexity and better performance solution. The modulation and signal types, the bandwidth and the carrier frequency presented in these measurements are only examples to give an idea about the performances of the technology. Of course, the capability of the illustrative embodiments is not limited to such signal and modulation types and bandwidths.
It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the illustrative embodiments of the digital transmitters described hereinabove may be arranged and constructed in discrete, semi-discrete, surface mount, multi-chip, or monolithic technology for utilization in one of the mobile station and base station for wireless communication and in one user terminal and server application for wired or wireless networks.
The illustrative embodiments described herein also make possible the generation of signals around RF frequency in the range of few Giga Hertz (GHz). As mentioned hereinabove, changing the frequency is easy to achieve by only changing the clock frequency and generally does not require a considerable change in the transmitter architecture.
As is easily understood by one skilled in the art, the proposed illustrative embodiments are easy to implement and may require only one signal clock. When this is the case, there is no need to synchronize two different clock signals and/or to adjust the gain and phase of the signal at different stages of the implemented structure. This reduces the cost of the implementation in terms of resources and energy consumption and ensures good signal quality. Consequently, the risks of algorithm divergence or bad adjustment performances are minimized.
For example, the digital transmitter 1 of
The digital transmitter 100 of
It is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited in its application to the details of construction and parts illustrated in the accompanying drawings and described hereinabove. The disclosure is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced in various ways. It is also to be understood that the phraseology or terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and not limitation. Hence, although the present disclosure has been described hereinabove by way of illustrative embodiments thereof, it can be modified, without departing from the spirit, scope and nature of the subject disclosure as defined in the appended claims.
The following references are incorporated by reference herein.
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20140211886 A1 | Jul 2014 | US |
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60996140 | Nov 2007 | US |
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Child | 14227236 | US |