The present invention relates to power amplifiers for wireless communications systems, and more particularly relates to predistortion methods for linearizing the output of such power amplifiers.
Reliable mobile, or wireless, communication systems rely on clean and consistent transmission from base-stations under widely and rapidly changing conditions. Therefore, the radio frequency (RF) power amplifiers (PA) found in the base stations of such wireless communication systems have typically been the most critical and costly component. This is derived from the stringent requirements on spectrum and power efficiency of these transmitters, even though they are driven by wideband and highly varying signals. To meet the demanding specifications for these amplifiers, a number of linearization techniques have been implemented. One such linearization technique, called digital baseband predistortion, has been successfully implemented using digital signal processors. However, digital baseband predistortion has a disadvantage in that it requires the entire transmit path to be several times wider than the signal bandwidth due to the predistorted input. Therefore, this wideband transmit path demands a fast digital-to-analog converter (DAC) and wideband filters. Moreover, as the bandwidth of the input signal gets wider, the bandwidth requirement of the baseband predistortion system gets much wider. In contrast, the main advantage of RF envelope digital predistortion is that the transmit path doesn't need to be wideband. But RF envelope digital predistortion has the disadvantage that it requires additional components, such as an envelope detector and large RF delay lines, that create inaccuracy and loss, as well as increased cost and complexity. There has therefore been a need for a predistortion system that provides the desired precision without unnecessary cost and complexity.
The present invention comprises a new architecture for a predistortion system that substantially removes the wideband requirements and potential distortions caused by the additional components typically required in the prior art. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed architecture achieves a reduction of adjacent channel power ratio (ACPR) comparable to conventional baseband predistortion. The proposed architecture is suitable for the applications which require wide bandwidth (i.e., >100 MHz).
(a) represents the output of a power amplifier without predistortion;
(b) represents the output of a power amplifier with one sample advanced;
(c) represents the output of a power amplifier with one sample delayed;
(d) represents the output of a power amplifier with coarse delay match.
A block diagram of an embodiment of the proposed system is shown in
More particularly, an input signal is converted into I and Q components 120 and 125 in a conventional manner (and therefore not shown). The I and Q components are provided to a digital delay 130, and also provided to the magnitude calculation block 110 as well as an adaptation algorithm block 135.
In an embodiment as shown in
In at least some embodiments, the LUT values are initially obtained via a calibration routine, whereby the output signal from the power amplifier is measured and the LUT coefficients are estimated so as to compensate for any nonlinear distortion created by the power amplifier. In such an embodiment, the LUT coefficients can be stored in the memory of either an FPGA or a DSP, and can be populated with a microprocessor or digital signal processor. In addition, the LUT coefficients can be updated by, as just one example, feeding the output of the power amplifier back to the baseband signal processor, where it is compared with the input signal, in response to which the lookup table value is updated. The feedback block shown in
Referring to
F
1
{z}=α
11+α12Z+α13Z2+ . . . +α1NZN−1
and
F
2
{z}=α
11+α12Z+α13Z2+ . . . +α1NZN−1
As noted above, the polynomial coefficients are updated in the same manner as the updates to the lookup table described in connection with
Referring still to
In some embodiments, the DAC 160 will preferably have at least twice bandwidth of the signal to be converted.
Delay mismatch: To see delay mismatch effects with respect to performance of the system, suppose the RF input, x(t), consists of two tones with a tone spacing (ω2−ω1). The predistortion function, F, with delay mismatch, τd, can be described as
F(t−τ)=a1+a3|Xe(t−τd)|2=a1+½a3+½a3 cos[(ω2−ω1)t+ω1τd] (1)
where Xe(t) is the envelope of the input signal, a's are the complex coefficients of the polynomials, and τd is the delay mismatch. It can be seen from (1) that the predistortion function requires the same bandwidth of the frequency spacing in order to compensate up to third order intermodulation distortions (IMD). The predistorted input RF signal, XPD(t), then can be expressed as
X
PD(t)=x(t) F(t−τd) (2)
After substituting (1) into (2), expanding, and arranging it, it can be simply formulated as
X
PD(t)=b1 S+b3 SU
where b's are complex coefficients and S, SU
Experimental Results: A single carrier wideband code division multiplexing access (WCDMA) signal with 10 dB peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) is used in the test bench shown in
Having fully described an embodiment of the invention and various alternatives, those skilled in the art will recognize, given the teachings herein, that numerous alternatives and equivalents exist which do not depart from the invention. It is therefore intended that the invention not be limited by the foregoing description, but only by the appended claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/481,389, filed on May 25, 2012, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/330,451, filed on Dec. 8, 2008, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/012,416, filed on Dec. 7, 2007, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61012416 | Dec 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13481389 | May 2012 | US |
Child | 13776163 | US | |
Parent | 12330451 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13481389 | US |