The invention relates to methods of, and apparatus for, controlling distortion counteracting equipment such as a predistorter.
In a case where signal handling equipment distorts a signal upon which it operates, it is known to use a lineariser to reduce distortion in the output signal of the equipment. It is known to perform linearisation adaptively by monitoring distortion or errors in the output signal and subsequently using information about these errors to adjust the linearisation.
An aim of the invention is to improve the manner in which distortion counteracting equipment, such as a predistorter, is controlled.
According to one aspect, the invention provides apparatus for controlling distortion counteracting equipment, said counteracting equipment operating to ameliorate distortion in an output signal produced by signal handling equipment in response to an input signal, the apparatus comprising sensing means for sensing the input and output signals and conditioning means for producing assay signals, namely an input envelope signal produced from the sensed input signal and a component correlation signal produced from the sensed input and output signals, said assay signals being for use in developing control signals for controlling the counteracting equipment.
The invention also consists in a method of controlling distortion counteracting equipment, said counteracting equipment operating to ameliorate distortion in an output signal produced by signal handling equipment in response to an input signal, the method comprising sensing the input and output signals and producing assay signals, namely an input envelope signal produced from the sensed input signal and a component correlation signal produced from the sensed input and output signals, said assay signals being for use in developing control signals for controlling the counteracting equipment.
Thus, the invention produces assay signals which can be used for controlling the counteracting equipment and which can be sampled arbitrarily without being constrained by the Nyquist criterion. This allows the assay signals to be sampled at any appropriate rate, permitting the use of low cost—low performance processors for manipulating the assay signals to control the counteracting equipment. This freedom from the sampling bandwidth constraints that would otherwise be imposed is particularly important where the input and output signals have a large bandwidth (e.g. where the input and output signals are wideband-CDMA signals). By using lower sampling rates, consumption of power and processing resources can be reduced in the signal processing hardware.
In a preferred embodiment, a second component correlation signal is derived from the sensed output signal and the three assay signals are used to develop control signals for the counteracting equipment.
The input envelope signal may be the square (or the modulus) of the sensed input signal's envelope and preferably, the input envelope signal is produced through summing the squares of orthogonal components of the sensed input signal. The component correlation signal may be produced through the difference of two products of component vectors of the sensed signals (i.e. the sensed input and output signals). For example, where the sensed signals are in IQ format, the products may be the product of the in-phase component of the sensed input signal and the quadrature phase component of the sensed output signal and the product of the quadrature phase component of the sensed input signal and the in-phase component of the sensed output signal. Alternatively, the component correlation signal may be produced through summing two products of component vectors of the sensed signals. For example, where the sensed signals are in IQ format, the products may be the product of the in-phase components of the sensed input and output signals and the product of the quadrature phase components of the sensed input and output signals. Where two component correlation signals are used, one component correlation signal may be formed by said summed products and the other component correlation signal may be formed by said differenced products. It should be noted that the products could be calculated using a different set of orthogonal vector axes for the components, i.e. a set of orthogonal axes other than the in- and quadrature-phase axes mentioned in the examples above.
In one embodiment, the relationship between the input envelope signal and a component correlation signal is assessed and departures of the relationship from its ideal form are used to produce control signals for making the counteracting equipment ameliorate the departure. In one embodiment, the departure constitutes a control signal for the counteracting equipment. For example, the ideal relationship between the component correlation signal and the input envelope signal can be a 1:1 correspondence, and departures from this relationship used to control a signal component (e.g. the departures are used to control the predistortion of a signal component of the input signal). Alternatively, the ideal relationship between the component correlation signal and the input envelope signal could, for example, be a 0:1 correspondence, and departures from this relationship used to control a signal component (e.g. the departures are used to control the predistortion of a component of the input signal).
Preferably, the sensed signals are time-aligned before the relationship is assessed for departures. Preferably, the sensed signals are phase-aligned to account for an intrinsic phase offset between the input and output signals before the relationship is assessed for departures from its ideal state. The time alignment can be achieved by adjusting a delay between the sensed signals. The phase alignment can be achieved by phase shifting one of the sensed signals relative to the other.
In a preferred embodiment, the signal handling equipment is an amplifier or amplifying arrangement, and the distortion counteracting equipment is for linearising the input-output characteristic of the amplification process. The lineariser may be, for example, a predistorter or a feed-forward arrangement.
The invention was described above in terms of methods for controlling distortion counteracting equipment, and the invention also extends to programmes for implementing such methods. Such programs may be stored in a suitable data store, e.g. a disk or a memory.
By way of example only, certain embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The amplifier 10 of
The structure of preprocessor 26 differs in that it comprises only a digital hilbert transform for converting the digitised IF version of the sensed amplifier input signal to quadrature format.
The complex signal space diagram of
With reference to
Before the assay signals (the input envelope signal and the I and Q component correlation signals) are used by the generator 30c to produce control signals for the predistorter, the amplifier input and output signals used in the multiplying processes 38, 40, 44, 46, 50 and 52 are brought into time alignment and are adjusted to remove the phase offset θint. The time alignment is achieved by adjusting the variable delay 28a in preprocessor 28 and the phase offset θint is eliminated by adjusting the phase of the sensed amplifier output signal in downconverter 18 using the phase adjust signal. The determination of the phase and delay adjustments will be described later. Note that in an alternative embodiment, the phase alignment may be implemented as a complex vector rotation of the I and Q component envelope signals.
The assay signals produced by the correlator 30a can be undersampled or arbitrarily sampled to build up a predominantly time-independent I/Q amplifier distortion characteristic at a rate that is convenient for the generator 30c, i.e. the assay signals are not subject to the Nyquist sampling criterion. The sampler 30b samples the assay signals simultaneously to produce a trio of samples. The sampler 30b produces trios of samples from the assay signals at a rate suited to the generator 30c. In an alternative embodiment the arbitrary sampler may operate on the inputs to the correlator so that a single multiplexed multiplier may be used in place of multipliers 38, 40, 44, 46, 50 and 52.
The generator 30c assesses the input envelope signal against each of the I component and Q component correlation signals and in each case determines whether the assessed signals depart from their ideal relationship (the departures indicating residual distortion in the amplifier output). In the ideal state (when the amplifier is linearised) the ratio of the input envelope signal to the I component correlation signal is 1:1 and the ratio of the input envelope signal to the Q component correlation signal is 1:0.
The departure of each of the ratios from its ideal value constitutes a control signal that is used to correct the predistorter. The departure of the ratio of the I component correlation signal to the input envelope signal from its ideal 1:1 value represents residual AM to AM distortion in the amplifier output and in this embodiment forms a control signal for adjusting the predistortion of the in-phase component of the input signal. The departure of the ratio of the input envelope signal to the Q component correlation signal from its ideal 1:0 value indicates the presence of residual AM to PM distortion in the amplifier output and forms a control signal for adjusting the predistortion of the quadrature-phase component of the input signal in order to suppress the residual AM to PM distortion. It is not strictly necessary to eliminate the phase offset θint, but if it is not eliminated then the ideal relationships for the assay signals will not be as stated above and the processing to produce control signals for the predistorter from the assay signals will be more complex.
As mentioned earlier, the sensed input and output signals are time aligned by adjusting the variable delay 28a. When these signals are time aligned, the amount of the variable delay 28a allows the measurement of the propagation delay through the amplifier. The fixed delay 34 is set to account for the fixed digital to analogue converter, analogue to digital converter and amplifier propagation delays of the system, plus an additional quantity of unit sample delays (the additional unit sample delays allow the relative delay between the sensed input and output signals to be adjusted both positively and negatively using only the variable delay 28a). Thus, if the values of the DAC and ADC delays and the fixed delay 34 are known, then the amplifier propagation delay can be calculated from the amount of the variable delay 28a.
It can be shown that the I/Q characteristics shown in
After the sensed input and output signals have been time aligned, the phase offset θint between the sensed input and output signals is calculated and a phase correction is applied to the sensed output signal using the phase adjust input of downconverter 18 (this is achieved, for example, by adjusting the phase of a local oscillator signal within the downconverter). The phase offset θint is calculated by the generator 30c as the four quadrant arctangent of the sum of recent I component correlation signal samples divided by the sum of corresponding I component correlation signal samples, with appropriate accounting for the quadrants defined by the signs of the sums. That is, the phase offset is calculated from:
A simple pair of I component and Q component correlation signal samples can be used instead of sums of samples but the value obtained for θint will be more prone to system noise. The samples used for the θint calculation can be obtained arbitrarily from the assay signals and the sampling could be limited so that values that are obtained only from the region of the amplifier power curve that is known to be linear.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0114798.2 | Jun 2001 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB02/02661 | 6/12/2002 | WO |