The present invention relates to detector circuits, e.g. for impedance measurement systems of mobile communication devices.
Impedance measurement systems can be used to determine the impedance of a signal path in a mobile communication device where the signal path's impedance depends on its external conditions. In other words: where the signal path has a variable load impedance.
In the case of mobile communication devices with an antenna, the variable load impedance can be due to the antenna's changing environment.
In order to optimize the transmission coefficient of Tx or Rx signals propagating in the signal path, the signal path's actual impedance must be known.
Conventional impedance measurement systems, e.g. known from patent publication U.S. Pat. No. 6,822,433, uses a phase detector and two additional RSSI-chains as level detectors to determine a variable load impedance.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an alternative detector circuit without the need for a level detector, e.g. an RSSI-chain.
Therefore, a detector circuit according to claim 1 is provided. Dependent claims provide preferred embodiments of the invention.
Features of the detector circuit shown hereinafter do not exclude each other. The phase detector can comprise each feature in combination with other features in order to provide an individually optimized detector circuit.
A detector circuit is provided that comprises a first signal input determined to receive a first signal S1, a second signal input determined to receive a second signal S2 having a phase difference a relative to the first signal S1 and a third signal input determined to receive a third signal S3 having a phase difference β relative to the first signal S1. The detector circuit further comprises a phase detector determined to derive the phase differences α and β. Further, the detector circuit comprises a calculation circuit determined to derive a ratio selected from |S1|/|S3|, |S3|/|S2|, and |S2|/|1| and the respective inverse ratios. Derivation of the ratio is achieved by evaluating the two phase differences α and β obtained from the phase detector. Further, the detector circuit comprises a signal output determined to provide the ratio.
Such a detector circuit may be used in an impedance measurement system for a signal path shown in
In one embodiment, the first signal S1, the second signal S2, and the third signal S3 are voltage or current signals.
Accordingly, in one embodiment of the detector circuit, the first signal S1 is the voltage V10. The second signal S2 is the voltage V20. The third signal S3 is the voltage V12. However, the above relations between S1, S2, and S3 on one hand and V10, V20, and V12 on the other hand are only examples. In particular it is possible that S1, S2, and S3 are chosen arbitrarily. In other words: From three input signals two arbitrarily chosen different phase differences are needed to determine the last phase difference and to obtain full information about impedances and impedance matching.
Further, it is clear that the situation shown in
It was found that the problem of deriving the unknown impedance Z can be reduced to determining the ratio V10/V12. V10 may be written as V10=|V10|exp(jωt). Then, V12 may be written as V12=|V12|exp((jωt)+φ), i.e. V10 and V12 are signals of the same frequency with a phase difference of φ between V10 and V12. Accordingly, the ratio V10/V12 can be written as V10/V12=|V10|/|V12|exp(jφ). The correlations between V10, V12, and V20 are visualized in a complex plane view in
The problem of deriving the ratio V10/V12 can, thus, be reduced to derive the ratio of the absolute values |V10|/|V12| and by measuring the phase difference φ.
The circuit known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,822,433 uses two RSSI-chains to obtain the ratio of the absolute values. A further phase detector is needed to obtain phase information.
The central idea of the present invention is based on the fact that knowing the values of phase differences φ and ψ intrinsically also comprise information about the ratio of the absolute values |V10|/|V12|. Generally: by knowing two phase differences between two sets of the three input signals S1, S2 and S3, one can calculate any ratio between two absolute levels from the set of S1, S2 and S3. One important aspect of the invention is that circuitry is provided that allows direct access to phase information by processing the three signals V10, V12, and V20.
Especially, the invention is based on the fact that the inventors have found a geometric correlation between signal levels and phase information on one hand and electric circuitry that allows to make use of this correlation on the other hand.
It was found that the following identity (sine rule):
|V10|/|V12|=sin(χ)/sin(ψ)=sin(ψ+φ)/sin(ψ)
allows to directly obtain the ratio of the absolute values of signals V10 and V12 as the three input signals can be interpreted according to
The phase detector of the detector circuit provides the phase differences φ and ψ. The third phase difference χ can either be measured as the phase difference between the second signal S2 and the third signal S3. However, it is possible to calculate the value for χ as φ+ψ+χ=180°. Further, the respective ratios of the complex numbers can be obtained also.
In one embodiment, the phase detector works in the analog domain or in the digital domain. If the phase detector works in the digital domain, then the detector circuit comprises an analog/digital-converter. The analog/digital-converter can digitalize the values of α and β. Calculation of the ratios and of the third phase difference χ, respectively, can be performed via conventional integrated circuits, e.g. of an ASIC (ASIC=Application-Specific Integrated Circuit).
In one embodiment, the calculation circuit works in the digital domain and the phase detector comprises an analog/digital-converter. Then, signals encoding phase difference information can be obtained via an analog circuit and digitalized via the analog/digital-converter. However, it is also possible that the phase detector itself works in the digital domain and comprises the analog/digital-converter at its signal input.
In one embodiment, the calculation circuit determines the three ratios: S1/S3, S3/S2, and S2/S1.
Each of the three ratios can be expressed as a ratio of the other two ratios or the respective inverse ratio. Thus, the respective measured third ratio can be utilized to improve the accuracy of the other two ratios by comparison with the to be expected third ratio.
In one embodiment, the calculation circuit determines the phase difference of the second signal S2 relative to the third signal S3. In other words: the calculation circuit determines the value for the third angle, χ. By summing all three phase differences, the correctness of the measured phase differences can easily be determined as the sum of the phase differences should equal 180°.
In one embodiment, the calculation circuit utilizes a lookup table. Via a lookup table, a digitalized value representing the phase difference can easily be converted into the direct digital representation of the angle's value.
In one embodiment, the detector circuit provides information about a positive ratio selected from: |S1|/|S3|, |S3|/|S2|, |S2|/|S1|. The detector circuit provides information about the phase difference α, β, and/or γ. It is possible that the detector circuit is an impedance detector.
The phase detector can be implemented using limiter amplifiers. Limiter amplifiers create square wave signals which can be processed by conventional phase detector circuits. The use of limiter amplifiers before the conventional phase detectors eliminate amplitude information and ensures that the phase detector circuits work properly. It is possible that a first phase detector circuit determines β while at the same time a second phase detector circuit determines α. However, it is possible that one and the same phase detector circuit provides β and α one after another. Then, a switching circuit can be utilized to provide the single phase detector circuit with different input signals. Only one absolute ratio and one angle is sufficient to provide a ratio Sx/Sy (x, y=1, 2, or 3) with which the impedance Z can be determined when the impedance Zsense is known.
However, measuring and determining alternative ratios and phase differences can be used to improve the accuracy of the detector circuit.
Examples of the detector circuit, its basic principles and ideas are shown in the schematic figures.
FIG. shows an embodiment of the detector circuit with the calculation circuit CC between the phase detector PD and an analog/digital-converter ADC,
Thus, only a phase detector PD and a calculation circuit CC are needed to provide a detector circuit for an impedance measurement system. No additional RSSI-chains providing direct level information are needed.
In the circuit shown in
The input signals S1, S2, S3 can arbitrarily be chosen from the available input signals, e.g. from the input signals a circuit as shown in
As a result of the inventors' findings, an alternative detector circuit is provided that makes the use of RSSI-chains or any other circuitry for level ratio detection dispensable.
The detector circuit is not limited to the embodiments described in the specification or shown in the figures. Detector circuits comprising further elements such as further phase detectors, calculation circuits, analog/digital-converters and further switches or impedance elements or combinations thereof are also comprised by the present invention.
The features shown above do not exclude each other. The detector circuit can comprise each feature in combination with other features to obtain an especially optimized detector circuit.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/050413 | 1/10/2013 | WO | 00 |