1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a predistorter for linearizing a power amplifier for a radio communication transmitter and a predistortion method therefor.
2. Description of the Related Art
Microwave power amplifiers used in base stations or terminals of cellular phone systems require high power efficiency for achieving lower power consumption and compactness. In general, the efficiency of a power amplifier increases as its operating point approaches the saturation output power, and thus, it is desirable that the power amplifier operates in a region close to the saturation output power. However, the power amplifier operating in the region close to the saturation power generates a high level of distortion component. In a base station or a terminal, the power amplifier has to achieve a predetermined attenuation level of a distortion component outside the transmitted signal bandwidth (a predetermined adjacent channel power ratio, for example). Therefore, in order to operate the power amplifier in the region close to the saturation power, the distortion component has to be reduced. In order to reduce the distortion component, researches have been made on nonlinear distortion compensation methods for a distortion generated by the power amplifier.
As a distortion compensation method for a power amplifier, there has been proposed a predistortion method. A predistorter adds a signal to an input signal in advance to cancel a distortion component generated in a power amplifier. The added signal is equal in level and opposite in phase to the distortion component generated in the power amplifier. The amount of distortion compensation by the predistortion method depends on the amplitude and phase error between the added signal and the distortion component. For example, in the case where the input/output characteristics of the power amplifier is represented by a power series model, in order to achieve a distortion compensation of more than 30 dB, the amplitude error and phase error between the signal added by the predistorter and the distortion component generated in the power amplifier have to be suppressed within a range of ±0.28 dB and within a range of ±1.8 degrees, respectively.
The signal x(t) input to the predistorter 10 is divided by a divider 11 and the divided signals are provided to a linear transmission path PTH1 and a distortion generating path PTH2. In the distortion generating path PTH2, a third-order distortion generator 13 and a fifth-order distortion generator 15 generate a third-order distortion signal and a fifth-order distortion signal from the divided input signal x(t), respectively. The vectors of these signals are adjusted by vector adjusters 14 and 16, respectively, and summed up by an adder 18.
On the other hand, the input signal provided to the linear transmission path PTH1 is adjusted in delay time by a delay unit 12. The output from the linear transmission path PTH1 and the output from the distortion generating path PTH2 (that is, the output of the adder 18) are summed up by an adder 19 to produce a predistorted signal, which is output as an output r(t) of the predistorter 10. A distortion detector 34 demodulates the radio-frequency output signal from the power amplifier 33 into a base band signal or intermediate frequency band signal and detects a third-order distortion component and a fifth-order distortion component in the signal. The third-order distortion signal and the fifth-order distortion signal generated by the third-order distortion generator 13 and the fifth-order distortion generator 15 are adjusted by the vector adjusters 14 and 16, respectively, so as to cancel the third-order distortion component and the fifth-order distortion component generated in the power amplifier 33 under the control of a controller 35.
In
The (2k−1)th-order distortion generator in the (2k−1)th-order distortion generating path outputs a signal x(t)(2k−1), which is the input signal x(t) to the predistorter 10 raised to the (2k−1)th power (referred to as (2k−1)th order signal, hereinafter). The output signal of the (2k−1)th-order distortion generator has a bandwidth (2k−1) times wider than a bandwidth of the input signal x(t). As shown in
As an example, in the following, there will be described a case where the input signal x(t) to the predistorter 10 is composed of two carriers of equal amplitude. The output r(t) of the predistorter is expressed by the following equation (see the non-patent reference 1):
In this equation, the term a1x(t) for k=1 denotes the output signal of the linear transmission path PTH1, and a coefficient a1=α1 denotes a linear gain. The term for k≧2 denotes the output signal of the (2k−1)th order distortion generating path. The gain (α2k−1) and phase (φ2k−1) of the vector adjuster in the (2k−1)th-order distortion generating path are expressed by the following equation;
a2k−1=α2k−1ejφ
where x(t) denotes a complex envelope signal input to the predistorter, and r(t) denotes a complex envelope signal output from the predistorter. In the above, the equation is represented using the complex envelope signals. The RF-band signal rRF(t) to be actually transmitted is expressed by the following equation:
rRf(t)=Re{r(t)exp(j2πfct)} (2)
In this equation, Re{ } denotes the real part of a complex variable, and fc denotes the frequency of a carrier.
Supposing that the frequency interval between the two carriers of equal amplitude is 2f0, and the amplitude thereof is A, the complex envelope signal x(t) is expressed by the following equation:
x(t)=A cos(2πf0t) (3)
From the equation (1), the output signal of the linear transmission path of the predistorter is determined to be:
α1A cos(2πf0t)
and the output signal of the third-order distortion generating path of the predistorter is determined to be:
RF band signal components obtained by up-converting the input signal, the output signal of the linear transmission path and the output signal of the third-order distortion generating path with the carrier frequency fc are shown in
Up-converting this signal with the carrier frequency fc results in an RF band signal shown in
In the above, only the interference of the output signal of the third-order distortion generating path with the output signal of the linear transmission path has been described. In the case of the output signal of the fifth-order distortion generating path shown in
As can be seen from the above description, the conventional predistorter has a problem that the output signal of the (2k−1)th-order distortion generating path has components that interfere with the output signal of the linear transmission path and the output signals of lower-than-(2k−1)th-order distortion generating paths. While two carriers of equal amplitude have been described as an example, which have discrete spectrum, the same holds true for a signal with continuous spectrum. To solve the problem described above, in the (2k−1)th-order distortion generating path, it is necessary to reduce the components that interfere with the output signal of the linear transmission path and the output signals of lower-than-(2k−1)th-order distortion generating paths.
Non-patent reference: T. Nojima and T. Konno, “Cuber Predistortion Linearizer for Relay Equipment in 800 MHz Band Land Mobile Telephone System”, IEEE Trans. on Vehicular Tech., Vol., VT-34, No. 4, pp. 169-177, November, 1985.
An object of the present invention is to provide a predistorter that has a distortion generator capable of generating a (2k−1)th-order signal with a lower-than-(2k−1)th-order signal and a linear signal suppressed in a (2k−1)th-order distortion generating path, and a predistortion method therefor.
According to the present invention, there is provided a predistorter, comprising:
a divider that divides an input signal and supplies the divided input signals to a linear transmission path and a distortion generating path, respectively;
a (2k−1)th-order distortion generator that raises the divided input signal supplied to the distortion generating path to the (2k−1)th power to generate a distortion component, where k denotes an integer equal to or greater than 2;
a vector adjuster that adjusts the amplitude and phase of the output signal of the (2k−1)th-order distortion generator; and
a adder that sums the output signal of the vector adjuster and the output signal of the linear transmission path and outputs the predistorted input signal,
in which the (2k−1)th-order distortion generator has:
a (2k−1)th-order multiplier that raises the divided input signal supplied to the distortion generating path to the (2k−1)th power;
a (2J−1)th-order multiplier that raises the divided input signal to the (2J−1)th power, where J denotes an integer falling within a range of k>J≧1;
a first vector adjuster that adjusts the amplitude and phase of the output of the (2J−1)th-order multiplier; and
a first adder that sums up the output of the first vector adjuster and the output of the (2k−1)th-order multiplier and outputs the sum result as an output of the (2k−1)th-order distortion generator, and
the first vector adjuster adjusts the amplitude and phase so as to suppress a lower-than-(2k−1)th-order component in the output of the first adder.
According to the present invention, there is provided a predistortion method, comprising:
a step of dividing an input signal and supplying the divided input signals to a linear transmission path and a distortion generating path, respectively;
a step of generating a distortion component by raising the divided input signal supplied to the distortion generating path to the (2k−1)th power, where k denotes an integer equal to or greater than 2; and
a step of adjusting the amplitude and phase of the distortion component and adding the adjusted distortion component to the output signal of the linear transmission path, thereby predistorting the input signal,
wherein the step of generating a distortion component further comprises:
a sub-step of raising the divided input signal supplied to the distortion generating path to the (2k−1)th power;
a sub-step of raising the divided input signal to the (2J−1)th power, where J denotes an integer falling within a range of k>J≧1; and
a sub-step of suppressing a lower-than-(2k−1)th-order component in the result of the raising to the (2k−1)th power using the result of the raising to the (2J−1)th power, thereby generating the distortion component.
According to the present invention, since the lower-than-(2k−1)th-order components in the output of the (2k−1)th-order multiplier in the (2k−1)th-order distortion generator are suppressed, adjustments conducted by the vector adjusters of the predistorter are simplified.
(Principal)
According to prior art, supposing that i=(2k−1), an ith-order distortion generator in an ith-order distortion generating path performs the following calculation:
di(t)=|x(t)|2(k−1)x(t) (5)
where x(t) denotes a complex envelope signal input to the ith-order distortion generator, and di(t) denotes a complex envelope signal output from the ith-order distortion generator. According to the present invention, the ith-order distortion generator performs the following calculation:
where bi2m−1 denotes a real number. The second term in the right-hand side of the equation (6) represents a signal component of lower than ith order. According to the present invention, the signal components lower than ith order in the second term of the equation (6) are subtracted from the signal components lower than ith order in the first term, thereby suppressing the signal components lower than ith order.
For example, when the input signal is composed of two carriers of equal amplitude a third-order distortion generating path (i=3) will be described as follows. Substituting i=2k−1=3 into the equation (6) results in the following equation:
The second term in the right-hand side of the equation (7) represents a third-order distortion component, and the first and third terms represent first-order signal components. Thus, setting the value b31 in the equation (7) at 3A2/4 results in the following equation:
Thus, the signal components lower than ith order that interfere with the linear transmission path can be suppressed. An output signal of a third-order distortion generating path according to a conventional method and an output signal of a third-order distortion generating path according to the present invention are shown in
Similarly, as for a fifth-order distortion generating path when the input signal is composed of two carriers with equal amplitude, substituting i=2k−1=5 into the equation (6) results in the following equation:
In order that the third-order signal component and the first-order signal component in the equation (9) are made 0, the values b51 and b53 can be set so as to satisfy the following simultaneous equations:
The solutions of the simultaneous equations are as follows:
Substituting the equation (11) into the equation (9) results in the following equation.
Thus, a fifth-order distortion component d5(t) free from the first-order signal component and the third-order signal component, which interfere with the linear transmission path and the third-order distortion generating path, respectively, is obtained.
In the above, the third-order distortion generator and the fifth-order distortion generator have been described. In general, a component that interferes with the output of a lower-than-ith-order distortion generating path can be suppressed by optimally determining the values bi1, bi3, . . . , bij-2 for an ith-order distortion generator (i denotes an odd number equal to or greater than 3).
As shown in
A signal path including the third-order distortion generator 23 and the vector adjuster 14 constitutes a third-order distortion generating path, a signal path including the fifth-order distortion generator 25 and the vector adjuster 16 constitutes a fifth-order distortion generating path, and a signal path including the seventh-order distortion generator 27 and the vector adjuster 17 constitutes a seventh-order distortion generating path. In
In the embodiment shown in
The first-order multiplier 23B1 is shown in this drawing only for illustrating the concept of the first-order component of the input signal x(t) represented by the term −b31x(t) or −b31A cos(2πf0t) in the equation (7). Thus, in actual, the divided input signal is simply directly passed to the vector adjuster 23C1, and the first-order multiplier 23B1 for carrying out the raising to the first power is not provided as an actual entity. The first-order component is adjusted in phase and amplitude by the vector adjuster 23C1 and then passed to the adder 23D. The setting of the vector adjuster 23C1 is conducted by the setting unit 23E in such a manner that b31=(3/4)A2 in the equation (7) as described above. The value b31 can be immediately determined once the amplitude A of the input signal is given.
The third-order multiplier 23B2 raises the divided input signal x(t) to the third power, and the output signal thereof contains a first-order component and a third-order component corresponding to the first term (3/4)A3 cos(2πf0t) and the second term (1/4)A3 cos(3×2πf0t) in the right-hand side of the equation (7), respectively. The output of the third-order multiplier 23B2 and the output of the vector adjuster 23C1 are summed up by the adder 23D. In this way, the first-order component is removed, and only the third-order distortion component is ideally output.
As described above, in the third-order distortion generator 23 according to the first embodiment, the input signal is raised to the third power, and the vector adjuster 23C1 determines the amplitude and phase of the first-order component of the input signal so as to eliminate the first-order component. Therefore, in the embodiment shown in
As with the third-order distortion generator 23 described above, the first-order multiplier 25B1 is to pass the divided signal directly to the vector adjuster 25C1 and can be omitted. The output of the vector adjuster 25C1 corresponds to the term described below in the equation (9).
−b51x(t)=−b51A cos(2πf0t) (13)
The third-order multiplier 25B2 raises the divided input signal to the third power and produces a signal containing first-order and third-order components expressed by the term
in the equation (9). The fifth-order multiplier 25B3 raises the input signal to the fifth power and produces a signal containing first-order, third-order and fifth-order components shown in the second line of the equation (9).
The setting unit 25E determines the values b51 and b53 according to the equation (11). Then, the setting unit 25E sets the amplitude and phase of the vector adjuster 25C1 to the value b51 in order to provide the signal expressed by the equation (13). The setting unit 25E sets the amplitude and phase of the vector adjuster 25C2 to the value b53 to provide the signal expressed by the equation (14). Once the adder 25D sums up the outputs of the vector adjusters 25C1 and 25C2 and the output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B3, the equation (10) is satisfied. Thus, the first-order component and the third-order component in the equation (9) are made 0. Thus only the fifth-order distortion component is output from the adder 25D.
As described above, also in the fifth-order distortion generator 25, the fifth-order distortion component can be generated by eliminating the third-order component and the first-order component from the input signal raised to the fifth power. Therefore, the adjustment of the amplitude and phase of the output signal of the fifth-order distortion generator 25 by the vector adjuster 16 in the predistorter 20 shown in
The output signal of the seventh-order multiplier 27B4 contains the first-order signal component, the third-order signal component, the fifth-order signal component and the seventh-order signal component. The output signal of the seventh-order distortion generator 27 shown in
In short, the predistorter shown in
In
In summary, it is essential only that a (2k−1)th-order distortion generator comprises at least a (2k−1)th-order multiplier that raises the divided signal to the (2k−1)th power, a (2J−1)th-order multiplier that raises the divided signal to the (2J−1)-th power (J denotes an integer falling within a range of k>J≧1), a vector adjuster that adjusts the amplitude and phase of the output of the (2J−1)th-order multiplier, and an adder that sums the output of the (2k−1)th-order multiplier and the output of the vector adjuster. However, as can be seen from the description with reference to
The first embodiment has been described supposing that the input signal is composed of two carriers of equal amplitude. However, in the case where the input signal is a signal with a continuous spectrum, the setting unit 23E shown in
Furthermore, the predistorter according to the first embodiment can be implemented by a digital signal processing.
Specifically, for the output of a seventh-order multiplier 27B, there are a vector adjuster 27C3 and an adder 27D3 that adds the output of a fifth-order multiplier 25B to the output of the seventh-order multiplier 27B after adjusting the vector of the output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B, a vector adjuster 27C2 and an adder 27D2 that adds the output of a third-order multiplier 23B to the output of the seventh-order multiplier 27B after adjusting the vector of the output of the third-order multiplier 23B, and a vector adjuster 27C1 and an adder 27D1 that adds the output of a first-order multiplier 21B to the output of the seventh-order multiplier 27B after adjusting the vector of the output of the first-order multiplier 21B. Furthermore, for the output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B, there are a vector adjuster 25C2 and an adder 25D2 that adds the output of the third-order multiplier 23B to the output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B after adjusting the vector of the output of the third-order multiplier 23B, and a vector adjuster 25C1 and an adder 25D1 that adds the output of the first-order multiplier 21B to the output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B after adjusting the vector of the output of the first-order multiplier 21B. Furthermore, for the output of the third-order multiplier 23B, there are a vector adjuster 23C1 and an adder 23D1 that adds the output of the first-order multiplier 21B to the output of the third-order multiplier 23B after adjusting the vector of the output of the first-order multiplier 21B. In addition, there are a setting unit 27E that controls the vector adjusters 27C1, 27C2 an 27C3, a setting unit 25E that controls the vector adjusters 25C1 and 25C2, and a setting unit 23E that controls the vector adjuster 23C1.
The output of the first-order multiplier 21B is passed to an adder 19 via a delay unit 12. The output of the third-order multiplier 23B is passed to an adder 18 via the adder 23D1 and a vector adjuster 14. The output of the fifth-order multiplier 25B is passed to the adder 18 via the adders 25D2 and 25D1 and a vector adjuster 16. The output of the seventh-order multiplier 27B is passed to the adder 18 via the adders 27D3, 27D2 and 27D1 and a vector adjuster 17. The sum result of the adder 18 is passed to the adder 19 as the output of a distortion generating path PTH2, and the adder 19 sums the output of the distortion generating path PTH2 and the output of a linear transmission path PTH1 and outputs the sum result in the form of a signal r(t) predistorted by the predistorter 20.
The combination of a distributor 11, the first-order multiplier 21B, the third-order multiplier 23B, the fifth-order multiplier 25B, the seventh-order multiplier 27B, the vector adjusters 27C1, 27C2 and 27C3, the adders 27D1, 27D2 and 27D3 and the setting unit 27E corresponds to the seventh-order distortion generator 27 shown in
The predistorter according to the second embodiment can be implemented by a digital signal processing.
The present invention can be applied to a power amplifier for a radio communication transmitter.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-312620 | Oct 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6108385 | Worley, III | Aug 2000 | A |
7170342 | Suzuki et al. | Jan 2007 | B2 |
7366252 | Cova et al. | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7551686 | Coons et al. | Jun 2009 | B1 |
20040189378 | Suzuki et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20050141637 | Domokos | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050157814 | Cova et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20060061418 | Matsuura et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 463 198 | Sep 2004 | EP |
2 335 813 | Sep 1999 | GB |
11-289227 | Oct 1999 | JP |
2002-506307 | Feb 2002 | JP |
2003-229727 | Aug 2003 | JP |
2004-112151 | Apr 2004 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060088124 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |