This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-043653 filed on Mar. 7, 2016, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a radio transmitter in the field of digital radio communication.
Background Art
As personal digital appliances, such as personal computers and smartphones (hereinafter abbreviated as PCs), become widespread, the occasion to connect input/output devices such as a mouse and a head set to PCs using wireless standards such as the Bluetooth is increasing. Since the input/output devices are battery-driven devices, a power-efficient switching system is preferably used as the power supply.
The VCC power supply of the power amplifier 10 supplies power from a switching power supply 15 through the LPF 4. In general, since the power consumption of the power amplifier 10 is high, the switching power supply 15 and the power amplifier 10 are often wired to each other independently to avoid the influence on the other circuit blocks. Though not illustrated here, power is supplied to the circuit blocks other than the power amplifier 10 by wiring different from power wiring 16 to the power amplifier 10.
In the case of using the typical step-down switching power supply 15 as the VCC power supply of the power amplifier 10, some switching frequencies of harmonics in the switching power supply may be converted into a carrier-frequency band of the digital radio transmitter, resulting in unwanted emissions that exceed the level of leakage power defined in the wireless standard.
This spectrum illustrates an example of hopping to the highest frequency in radio facilities for identifying mobile objects in a band of 2.4 GHz for specified low-power radio stations using a frequency hopping system, where a main spectral component 21 of transmit data exists at the center, and unwanted emissions 22 of AC components of the VCC power supply resulting from the switching frequency exist both ends thereof. The center frequency is 2480 MHz, and as illustrated in
[Patent Document 1] Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2003-133972
When the conventional switching power supply is used as-is for the VCC power supply of the power amplifier, there is a problem that big unwanted emissions appear in the transmission wave spectrum and hence it cannot meet the wireless standard. As a countermeasure for the problem, it is necessary to add an expensive filter onto the power-supply line.
In order to solve the conventional problem, a digital radio transmitter of the present invention is configured as follows:
The digital radio transmitter includes: a switching power supply that determines a switching frequency by a synchronization signal of an oscillator; a data readout/transfer circuit that determines a transfer timing frequency of baseband data based on the synchronization signal of the oscillator; and a power amplifier using, as a VCC power source, voltage output from the switching power supply.
Alternatively, another configuration is such that a frequency converter/adder is provided to add, to the input side of the power amplifier, components whose phase is opposite to the time waveforms of unwanted emissions included in transmission waves.
According to the digital radio transmitter of the present invention, unwanted emissions of transmission waves can be reduced without enhancing a power supply filter or a transmission filter. Further, the digital radio transmitter can be made to conform to a regal standard therefor by setting a dividing ratio or adjusting the phase shift amount without any design change.
A first embodiment of the present invention will be described below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The data readout/transfer circuit 5 reads out data at the rising or falling timing of the frequency reference clock as output of the oscillator 1, and transfers the read data to a downstream first-order modulator 6. The first-order modulator 6 assumes digital baseband modulation such as ASK, PSK, or FSK. The data readout/transfer may be performed at the rising or falling timing of a clock obtained by dividing the frequency reference clock, rather than that performed in the cycle of the frequency reference clock as the output of the oscillator 1. Since data processing such as interleaving and encoding, for which the data are not required to have a synchronization relationship to the frequency reference clock as the output of the oscillator 1, is not essential, the description thereof will be omitted. The output of the first-order modulator 6 is input to a frequency converter 9 via a DAC (DA converter) 7 and an LPF (lowpass filter) 8. At the frequency converter 9, second-order modulation such as frequency spread or frequency hopping is performed. Even when the frequency converter 9 is a simple up-converter or in a system for performing conversion processing on plural IFs (intermediate frequencies), the essence of the present invention does not change.
In the meantime, the oscillator 1 may not be necessarily used as the clock source for a local signal required for frequency conversion. In other words, the carrier of the transmission waves is not necessarily synchronized with the phase of the data. The phase of the baseband data signal has only to be aligned with the output of the oscillator 1. The output of the frequency converter 9 is input to the power amplifier 10 to amplify the transmission waves up to a level of power necessary for transmission. The output of the power amplifier 10 is output as transmission waves to an antenna element or the like via a BPF (bandpass filter) 11.
As described above, a data transfer system from the data readout/transfer circuit 5 to the frequency converter 9 is synchronized with a power supply system from the oscillator 1 to the LPF 4. Further, the cycles of both systems are in an integer ratio. Although the number of divisions of the frequency divider 2 may be predetermined, it is desired that the dividing ratio should be variable so that the transmission waves obtained can be regulated while monitoring the transmission waves.
Here, the frequency of the synchronization signal can be changed by changing the dividing ratio of the frequency divider 2 in
This spectrum illustrates an example of hopping to the highest frequency in radio facilities for identifying mobile objects in a band of 2.4 GHz for specified low-power radio stations using a frequency hopping system, where a main spectral component 21 of transmit data exists at the center, and unwanted emissions 22 of AC components of the VCC power supply resulting from the switching frequency exist both ends thereof. The center frequency is 2480 MHz, and an allowable antennal power 23 is 3 mW at frequencies of 2483.5 MHz or less, or 25 μW at frequencies exceeding 2483.5 MHz.
If the dividing ratio of the frequency divider 2 is doubled to set the frequency of the synchronization signal to 1.5 MHz, since low-order unwanted emissions relatively high in intensity among the unwanted emissions 22 as in
This is a result of taking measures without changing the LPF 4 (power supply filter, ripple filter) illustrated in
Further, the digital radio transmitter of the embodiment features that the frequency reference clock of the data readout/transfer circuit 5 is synchronized with the switching frequency of the switching power supply 3. Specifically, the timing when the baseband data signal is changed is synchronized with the AC components resulting from the switching frequency included in the VCC power source of the power amplifier 10. Therefore, cyclical changes in the intensity of the transmission wave spectrum including unwanted emissions are suppressed and stabilized. In other words, random noise caused by the VCC power source becomes coherent noise synchronized with the VCC power source. This makes clear the countermeasure against noise and the confirmation of the effect of the countermeasure.
At the frequency converter/adder 14, the baseband data signal input to the frequency converter 9 is regulated upstream of the frequency converter 9. Specifically, a synchronization signal, whose phase shift amount and amplitude are so adjusted that unwanted emissions generated by the AC components of the VCC power source can be canceled at the power amplifier 10, is added to the baseband data signal.
According to this configuration, a high-frequency output spectrum corresponding to the switching frequency of the switching power supply 3 (=the frequency of the synchronization signal) can be obtained as illustrated in
According to this configuration, most-influential, low-order unwanted emissions can be suppressed. In other words, transmission waves that cannot comply with a legal standard due to the unwanted emissions 22 resulting from the synchronization signal as illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2016-043653 | Mar 2016 | JP | national |