The present invention relates generally to wireless communication systems and methods, and more specifically to DC offset cancellation for a wireless receiver.
Wireless network technology conveniently allows a mobile user to wirelessly connect to a wired network, such as an enterprise's local area network (LAN). Heterodyne receivers and direct downconversion receivers are generally used to receive wireless transmissions. In a heterodyne receiver, a radio frequency (RF) signal is mixed with a signal from a local oscillator to produce and intermediate frequency (IF) signal. Through various IF stages with mixers, oscillators, and filters, the IF signal eventually is downconverted to a baseband signal for further processing.
Direct downconversion receivers (DCRs) directly downconvert a received RF signal to a baseband signal without additional signal processing at various IF stages. DCRs have a local oscillator operating at the carrier frequency used to downconvert signals to baseband, resulting in a simpler architecture. The downconverted signal is amplified by a gain to achieve optimal signal strength before presentation to a digital detector or demodulator for further processing.
Processing of received signals may be negatively impacted by DC offset. DC offset may occur due to, for example, current leakage from a receiver's local oscillator (LO), signal reflections, temperature changes, and other causes.
An AC-coupled high pass filter can provide a straightforward approach to correct DC offset, with the filter removing low frequency and DC signal components. Such high pass filters are more effective in removing effective DC offset when the corner frequency of the filter is closer to the frequencies carrying information. Unfortunately, filters with high corner frequencies are also more likely to attenuate signals at the information carrying frequencies. Accordingly, some have proposed use of a high pass filter with a corner frequency switchable from a first higher frequency used during initial reception to a second lower frequency during reception of other portions of a signal. Use of such filters, however, may result in a substantially instantaneous change, or distortion, in perceived signal strength and DC offset by downstream processing components.
The invention provides methods and systems that utilize AC-coupled filtering to reduce DC offset, with aspects dynamically correcting instantaneous DC offset generated from the AC-coupled filtering. In one aspect of the invention, the invention comprises a method, using an AC-coupled filter, of reducing DC offset in a downconverted signal in a wireless receiver receiving a signal including a preamble, the method comprising changing the corner frequency of the AC-coupled filter a plurality of times during reception of the preamble.
In another aspect of the invention, the invention comprises a receiver including a DC offset correction system, comprising a mixer downconverting a received signal to form a downconverted signal; a first AC-coupled high pass filter having an input in at least one-way data communication with the mixer, the first AC-coupled high pass filter having a switchable corner frequency dependent on a frame state of a received signal; and a plurality of second AC-coupled high pass filters coupled to an output of the first AC-coupled high pass filter, each of the plurality of second AC-coupled high pass filters having a switchable corner frequency dependent on the frame state of the received signal.
In another aspect of the invention, the invention comprises a method for correcting DC offset in a wireless receiver, the method comprising high pass filtering a downconverted signal to substantially reduce signal components below a first frequency during a first time period; high pass filtering the downconverted signal to substantially reduce signal components below a second frequency during a second time period; and high pass filtering the downconverted signal to substantially reduce signal components below a third frequency during a third time period.
These and other aspects of the invention are more fully appreciated in view of this disclosure including the associated figures.
In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different drawings.
In the receiver, an RF antenna 10 receives an analog signal stream. The received signal stream is provided to a mixer 12. The mixer 12 mixes a local oscillator (LO) signal with the received signal. The LO signal is provided by a local oscillator (not shown). The LO signal is at the received RF signal's center frequency, so the mixer 12 downconverts the RF signal into a baseband signal. Very often, the received signal is in quadrature, and two mixers are used to generate I-channel and Q-channel signals. In other embodiments the mixer downconverts the signal to an IF signal.
An amplifier 14 receives the downconverted signal and provides an amplified downconverted signal. In some embodiments, the amplifier 14 is a variable gain amplifier, with the magnitude of the gain determined, for example, by an automatic gain control circuit.
The amplified downconverted signal is passed through a N-corner switchable high pass filter 16. The N-corner switchable high pass filter includes N, with N more than two, corner frequencies. In some embodiments, in operation the corner frequency is successively lowered during reception of a preamble field of a data stream. After filtering by the N-corner switchable high pass filter the filtered amplified downconverted signal is provided to an analog to digital converter (ADC) 18. In some embodiments, such as where the signal received by the filter is an IF signal, further downconversion may first be performed.
The ADC converts the analog baseband signal to a digital signal, and forwards the digital signal to a digital baseband processor 20. The digital baseband processor performs additional processing, such as demapping, framing, and other processing.
Each high pass filter includes a capacitor and a first resistor RI connected in series, with the resistor RI coupled to ground and the output of the filter taken between the capacitor and the resistor. A second resistor R2 is coupled in parallel to the resistor RI by a switch.
Each high pass filter is therefore a high pass RC filter, with a corner frequency inversely dependent on the capacitance C and the resistance R. When the switch is closed the resistance is
When the switch is open the resistance is RI, which will generally be greater than
As the corner frequency inversely depends on the resistance, the higher effective resistance when the switch is open reduces the corner frequency of the filter.
Taking the high pass filter HPF1 as an example, HPF1 includes a capacitor 530 and a resistor RI 540 connected in series. A further resistor R2550 is coupled in parallel to the resistor 540 by a switch 560. The high pass filter HPF1 has a higher corner frequency when the switch 560 is closed. The high pass filter HPF1 has a lower corner frequency when the switch 560 is open. The other high pass filters HPF2, . . . , HPFN, are configured and operate in the same manner.
In operation, the switches of the HPF1, HPF2, . . . , HPFN are initially closed and then sequentially opened over a course of one period T of a received signal. For example, for HPF1, the switch is open at t0, the switch for HPF2 is open at t1, and the switch for HPFN is open at tN-I where t0<t1< . . . <tN-1. More particularly, in some embodiments switches are open at N equally spaced sampling points, such that t1-t0=t2-t1, etc.
In an exemplary embodiment the filter of, for example,
It is believed that a method of operation of sequentially opening the switches of the filter at N equally spaced sampling points within a preamble field reduces instantaneous DC offset caused by switching corner frequencies. For an 802.11g signal, the preamble sequence of the signal may be represented as
. When sampled by N equally spaced sampled points, ω=2π/T and t=nT/N. Substituting these values for ω and t provides
Similarly, for even m and N constrained to 2 km, k any integer,
For 802.11g implementations, M=2, 4, 6. The smallest common denominator for 2M=4, 8, 12, is 24. Thus, for 24 sampling points the RMS error reduction due to switching corner frequencies is 100%. Similarly, for 2 sampling points 20 the RMS error reduction is 50%, for 4 sampling points the RMS error reduction is 66%, and for 8 samplings the RMS error reduction is 83%. Although N=24 provides an optimal error reduction rate of 100% I it is believed that N=4, with an error reduction of 66%, provides an acceptable rate of error reduction.
Accordingly, in various embodiments a high pass filtering system is used in a receiver. The filtering system has a plurality of corner frequencies, with the number of corner frequencies a multiple of the number of fundamental frequencies of a sampled signal. Each corner frequency is assigned a sampling point within a period of at least one of the frequencies.
The filter of
As illustrated in
The second resistance is provided by a resistive element 424. In one embodiment, the resistive element 424 is a resistor. In some embodiments, the resistive element 424 is a transistor or a series of transistors set to operate in their linear range. A switch 426 allows current to flow through the resistive element 424. In one embodiment, the switch 426 is an NMOS transistor, as illustrated in
The output of the last buffer in the series is provided to four parallel switchable high pass filters 760, 770, 780,790. The output of each of the parallel switchable high pass filters is provided to a summer 795. The switchable high pass filters may be, for example, the filters illustrated in
The corner frequency is lowered for the series of filters at a first time, t0, as illustrated in
The corner frequency of the filters in parallel is lowered sequentially for the filters 76, 770, 780, and 790 at times t1, t2, t3, and t4, respectively. Preferably times t1, t2, t3 and t4 are within one fundamental period of a received signal.
Referring also to
Variations/modifications, and other implementations of what is described herein will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention as claimed. Although the invention has been described with respect to certain embodiments, it should be recognized that the invention includes the claims and their equivalents supported by this disclosure.
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/850,774, filed on May 21, 2004, the contents of which are incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10850774 | May 2004 | US |
Child | 13461981 | US |