The present invention relates to electromagnetic pulse generation. More specifically, it relates to circuits, systems and methods of electromagnetic pulse generation.
The wireless device industry has recently seen unprecedented growth. With the growth of this industry, communication between wireless devices has become increasingly important. There are a number of different technologies for inter-device communications. Radio frequency (RF) technology has been the predominant technology for wireless device communications. Electro-optical devices have also been used in wireless communications. However, electro-optical technology suffers from low ranges and a strict need for line of sight. RF devices therefore provide significant advantages over electro-optical devices.
Conventional RF technology employs continuous sine waves that are transmitted with data embedded in the modulation of the sine waves' amplitude or frequency. For example, a conventional cellular phone must operate at a particular frequency band of a particular width in the total frequency spectrum. Specifically, in the United States, the Federal Communications Commission has allocated cellular phone communications in the 800 to 900 MHz band. Generally, cellular phone operators divide the allocated band into 25 MHz portions, with selected portions transmitting cellular phone signals, and other portions receiving cellular phone signals.
Another type of inter-device communication technology is ultra-wideband (UWB). UWB wireless technology is fundamentally different from conventional forms of RF technology. UWB employs a “carrier free” architecture, which generally does not require the use of high frequency carrier generation hardware; carrier modulation hardware; frequency and phase discrimination hardware or other devices employed in conventional frequency domain (i.e., RF) communication systems.
A number of architectures for use of ultra-wideband communications have been suggested. In one approach, the frequency spectrum allocated to UWB communications devices is partitioned into discrete bands. Modulation techniques and wireless channelization schemes can then be designed around a UWB device operating within one or more of these sub-bands. Alternatively, a UWB communications device may occupy all or substantially all of the entire allocated spectrum.
Regardless of the amount of spectrum employed, most UWB communication devices may then use a modulation technique. For example, a UWB device may generate UWB pulses at specific amplitudes and or phases. All of these approaches require a UWB device to generate specific types of pulses, or pulse morphology, to conform to the desired architecture, or modulation technique.
Therefore, there exists a need for an electromagnetic pulse generator that can generate electromagnetic pulses of a desired duration.
The present invention provides a system, method and apparatus for an electromagnetic pulse generator. A preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises a software controllable electromagnetic pulse generator. In one embodiment of the present invention, a computer software interface provides control signals to an array of electromagnetic pulse generation gates. The gates are activated by a transition of a control signal from one voltage level to another voltage level. During the transition time an electromagnetic pulse is formed in the output of each gate.
An alternative embodiment of the present invention may aggregate the discrete electromagnetic pulses into a desired waveform.
One feature of the invention is that the electromagnetic waveforms generated are compatible with a number of different communications methods and technologies.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be appreciated from review of the following detailed description of the invention, along with the accompanying figures in which like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout.
It will be recognized that some or all of the Figures are schematic representations for purposes of illustration and do not necessarily depict the actual relative sizes or locations of the elements shown.
In the following paragraphs, the present invention will be described in detail by way of example with reference to the attached drawings. Throughout this description, the preferred embodiment and examples shown should be considered as exemplars, rather than as limitations on the present invention. As used herein, the “present invention” refers to any one of the embodiments of the invention described herein, and any equivalents. Furthermore, reference to various feature(s) of the “present invention” throughout this document does not mean that all claimed embodiments or methods must include the referenced feature(s).
There are many useful applications for extremely short duration pulses of electromagnetic energy. For example, in RADAR and other imaging applications short electromagnetic pulse durations can improve the resolution capability of the system. In ultra-wideband communications extremely short duration pulses are desirable as well. The present invention provides an apparatus, method and system for electromagnetic pulse generation having extremely short duration.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a number of extremely short duration pulse generation cells are aggregated into an array. The aggregation may involve serial aggregation of control inputs, serial aggregation of pulse generation cell outputs, as well as parallel aggregation of both control inputs and pulse generation cell outputs. The data inputs, control inputs, and the on/off state of the current sources may be under digital computer software control through the use of a microprocessor or a finite state machine.
Conventional radio frequency technology employs continuous sine waves that are transmitted with data embedded in the modulation of the sine waves' amplitude or frequency. For example, a conventional cellular phone must operate at a particular frequency band of a particular width in the total frequency spectrum. Specifically, in the United States, the Federal Communications Commission has allocated cellular phone communications in the 800 to 900 MHz band. Cellular phone operators use 25 MHz of the allocated band to transmit cellular phone signals, and another 25 MHz of the allocated band to receive cellular phone signals.
Another example of a conventional radio frequency technology is illustrated in
In contrast to conventional “carrier wave” communications, another type of communication technology is emerging. Known as ultra-wideband (UWB), or impulse radio, it employs pulses of electromagnetic energy that are emitted at nanosecond or picosecond intervals (generally tens of picoseconds to a few nanoseconds in duration). For this reason, ultra-wideband is often called “impulse radio.” Because the excitation pulse is not a modulated waveform, UWB has also been termed “carrier-free” in that no apparent carrier frequency is evident in the radio frequency (RF) spectrum. That is, the UWB pulses are transmitted without modulation onto a sine wave carrier frequency, in contrast with conventional radio frequency technology. Ultra-wideband requires neither an assigned frequency, a power amplifier, high frequency carrier generation hardware, carrier modulation hardware, stabilizers, frequency and phase discrimination hardware or other devices employed in conventional frequency domain communication systems.
Referring to
Thus, UWB pulses generally do not operate within a specific frequency, as shown in
Further details of UWB technology are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,728,632 (in the name of Gerald F. Ross, and titled: Transmission and Reception System for Generating and Receiving Base-Band Duration Pulse Signals without Distortion for Short Base-Band Pulse Communication System), which is referred to and incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
Also, because the UWB pulse is spread across an extremely wide frequency range, the power sampled at a single, or specific frequency is very low. For example, a UWB one-watt signal of one nano-second duration spreads the one-watt over the entire frequency occupied by the pulse. At any single frequency, such as a cellular phone carrier frequency, the UWB pulse power present is one nano-watt (for a frequency band of 1 GHz). This is well within the noise floor of any cellular phone system and therefore does not interfere with the demodulation and recovery of the original cellular phone signals. Generally, the UWB pulses are transmitted at relatively low power (when sampled at a single, or specific frequency), for example, at less than −30 power decibels to −60 power decibels, which minimizes interference with conventional radio frequencies.
As described above, conventional wireless devices communicate with Radio Frequency (RF) energy. Conventional technologies for RF communications employ RF carrier waves. Data is modulated onto the carrier wave, amplified and transmitted from a RF device. A second RF wireless device receives the carrier wave, amplifies the wave, and demodulates the data. RF communications suffer from fading, multi-path interference, and channel attenuation. Since RF energy strength is proportional to the inverse of the transmitted distance squared, the quality of RF wireless communication is dependent on the relative location of the RF devices that are communicating. Atmospheric conditions, terrain, natural and man-made objects can additionally degrade the received signal strength of RF communications
One feature of the present invention is that with extremely short electromagnetic pulse generation capability, software-defined radio becomes feasible. That is, a conventional radio transmitter generally comprises a carrier-wave generator constructed to transmit a specific radio frequency, a device for modulating the carrier wave in accordance with information to be broadcast, amplifiers and an aerial system. This conventional radio transmitter only transmits at a specific frequency.
Software-defined radio is communication in which electromagnetic pulses, or conventional sine waveforms are generated, modulated, and decoded only by computer software. This allows a single computer-controlled receiver, transmitter or transceiver to interface and operate with a variety of communication services that use different frequencies, modulation methods and/or protocols. Changing the frequency, modulation method and/or protocol only requires using a different computer software program. Thus, software-defined radio is much more economical to manufacture, package, and produce.
One feature of the present invention is that a group of short duration pulses of electromagnetic energy can be aggregated, or “stacked-up” to form a conventional radio frequency signal. A communication signal sampling theorem states that a signal must be sampled at twice the highest frequency component to be reliably recovered. This signal sampling theorem is generally known as either the Nyquist sampling theorem or the Shannon sampling theorem.
One corollary of this sampling theorem is that electromagnetic pulse generation systems can be used to represent, or simulate, continuous waveform signals if the time resolution, or duration of the pulses is such that the inverse of resolution is at least twice the highest frequency component in the desired waveform. For example, to aggregate a pulsed signal to represent cellular communications at 900 MHz would require at a minimum a 555 pico-second pulse duration. To replicate a 802.11(a) (i.e., BLUETOOTH) waveform would require pulse durations of 100 pico-seconds or less since the center frequency assigned to that communications technology is approximately 5 GHz. Additionally, to represent some conventional signal modulation techniques, the amplitude of the carrier waveform must also be reliably constructed. Therefore, re-creation, or simulation, of an amplitude modulated waveform may require the capability to produce extremely short duration pulses while controlling the amplitude of the pulses.
One capability envisioned by the present invention is a single mobile, or fixed, wireless device that can switch between various wireless, or wire communication technologies and standards. By way of example and not limitation, a device constructed according to the present invention may communicate with BLUETOOTH, WiFi, UWB, CDMA, GSM, PCS and a host of other communication technologies by employing a software-defined radio. One feature of the present invention is the generation and aggregation of extremely short duration electromagnetic pulses into waveforms that simulate a wide range of wireless communication technologies.
Wireless communication technologies may use a number of modulation techniques to impart data to the signal prior to transmission. Most of these modulation techniques are imparted to an existing carrier signal that changes properties based on the data. For example, in phase modulation schemes the phase of a carrier waveform is shifted in increments depending of the data to be imparted. In Amplitude Modulation (AM) the amplitude of the carrier signal is varied by the data to be carried. In Orthogonal Frequency Division Modulation (OFDM) data is modulated onto a set of orthogonal carriers prior to transmission. Since the carriers are selected to be orthogonal, there is minimal interference between the resultant modulated signals.
Ultra-wideband (UWB) pulse modulation techniques enable a single representative data symbol to represent a plurality of binary digits, or bits. This has the obvious advantage of increasing the data rate in a communication system. A few examples of UWB modulation include Pulse Width Modulation (PWM), Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM), and Pulse Position Modulation (PPM). In PWM, a series of pre-defined UWB pulse widths are used to represent different sets of bits. For example, in a system employing 8 different UWB pulse widths, each symbol could represent one of 8 combinations. This symbol would carry 3 bits of information. In PAM, pre-defined UWB pulse amplitudes are used to represent different sets of bits. A system employing PAM16 would have 16 pre-defined UWB pulse amplitudes. This system would be able to carry 4 bits of information per symbol. In a PPM system, pre-defined positions within an UWB pulse timeslot are used to carry a set of bits. A system employing PPM16 would be capable of carrying 4 bits of information per symbol. Additional UWB pulse modulation techniques may also be employed by the present invention.
One feature of the present invention is that it allows a computer software control unit to select appropriate electromagnetic pulse generation cells in such a way as to generate a carrier signal that is already modulated to reflect the desired data to be sent. This can reduce the complexity and expense of communication device design in that modulation hardware is no longer necessary to impart data onto the carrier signal.
An additional feature of the present invention is that it may act as a “bridge” between different communication technologies. By way of example and not limitation, a narrowband PCS signal may be received at a frequency of approximately 1.9 GHz. A communication device employing the present invention may re-transmit the PCS signal by transmitting a 900 MHz signal that conforms with a CDMA communication system. Alternatively, the re-transmission may employ a UWB wireless link using UWB communication methods described above. The UWB wireless link may transmit across a frequency band extending from about 3.1 GHz to about 10.6 GHz.
The electromagnetic pulse generation cell(s) employed in the present invention may have one, or more software controllable interfaces. In one embodiment, the software control interface employs at least one digital to analog conversion (DAC) circuit. In this embodiment, a DAC may be used to provide the control signal of the pulse generation cell(s). Alternatively, a DAC may be used to deactivate a switch placed inline with the current source of each pulse generation cell effectively shutting down unused pulse generation cell(s). Alternatively, a DAC may be used by a software control unit to control the flow of data to the input stage of each pulse generation cell. A still further use of a software controlled DAC would provide control signals to the aggregation or combining circuit that combines the output of serial and/or parallel arrays of pulse generation cells. Additionally a DAC may be used to provide threshold voltage levels in the pulse generation cell(s).
In another embodiment of the present invention, a computer microprocessor or alternatively a finite state machine, may send signals directly to the above mentioned inputs without the use of DAC hardware. A finite state machine is any device that stores the status of something at a given time and can operate on input to change the status and/or cause an action or output to take place for any given change. Thus, at any given moment in time, a computer system can be seen as a set of states and each program in it as a finite state machine. For example, a finite state machine may be a hardware implementation of computer logic, or software.
As conceived herein, electromagnetic pulse generation cells may be configured in a number of ways. In one embodiment, pulse generation cells are connected in series, relative to the control input, with a single set of output terminals to form a Serial Array Single Output (SASO). In this embodiment, a delay element may be used to set the time of pulse generation of each cell relative to the first cell's output. Generally, a delay line is a device that introduces a time lag in a signal. The time lag is usually calculated as the time required for the signal to pass though the delay line device, minus the time necessary for the signal to traverse the same distance without the delay line.
In this configuration, a transition in a control signal generates a pulse proportional to the data input on the first cell. The control signal then passes through a delay line to a second cell and causes a pulse to be generated in the output proportional to the data input on the second cell. The second pulse is delayed in time relative to the first by the delay in the control signal. Subsequent stages in the SASO can be further delayed providing pulse outputs at their appropriate time interval. This configuration may be used without delay lines causing the pulses produced by each individual cell to be summed at the output terminals.
Another configuration of pulse generation cells involves connecting in series, relative to the control input, a number of cells where each cell has output terminals. In this configuration, a serial input multiple output (SAMO), can be implemented with or without delay lines to provide simultaneous outputs or outputs that are temporally spaced due to the delay in the control transition. In this configuration, the outputs may be summed at a common node, or provided to a mixing circuit such as a Gilbert Multiplier, or a Half Gilbert Multiplier, and the product is then taken.
In a still further configuration, a combination of electromagnetic pulse generation cells may be connected in parallel, relative to the control inputs. In this configuration, each pulse generation cell may receive a different control signal. In this configuration, the timing of the control inputs can directly control generation and temporal spacing of the pulses. The cells may be configured to have a single output (PASO) or multiple outputs (PAMO).
In another configuration, two-dimensional arrays of SASO, SAMO, PASO, and PAMO arrays may be connected serially or in parallel to provide additional functionality.
In conventional communication technologies a carrier waveform is generated then data is modulated onto the waveform. For example, most conventional systems use a local oscillator to provide a sine wave carrier, and then data is modulated onto the carrier, or waveform. In some forms of ultra-wideband communications, a pulse is generated then filtered or mixed to achieve a desired center frequency. In one embodiment of the present invention, the pulse generation cells are configured to produce waveforms at the desired center frequency, and are also configured to represent data in its modulated form. This reduces the complexity and expense of the transmitter design by eliminating modulation and mixing hardware and potentially eliminating the need for bandpass filters.
By controlling the shape of a generated waveform to the tens of picoseconds, it is possible to limit the frequency content of the resultant waveform. One feature of the present invention provides a waveform generator for electronic communication systems that complies with FCC emission limit regulations without employing bandpass filters to reject out-of-band emissions.
Another feature of the present invention provides a waveform generator that may be software controlled to produce ultra-wideband (UWB) pulses compliant with both single-band and multi-band UWB systems. Current Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations establish “spectrum masks” that limit outdoor ultra-wideband emissions to −41 dBm between 3.1 GHz and 10.6 GHz. A single-band ultra-wideband (UWB) communication system may emit UWB pulses having a frequency spread that would extend from about 3.1 GHz to about 10.6 GHz. A multi-band UWB communication system may break-up the available frequency and emit UWB pulses in discrete frequency bands, for example, 200 MHz bands, 400 MHz bands, or 600 MHz bands. It will be appreciated that other frequency band allocations may be employed. An example of a possible multi-band UWB communication system is illustrated in
Additionally, the present invention allows a communication device to bridge, or convert data received from a single-band UWB communication system to a multi-band communication system and vice-versa, as well as bridging data between conventional carrier wave communication technologies as described above, and UWB communication technologies.
Referring now to
The drain terminals (D) of DPT 2 are connected to the source terminals (S) of DPT 3. The gate terminals (G) of DPT 3 are connected to the output of a delay element D1. As discussed above, the delay element is a device that introduces a time lag in a signal. The time lag is usually calculated as the time required for the signal to pass though the delay line device, minus the time necessary for the signal to traverse the same distance without the delay element.
The drain terminals (D) of DPT 3 are connected to resistive elements R1 and R2. Resistive elements R3 and R4 are connected to a voltage source such as Vdd and to the source terminals (S) of DPT 3.
A Control signal is connected to the input of delay D1 and to the input of the Inverter. The power and ground connections of the Inverter can be connected to Vdd1 and Vss respectively, or alternatively to other voltage potentials not shown. All of the signals may be software controlled by the use of a software control unit (SCU), and/or optional digital to analog converters (DACs) not shown. DAC circuits may comprise multi-bit DAC circuits or alternatively be replaced by voltage divider circuits configured to provide specific voltage levels used by the pulse generation cell.
The Control may comprise a SCU or one or more DACs, and generate the control signals. The delay element D1 is calculated to delay the Control signal from reaching the gate terminals (G) of DPT 3 until the output of the Inverter reaches the gate terminals (G) of DPT 2. Alternatively, the Inverter may be connected to a voltage level distinct from Vdd1.
The function of resistive elements R3 and R4 is to provide appropriate biasing to the circuit. For example, as is generally known, biasing is used to establish a predetermined threshold or operating point. Other methods of biasing are known in the art and may be used to provide this function.
The operation of the electromagnetic pulse generation cell illustrated in
Referring now to
SCU 10 provides set-up signals SU1 through SUn to switches SW1 through SWn. Switches SW1 through SWn are in either an open or a closed state depending on the set-up signals SU1 through SUn. Once selected R12 through Rn2 provide a path for currents I1 through In prior to the Firing Signal becoming active. In this state, SCU 10 has selected which currents I1 through In will pass through high-speed switch SW(fast) when the Firing Signal is activated. Once the Firing Signal is activated by SCU 10, the Itotal, the sum of the selected currents I1 through In, conducts through high-speed switch SW(fast) and develops a change in voltage Vout.
In the electromagnetic pulse generation cell illustrated in
High-speed switch SW(fast) may only allow current to pass when two or more switching elements, such as transistors, are in the triode region, and prevent current flow when at least one of the switching elements is saturated, or in an off state.
For example, when an inverter comprising at least two transistors is used for high-speed switch SW(fast), the switch SW(fast) is in steady-state when one transistor is off and the other is on. The triode region (when both transistors are between on and off) that occurs when the transistors switch states provides a path for current flow. Specifically, the triode state occurs between when the first transistor is on and the second transistor is off, to when the first transistor is off and the second transistor is on. This triode region, between when the transistors switch states, provides a path for current flow.
In the first state, Vout would approximate Vss since no current is flowing across the load. Likewise in the second state Vout approximates Vss for the same reason. When SW(fast) is switching states, current is allowed to flow across the load and an electromagnetic pulse is produced.
In an alternate embodiment of this extremely short duration electromagnetic pulse generation architecture, shown in
The high-speed switch SW(fast) can provide a higher impedance path for current when in the open state. When high-speed switch SW(fast) receives a Firing Signal from SCU 10, it changes states and allows Itotal, the sum of currents I1 through In to flow to the load Rload and C1.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
As also shown in
One feature of the present invention is that pulses 150 (a-j) having frequency spectra 160(a-j) may be used in a multi-band ultra-wideband (UWB) communication system. For example, multi-band UWB systems usually fall into two architectures. The first architecture generates a electromagnetic pulse with a duration relating to the amount of frequency to be occupied by the band. The UWB pulse is then filtered with a bandpass filter that has a center frequency at the center of the frequency band to be occupied. When transmitted, the resultant pulse will occupy the appropriate amount of frequency around the center of the bandpass filters bandwidth.
A second multi-band UWB communication architecture involves generating a pulse with the appropriate bandwidth and mixing it with a carrier wave of the desired center frequency. The complexity of both architectures is significant.
In one embodiment of the present invention, multi-band UWB pulses are generated directly without the use of mixing circuits and bandpass filters. These pulse streams are generated directly, or are generated by the aggregation of pulse generation cells using the arithmetic combination circuit 120, shown in
Referring specifically to
Thus, it is seen that a systems, methods and articles of manufacture are provided for electromagnetic pulse generation suitable for communications in a wired or wireless medium. One skilled in the art will appreciate that the present invention can be practiced by other than the above-described embodiments, which are presented in this description for purposes of illustration and not of limitation. The description and examples set forth in this specification and associated drawings only set forth preferred embodiment(s) of the present invention. The specification and drawings are not intended to limit the exclusionary scope of this patent document. Many designs other than the above-described embodiments will fall within -the literal and/or legal scope of the following claims, and the present invention is limited only by the claims that follow. It is noted that various equivalents for the particular embodiments discussed in this description may practice the invention as well.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 as a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/633,607, filed Jul. 31, 2003, entitled “Electromagnetic Pulse Generator.”
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10633607 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 11126446 | May 2005 | US |