This application claims priority to Korean Patent Application No. 10-2022-0024428 filed on Feb. 24, 2022 and Korean Patent Application No. 10-2022-0059076 filed on May 13, 2022 in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, and all the benefits accruing therefrom under 35 U.S.C. 119, the contents of which in their entirety are herein incorporated by reference.
The present inventive concepts relate to an electronic device and/or an operating method to compensate for in-phase/quadrature imbalance.
A technique for converting a baseband signal (hereinafter referred to as a BB signal) or an intermediate frequency signal (hereinafter referred to as an IF signal) into a radio frequency signal (hereinafter referred to as an RF signal) using an in-phase/quadrature mixer (IQ mixer), or converting the RF signal into the BB signal or the IF signal is being widely used in the field of wireless communication.
However, carrier leakage and IQ imbalance occur in an actual IQ mixer. Carrier leakage occurs when the product of an input signal and an IQ local oscillation (IQLO) signal transmitted from a local oscillator is not only transferred to an output terminal of the IQ mixer, but also when the IQ LO signal is leaked to an output terminal of the IQ mixer. IQ imbalance is a concept that includes gain imbalance occurring because the magnitudes of an in-phase signal and a quadrature signal transmitted from a local oscillator to the IQ mixer are not the same as each other, and phase imbalance occurring due to the in-phase signal and the quadrature signal not having a phase difference of 90° therebetween. When I/Q imbalance occurs in a quadrature modulator of a transceiver, error vector magnitude (EVM) degradation may occur and a packet error rate (PER) may increase, thereby decreasing overall communication system performance.
One example embodiment of the present inventive concepts provides an electronic device including a feedback oscillator configured to output a first oscillation signal and a second oscillation signal, the second oscillation signal having a defined phase difference from the first oscillation signal, the feedback oscillator including a phase shifter configured to receive the first oscillation signal and output the second oscillation signal, an up-conversion mixer configured to output a first loopback signal obtained by mixing the first oscillation signal with a reference tone signal, and output a second loopback signal obtained by mixing the second oscillation signal with the reference tone signal, and a receiver configured to generate a first reference IQ signal from the first loopback signal, generate a second reference IQ signal from the second loopback signal, and compare an actual phase difference between the first reference IQ signal and the second reference IQ signal with the defined phase difference.
Another example embodiment of the present inventive concepts provides an electronic device including a feedback oscillator configured to generate a feedback oscillation signal, a phase shifter configured to output a first oscillation signal having the feedback oscillation signal shifted to a first phase, and a second oscillation signal having the feedback oscillation signal shifted to a second phase, an up-conversion mixer configured to generate and output a first loopback signal by mixing the first oscillation signal with a reference tone signal, and generate and output a second loopback signal by mixing the second oscillation signal with the reference tone signal in a measurement mode, and a receiver configured to generate a first reference IQ signal by down-conversion mixing the first loopback signal, and generate a second reference IQ signal by down-conversion mixing the second loopback signal in the measurement mode. The receiver is configured to estimate a phase offset by comparing a defined phase difference between the first oscillation signal and the second oscillation signal with an actual phase difference between the first reference IQ signal and the second reference IQ signal, and estimate a gain offset from the first reference IQ signal and second reference IQ signal.
Another example embodiment of the present inventive concepts provides a method for operating an electronic device, the method including generating a first oscillation signal by phase-shifting a feedback oscillation signal to a first phase, and generating a second oscillation signal by phase shifting the feedback oscillation signal to a second phase in a measurement mode, generating a first loopback signal by up-conversion mixing a reference tone signal with the first oscillation signal, and generating a second loopback signal by up-conversion mixing the reference tone signal with the second oscillation signal, generating a first reference IQ signal by down-conversion mixing the first loopback signal with a receiver oscillator signal in the receiver, generating a second reference IQ signal by down-conversion mixing the second loopback signal with the receiver oscillator signal in the receiver, and estimating a gain offset and a phase offset of the receiver according to the first reference IQ signal and the second reference IQ signal.
Technical aspects of the present inventive concepts are not restricted to those set forth herein, and other unmentioned technical aspects will be clearly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which the present inventive concepts pertain by referencing the detailed description of the present inventive concepts given below.
The above and other aspects and features of the present inventive concepts will become more apparent by describing in detail example embodiments thereof with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
Hereinafter, some example embodiments of the present inventive concepts will be described with reference to the attached drawings:
The high rate pulse repetition frequency (HRP) ultra-wide Band (UWB) physical layer (PHY), defined in the IEEE 802.15.4z standard, is a technology that transmits and receives signals at a low power over a wide frequency band of 500 MHz, which is a useful communication technology for medium- and low-speed data transmission, ranging, and angle of arrival (AoA) estimation applications. The present inventive concepts relate to a technology for estimating and compensating for an IQ imbalance of a receiver when the receiver receives a signal according to the HRP UWB PHY communication specification defined in the IEEE 802.15.4z standard. The passband signal received from the receiver is converted into a baseband signal by a down-conversion mixer, and when an IQ imbalance offset exists in the down-conversion mixer, reception sensitivity may be degraded, and the accuracy upon estimating AoA may be lowered.
Hereinafter, a transmission/reception circuit of a communication system and an electronic device according to some example embodiments of the present inventive concepts will be described with reference to
Referring to
A wireless network may include short-range communication methods, such as Bluetooth, Bluetooth low energy (BLE), near-field communication, WLAN (Wi-Fi), Zigbee, infrared (IrDA), Wi-Fi Direct (WFD), ultra-wideband (UWB), and Ant+ communication, but example embodiments are not limited thereto. Alternatively, the wireless network may include a mobile communication method, and for example, may transmit and receive wireless signals to and from at least one of a base station, an external terminal, and a server on the mobile communication network. According to some example embodiments, a case where the wireless network is a UWB manner will be described, but the scope of the present inventive concepts is not limited thereto.
The UWB manner may load information into a very short impulse having a width of several ns and transmit the information at sampling of a high speed of several GHz, and the first electronic device 10 and the second electronic device 20 may include a transmitting device and a receiving device. The first electronic device 10 may include a transmitting device 110 and a receiving device 120, and the second electronic device 20 may include a feedback transmitting device 210 and a receiving device 220. That is, one electronic device may include at least one transmitter and at least one receiver, and upon the operation in a normal mode, the transmitter and receiver included in one electronic device may independently perform transmission and reception operations, and upon the operation in a measurement mode, the transmitter and the receiver may be connected to each other for a receiver to estimate and compensate for a reception IQ imbalance. In the following description, the feedback transmitting device 210 is described as a feedback transmitter 210 and the receiving device 220 is described as a receiver 220 so that the devices are distinguished from the first electronic device 10, but technical aspects of the present inventive concepts are not limited thereto. Modulation and demodulation may be performed in a burst position modulation (BPM)-binary phase-shift keying (BPSK) manner. The BPM-BPSK manner has the advantage of only generating a transmission signal with a real signal rather than a complex signal.
Because the UWB manner uses a BPSK modulation scheme, the transmitting devices 110 and 210 configured to generate a UWB signal may simply implement a transmitter with only a single signal path without having to implement both a real path and an imaginary path corresponding to the complex signal. However, when the transmitter is simply implemented, there is a restriction in terms of compensation for a reception IQ imbalance.
For example, when a left spectrum in
In a system for transmitting a signal in a wide band such as UWB communication, the imaginary signal i may be added to the real signal r as noise to lead to degrading a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the reception signal (Rx signal).
Accordingly, the reception circuit 120 may estimate a gain mismatch offset and a phase mismatch offset by measuring and analyzing distortion of the signals r and i that are present at two frequencies fΔand −fΔaccording to the IQ imbalance, respectively. Therefore, in order to accurately measure the offset according to the IQ imbalance of the reception circuit 120, it is desirable to accurately measure the magnitude and phase of the signals of the two frequencies f66 and −f66.
Referring to
For example, referring to the illustrated spectrum, a transmission signal Tx Signal may have frequency components in each of the reference tone frequency f66 and frequency −fΔ. When such a transmission signal is transmitted, as described in
For example, the reception circuit 120 may receive a real signal r1 and an imaginary signal it with respect to the transmission signal of the reference tone frequency fΔ, and may receive a real signal r2 and an imaginary signal i2 with respect to a transmission signal of a frequency −fΔ. In this case, since the imaginary image signal i1 and the imaginary image signal i2 overlap the real signal r2 and the real signal r1, respectively, it is difficult to accurately measure the magnitudes and phase components of the real signals r1 and r2 and the magnitudes and phase components of the imaginary image signal i1 and the imaginary image signal i2 in the receiving circuit 120.
Referring to
The PHY modulator 111 modulates the transmission signal in the binary phase-shift keying (BPSK) manner and outputs the same signal to a BPSK signal uI1(n). The transmission signal may be a reference tone signal with the reference tone frequency fΔ. The DAC 120 converts the BPSK signal uI1(n) output from the PHY modulator 111 into an analog signal and outputs the same signal as a baseband signal uI1(t), and the LO generator 130 generates an oscillation signal with a carrier frequency fc, that is, an LO signal. According to some example embodiments, the LO generator 130 may be referred to as a local oscillator or a transmission oscillator.
The up-conversion mixer 140 generates a transmission tone signal uI1 in a passband by mixing a local oscillator (LO) signal cos(2πfΔt), which is a transmission oscillator signal, with the reference tone signal uI1(t) in a baseband. The power amplifier 150 and the antenna 160 amplify power for the transmission tone signal un in the passband, which is a radio frequency (RF) signal, and output the same to the wireless network (30 in
As described above with reference to
Referring to
The reception antenna 231 receives a passband signal un transmitted via the wireless network (30 in
The feedback transmitter 210 may be used for offset measurement of the receiver 220 embedded in the second electronic device 20 in the measurement mode, and may operate as a transmission circuit of the second electronic device 20 in the normal mode. The feedback transmitter 210 is connected to the receiver 220 via a loopback path. The feedback transmitter 210 generates a loopback signal in the measurement mode and fails to generate the loopback signal and operates as a transmitter in the normal mode.
According to some example embodiments, the feedback transmitter 210 phase-shifts the reference tone signal with the reference tone frequency fΔ in the measurement mode and outputs the same signal to the loopback signal uRF(t). For example, the feedback transmitter 210 generates at least two loopback signals uRF(t) phase-shifted to at least two different phases preset in the measurement mode and provides the signals to the receiver 220 via the loopback path RF. The loopback signal uRF(t) is a signal in which a signal corresponds to a transmission signal of the first electronic device 10, for example, uI1(t) as an analog signal is generated in the second electronic device 20.
According to some example embodiments, in the normal mode, the feedback transmitter 210 generates the transmission signal based on an input signal of the second electronic device 20 to transmit the signal to the receiving device of the first electronic device 10 and outputs the transmission signal via the power amplifier 242 and the transmission antenna 244.
The receiver 220 sequentially receives at least two loopback signals phase-shifted respectively to at least two different phases having a preset phase difference (or alternatively, a defined phase difference, a desired phase difference, a specified phase difference, etc.) from the feedback transmitter 210 in the measurement mode according to some embodiments. For example, the receiver 220 generates the first and second reference IQ signals that are subjected to down-conversion mixing from the first and second loopback signals, analyzes the first and second reference IQ signals based on the preset phase difference signal and the reference tone signal, and estimates a gain offset and a phase offset generated in an IQ channel of the receiver 220.
For example, the receiver 220 receives a first loopback signal phase-shifted and generated to a preset first phase in the measurement mode, and generates a first reference IQ signal by performing In-phase/quadrature (IQ) mixing for the first loopback signal. The receiver 220 receives the second loopback signal generated phase-shifted and generated to a preset second phase, and generates a second reference IQ signal by performing the IQ mixing for the second loopback signal. Since a difference between the first phase and the second phase preset in the feedback transmitter 210, that is, the preset phase difference, is known within the second electronic device 20, the receiver 220 may compare the generated first reference IQ signal and the generated second reference IQ signal, may calculate an actual phase difference and a signal size, and may then compare the same with the preset phase difference and the reference tone signal, thus calculating a phase offset and a gain offset between an I channel and a Q channel. The receiver 220 may then generate a correction IQ signal by reflecting the gain offset and the phase offset calculated in the measurement mode in a reception IQ signal received via the reception antenna in the normal mode.
According to some example embodiments, the receiver 220 may receive an input tone signal input via the reception antenna 231 in the normal mode, and generate and output the reception IQ signal. The receiver 220 may estimate the gain offset and the phase offset by generating reference IQ signals having different phases in the measurement mode.
Referring to
The PHY generator 211 modulates the reference signal or the transmission signal in the binary phase-shift keying (BPSK) manner and outputs the same signal to the BPSK signal uI1(n). In some example embodiments, the transmission signal is a signal to be transmitted by the second electronic device 20 over the wireless network (e.g., 30 in
The DACI 212 converts the signal uIi(n) output from the PHY generator 211 into an analog signal and outputs the analog signal as a baseband signal uIi(t) as shown in Equation 2.
u
I1(t)=cos(2πfΔt) Equation 2
The local oscillator (LO) generator 213 generates the LO signal cos(2πfct) with a carrier frequency fc. For example, in the measurement mode, the LO generator 213 may be refered to as a feedback oscillator, and the LO signal may be referred to as a feedback oscillation signal. According to some example embodiments, the feedback oscillator may include the LO generator 213 and the phase shifter 214.
In the measurement mode (e.g.,
In the normal mode (e.g.,
In the measurement mode, the up-conversion mixer 215 mixes a first phase shifted local oscillator (LO) signal cos(2πfct+θps1) or a second phase shifted LO cos(2πfct+θps2) with the baseband signal uI1(t), respectively, in the measurement mode, and generates and outputs first and second loopback signals uRF(t) as in Equations 3 and 4 (pass {circle around (1)} in
uRF,ps1(t)=Re{α·cos(2πfΔt)ej(2πf
uRF,ps2(t)=Re{α·cos(2πfΔt)ej(2πf
Alternatively, in the normal mode, the up-conversion mixer 215 mixes the local oscillator (LO) signal cos(2πfct) with the baseband signal uI1(t) based on the transmission signal in the normal mode, and generates the same signal to a passband transmission signal uI2(t) and outputs it to the power amplifier 242.
In the Equations 3 and 4, a is a gain of a loopback path (e.g., RF in
When the loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) is expressed as c=aejθps1, the baseband signal of the first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) in Equation 3 is expressed as Equation 5,
u
BB,ps1(t)=α·cos(2πfΔt)ej(θ
The baseband signal of the second loopback signal URF,ps2(t) in Equation 4 may be expressed as Equation 6.
u
BB,ps(t)=α·cos(2πfΔt)ej(θ
Referring to
According to some example embodiments, the receiver 220 may include an input terminal selection circuit 221, an LO generator 222, a 90-degree phase shifter 223, down-conversion mixers 224a and 224b, ADCs 226A and 226B, an output terminal selection circuit 227, a mismatch compensator 240, and a PHY modulator 250.
The input terminal selection circuit 221 according to some example embodiments may select whether to operate in a measurement mode or a normal mode according to a control signal. For example, when the control signal selects the normal mode(e.g., EST=0), the receiver 220 may receive the input tone signal un received from the antenna 231 of the feedback transmitter 210 and output the same signal as the received signal uI3. For example, when the control signal selects the measurement mode (e.g., EST=1), the receiver 220 may output the loopback signal uRF(t) generated from the feedback transmitter 210 as the reception signal uI3.
The LO generator 222 may generate the LO signal with the carrier frequency fc. According to some example embodiments, the LO generator 222 may be referred to as a receiving oscillator, and the LO signal generated by the LO generator 222 may be referred to as a receiver oscillation signal. According to some example embodiments, the receiving oscillator may be implemented by including the LO generator 222 and the 90-degree phase shifter 223.
The 90-degree phase shifter 223 shifts the LO signal by 90 degrees. That is, the LO generator 222 and the 90-degree phase shifter 223 may generate two LO signals having a 90-degree phase difference.
Ideally, when the LO signal is generated, the first LO signal may be cos(2πfct) and the second LO signal need to be generated as −2sin(2πfct), but in terms of circuit design and process, it is not easy to implement a receiver having an accurate 90-degree phase difference between I and Q channels and a gain 1. Accordingly, the actual receiver may have the phase offset and the gain offset, for example, when Ørx is an IQ channel phase offset of the receiver 220, and grx is an IQ channel gain offset of the receiver 220, the first LO signal may be cos(2πfct), and the second LO signal may be −2grxsin(2πfct+Ørx). According to some example embodiments, the LO generator 222 and the 90-degree phase shifter 223 may be implemented as separate independent components or may be implemented as one combined component according to some example embodiments.
The down-converted mixers 224a and 224b perform IQ mixing for the reception signal or the loopback signal, and generates the same as the reference IQ signal. For example, the down-converted mixers 224a and 224b may mix the first LO signal (e.g., cos(2πfct)) and the second LO (e.g., −2grxsin(2πfct+Ørx). with the reception signal un(t), respectively, and generate the mixed signals as the I channel signal and the Q channel signal, i.e., the reference IQ signals.
LPFs 225a and 225b perform low-pass filtering for the reference IQ signal and outputs the same signal.
For example, in the measurement mode, the down-conversion mixer 224a may generate a first reference I signal by mixing a first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) and the first LO signal (e.g., cos(2πfct)) based on the first phase θps1, and the down-conversion mixer 224b generate a first reference Q signal by mixing a first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) and the second LO signal (e.g., −2grxsin(2πfct+Ørx)). Furthermore, the down-conversion mixer 224a may generate a second reference I signal by mixing a second loopback signal uRF,ps2(t) and the first LO signal (e.g., cos(2πfct)) based on the second phaseθps2, and the down-conversion mixer 224b may mix a second loopback signal uRF,ps2(t) and the second LO signal (e.g., −2grxsin(2πfct+Ørx). to generate the same as a second reference Q signal.
For example, in the normal mode, the down-conversion mixer 224a may generate a reception I signal by mixing the input tone signal un and the second LO signal (e.g., cos (2πfct)) and the down-conversion mixer 224b may a reception I signal by mixing the input tone signal uI1 and the second LO signal (e.g., −2grxsin(2πfct+Ørx)).
Specifically, in the measurement mode, the first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) and the second loopback signal uRF,ps2(t) may express a first reference IQ signal uRF,ps1(t) and the second reference IQ signal uRF,ps2(t) output according to the IQ imbalance of the receiving circuit 200 in the down-conversion mixers 224a and 224b, as an analog baseband as in Equations 7 and 8.
r
ps1(t)=rI,ps1(t)+jrQ,ps1(t)=g1RX·uBB,ps1(t)+g2RX·u*BB,ps1(t) Equation 7
r
ps2(t)=rI,ps1(t)+jrQ,ps2(t)=g1RX·uBB,ps2(t)+g2RX·u*BB,ps2(t) Equation 8
In Equations 7 and 8, rI,ps1(t) is the first reference I channel signal, rQ,ps1(t) is the second reference Q channel signal,
uBB,ps1(t) and uBB,ps2(t) are real tone signals, and u*BB,ps1(t) and u*BB,ps2(t) are imaginary tone signals.
The ADCs 226A and 226B convert an analog baseband signal into a digital baseband signal. For example, the first reference IQ signal rps1(t) of the analog baseband in Equation 7 is converted and output into the first reference IQ signal rps1(n) of the digital baseband, and the second reference IQ signal rps2(t) of the analog baseband of Equation 8 may be converted and output into the second reference IQ signal rps2(n) of the digital baseband and output.
In the measurement mode, the mismatch compensation unit 240 analyzes the first reference IQ signal rps1(n) based on the reference tone frequency, the reference tone signal, and the first phase θps1, and analyzes the second reference IQ signal rps2(n) based on the reference tone frequency, the reference tone signal and the second phase θps2, thus estimating the gain offset and the phase offset (θΔ−θΔ′) calculated from the set phase difference (θΔ=θps1−θps2), and the actual phase difference (θΔ′). After the input tone signal un received in the normal mode is reflected in the gain offset and the phase offset estimated from the reception IQ signal rI(n), rQ(n) subjected to the down-conversion mixing, the mismatch compensation unit 240 outputs it as a correction IQ signals rI(n)′ and rQ(n)′.
The PHY demodulator 250 demodulates the correction IQ signals rI(n)′ and rQ(n)′ in a binary phase-shift keying (BPSK) manner, which is the same as a preset manner, for example, a modulation method used by the transmitting device 20.
Referring to
The signal analyzer 241 analyzes the signal compared to at least two reference IQ signals output from the ADCs 226A and 226B. The offset estimator 243 may estimate the gain offset and the phase offset from analysis results of the signal analyzer 241 based on the reference tone frequency and at least two different preset phases. The signal compensator 245 generates and outputs the correction IQ signal in which the estimated gain offset and phase offset are reflected in the reception IQ signal.
Specifically, the signal analyzer 241 measures the reception signal R (fΔ) at the reference tone frequency fΔ. For example, the signal analyzer 241 analyzes the first reference IQ signal rps1 (t) in which the first loopback signal rps1(t) subjected to down-conversion mixing in the first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t), based on the first phase θps1, the reference tone signal, and the reference tone frequency fΔ. The signal analyzer 241 analyzes the second reference IQ signal rps2(t) subjected to down-conversion mixing in the second loopback signal uRF,ps2(t) based on the second phase θps2, the reference tone signal, and the reference tone frequency f.
Rps1(fΔ) of Equation 7 expresses a first reference IQ signal r_ps1(t) measured by receiving the first loopback signal rps1(t) measured by receiving the first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) in the receiver 220, as a frequency domain, and may be expressed as Equation 9.
In Equation 9, when expressed as c=aejθ
Similarly, Rps2(fΔ) of Equation 8 expresses a second reference IQ signal rps2(t) measured by receiving the second loopback signal uRF,ps2(t) in the receiver 220, as a frequency domain, and may be expressed as Equation 10.
According to Equations 9 and 10, a measurement value (θps1) of cos(θps1) in the first phase θps1 and a measurement value (θps2) of cos(θps2) in the second phase θps2 may be calculated as in Equations 11 and 12.
(θps1)=(Rps1(fΔ)+R*ps1(fΔ) Equation 11
(θps2)=(Rps2(fΔ)+R*ps2(fΔ) Equation 12
The first phase θps1 and the second phase θps2 set in the feedback transmitter 210 are preset (or alternatively, desired) and known values, and when θps2=θps1+θpsΔ is in consideration of the difference θpsΔ between the two shifted phases, the relationship between Equation 11 and Equation 12 may be represented as Equation 13.
a·cos(θps2) =a·cos(θps1+θpsΔ)=a·cos(θps1)sin(θps1)sin(θpsΔ) <Equation 13
When Equation 13 is summarized as an equation for (θps1), it can be expressed as Equation 14.
The measurement value (θps1) of cos(θps1) in the first phase (θps1) and a measured value (θps2) cos(θps2) in the second phase θps2 in Equation 14 can be estimated via Equation 11 and Equation 12, and cos(θpsΔ) and sin(θpsΔ) can be calculated from a preset and known θpsΔ, and accordingly, (θps1) may be calculated in Equation 14.
Similarly, when (θps2) for the second phase is derived in the same manner as Equation 13, it can be summarized as Equation 15, and cos(θpsΔ) and sin(θpsΔ) can be calculated from the present and known phase difference (θpsΔ) between the first phase θps1 and the second phase θps2.
(θps2)=(θps1)cos(θpsΔ)+(θps1)sin(θpsΔ) Equation 15
When (θps1), (θps2), (θps1)(θps1) and (θps2) are obtained via Equations 11 to 15, respectively, the first phase difference IQ signal Rps1(fΔ) based on the first reference IQ signal rps1(t) and the second phase difference IQ signal Rps2(fΔ) based on the second reference IQ signal rps1(t) in Equation 11 and Equation 12 are may be expressed like Equation 16 and Equation 17.
(grxcos(ϕrx)·(θps1)−grx sin(ϕrx)·(θps1))=2·Im{Rps1(fΔ)} <Equation 16>
(grxcos(ϕrx)·(θps1)−grx sin(ϕrx)·(θps2))=2·Im{Rps2(fΔ)} <Equation 17>
When Equation 16 and Equation 17 are expressed as matrices, they can be expressed like Equation 18.
In other words, Equation 18 shows the measured reception signal divided into a matrix
for the first phase and the second phase, and a matrix
for the phase offset ϕrx and the gain offset grx in the reference tone signal. Equation 18 may be represented by Equation 19 of signal components grxcos(ϕrx) and grxsin(ϕrx) for offset.
In Equation 19, the phase offset ϕrx and the gain offset grx may be obtained as in Equation 20.
ĝ
rx=√{square root over (A2+B2)}
{circumflex over (ϕ)}rx=angle(A+jB) <Equation 20>
As described above, the offset estimator 243 may estimate the gain offset grx and the phase offset ϕrx in the IQ channel of the receiver of the analysis results of the signal analyzer 241 based on different phases ϕps1 and ϕps2 having the preset difference, and the reference tone frequency fΔ.
Referring to
The electronic device 20 sets a phase shift value to a preset first phase θps1 in the feedback transmitter 210 (S11), and shifts a first LO signal cos(2πfct) with the carrier frequency fc to a first phase. The first LO signal cos(2πfct+θps1) shifted to the first phase is subject to up-conversion mixing to a reference tone signal with a reference tone frequency and is output to the receiver 220 as a first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) (S12). The receiver 220 measures the first reception signal Rps1(fΔ) at the reference tone frequency fΔ (S13). In this case, the first reception signal Rps1(fΔ) is a first loopback signal uRF,ps1(t) received from the receiver 220.
In the feedback transmitter 210, the receiving apparatus sets a phase shift value to a second phase θps2 having a preset phase difference θpsΔ from the first phase θps1 (S14), and shifts a first LO signal cos(2πfct) with the carrier frequency to the second phase. The first LO signal cos (2πfct+θps2) shifted to the second phase is subject to the up-conversion mixing into the reference tone signal with the reference tone frequency and is output to the receiver 220 as the second loopback signal uuRF,ps2(t) (S15). The receiver 220 measures the second reception signal Rps2(fΔ) at the reference tone frequency f66 (S16).
The electronic device 20 analyzes the first reception signal Rps1(fΔ), and the second reception signal Rps2(fΔ) based on the preset and known values such as a first phase θps1, a second phase θps2, the phase difference θpsΔ, the reference tone frequency fΔ, and the reference tone signal. As result of the analysis, the gain grx and the phase offset Ørx are estimated from the reception signal and the second signal (S17), the estimated gain offset grx and phase offset Ørx are reflected in the reception IQ signal, thus correcting the offset and outputting the correction IQ signal (S18).
Referring to
Referring to the illustrated spectrum, when the transmission signal Tx Signal has frequency components at each of the reference tone frequency fΔ and frequency −fΔ, the reception circuit 200 may receive not only the real signal r of the transmission signal but also the imaginary signal I, as already described in
However, according to some example embodiments, the electronic device 20 may be phase-shifted to at least two different preset phases without a separate local oscillator (LO) generator to calculate the phase offset and the gain offset due to the IQ imbalance, and reflect and output the calculated offset in the reception IQ signal received in the normal mode. In addition, even if the imaginary signal i is received, since it has a different phase from the real signal r, there is an advantage of accurately measuring, in the receiving apparatus (200), the size and phase component of the real signals r1 and r2, and the size and phase component of the imaginary signals i1 and i2, respectively. In addition, the electronic device 20 may generate the real signal, that is, the loopback signal, via the feedback transmitter 210, thereby reducing the complexity of the device.
Technical aspects to be achieved through some example embodiments of the present inventive concepts provide an electronic device capable of estimating and compensating for in-phase/quadrature imbalance, and an operating method therefor.
One or more of the elements disclosed above may include or be implemented in one or more processing circuitries such as hardware including logic circuits; a hardware/software combination such as a processor executing software; or a combination thereof. For example, the processing circuitries more specifically may include, but is not limited to, a central processing unit (CPU), an arithmetic logic unit (ALU), a digital signal processor, a microcomputer, a field programmable gate array (FGPA), a System-on-Chip (SoC), a programmable logic unit, a microprocessor, application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), etc.
Although some example embodiments of the present inventive concepts have been described above with reference to the accompanying drawings, the present inventive concepts are not limited to the example embodiments herein, but may be implemented in various different ways, and the present inventive concepts may be embodied in many different forms without changing technical subject matters and essential features as will be understood by those skilled in the art. Therefore, example embodiments set forth herein are for example only and are not to be construed as a limitation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2022-0024428 | Feb 2022 | KR | national |
10-2022-0059076 | May 2022 | KR | national |