The present invention concerns signals mixers using current mirrors, and receivers for radiofrequency signals using such mixers.
It is conventional to use signal mixer devices comprising an output current. For example, in radiofrequency receivers the received signal is mixed after amplification with the signal of a local oscillator to perform a frequency change and deliver an intermediate frequency signal or a base band signal. The mixed signal is fed into a current mirror circuit to ensure the value of the output current regardless of the impedance at the output of the mixer device. Accordingly, the output current is determined by the input current regardless of the output impedance.
The output of such a mixer is conventionally filtered before the signals are converted into digital signals which are used for demodulation.
However, the constraints on the linearity of the mixer, of the converters and of a downstream base band stage, are high. More precisely, the signal still has energy spread over a wide range of frequency which must be taken into account when designing these circuits to avoid saturation and other perturbations.
Accordingly, the mixer devices and the corresponding receivers are designed with constraints due to unwanted signals which leads to sub-optimal designs and sub-optimal performances.
The aim of the present invention is to solve this problem by providing an enhanced device for mixing radiofrequency signals. To this effect the invention provides a mixer device as recited in claim 1 and a corresponding receiver as recited in claim 9.
Thanks to the integration of low pass filters in the current mirror stage, the spread of the frequency spectrum of the signal is reduced. Thus the unwanted signals are rejected at an early stage of signal processing, relaxing the constraints on the circuits.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description illustrated by the drawings in which:
In
The antenna 4 is connected to an analog front end 6 which output is fed into a base band demodulator 8 applying the relevant demodulation or equalization processing to derive an information signal S supplied to other processing circuits, with which the receiver 2 is associated.
Along with other components, the analog front 6 comprises an amplifier stage 10 with one or several low noise amplifiers (LNA). The output of the amplifier stage 10 is fed into two mixer devices 12 and 14. Each mixer device also receives a signal delivered by a local oscillator 16. The signal fed into the mixer device 14 has a phase shift of 90° with regard to the signal provided to the mixer device 12.
Each mixer device 12 and 14 comprises a mixer circuit, Identified respectively 18 and 20, to mix the radiofrequency signal provided by the amplifier stage 10 with the signal provided by the local oscillator 16. Each of the outputs of these mixer circuits 18 and 20 are fed into a mirror current circuit 22 and 24.
The mirror current circuits 22 and 24 respectively deliver the real component of the signal Identified by I, and the imaginary component of the signal, identified by the letter Q.
In the embodiments described, all the signals from the amplifier stage 10 down to the base band demodulator 8 are balanced signals accordingly the output signals of the current mirror circuits are balanced signals delivered through impedances 26 and 28.
In the example described, the impedances 26 and 28 are the impedances of the processing circuits of the base band demodulator 8.
In
The input stage 30 comprises two transistors 32, 34 mounted in parallel, each being connected to the ground and provided on their gate terminals with the radiofrequency signal as delivered by the amplifier stage 10. These inputs are balanced and are respectively referred to as the negative and positive inputs IN+ and IN−.
Of course, other kind of conventional input stages using for example cascode connected transistor can be used.
The general function of the input stage is to transform a voltage, namely the voltage between inputs IN+ and IN−, into a current fed into the mixer circuits.
The outputs of the input stage transistors 32, 34 are fed into the mixer circuit and more precisely, each signal is fed into a pair of second stage transistors, namely 36, 38 and 40, 42, the drain terminals of each pair being connected together.
The symmetrical mixer transistors 36 and 42 are each fed on their gate terminals with the signal provided by the local oscillator 16 and their outputs are the outputs of the mixer circuit.
Furthermore, each of these outputs is also connected to the output of the other mixer transistor of the other pair. Thus, the output of transistor 36 is connected to the output of transistor 40 and reciprocally, the output of transistor 42 is connected to the output of transistor 38.
Finally, the gate terminals of the two symmetrical transistors 38 and 40 are connected together.
Such a mixer circuit is conventional and will not be described in further details.
The outputs of the mixer circuit 18, namely the positive and negative outputs OUTm+ and OUTm−, are fed into the current mirror circuit 22 and more precisely into a first stage of the current mirror circuit. This first stage of the mirror current circuit comprises two transistors 44 and 46 whose drain terminals are connected respectively to the outputs OUTm+ and OUTm− of the mixer circuit and whose source terminals are connected to a direct voltage source V, alternatively trough a series connected resistor. The gate terminals of these transistors are connected to the respective outputs of the mixer circuit and the signal at these gate terminals are named A and B and fed into a second stage of the current mirror circuit.
This second stage comprises two pairs of transistors, namely 48, 50 and 52, 54, the transistors of one pair being series connected between the direct voltage source V and a ground GND. Each of the transistors of said pairs connected to the direct voltage source receives on its gate terminal respectively the signal A or B as delivered by the transistors of the first stage.
The outputs of the current mirror circuit are formed by the signals taken between the central points of each of the two pairs of transistors, namely the positive output OUT+ between the transistors 48 and 50 on one side and the negative output OUT− between the transistors 50 and 52 on the other side.
The impedance 26 representing the impedance of the processing circuits of the base band demodulator 8 is connected between the two outputs OUT+ and OUT− and accordingly, receives the signal I.
The second transistors 50 and 54 of each pair of said second stage transistors are designed to have high impedances so that the current signal goes into the base band demodulator 8 to minimize the gain loss.
The gates terminals of transistors 50 and 54 are fed with a bias signal delivered by a bias adjustment circuit 58 connected in a conventional manner to a control point of the impedance 26.
Furthermore, the current mirror circuit 22 is also adapted to perform low pass filtering of the signal delivered by the mixer circuit. This filtering is performed simultaneously with the conventional function of the current mirror circuit, namely providing an output current determined by the input current regardless of the output impedance.
In the example described, each of the first and second stages of the circuit mirror current comprises a low pass filter using capacitors connected to the transistors of the first and second stages. More precisely, these low pass filters are passive filters, i.e. filters with no active component such as a transistor or the like. This allows reducing the current consumption of the device.
In the first stage, filtering capacitors 60, 62 are connected in parallel with each of the two transistors 44 and 46, i.e. between the direct voltage source V and each of the outputs OUTm+ and OUTm− of the mixer circuit. In the example, the cut-off frequency of each of these filters is about 14 MHz.
In the second stage, a filtering capacitor 64 is connected between the drain terminals of each of the transistors 48 and 52, i.e. between the central points of each of the two pairs of transistors. This capacitor also attenuates the unwanted signal, and as the respective impedance of each of the two stages are independent, the cut-off frequency of this capacitor 64 can be different from the one of the first stage and especially can be smaller. In the example, the cut-off frequency of the capacitor 64 is about 8 MHz.
Thus, the mixer of the invention delivers a signal which current is determined by the input current regardless of the output impedance and simultaneously filtered. Accordingly, the swing of the signal is smaller and thus, the impedance of the down stream stages can be higher and the linearity constraint is reduced. More precisely, requirements on the current mirror circuit, base band circuits and analog to digital converters are relaxed. Furthermore, due to the reduced linearity constraint, the overall current consumption of the device is reduced by use of components with lower linearity specifications.
Other embodiments of the invention are also possible, especially by using various circuits to connect the filtering capacitors.
In another embodiment represented with reference to
Alternatively, the two embodiments described previously are combined as represented in
Yet in another embodiment represented with reference to
Any of these various circuits, namely, the use of capacitors connected in parallel with each transistor, the use of a single capacitor connected between the drain terminals, the combination of these two circuits as well as the use of capacitors connected to the ground, can also be used in the second stage.
Alternatively, each of the gate terminals of the first stage transistors is series-connected with a resistor 82, 84 whose outputs represent respectively the A and B signals. In this embodiment, filtering capacitors 86, 88 are connected between the direct voltage source and the output of the resistors 82 and 84, as represented in
All these embodiments will perform similar filtering of the signal and can be combined with a second stage filter as described previously and the use of passive filters allows to reduce the current consumption.
Furthermore, it is possible to use a non-balanced circuit having a single input and in which the input stage, the mixer circuit and the current mirror circuit are adapted in a conventional manner.
Furthermore, any of the filtering capacitors, namely capacitors 60, 62, 64, 70, 76, 78, 80, 86, 88 can be made adjustable to attenuate different unwanted frequencies
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05292684.7 | Dec 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2006/003627 | 12/14/2006 | WO | 00 | 6/13/2008 |