The efficiency of modern mobile radio systems is essentially dependent on the quality of the filters required for signal processing. Particularly for bandpass filters, a number of requirements must be fulfilled, which can be different and are specified by the individual mobile radio system or the standard.
Bandpass filters can be implemented by different techniques. For example, filters which are constructed from discrete LC elements are known. Furthermore, microwave-ceramic resonators are known. Particularly far developed and greatly varied with regard to the characteristics thereby attainable are filters which work with surface acoustic wave filters, so-called SAW filters.
More recent developments show that filters working with bulk acoustic waves, which are built from bulk acoustic wave resonators, also have considerable technical potential, which can make them a preferred filtering technique.
In addition to the pure transfer behavior of a filter, which can be seen with the aid of the transfer curve, usually shown as S-parameters of the scattering matrix, other electrical functions can also be integrated in a filter, for example, the reshaping of an asymmetrical (single-ended) signal into a symmetrical or balanced signal. It is also possible to perform, in the filter itself, an impedance transformation between the filter input and output.
In general, for the optimal functioning of a filter, the electrical and circuit-engineering environment in which the filter is used is important. The form in which the signal to be filtered appears at the filter input, whether asymmetrical or symmetrical, is also important, as is how the filtered signal at the filter output is passed on to the next processing stage of a system or what is required by the next stage. Filters with asymmetrical filter inputs and outputs, which therefore process a single “hot” or information-carrying potential that is always referenced to ground, can be produced in a completely nonproblematic manner.
It is more difficult to convert such asymmetrical signals into symmetrical ones—or even to process a symmetrical signal and also again make it available symmetrically at the output. Such filters, which are operated balanced on both ends, are to be implemented, only with difficulty, with filters which work with bulk acoustic waves.
Prior art filters that comprise bulk acoustic wave resonators and that can be operated symmetrically on both ends primarily exhibit unsatisfactory filter behavior in the passband, which has excessively high ripple, whereby the insertion loss suffers and the filtering behavior is disturbed.
Described herein is a filter which can be operated symmetrically on both ends, with bulk acoustic wave resonators, which is improved with regard to its filter behavior, especially in the passband.
The filter is constructed from bulk acoustic wave resonators. It has an electric input port and an electric output port, both of which can be operated symmetrically. Accordingly, the filter has two signal paths, which extend from a terminal of the input port to a terminal of the output port. With regard to these signal paths, the bulk acoustic wave resonators are located electrically symmetrically to one another. Each of the two signal paths is connected to a complex impedance.
Substantially improved transfer characteristics are obtained with the filter described herein in comparison to known symmetrical filters operating with bulk waves. In particular, the filter has a smoothed passband, which, in comparison with prior art filters, has less insertion loss. In an alternative representation, the filter has substantially smaller deviations from the optimal matching point in the Smith chart and behaves well in the optimal range. Thus, the filter exhibits optimal electrical matching, which later leads to reduced insertion loss, to lower ripple, and to an improved filter behavior. By varying the complex impedances, it is possible to adapt the filter optimally to any external environment.
Herein, “complex impedance” is understood to mean not only an individual, actual circuit element having an impedance, but also a combination of ideal, actual, individual components affected by an impedance.
The bulk acoustic wave resonators can be individual acoustic wave oscillators. The bulk acoustic wave resonators, however, can also be thin-film resonators. The entire filter is may be an integrated arrangement of thin-film resonators, in which the individual thin-film resonators and their wiring are constructed in an integrated manner during the fabrication process. In one embodiment, all bulk acoustic wave resonators are placed on a single, common substrate. However, the construction of the filter components on different substrates and their suitable interconnections are also possible.
Every signal path is connected to at least one complex impedance. Connection to the filter can take place on one or both electric ports. This does not rule out that, within the filter, other complex impedances are connected to other connecting sites, which produces other advantages.
In one embodiment, each terminal of each port is connected to another complex impedance.
In another embodiment, each signal path is connected in series with a complex impedance, so that this impedance is pad of the individual signal path. In another embodiment, the two signal paths are connected in parallel with a complex impedance. The impedance can thereby be located in a transverse branch, which connects the two signal paths.
The filter can also be designed as a reactance network of resonators. The resonators can be placed in series and parallel branches. In these cases, it is also possible to provide the complex impedance in one of the parallel branches that bridge the two signal paths.
Another embodiment connects two terminals of one port in series with a complex impedance, but with the two terminals of the other port connected in parallel with another complex impedance. With regard to the different types of connections of complex to impedances with the signal paths as implemented in a filter, the already mentioned variation possibilities are valid for each of the two possibilities.
The bulk acoustic wave resonators can be connected in a ladder-type arrangement. It is also possible to connect the bulk acoustic wave resonators in a lattice arrangement. A filter which saves space in particular or which can operate with few bulk acoustic wave resonators utilizes bulk acoustic wave resonators in a stacked arrangement, which is designated as a CRF arrangement (Coupled Resonator Filter). Such CRF filters comprise thin-film resonators formed in a stack, one above another, wherein resonators which are adjacent in a stack can have a common middle electrode. It is also possible, however, to provide a coupling layer between the two thin-film resonators arranged one above the other. The fraction of the acoustic coupling between the first and second resonators arranged one above the other is determined as a function of the thickness and the material of the coupling layer. Such a filter, comprised only two stacked thin-film resonators acoustically coupled to one another, can be operated symmetrically on both ends.
A filter in accordance with this disclosure can also comprise two partial arrangements of bulk acoustic wave resonators, connected in series with one another. Each of the partial arrangements, independently of one another, corresponds to the already mentioned types of bulk acoustic wave resonator filter arrangements. For the connection, a first port of the first partial arrangement is connected to a second port of the second arrangement. It is also thereby possible to provide complex impedances between the two partial arrangements within the framework of the connection.
In one embodiment, the complex impedance comprises an inductor. Such an inductor can be produced in a particularly simple manner and can be implemented as a function of the required inductor value, for example, in the form of simple printed conductors, electrical connections, and also bumps. Larger inductors are produced in the form of coils or meandering sections of printed conductors, which can also be included as integrated passive components
In one embodiment, the bulk acoustic wave resonators of the filter are placed on a common substrate; the substrate, in turn, is affixed to a multilayer carrier. In the multilayer carrier, connection structures and passive components are provided which can comprise complex impedances and, moreover, other connection elements. In this way, a particularly compact components is obtained, which, has no other discrete component aside from the thin-film resonator arrangement on the substrate. In this component, all other required passive components are integrated into the carrier or, if necessary, also into the substrate of the thin-film resonator arrangement.
If the substrate on which the bulk acoustic wave resonators are located is constructed from a semiconductor, then the complex impedances can also be implemented, at least in part, integrated in the semiconductor substrate. In a known manner, all connection structures and passive and active components can also be implemented in the semiconductor.
For the exact shaping and dimensioning of the complex impedance, specifically, the impedance which comprises an inductor, the exact connection of the impedance is decisive. For a series-connected impedance, for example, an inductor in the range of 0.1 to 10 nH is selected. An impedance connected in parallel can, for example, be constructed with an inductor in the range of 10-100 nH, in order to achieve optimal matching to an external connection environment.
Optimally matched filters that can be symmetrically operated on both ends have the additional advantage, aside from the improved filter characteristics, that they behave without problems in connections with other filters which can also be operated balanced/balanced, and there is almost no mutual influence between the two filters, as long as they work in different frequency bands. This is possible since, in the Smith diagram, the range of the individual passbands of filters assumes only a small area, which is equivalent to excellent matching. Thus, for example, with an input-side diplexer, only very few additional elements are still required.
On the basis of the good connectability with other similarly designed filters, filter banks can be implemented in this way, for example, cascaded arrangements of diplexers, wherein the two individual filters of the diplexer of such a cascade, standing hierarchically at the very top, can be firmly connected with a common terminal. The signal is then made available, in accordance with its wavelength of the corresponding filter, to the hierarchically lowest stage on the output port.
Embodiments are explained in more detail below with the aid of examples and corresponding figures. The figures are used solely for better understanding and are therefore only drawn schematically and not true to scale. Similar or similarly operating parts are provided with the same reference symbols.
If one implements a GSM filter, adapted to 100 Ohms, with such an arrangement, then one obtains the transfer curve whose frequency parameters are shown in
With the aid of the complex impedances, which are connected with the arrangement of bulk acoustic wave resonators, a substantial improvement is attained both in the passband and in the electrical matching of the filter. The improvements can be seen, for example, in the passband, which has reduced ripple and also no discontinuity in the middle. Smaller “rings” are observed in the Smith chart.
Good characteristics for a filter are already obtained, however, with one or two substructures.
Such a resonator arrangement can also be cascaded, i.e., the arrangement is connected repeatedly in series, one component behind another. The resonator arrangement RA, designed as a CRF, may be designed on a substrate with large surface area in the form of thin-film resonators.
The connections shown in
A filter in accordance with this disclosure generally possesses a symmetrical arrangement of resonators and of impedances Z. The symmetry thereby specifically refers to the two signal paths in which the arrangement is developed symmetrically, relative to one another. Moreover, the symmetry can also refer to the two ports T1, T2, so that the connection of the first port T1 can be symmetric to the connection of the second port T2. It is also possible, however, to undertake a connection with impedances on the first port T1 different from that on the second port T1 and, for example, to combine series impedances on the first port with parallel impedances on the second port.
A possible case b) is similar; only here, for example, r and s are equal to 2 for the matching unit MA3 connected upstream.
A diplexer can be implemented particularly well from the parallel connection of two filters, since they are very well matched. By the good matching of filters, a cascade of filters, which corresponds in practice to a filter bank of a total of four filters, are implemented without disturbances between the individual filters. In this way, for example, it is possible to symmetrically diplex an input signal, in a purely passive manner, without a switch, to four reception filters (RX filters) in an end device for the mobile radio, wherein the four filter end stages can be correlated, for example, to the GSM bands GSM850, GSM900, GSM1800, and GSM 1900. The connection of the filters is carried out without additional switches by a direct connection, as shown, for example, in
The structure of
It is also possible to continue this cascading via additional stages, wherein, in the general case, the cascading is carried out from x input ports to y output ports, where x, y are natural numbers and x<y.
If the complex impedance is designed, for example, as an inductor, the entire structure is advantageously considered in the dimensioning of the inductor, since the contacts and conductor sections implemented in the carrier substrate are themselves affected by the inductor, which contributes to the total inductance between the resonator arrangement RA and the terminal surface AF. The complex impedance, which is optimal for a filter, is then produced from the sum of the impedances of the individual connection structures or connection components and the concrete impedance elements Z, which are constructed in the interior of the carrier substrate, in addition to the conductors present. If these impedances are incorporated in series into the signal path and implemented as an inductor, then inductors between 0.1 and 10 nH at 2 GHz are sufficient for a matching filter operating in an approximately 100 Ohm environment, wherein at least the lower inductor values can already be implemented with bumps and the contacts and printed conductor sections shown, for example, in
Since it was only possible to illustrate a few embodiment examples, the scope of coverage is not restricted to them. The complex impedances which were not shown in more detail can represent, in the simplest case, inductors; in an actual embodiment however, they can represent any combination of connected different circuit elements with impedance. The bulk acoustic wave resonators can be constructed in a known manner, for example, as FBAR resonators. The type and number of substructures used in a resonator arrangement can be selected arbitrarily. Furthermore, the impedances can also be implemented on the surface of the substrate, on the surface of the carrier substrate, or as concrete components outside the arrangement, as shown, for example, in
Although the filters described herein can be operated symmetrically, this does not rule out asymmetrical operation on one or both sides. Such filters can then be operated, for example, balanced/unbalanced. With such a mode of operation, nothing is changed in the advantageous filter behavior of the filters.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 032 930.0 | Jul 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/05998 | 6/3/2005 | WO | 00 | 7/26/2007 |