The present invention relates to digital subscriber line (DSL) technologies. More particularly, the present invention relates to a line driver for an asymmetrical digital subscriber line (ADSL) system.
DSL and ADSL systems use a technique called discrete multitone (DMT) for transmitting data. With DMT, a frequency band up to 1.2 MHz is split up into 256 tones (also referred to as subcarriers or subchannels) each spaced 4.3125 kHz apart. In a DSL/ADSL application, the tones are allocated for use depending on the direction of communication between a central office (CO) and a remote terminal (RT) or customer premises equipment (CPE).
Communication from a CO to a RT/CPE (such as an end user's PC modem) is referred to as “downstream.” The direction of communication from a RT/CPE to the CO is called “upstream.” A higher and wider frequency range, for example, 176 kHz to 1.1 MHz, is allocated to the downstream communication, and a lower frequency range, for example, 10 kHz to 138 kHz, is allocated to the upstream communication.
As shown in
for a differential line driver as shown in
Although the back-termination resistors are necessary to prevent undesirable reflection of the receive signal, they waste one-half of the power provided by the line driver amplifiers. Thus, in DSL systems one conventional way of reducing system power is to reduce the value of the back-termination resistors from its standard value. The reduced termination resistance reduces the drop across the resistors and thus increases the proportion of the transmit signal that reaches to the transmission line, allowing the use of a lower supply voltage for the line driver. However, simply reducing a termination resistance causes mistermination of the receive signal as well as reducing the amount of the receive signal developed across these resistors to be sensed by a receive circuit.
An approach termed “active termination” provides a positive feedback from the line driver outputs so as to boost the reduced value of termination resistor and make the effective (or synthesized) output impedance match the line impedance.
where Rf is a feedback resistance of the differential amplifier 12, and RF is a resistance of the positive feedback for the active termination.
As shown in
where k<1. When the line impedance has a typical value of 100 Ω, the back-termination resistance Rt is
It should be noted that for a differential structure, the total termination resistance
is divided into a pair of termination resistors. Each amplifier output is coupled via a feedback resistance RF to the opposite amplifier input so as to make a positive feedback.
a synthesized impedance Z′ seen looking into the circuit at the output node is
matching the effective output impedance Zout to the line impedance Z=100.
There is a conventional technique to build a second order low pass filter around an amplifier, by adding a relatively small number of extra components. For example, a Rauch configuration is typically chosen because of its robustness against components variations.
As is well understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, the transfer function of the Rauch configuration shown in
where
and s is the Laplace variable.
When applied to an ADSL line driver, depending on the sampling rate used in the ADSL system, the Rauch filter can be the only one present or part of a higher order filter. In ADSL applications this filter can be designed to have a cut-off frequency of 138 KHz for the CPE side transceiver, and 1.1 MHz for the CO side transceiver.
However, as shown in
As described above, implementing an active termination or impedance synthesis is desirable to reduce the required power of the line driver. It is also desirable to build a low pass filter around a line driver because it can eliminate extra filtering either on-chip or off-chip, so as to reduce the system cost. In addition, it is easier and less expensive to build a low pass filter around the line driver than implementing one in the AFE portion. Furthermore, providing the low-pass filter at the last stage of the transmit signal (i.e., at the line driver amplifier) is more effective in cutting off higher frequency noises. Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide both low-pass filtering and active impedance synthesis in ADSL line drivers to satisfy the transmit mask requirement.
A line driver couples a data transceiver to a transmission line having a load impedance Z via a transformer with a turns ratio of 1:n, the data transceiver transmitting signals in a first frequency range and receiving signals in a second frequency range different from the first frequency range. The line driver includes an input port for receiving an input signal voltage, an output port for supplying an output signal voltage to the transformer, and a differential amplifier having a low pass filter characteristic, coupled with the input port, for amplifying the input signal voltage and outputting an amplified signal voltage. The line driver further includes termination resistors for coupling the amplified signal voltage therethrough as the output signal voltage to the output port, the termination resistors having a resistance Rt, where
and a positive feedback path for coupling the output signal voltage from the output port to an appropriate node of the differential amplifier so that a synthesized output impedance substantially matches the load impedance Z over the second frequency range.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate one or more embodiments of the present invention and, together with the detailed description, serve to explain the principles and implementations of the invention.
In the drawings:
Embodiments of the present invention are described herein in the context of a line driver for ADSL system. Those of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the following detailed description of the present invention is illustrative only and is not intended to be in any way limiting. Other embodiments of the present invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons having the benefit of this disclosure. Reference will now be made in detail to implementations of the present invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The same reference indicators will be used throughout the drawings and the following detailed description to refer to the same or like parts.
In the interest of clarity, not all of the routine features of the implementations described herein are shown and described. It will, of course, be appreciated that in the development of any such actual implementation, numerous implementation-specific decisions must be made in order to achieve the developer's specific goals, such as compliance with application- and business-related constraints, and that these specific goals will vary from one implementation to another and from one developer to another. Moreover, it will be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time-consuming, but would nevertheless be a routine undertaking of engineering for those of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure.
For example, the central office (CO) side transceiver may transmits signals in the first frequency range of 176 kHz to 1.1 MHz, which is allocated to the downstream communication to a remote terminal (RT) or customer premises equipment (CPE) side transceiver. The CO side transceiver may receive signals in the frequency range of 10 kHz to 138 kHz, which is allocated to upstream communication from a RT/CPE side transceiver to the CO side transeiver. The RT/CPE side transceiver, on the other hand, transmits signals in the frequency range of 10 kHz to 138 kHz and receives signals in the frequency range of 176 kHz to 1.1 MHz. It should be noted that these frequency ranges are examples for an illustration purpose only, and the present invention is generally applicable whenever the receive signal and the transmit signal occupy different frequency ranges.
As shown in
Termination resistors 32 are coupled between outputs of the amplifier 30 and the output port 29. The termination resistors 32 have a resistance Rt, where Rt, where
That is, the value of the resistance Rt is a reduced by factor k from the “standard” value
for a complete termination. As shown in
When the line driver 20 is implemented in a CO side transceiver, the RX frequency range is lower than the TX frequency range, and thus the positive feedback path 34 includes a resistive coupling. When the line driver 20 is implemented in a RT/CPE side transceiver, the RX frequency range is higher than the TX frequency range, and thus the positive feedback path 34 includes a capacitive coupling.
As shown in
The amplifier 50 also includes a first input resistor 62 (having a resistance R1) coupled to the first input signal terminal 42, a second input resistor 64 (having a resistance R1) coupled to the second input signal terminal 44, a third input resistor 66 (having a resistance R2) coupled to the first input 52, and a fourth input resistor 68 (having a resistance R2) coupled to the second input 54. A first node 72 connects the first input resistor 62 and the third input resistor 66, and a second node 74 connects the second input resistor 64 and the fourth input resistor 68.
The amplifier 50 further includes a first feedback resistor 76 (having a resistance R3) coupled between the first output 56 and the first node 72, a second feedback resistor 78 (having a resistance R3) coupled between the second output 58 and the second node 74, a first capacitor 80 (having a capacitance ½C1) coupled between the first node 72 and the second node 74, a second capacitor 82 (having a capacitance C2) coupled between the first output 56 and the first input 52, and a third capacitor 84 (having a capacitance C2) coupled between the second output 58 and the second input 54.
As shown in
That is, the resistance Rt has a value reduced by factor k from the standard value of
The line driver 40 further includes a positive feedback path resistively coupled around the amplifier 50. As shown in
Assuming that the resistance R4 is considerably greater than
and from the specific configuration described above, the low pass filter characteristic of the line driver 40 is expressed as
where s is the Laplace variable and
As is well understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, Equation (1) shows a transfer function of a second order low pass filter.
The synthesized output impedance Zout is expressed as
Since Zout(0)=Z, and Zout(∞)=Z×k, the synthesized impedance Zout has a low-pass characteristic.
Note that the assumption
by no means indicates a loss of generality for the implementation of the present invention. In general, in order to minimize power loss, R4 is chosen in the order of several kilo ohms (1 kΩ=1000 Ω). Since the turns ratio n is generally larger than 1 and the line impedance Z is typically 100 Ω, the assumption is easily met in actual and practical implementations. Even without such considerations, the condition
can always be met: it is well known to those of ordinary skill in the art that for a filter implemented using capacitors, operational amplifiers, and resistors, regardless of the particular architecture used, all the resistors can be scaled up by an arbitrary constant and all the capacitors can be scaled down by the same constant while the filter frequency response remains the same. In other words one can always scale values of R1, R2, R3, R4,½C1, and C2 shown in
Equation (1) can be expressed as
with
Here, Wn is the natural frequency of the filter, Q is the quality factor (Q factor) of the filter, and G is the DC gain of the filter. The filter characteristic is specified by the parameters Wn, Q, and G.
Using Equation (3) and Z=100, Equation (2) becomes
Accordingly, by properly selecting component values R1, R2, R3, C1 and C2 (R4 is a function of R3 and k), a desirable filter characteristic (specified by Wn, Q, and G) around the line driver 40 and the active termination (factor k) can be achieved simultaneously.
is clearly met with these standard values (R4=7940 is considerably greater than
However, it should also be noted that these component values are examples for illustrative purpose only, and the present invention is not limited to specific component values.
As shown in
As shown in
The amplifier 110 also includes a first input resistor 162 (having a resistance R1) coupled to the first input signal terminal 142, a second input resistor 164 (having a resistance R1) coupled to the second input signal terminal 144, a third input resistor 166 (having a resistance R2) coupled to the first input 152, and a fourth input resistor 168 (having a resistance R2) coupled to the second input 154. A first node 172 connects the first input resistor 162 and the third input resistor 166, and a second node 174 connects the second input resistor 164 and the fourth input resistor 168.
The amplifier 110 also includes a first feedback resistor 176 (having a resistance R3) coupled between the first output 156 and the first node 172, a second feedback resistor 178 (having a resistance R3) coupled between the second output 158 and the second node 174, a first capacitor 180 (having a capacitance ½C1) coupled between the first node 172 and the second node 174, a second capacitor 182 (having a capacitance C2) coupled between the first output 156 and the first input 152, and a third capacitor 184 (having a capacitance C2) coupled between the second output 158 and the second input 154. It should be noted that although the same denotations R1, R2, R3, C1 and C2 are used for a simplicity reason, actual values of the resistance and capacitance are different from those of the line driver 40.
As shown in
That is, the resistance Rt has a value reduced by factor k from the standard value of
The line driver 100 further includes a positive feedback path capacitively coupled around the amplifier 110. As shown in
When a value
is considerably greater than
for a frequency f ranging from 0 to fc, where fc being a cut-off frequency of the low pass filter characteristic of the line driver 100, the transfer function is approximated as
Then from the specific configuration described above, the low pass filter characteristic of the line driver 100 is expressed as
where s is the Laplace variable and
As is well understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, Equation (5) shows a transfer function of a second order low pass filter.
The line driver 100 has a synthesized output impedance Zout expressed as
Since Zout(0)=Z×k, and Zout(∞)=Z, the synthesized impedance Zout has a high pass characteristic.
Note that the assumption
by no means indicates a loss of generality for the implementation of the present invention. In general, in order to minimize power loss, C3 is chosen less than a couple of hundred pico farads (1 pF=1×10−12 F). Since the turns ratio n is generally larger than 1 and the line impedance Z is typically 100 Ω, the assumption is easily met for a cut-off frequency fc which is about 138 kHz for actual and practical RT/CPE applications. Even without such considerations, the condition
can always be met: it is well known to those of ordinary skill in the art that for a filter implemented using capacitors, operational amplifiers, and resistors, regardless of the particular architecture used, all the capacitors can be scaled down by an arbitrary constant, and all the resistors scaled up by the same constant while the filter response remains the same. In other words one can always scale values of R1, R2, R3, ½C1, C2, and C3 shown in
for a frequency range f<fc.
Equation (5) can be expressed as
with
Here, Wn is the natural frequency of the filter, Q is the quality factor (Q factor) of the filter, and G is the DC gain of the filter. The filter characteristic is determined by the parameters Wn, Q, and G.
Using Equation (7) and Z=100, Equation (6) becomes
Accordingly, by properly selecting component values R1, R2, R3, C1 and C2 (C3 is a function of C2 and k), a desirable filter characteristic (specified by Wn, Q, and G) around the line driver 100 and the active termination (factor k) can be achieved simultaneously.
for the cut-off frequency fc138 kHz is easily met with these standard values
is considerably greater than
However, it should also be noted that these component values are examples for illustrative purpose only, and the present invention is not limited to specific component values.
As shown in
A transceiver system in accordance with the present invention includes a CO side and a RT/CPE side transceivers both having a line driver in accordance with the present invention as described above. In accordance with a specific embodiment of the present invention, the transceiver system includes the CO side transceiver having the line driver 40, as shown in
In a line driver according to the present invention, a portion of the transmit signal is fed back to an appropriate node of the line driver including an amplifier having a low pass filter characteristic, for example, having the Rauch configuration. The polarity of the transmit signal which is fed back is chosen to establish a positive feedback path around the line driver and thus give the appropriate boost to the back termination resistors which are reduced in value. The transmit signal which is fed back can be coupled resistively or capacitively, depending on the frequency range of the receive signal.
When the positive feedback path is resistively coupled, the synthesized impedance takes the form of a low-pass, and when the feedback path is capacitively coupled, the synthesized impedance has a high-pass characteristic. In the both cases, the frequency response around the line driver shows the required low-pass filter characteristic. Since the received signal in ADSL CPE applications occupies a frequency band above the transmitted signal, a high-pass characteristic is acceptable in the synthesized impedance. This simply means that the active termination will provide the necessary termination for the high frequency down stream data while misterminating the line at lower frequencies where there is no useful signal. Thus a capacitive coupling is appropriate at the CPE side. On the other hand, for the CO side the received signal is at a frequency band lower than the transmitted signal, hence a low-pass characteristic in the synthesized impedance is acceptable, thus requiring resistive coupling. In this case positive feedback around the line driver will ensure proper termination for the lower frequency upstream data while misterminating the line for higher frequencies where there is no useful signal for reception.
While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure that many more modifications than mentioned above are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims.
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