Linear amplifier using frequency 2nd order intermodulation feed-forwarding method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6496065
  • Patent Number
    6,496,065
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, October 31, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 17, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
A linear amplifier using a low frequency 2nd intermodulation feed-forwarding method to offset the 3rd intermodulation component of a fundamental signal is provided. This linear amplifier includes a transistor for amplifying the power of the fundamental signal, a first filter unit, one end of which is connected to the gate of the transistor, for filtering a 2nd order intermodulation signal from the fundamental signal, a low frequency amplifier connected to the other end of the first filter unit, for amplifying the 2nd order intermodulation signal with a predetermined voltage gain, and a second filter unit connected in series between the output port of the low frequency amplifier and the drain output port of the transistor, for filtering the amplified 2nd intermodulation signal and feeding the same to the output port of the transistor. This linear amplifier feeds the low frequency 2nd order intermodulation component of a fundamental signal forward to the output port of a power amplification transistor, thereby maintaining the stable characteristics of a circuit adopting a feed-forwarding method and favorably offsetting a 3rd intermodulation component that is adjacent to the frequency of the fundamental signal.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a linear amplifier, and more particularly, to a linear amplifier using a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding method.




2. Description of the Related Art




When a mobile terminal or a mobile base station power-amplifies and transmits a signal, the receiving sensitivity of a receiving side is degraded by distortion due to the interference between a fundamental signal to be transmitted and its intermodulation component.




In order to solve the above problem, conventional linear amplifiers shown in

FIGS. 1A

,


1


B and


2


are used. Each of the conventional linear amplifiers roughly includes an input impedance matching unit (Z


s


)


20


for matching the output impedance of a signal source Vs with the input impedance of the input port of a transistor


12


,


14


or


24


, and an output impedance matching unit (Z


L


)


29


impedance-matching the output port of the transistor


12


,


14


or


24


with an output load. An amplifier shown in

FIG. 1A

tunes to a distortion component signal using a source harmonic tuning method and reflects an intermodulation signal reflected by the gate of the transistor


12


back to the gate using a reflection coefficient control unit


17


having a variable capacitor or a stub at the gate port of the transistor


12


, thereby offsetting a distortion component. In

FIG. 1B

, a reflection coefficient control unit


16


is installed to the rear of the transistor


14


, and tunes a harmonic output from the rear of the transistor


14


and reflects the harmonic back to the gate using a load harmonic tuning method, thereby offsetting a 3


rd


order harmonic component.





FIG. 2

shows a linear amplifier using an intermodulation signal feed-backwarding method. The linear amplifier of

FIG. 2

includes an amplification transistor


24


, filters


25


and


28


for filtering a 2


nd


order harmonic component from an input signal, a phase shifting unit


26


for shifting the phase of the 2


nd


order harmonic component, and an amplifier


27


for amplifying the phase-shifted 2


nd


order harmonic component to a predetermined value. The phase-shifted 2


nd


order intermodulation signal is fed backward to the input port of the amplification transistor


24


, thereby offsetting a 3


rd


order intermodulation component.




However, these conventional intermodulation signal tuning methods can offset only several dB of 3


rd


order harmonic component. In the intermodulation signal feed-backwarding method, 10 dB to 15 dB of intermodulation component can be offset, but the characteristics is unstable and the band is narrowed.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




An objective of the present invention is to provide a linear amplifier using a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding method for offsetting a 3


rd


intermodulation component while maintaining the stable characteristics of a linear amplification circuit obtained by feed-forwarding.




To achieve the above objective, the present invention provides a linear amplifier using a low frequency 2


nd


intermodulation feed-forwarding method to offset the 3


rd


intermodulation component of a fundamental signal, the device including: a transistor for amplifying the power of the fundamental signal; an input impedance matching unit connected to the gate of the transistor for impedance-matching a source of the received fundamental signal with the gate of the transistor; a first filter unit, one end of which is connected to the gate of the transistor, for filtering a 2


nd


order intermodulation signal from the fundamental signal; a low frequency amplifier connected to the other end of the first filter unit, for amplifying the 2


nd


order intermodulation signal with a predetermined voltage gain; a second filter unit connected in series between the output port of the low frequency amplifier and the drain output port of the transistor, for filtering the amplified 2


nd


intermodulation signal and feeding the same to the output port of the transistor; and an output impedance matching unit connected to the output port of the transistor for impedance-matching the output port of the transistor with an external load.




The voltage gain (β) of the low frequency amplifier






-




gm
3

·

C
0



gmd
·

C
1



.











The gm


3


and gmd are the coefficients of terms v


gs


(t)


3


and V


gs


(t)v


ds


(t), respectively, of Equation:








i




ds




[v




gs




,v




ds




]=gm·v




gs


(


t


)+


gd·v




gs(t)




+gm




2




·










v


gs


(


t


)


2




+gmd·v




gs


(


t


)


v




ds


(


t


)+










gd




2




·v




ds


(


t


)


2




+gm




3




·v




gs


(


t


)


3




+gm




2















v


gs


(


t


)


2




·v




ds


(


t


)+










gmd




2




·v




gs


(


t





v




ds


(


t


)


2




+gd




3




·v




ds


(


t


)


3


+. . .






which is a Taylor series extension formula of the drain-source non-linear current i


ds


[v


gs


,v


ds


] of the transistor.




Also, C0 and C1 in the voltage gain are the coefficients of the constant term and term v


gs


(t) in Equation C


gs


[v


gs


(t)]=C


0


+C


1


·v


gs


(t)+C


2


·v


gs


(t)


2


+ . . . , which is a power series of a gate source capacitor of the transistor.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The above objective and advantage of the present invention will become more apparent by describing in detail a preferred embodiment thereof with reference to the attached drawings in which:





FIGS. 1A and 1B

are block diagrams of conventional linear amplifiers each including a harmonic tuning circuit;





FIG. 2

is a block diagram of a conventional linear amplifier including a circuit for feeding an intermodulation component backward using a 2


nd


order intermodulation component;





FIG. 3

is a circuit diagram of a linear power amplification circuit using a 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding method according to the present invention;





FIG. 4A

is an equivalent circuit diagram of the circuit of

FIG. 3

with respect to a high frequency;





FIG. 4B

is an equivalent circuit diagram of the circuit of

FIG. 3

with respect to a low frequency;





FIG. 5

shows output signals depending on whether a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding circuit is adopted, when 2-ton signals f


1


and f


2


are input to the circuit of

FIG. 3

; and





FIG. 6

shows output signals depending on whether a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding circuit is adopted, when a code division multiple access (CDMA) signal is input to the circuit of FIG.


3


.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT





FIG. 3

shows a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding amplifier according to the present invention.

FIG. 4A

shows the equivalent circuit of

FIG. 3

which is applied to a fundamental signal, that is, a high frequency signal, and

FIG. 4B

shows the equivalent circuit of

FIG. 3

which is applied to a 2


nd


order harmonic component, that is, a low frequency signal.




In the fundamental signal processing shown in

FIG. 3

, a fundamental signal from a signal source V


S


is applied to the gate of a transistor


30


via an input impedance matching unit


32


and power-amplified and output to the drain. An output impedance matching unit


34


impedance-matches the amplified signal with an output load. A first direct current blocking filter


36


, an amplifier


38


and a second direct current blocking filter


37


are serially connected to each other between the gate, which is an input port, and the drain, which is an output port, such that a 2


nd


intermodulation signal is fed forward.




In

FIGS. 4A and 4B

, reference character Rs denotes the gate resistance of the transistor


30


, reference character Rd denotes the drain resistance of the transistor


30


, reference character Ri denotes an input resistance, and reference character Rs is a source resistance. An impedance component due to capacitance is particularly greater than other shown parameters. Accordingly, when Rs, Rd, Ri and Rg are set to be 0, a drain-source nonlinear channel current i


ds


[v


gs


, v


ds


] is obtained by Taylor series expension from Equation 1:








i




ds




[v




gs




, v




ds




]=gm·v




gs


(


t


)+










gd·v




ds(t)




+gm




2




·v




gs


(


t


)


2




+










gmd·v


gs


(


t


)


v




ds


(


t


)+










gd




2




·v




ds


(


t


)


2




+gm




3




·v




gs


(


t


)


3




+gm




2




d·v




gs


(


t


)










2




·v




ds


(


t


)+










gmd




2




·v




gs


(


t





v




ds


(


t


)


2




+










gd


3




·v




ds


(


t


)


3


+ . . .   (1)






wherein a first order coefficient gm denotes trans conductance, gd denotes output conductance, and v


gs


and v


ds


denote the alternating current (AC) voltage of a gate voltage and that of a drain voltage, respectively. When 2 tone input signals f


1


and f


2


are applied to the gate of the transistor


30


, Equation 2 is established:














v
gs







(
t
)


=








A
1

·
cos







(

2





π






f
1






t

)


+



A
2

·
cos







(

2





π






f
2






t

)









=







1
2





[




A
1

·
exp







(

j





2





π






f
1






t

)


+



A
1

·
exp







(


-
j






2





π






f
1






t

)



]

+













1
2



[




A
2

·
exp







(

j





2





π






f
2






t

)


+



A
2

·
exp







(


-
j






2





π






f
2






t

)



]








=







1
2



[


V

gs
-

f
1



+

V

gs
-

f
1


*


]


+


1
2



[


V

gs
-

f
2



+

V

gs
-

f
2


*


]










(
2
)













wherein V


gs−f






1




is equal to A


1


exp(j2nf


1


), V


gs−f






2




is equal to A


2


exp(j2nf


2


), V*


gs−f






1




is equal to A


1


exp(−j2nf


1


), V*


gs−f






2




is equal to A


2


exp(−j2nf


2


), 2-ton input signals f


1


and f


2


are signals within a bandwidth in a fundamental signal, and A


1


and A


2


denote the magnitudes of signals f


1


and f


2


, respectively.




When Equation 2 is substituted for Equation 1, the current of a main 3


rd


intermodulation component (2f


2


−f


1


) is expressed as a term combined with a 3


rd


coefficient gm


3


in Equation 1, as in Equation 3:








i




ds


(


t


)|


2f






2






−f






1






gm






3







gm




3




·A




2




2




·A




1


·cos [2π(2


f




2




−f




1


)


t]


  (3)






The harmonic component i


gs


(t) of a gate current due to the non-linearity of a gate-source capacitor (C


gs


) can be expressed by the input voltage v


gs


of the transistor


30


, as in Equation 4:











i
ds







(
t
)


=


[


C
0

+



C
1

·

v
gs








(
t
)


+



C
2

·

v
gs









(
t
)

2


+


]











v
ds








(
t
)




t







(
4
)













Since C


gs


[v


gs


(t)] is equal to C


0


+C


1


·v


gs


(t)+C


2


·v


gs


(t)


2


+ . . . a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation component in Equation 4 can be expressed as in Equation 5:








i




ds


(


t


)|


f




−f






1






j


½


C




1


(


f




2




−f




1


)[


V




gs−f






2






·V*




gs−f






1






−V




gs−f






1






·V*




gs−f






2




]  (5)






A gate voltage for a 2


nd


intermodulation component can be obtained using Equation 5 as in Equation 6:



















v
gs







(
t
)


&RightBracketingBar;



f
2

-

f
1










1

C
0







i
gs







(
t
)





&RightBracketingBar;



f
2

-

f
1






t







=







C
1


4






C
0





[



V

gs
-

f
2



·

V

gs
-

f
1


*


+


V

gs
-

f
1



·

V

gs
-

f
2


*



]








=







C
1


2






C
0










A
2

·

A
1

·

cos


[

2





π






(


f
2

-

f
1


)






t

]











(
6
)













When the 2


nd


order intermodulation component f


2


−f


1


is amplified by a low frequency amplifier


38


and applied to the drain port, a drain voltage is calculated by Equation 7:








{circumflex over (v)}




ds


(


t


)=


v




ds


(


t


)+β·


v




ds


(


t


)|


f






2






−f






1




  (7)






wherein β denotes the voltage gain of the low frequency amplifier


38


, and v


ds


(t) denotes a drain voltage when feed-forwarding is not performed.




When Equation 7 is substituted for Equation 1, a new 3


rd


order intermodulation current can be obtained. The new 3


rd


intermodulation component is obtained by the interaction between an amplified 2


nd


order intermodulation component and a 1


st


order main signal, and is expressed as the product of gmd and gd


2


, which are 2


nd


order coefficients. However, since generally gmd>>gd


2


, a main distortion component due to gmd is expressed as in Equation 8:














i
^

ds







(
t
)


&RightBracketingBar;


2






f

2
-




f
1



gm
d


=



gmd
·
β
·

C
1

·

A
2
2

·

A
1



4






C
0









cos


[

2





π






(


2






f
2


-

f
1


)






t

]







(
8
)













A main 3


rd


order intermodulation component output when, not amplified using a feed-forwarding method from Equation 3, can be offset by a 3


rd


order intermodulation component generated from the amplified 2


nd


intermodulation component from Equation 8. Hence, under an ideal condition in which the sum of Equations 3 and 8 is set to be 0, the voltage gain (β) of the low frequency amplifier


38


is calculated by Equation 9:









β
=

-



gm
3

·

C
0



gmd
·

C
1








(
9
)













As shown in Equation 9, the voltage gain (β) of the low frequency amplifier


38


, which is a pure real number value, is a constant which has no dependency on A


1


and A


2


which are the magnitudes of the input voltages of 2-tone signals f


1


and f


2


, respectively. Thus, even if the input voltages of the 2-tone signals f


1


and f


2


are changed to some extent, the linearity of a linear amplifier using a feed-forwarding method according to the present invention is considerably stably maintained, and a phase change in a significantly low frequency is so negligible that there is no need to adjust the phase.




In

FIG. 5

, when 2 ton frequency f


1


and f


2


included within a band are applied to a linear amplifier according to the present invention at a central frequency of 2.15 GHz, a 3


rd


intermodulation component has magnitudes a and b in case that a 2


nd


intermodulation component is not fed forward, and the 3


rd


intermodulation component has magnitudes c and d in case that the 2


nd


intermodulation component is fed forward. It can be seen from

FIG. 5

that the 3


rd


order intermodulation component is improved by 18 dB in case that the 2


nd


intermodulation component is fed forward.





FIG. 6

shows output signals with respect to an input code division multiple access (CDMA) signal, depending on whether the circuit of

FIG. 3

adopts a low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation feed-forwarding method. It can be seen from

FIG. 6

that an adjacent channel power ratio (ACPR) is improved by 10 dB.




In the above embodiment of the present invention, an amplifier has been limited to a transistor. However, it is apparent that the parameters for the transistor can also be adopted in general power amplification transistors by one of ordinary skill in the art.




A linear amplifier according to the present invention feeds the low frequency 2


nd


order intermodulation component of a fundamental signal forward to the output port of a power amplification transistor, thereby maintaining the stable characteristics of a circuit adopting a feed-forwarding method and favorably offsetting a 3


rd


intermodulation component that is adjacent to the frequency of the fundamental signal.



Claims
  • 1. A linear amplifier using a low frequency 2nd intermodulation feed-forwarding method to offset a 3rd intermodulation component of a fundamental signal, the device comprising:a transistor for amplifying a fundamental signal, the transistor having a gate, drain, and an output port; an input impedance matching unit connected to the gate of the transistor for impedance-matching a source of the fundamental signal with the gate of the transistor; a first filter unit, a first end of which is connected to the gate of the transistor, for filtering a 2nd order intermodulation signal from the fundamental signal; a low frequency amplifier connected to a second end of the first filter unit, for amplifying the 2nd order intermodulation signal with a voltage gain; a second filter unit connected in series between an output port of the low frequency amplifier and the drain of the transistor, for filtering the amplified 2nd intermodulation signal and feeding the amplified 2nd intermodulation signal after filtering to the output port of the transistor; and an output impedance matching unit connected to the output port of the transistor for impedance-matching the output port of the transistor with an external load.
  • 2. The linear amplifier of claim 1, wherein the voltage gain (β) of the low frequency amplifier is -gm3·C0gmd·C1.
  • 3. The linear amplifier of claim 2, wherein gm3 and gmd are the coefficients of terms vgs(t)3 and vgs(t)vds(t), respectively,ids[vgs, vds]=gm·vgs(t)+gd·vds(l)+gm2·vgs(t)2+gmd·vgs(t)vds(t)+gd2·vds(t)2+gm3·vgs(t)3+gm2d·vgs(t)2·vds(t)+gmd2·vgs(t)·vds(t)2+gd3·vds(t)3+ . . . which is a Taylor series expanstion of the drain-source non-linear currenids[VgsiVds]of the transistor.
  • 4. The linear amplifier of claim 3, wherein C0 and C1 are coefficients of a constant term and vgs(t) in Equation Cgs[vgs(t)]=C0+C1·vgs(t)+C2·vgs(t)2+ . . . , is a power series of a gate source capacitor of the transistor.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
5276406 Samay et al. Jan 1994 A
5406226 Cioffi et al. Apr 1995 A
6052029 Uda et al. Apr 2000 A
6163221 Matsuno Dec 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
6-214416 Mar 1996 JP
7-062070 Sep 1996 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
Yang et al.; A New Linear Amplifier Using low-frequency second order intermodulation Component Feedforwarding; IEEE Microwave and Guided Wave Letters, vol. 4, No. 10, Oct., 1999.*
Yang et al.; “A New Linear Amplifier Using Low-Frequency Second-Order Intermodulation Component Feedforwarding”, IEEE Microwave and Guided Wave Letters, vol. 4, No. 10, Oct. 1999, pp. 419-421.