The present invention relates generally to radio transmitters. More particularly but not exclusively, the present invention is directed towards an efficient and highly linear transmitter architecture to perform direct synthesis of a modulated signal.
A transmitter 100 generates radio signals required for communications. It consists of a data source, modulator 110, power amplifier (PA) 120 and antenna 130, as shown in
A polar transmitter 400 uses the approach shown in
One or more embodiments of the present invention may provide a very efficient and highly linear transmitter that can be used to directly synthesize and transmit any type of modulated signal.
In one aspect the present invention is directed to an apparatus for use in a polar transmitter comprising a signal combiner circuit, a low noise circuit coupled to a VCO circuit and a signal combiner circuit, said low noise circuit configured to provide a low noise signal provided by a low noise signal path from the VCO to the signal combiner circuit, and a low power circuit coupled to the VCO and the signal combiner circuit, said low power circuit configured to provide a low power signal provided by a low power signal path from the VCO to the signal combiner circuit; wherein the signal combiner circuit is configured to selectively generate an output signal based on the low noise signal, the low power signal, or a combination of the low noise and low power signal.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to an apparatus for direct synthesis of a modulation waveform in a polar transmitter, comprising a fractional-N phase-locked loop circuit including a counter in the feedback loop controlled by a ΔΣ modulator, wherein a sequence output produced by the ΔΣmodulator alternates between integer values to resolve a fractional N value, a two-port voltage-controlled oscillator, wherein a first port of the oscillator is configured to receive a control voltage for the phase-locked loop and a second port of the oscillator is configured to receive a direct modulation signal, a second input circuit of the fractional-N phase-locked loop configured to remove the modulation applied at the voltage-controlled oscillator, a low-noise circuit providing a low-noise signal path comprising a CMOS divider and variable gain amplifier with two or more shunt stages, a low-power circuit providing a low-power signal path comprising a CML divider and variable gain amplifier with a single low power stage, and a phase selection network configured to align the low-noise and low-power paths.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to an apparatus for combining two signals paths in a transmitter, comprising a low noise circuit providing a low noise signal path configured for low noise operation, said low noise circuit comprising a divider and a plurality of shunt stages comprising a variable gain amplifier, a low power circuit providing a low power signal path configured for low power operation, said low power circuit comprising a divider and one or more shunt stages of a variable gain amplifier, and a phase selection network configured for selecting the phase of a signal provided in either the low noise circuit or the low power circuit, wherein the phase of a signal is selected based on a closest phase match to a signal provided in the other circuit.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to a phase selection network for use in a polar modulator, comprising a first multiplexer configured to receive a plurality of phase signals from a first divider circuit, a second multiplexer configured to receive a plurality of phase signals from a second divider circuit, an exclusive-or circuit coupled at a first input to an output of said first multiplexer and coupled at a second input to a output of said second multiplexer, an integrator coupled to an output of the exclusive-or circuit, an analog-to-digital converter coupled to an output of the integrator, and a logic circuit configured to select one of said plurality of phase signals provided to said first multiplexer based on a closest phase offset match to one of said plurality of phase signals provided to said second multiplexer.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to a method for providing an output signal in a polar modulator transmitter comprising receiving a VCO output signal, dividing, in a low noise signal circuit, the VCO output signal to generate a low noise signal, dividing, in a low power signal circuit, the VCO output signal to generate a low power signal and selectively combining the low noise signal and low power signal in a combiner circuit to generate an output signal for transmission by said transmitter.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to a polar modulation transmitter comprising a power amplifier circuit, a phase locked loop circuit including a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO), a signal combiner circuit, a low noise circuit coupled to a VCO circuit and a signal combiner circuit, said low noise circuit configured to provide a low noise signal provided by a low noise signal path from the VCO to the signal combiner circuit, and a low power circuit coupled to the VCO and the signal combiner circuit, said low power circuit configured to provide a low power signal provided by a low power signal path from the VCO to the signal combiner circuit; wherein the signal combiner circuit is configured to selectively generate an output signal provided to the power amplifier, said output signal being based on the low noise signal, the low power signal, or a combination of the low noise and low power signal responsive to a desired output level.
Additional aspects of the present invention are further described below in conjunction with the accompanying Drawings.
The following is a brief description of the drawings wherein:
a) illustrates one embodiment of a pseudo-differential divide-by-2 circuit in CMOS technology in accordance with aspects of the present invention;
b) illustrates one embodiment of a flip flop comprising two latches as may be used in the circuit shown in
c) illustrates one embodiment of a CMOS flip-flop circuit in accordance with aspects of the present invention;
d) illustrates one embodiment of a CML flip-flop in accordance with aspects of the present invention;
e) illustrates CMOS and CML outputs as may be generated by the circuits shown in
a) shows details of an embodiment of a phase select network in the dual-path polar transmitter in accordance with aspects of the present invention; and
b) illustrates signals in the network shown in
A polar transmitter efficiently modulates the RF carrier signal. It may employ a modified fractional-N phase-locked loop (PLL) 510 to apply the phase/frequency modulation 512 and a variable-gain driver amplifier 430 to control the envelope of the RF signal as shown in
The modified fractional-N PLL relies on a multi-port voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) 518 to allow direct, wideband phase/frequency modulation. Applying the modulation signal simultaneously to the ΔΣmodulator 524 (and counter 520) removes the modulation in the PLL feedback path. This allows the PLL to synthesize the RF carrier at the appropriate frequency. The input signal is represented in the polar coordinate as amplitude (AM) and phase (FM). The amplitude part is processed by a D/A 528 and a Low Pass Filter (LPF) 532. The processed AM is then used to adjust the gain of the variable gain amplifier 430. The FM part of the signal has two routes to the polar transmitter: in one route, the FM signal is processed by the ΔΣ modulator 524; and in the other route, the FM signal is processed by a D/A 526 and a LPF 530, and then feeds to the VCO 518. In the PLL 510, a reference signal and the output from the counter 520 are fed to the Phase/Frequency Detector (P/FD) 512. The output from the P/FD 512 is processed by the Charge Pump (CP) 514 followed by a LPF 516. The filtered signal is used to adjust the frequency of the VCO 518. The VCO output may be processed by a frequency divider 534 and buffered by a buffer 536 before the frequency divided signal is provided to the variable gain amplifier 430.
In some embodiments, the VCO output may be connected to a divide-by-2/4 circuit that shifts the output off-frequency. This may provide advantages because the high-power PA potentially couples energy back to the VCO and forces it to track the modulated output with disastrous results. This phenomenon is know as injection pushing and is illustrated in
In general, the VCO develops a fairly large signal with low noise level and an excellent signal-to-noise ratio. This is critical to eliminating the SAW filter that precedes the PA, such as is shown in
The divide-by-2/4 circuit that follows the VCO invariably elevates the noise floor of the transmitter. As such, it's critical that the divider signal levels remain high to minimize any added noise. This is only possible with circuits such as CMOS that have signals that swing between supply levels.
a describes an embodiment of a pseudo-differential divide-by-2 circuit 700 in CMOS technology. It uses two flips-flops 710 to generate a pair of complimentary output signals. Each flip-flop 710 may consist of two latches 720 and 722 as shown in the embodiment of
Details of an embodiment of a CMOS flip-flop are shown in
In contrast,
Both the pseudo-differential CMOS divider and the CML divider potentially provide four output signals separated in phase by π/2. This characteristic is depicted in
The RF signal produced by the VCO and divide-by-2/4 circuit includes phase/frequency modulation. As such, its amplitude remains constant and unimportant until modulated by a variable-gain driver amplifier. Ideally, the variable gain amplifier (VGA) provides amplification at low noise levels, adds little distortion, and consumes very little power. This is important because any distortion produced by the transmitter spills power into adjacent communication channels and thereby reduces system capacity. To minimize distortion, the bias current in the VGA and other circuits is typically high—an unwanted attribute for portable devices.
To operate efficiently, the RF carrier signal must quickly and fully switch the commutating devices N1-N2. This requires a voltage swing approximately equal to
where max(iAM) is the peak value of signal and K is the intrinsic gain of the MOS devices in the switching core. (In practice, the parameter K varies inversely with oxide thickness tox).
The driver communicates the signal current IAM to produce a square-wave output. The output balun and associated matching network attenuates any signal harmonics except the fundamental and intended transmit signal. Note that the efficiency of the commutating amplifier tracks the level of signal iAM(t).
The signal iAM(t) represents the amplitude or envelope variation of the complex transmit signal. In many applications it also includes information related to the transmit signal's power level. This is because the amplitude and power level can be conveniently combined as follows
i
AM(t)→pTx×iAM(t)
where pTx signifies the designated power control level.
The RF carrier signal must remain fairly large even when the adjusted current iAM(t) drops to low levels (corresponding to low output power levels). At the same time, the devices must be sized fairly large to handle the operating current at full output power. Consequently, these devices typically possess large capacitances that form a parasitic leakage path for the RF carrier signal to the RF output.
Many wireless systems demand wide control of the transmit output power level. This requires a driver with wide dynamic range. To achieve this, the driver structure may be split into two or more stages (denoted as stages 1 through M) as illustrated in the embodiment of
The driver modulates the amplitude or envelope of the phase/frequency-modulated RF carrier. It effectively combines the modulation signals, which must be properly aligned to avoid distortion and spectral regrowth as shown in
An embodiment of a low power polar transmitter in accordance with aspects of the present invention combines both a low-noise path and a low-power path as shown in
In practice, the output currents combine nearly identical signals with unknown phase offsets. As such, it's even possible for the signals to combine destructively. To avoid this potential problem, typical embodiments of the inventive low power polar transmitter include a phase alignment network. This network selects the divider phase that most closely aligns with the opposite path. Recall that each divider produces four output signals separated by π/2. It follows then that the phase difference between the two paths can be at most π/4.
A power control network may be used to steer the AM signal between the two paths. The low-power path may be configured to be turned off at high output levels to suppress noise while the low-noise path may be configured to turn off at low output levels to reduce current consumption. In various embodiments these turn on and turn off levels may be determined by a dynamic threshold level or a predefined threshold level. Moreover, both paths may be configured to operate in an intermediate or transition output level region that minimizes any amplitude or phase steps due to the unavoidable phase differences (up to ±π/4) between the two paths. Details of an embodiment of this concept are illustrated in
Details of an embodiment of the phase select network 1300 are shown in
Outside the transition region, only one path operates. As the output power adjusts towards the transition region, the phase select network searches for the divider signal that best matches the phase of the divider signal used by the opposite and active path. This requires all four divider outputs to be tested. The A/D converter stores the result of each test. Each result is then compared to find the closest to zero. (Note that the inverter is reset for each test and the A/D converter is strobed a set time after the reset is deactivated to capture the result). The integrator reduces wideband noise and improves the resolution of the system.
In one or more embodiments, the inventive low power polar transmitter provides both low-noise performance and low-power consumption by incorporating a novel dual path approach. This may result in an optimized architecture for a wide range of output power levels. It may also improve dynamic range by reducing internal signal levels at the lower output power levels.
The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, used specific nomenclature to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that specific details are not required in order to practice the invention. Thus, the foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the invention are presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed; obviously, many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications, they thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
The present invention is related and claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/149,250 entitled “Low-Power Polar Transmitter” and filed on Feb. 2, 2009. The U.S. Provisional Patent Application is hereby incorporated by reference in its entireties. This application is also related to U.S. Utility Pat. No. 6,985,703, entitled DIRECT SYNTHESIS TRANSMITTER, issued on Apr. 1, 2005, and to U.S. Utility patent application Ser. No. 12/351,461, entitled COMMUTATING AMPLIFIER WITH WIDE DYNAMIC RANGE, filed on Jan. 9, 2009, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/019,967, entitled COMMUTATING AMPLIFIER WITH WIDE DYNAMIC RANGE, filed on Jan. 9, 2008. The contents of each of these patents/applications is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61149250 | Feb 2009 | US | |
61019967 | Jan 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10265215 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 12698154 | US | |
Parent | 12351461 | Jan 2009 | US |
Child | 10265215 | US |