The present application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/459,303, filed Dec. 10, 2010, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The subject matter disclosed herein relates generally to electronic filters. More particularly, the subject matter disclosed herein relates to notch filters, for example such as those for use in a mobile phone.
In a frequency division duplex (FDD) wireless transceiver, such as CDMA and WCDMA, the transmitter and receiver sections of a mobile station need to operate simultaneously. A typical RF FDD front-end single-band block diagram of the wireless transceiver is shown for example in
The duplexer in the RF front-end is used to separate the transmission and reception signals. The duplexer specification requirements on suppressing unwanted signal and/or interference are very high. Typically 55 dB or greater of isolation is required to suppress the transmission signal leaking into the receiver and a minimum 45 dB is required to suppress the transmitter noise in the receiver frequency band. Excessive transmission leakage through the duplexer to the receiver will cause inter-modulation and/or cross-modulation interference desensitizing the receiver. An external SAW filter with modest rejection level (typically 20 dB) is often placed after the LNA to relax the mixer linearity and duplexer rejection requirements. However SAW filters historically have shown resistance to integration and frequency tunability, thus increasing the size, component count, and cost of the overall transceiver.
In order to address these problems, tunable solutions such as YIG filters have been proposed. These filters exhibit low loss and broad tuning bandwidth characteristics, but they require an externally applied magneto-static field, suffer from slow tuning times due to hysteresis effects, and exhibit high power consumption.
Other options include distributed filter designs using coupled sections of resonant printed structures such as loaded combine filters, loaded loop resonators, or interdigitated filters. However, the large footprint required by these designs becomes the main disadvantage for any distributed implementation when designed for operation at typical cell phone frequency bands (700 MHz-2.7 GHz). In general, either acoustic or tunable lumped element filters must be used to meet cell phone real estate constraints. A non-tunable notch filter using bond wire inductors operating at the IMT band (TX: 1.92-1.98 GHz, RX: 2.11-2.17 GHz) has been developed, but low suppression level (approx. 12 dB) and high insertion losses (3 dB) can be measured with such a system. In addition, due to the non-tunable nature of the design, the suppression level shows high variation within in the operating frequency band.
In the cellular systems, the mobile phone operation frequency is channelized. The channel frequency spacing is only 100 kHz to 200 kHz depending on systems. Thus, the narrow band notch filter frequency needs to have frequency accuracy within 100 kHz for 2.5G and 3G mobile stations (channel spacing is 200 kHz) or 50 kHz for the LTE mobile stations (channel spacing 100 KHz). The frequency accuracy of the notch filter in this kind of application needs to be about 10−5 at least if the effective bandwidth of the filter is narrow down to the extent close to the signal bandwidth. The accuracy of the components comprising the notch filter is only 1%. In this case, it is impractical for an individual notch filter to utilize a fixed lookup table for filter tracking the transceiver operation frequencies. Accordingly, it would be desirable for a tunable filter to be able to dynamically track transceiver operation.
In accordance with this disclosure, tunable notch filters, such as micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) tunable notch filters, and control loop systems and methods are provided. In one aspect, a tunable filter and control system is provided. The tunable filter and control system can comprise a tunable notch filter providing a stop band, a sensing circuit in communication with the tunable notch filter and adapted to determine a phase change between a reference signal and a signal reflected from the tunable notch filter, and a control loop in communication with the tunable notch filter and the sensing circuit, the control loop being operable to adjust the tunable notch filter to modify the phase change.
In another aspect, a method for rejecting the strongest signal on an input of a tunable filter and control system can comprise receiving a reference signal at a tunable notch filter, wherein at least a portion of the reference signal is reflected by the tunable notch filter, sensing a phase change between the reference signal and the signal reflected from the tunable notch filter, and adjusting the tunable notch filter to modify the phase change.
Although some of the aspects of the subject matter disclosed herein have been stated hereinabove, and which are achieved in whole or in part by the presently disclosed subject matter, other aspects will become evident as the description proceeds when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings as best described hereinbelow.
The features and advantages of the present subject matter will be more readily understood from the following detailed description which should be read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings that are given merely by way of explanatory and non-limiting example, and in which:
a is a graph illustrating frequency responses of an ideal LC notch filter S21 magnitude and phase;
b is a graph illustrating frequency responses of an ideal LC notch filter S11 magnitude and phase;
A tunable narrow band notch filter may be used in the front-end of mobile phone receivers to deeply suppress the counterpart transmitter power leakage into the receiver. It may also be used in other RF applications wherever an interfering signal must be suppressed. In the cellular systems, the operation frequency of mobile phone transceivers is switched when its communication with one base station handovers to another base station. The present subject matter provides filter frequency control loops and methods for automatically tuning the notch filter center frequency to track the mobile phone transceiver operation frequency switch as well as compensating for manufacturing tolerances and operational variations such as may result, for example, across a range of ambient temperatures. The frequency control loop can utilize the phase of the transmitter local oscillator (LO) frequency or directly use the transmitter leakage as the reference and detect if the phase of the reflected LO or transmitter leakage signal from the notch filter has changed or not. Based on the phase change of the reflected LO or transmitter leakage, the frequency control loop can pull the notch filter center frequency equal to the current transmitter operation frequency. Thus, the leaking power from the transmitter into the receiver can be effectively suppressed no matter what frequency the transceiver operates on. Alternatively, the tunable notch filter can be used in other systems to reject whatever the strongest signal on its input may be to protect downstream circuitry.
In practical notch filter designs, a single bandpass is usually designed to coexist near the notch frequency. When this is the case, the design is also referred as single-pole, single-zero filter denoting a unique pole and zero in the filter transfer function. A configuration for a tunable notch filter circuit using tunable components, generally designated 10, is shown in
The series-LC block can resonate at a notch frequency that can be represented as follows:
where Cr represents the resonator composite capacitance resulting from the series connection of first and second capacitances C1 and C2 and can be expressed as follows:
At resonance (fr), the series-LC block can present a short circuit to ground reflecting most of the signal traveling along the transmission line. The values of L1 and C1 can be chosen in order to obtain a resonance frequency higher than 1.98 GHz when all MEMS capacitor cells used in capacitor C2 are in the “Off” state (i.e., minimum capacitance). By tuning the value of C2, the resonance frequency can be dynamically adjusted to generate a notch at one of the transmitter operating frequencies. The center frequency of this notch filter should be capable of being tuned to cover the entire IMT transmission frequency band (from 1.92 to 1.98 GHz).
On the other hand, the bandpass filter comprises the series-LC block in combination with third and fourth capacitors C3 and C4 that are located in a symmetrical fashion on both sides of the resonator. This arrangement minimizes the insertion loss of bandpass filtering and makes impedance matching identical as seen from ports 1 and 2.
The total capacitance C∥ of capacitances C3 plus C4 for resonating at the receiver frequency ωrx can be obtained from Equation (3) below:
The S-parameters for the notch and bandpass combination filter can be derived and expressed as follows:
where Zo is a reference impedance (e.g., about 50Ω). It is expected that S11=S22 (symmetric matching condition) only if the capacitance values c3 and c4 are identical.
Notch filter 10 described above provides an inherent narrow rejection bandwidth. The filter center notch frequency can be tuned with an accuracy of 100 kHz or less for 2.5G and 3G mobile systems (channel spacing is 200 kHz) or 50 kHz or less for the LTE system (channel spacing 100 KHz).
To achieve the accurate frequency tuning of the narrow band notch filter, a frequency automatic control loop can be provided. Such a loop can utilize the transmitter carrier as a reference signal and uses the reflection phase change of the reference signal from the notch filter to tune the filter frequency and to track the channel frequency that the mobile station transmitter operates on.
It is noted that a frequency automatic control loop for MMIC bandpass filters has been developed previously. Unlike the conventional bandpass filter frequency control loop using the transmission coefficient (S21) phase and/or magnitude, however, a frequency control loop according to the present subject matter can uniquely utilize the filter reflection coefficient (S11) phase information. In addition, one key difference from conventional bandpass filters is that the signal passing through the present notch filter can be suppressed to a very weak level which may be difficult to detect. Additionally, the notch filter can present 180° phase jump in transmission at its notch (or center) frequency (See, e.g.,
In the case of notch or other narrowband rejection filters, the phase information of the reflected reference signal from the filter (i.e., the phase information of the S11 around the notch frequency) can be used for tuning. An advantage of sensing S11 is that the magnitude of the reflection coefficient of the notch filter near its notch frequency is very high. In addition, the S11 reflection phase behavior versus frequency is continuous across its notch frequency and in quasi linear fashion as shown in
However, the phase of the notch filter reflection coefficient S11 monotonically varies with the frequency change and it crosses the 0° at the center frequency of the notch filter. This can be mathematically described by the transfer function of a simple notch filter reflection coefficient, HS11(jω):
where the S11 phase is expressed as
where ω is the angle frequency equal to 2πf (f is frequency), ωo is the notch filter center angle frequency, and k is a coefficient associated with filter Q factor under 50 ohm load. Utilizing the phase monotone variation with the frequency and the S11 phase equal to zero degree at the center frequency ω=ωo, the notch filter frequency automatic tuning and tracking can be achieved by using a phase locked loop.
A first notch filter frequency control loop configuration, generally designated 101, is depicted in
The second path from the power divider can direct reference RF signal Sref to a second RF LOG amplifier 140, from which an amplified reference signal can be passed to a voltage control phase shifter 142. The signal coming out from phase shifter 142 can have a right phase difference from the phase of the signal reflected by second notch filter section 112 (e.g., a 90° phase difference) to make phase detector 150 operate in its linear region and provide the highest gain. This signal from phase shifter 142 can also be input to phase detector 150 as a reference to detect the phase change of the signal reflected by second notch filter section 112. A phase control voltage Vp can be used for dynamically adjusting phase shifter 142 with the channel frequency switch to account for the phase difference caused by the two paths to the inputs of phase detector 150 having different physical lengths.
In the case that the frequency of the signal received at phase detector 150 from first RF LOG amplifier 130 is different from the current filter center frequency, the output voltage of the phase detector 150 can vary proportionally to the detected phase change of signal reflected by second notch filter section 112. This output can be provided to a control loop operable to adjust tunable notch filter 110 to modify the phase change. In particular, the voltage variation produced by phase detector 150 can be filtered by a low-pass filter 160 to produce a filtered voltage signal Vc. An initial voltage Vi can be added to filtered voltage signal Vc to initially set the notch filter rough center frequency based on the transceiver operation channel frequency information. This initially voltage Vi can broaden the frequency control loop phase locking operation range, speeding up the locking time, and reducing the frequency control error.
The filtered voltage signal Vc can be fed to a buffer amplifier 170 having a gain Kc and routed to an analog to digital (ADC) converter 180, where the voltage control signal can be converted to digital bits. A coder 190 can translate the bit sequence into tuning words, and tunable notch filter 110 can be tuned to the new frequency, thereby producing an output RF signal Sout.
In an alternative configuration shown in
In yet another alternative configuration for the case of the transmitter signal being single carrier, a third notch filter frequency control loop configuration 103 can be comparatively simplified and built on the main filter itself as depicted in
In a second path, the forward transmitter leakage signal then hits stand-alone tunable notch filter 115, and it can be mostly reflected by stand-alone tunable notch filter 115, having a phase change Δφ that is different from 180° if the leakage signal carrier frequency ωr is different from the notch filter originally tuned frequency ωo. The reflected transmitter leakage signal can be coupled to a branch of directional coupler 125 in communication with first RF LOG amplifier 130. This reflected transmitter leakage signal can also be amplified by first RF LOG amplifier 130 to remove its AM modulation as can be done for the reference leakage signal. The amplified reflected transmitter leakage signal can then be routed to anther input of phase detector 150. Phase shifter 150 can adjust the initial phase difference between the two input signals to 90°.
The output from phase detector 150 can be a voltage Vc that depends upon the reflection coefficient phase of the notch filter according to the following relationship:
VC˜Ao2 Sin(∠HS11(ω)) (9)
The high frequency products are filtered by a low-pass RC loop filter 160. Then, as in the other configurations, only the low frequency output passes through lowpass filter 160, and it can be amplified (e.g., at buffer amplifier 170) and digitized (e.g., at ADC converter 180) before being provided to tune the MEMS capacitors in stand-alone tunable notch filter 115 and make the frequency of stand-alone tunable notch filter 115 align with the leakage carrier frequency ωr.
In any of the configurations described above, the narrow band MEMS notch filter can be used to automatically and precisely tune mobile phone transceivers by using a frequency automatic control loop according to the presently-disclosed subject matter. Thus, the notch filter center frequency can accurately track the channel frequency on which the mobile phone transceivers operate.
Using a tunable notch filter frequency control loop, such as a system having one of those configurations discussed above, a number of advantageous performance improvements can be achieved. For example, the notch filter frequency control loop performance can compare favorably to ADS simulations. Specifically, a notch filter having one of the configurations discussed above can be implemented by using a fixed value of inductance L1=10.6 nH and Cr=0.6 pF, which can produce a notch frequency at 2 GHz. When ωc=20 KHz, Qo=1000 and τ=0 μs, the transient responses of this frequency control to an initial frequency offset Δωo=15 MHz and ADS simulations are shown in
Using the same loop parameters as above, the locking time responses for the filter Qo=1000, 100, 80 and 40 are shown in
The low pass filter cut off frequency ωc or the loop bandwidth impacts the filter frequency locking time. The locking time responses for different ωc and Qo=80, A=0.12, Δωo=15 MHz, and τ=0 are shown in
The overall loop gain (controlled by parameter ‘A’) impacts the locking time and oscillatory behavior. A high loop gain may cause frequency divergence situations.
The capacitor actuation delay time can also affect the frequency locking time of the filter and may possibly cause a divergent solution. The filter frequency control error transient response for different MEMS capacitor actuation delays is shown in
A standalone tunable filter according to the present subject matter can comprise an existing high Q tunable digital capacitor array (TDCA) flip chip solution. The TDCA can consist of a plurality of tunable capacitor cells (e.g., twenty cells) of nominal value of about 1 pF or 0.875 pF. The minimum capacitance step resolution of each cell can be about 0.125 pF. The cells in the TDCA can be interconnected on the PCB level in order to achieve any desired topology.
The Q of the die level capacitors can be measured to be greater than 150 at 2 GHz, allowing low insertion loss designs. In addition, the value of capacitance is highly repeatable, which is an important feature for narrowband tunable filtering circuits. The IP3 level for such a device can be about 65 dBm, and the group delay distortion can be below 1 ns in the received signal pass band. The CMOS biasing circuitry can be integrated in the same chip and can transform a 3.3V supply voltage to the required 35V voltage actuation level. The power consumption can be about 6 μA and 90 μA in the sleep and the active mode (i.e., charge pump on), respectively. A Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) can be used to control the capacitor banks states. A USB port can be used to transmit the tuning commands from PC control software. The software can require very low computational effort and can be easily implemented on a cell phone microprocessor.
As shown in
The SPSZ filter shown in
The measured transmission and return loss of the filter for 39 different tuning states of the resonator block are shown in
Notch filter control loops such as those discussed above can likewise be implemented using discrete components. A 20 dB directional coupler (Meca 722S-20-1.950) can distribute the input and reflected leakage signals. An analog adjustable phase shifter (Narda 3752) can be used to provide the 90 degree phase difference at the phase detector input when the transmit leakage and notch frequency are aligned. The phase detector board can include logarithmic amplifiers and provide a single ended output with dynamic range between 0 and 2 volts. The integrator can be implemented using and operational amplifier (THS3091DDA). The low pass filter can be a single stage RC circuit with a cutoff frequency of ωc=20 KHz. The analog to digital convertor (ADC)-(NI USB-6009) can be used to convert the output voltage from the integrator into a digital signal. A PC can be used here as an encoder in order to generate the tuning words that actuate the tunable RF MEMS capacitors. The communication link between the PC and the TDCA die can be based on SPI commands sent via USB-SPI interface (Total Phase Cheetah). The left tunable filter ports can be connected to a vector network analyzer for monitoring purposes.
Due to the unknown delay associated with the ADC and PC processing speed, it can be difficult to accurately determine the fast filter locking response time. Therefore, in order to check the filter convergence the time axis is considered here as number of iterations (or tuning words) required for the filter to achieve the frequency tracking. The locking time can then be estimated by multiplying the number of iterations by the MEMS actuation delay (typically 10 μs with this technology). The final estimated value would be reasonably close to the expected locking time in an IC implementation.
The loop performance and locking time can be evaluated in high or low loop gain conditions. Due to the digital nature of the tunable notch filter, only certain discrete frequency states are possible, which explains the expected step behavior of locking time response curves
From
The estimation of the filter frequency error in this practical discrete implementation can be a very challenging task for several reasons: (a) the tuning resolution of the present TDCA being 0.125 pF, the tunable digital filter can only achieve certain frequencies; (b) the noise pick-up of the discrete system is not negligible; and (c) the analog-to-digital convertor number of bits is limited. The final frequency error of this experimental filter frequency control loop will not exclusively depend on the quality factor of the components but will be considerably affected by the before mentioned factors.
Assuming these limitations, the final frequency for the above discrete implementation can be estimated by changing the filter external components to L1=27 nH, C1=0.1 pF, which reduces the step resolution to a maximum of 500 KHz at expenses of reduced notch tuning range of 5.6 MHz. As a consequence of increasing the inductor value, the overall Q factor can also be reduced, providing 15 dB notch rejection. The loop gain can be chosen as in
An experiment conducted by choosing different Δωo=5 MHz can result in a maximum recorded frequency error of 277 KHz for this particular implementation. The final frequency control error can be further reduced if the filter frequency tuning resolution and the overall Q factor increase.
Complete tunable filter systems and methods comprising an RF MEMS tunable notch filter and its associated frequency control loop have been described. The analysis and the derived closed form solutions and formulas have proven very useful to the design and implementation of the a tunable filter system such as disclosed herein. This tunable filter can be practically used in the transceivers of wireless mobile stations. It can be possibly integrated into mobile transceiver RF ICs. The notch filter frequency control loop formulation developed here is not only applicable to this specific filter topology, but can be applied to any narrowband band-stop tunable filters. Concepts of this tunable filtering system may be also used in the design of a more complex future tunable duplexer system.
The present subject matter can be embodied in other forms without departure from the spirit and essential characteristics thereof. The embodiments described therefore are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive. Although the present subject matter has been described in terms of certain preferred embodiments, other embodiments that are apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art are also within the scope of the present subject matter.
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