1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to communication devices, and more particularly, to such a device capable of operating in conjunction with a free-running oscillator.
2. Related Art
A known communication system includes a basestation transmitter/receiver (referred to as a transceiver) and one or more subscriber transceivers remote from the basestation. The basestation transceiver transmits a downstream communication signal including useful information (such as audio, video, etc.) to the subscriber transceivers. Each subscriber transceiver includes a receiver to recover the useful information from the downstream signal. Typically, the receiver first recovers/extracts inherent timing and/or frequency information from the downstream signal, for example, by frequency synchronizing an oscillator in the receiver to the downstream signal. Then, the receiver uses the recovered timing and/or frequency information to recover the useful information conveyed by the downstream signal.
Similarly, the basestation may also need to be able to recover inherent timing and/or frequency information from the upstream signal transmitted by the subscriber transceiver. However, some basestations may be incapable of recovering such upstream timing and/or frequency information unless it is closely matched to the downstream frequency and/or timing information.
It is desirable to keep the subscriber transceiver complexity, and thus overall cost, as low as possible. One cost driver in the subscriber transceiver tends to be any high frequency oscillator for generating high frequency signals used in or in conjunction with the transceiver. For example, oscillators used to generate signals in the GigaHertz (GHz) frequency range tend to be expensive, and thus, drive-up the overall cost of the transceiver.
Therefore, there is a need for a transceiver capable of extracting timing and/or frequency information from a downstream signal.
There is a further need for a transceiver capable of generating an upstream signal including inherent frequency and/or timing information that is closely matched to the frequency and/or timing characteristics of a downstream signal received by the transceiver.
There is an even further need for a low cost transceiver. There is a related need to reduce the cost of a high frequency oscillator used in or in conjunction with the transceiver, as compared to known systems.
A transceiver of the present invention includes the feature of extracting timing and/or frequency information from a downstream signal by frequency synchronizing an oscillator in the transceiver to the downstream signal.
The transceiver of the present invention has the feature of generating an upstream signal including inherent frequency and/or timing information matched closely to the frequency and/or timing characteristics of the downstream signal received by the transceiver. The transceiver frequency synchronizes the upstream to the downstream signal.
The transceiver of the present invention can be used with a free-running high frequency oscillator to reduce the overall cost of the transceiver. The free-running oscillator is not synchronized (for example, phase-locked or frequency-locked) to any other stable, reference oscillators.
Example Environment
Front-end Device
Front-end device 202 includes a downstream frequency-converter 204, an upstream frequency-converter 206, and a free-running oscillator 208. Downstream frequency-converter 204 includes a mixer 210 followed by a bandpass filter 212, and upstream-frequency converter 206 includes a bandpass filter 214 followed by a mixer 216. Free-running local oscillator 208 provides a free-running downstream LO signal 218 to mixer 210 and a free-running upstream LO signal 220 to mixer 216. LO signals 218 and 220 can be the same signal, and therefore, have the same frequency.
Free-running LO 208 is not synchronized (for example, phase-locked or frequency-locked) to a stable, accurate, external reference oscillator. Free-running LO 208 can be, for example, a relatively low cost, free-running, Dielectric Resonator Oscillator (DRO) for generating LO signals 218 and 220 in the GHz frequency range. A DRO generates a frequency that tends to drift noticeably over time, temperature, process and so on, when not synchronized to a stable reference oscillator. Thus, free-running LO signals 218 and 220 have respective frequencies tending to include an undesired frequency offset Δfd (also represented by reference numeral 222 in
In the downstream direction, front-end device 202 receives downstream signal 108. Downstream frequency-converter 204 frequency-converts downstream signal 108 (frequency fRFd) to an initial downstream signal 224 (frequency fIFd+Δfd) based on free-running LO signal 218 provided to mixer 210, whereby the free-running LO signal imparts the undesired frequency offset Δfd to the initial downstream signal 224. Front-end device 202 provides initial downstream signal 224 to back-end device 204.
In the upstream direction, back-end device 204 provides a pre-corrected upstream signal (frequency fIFu+Δfd) to upstream frequency-converter converter 206 of front-end device 202. Upstream frequency-converter 206 frequency-converts pre-corrected upstream signal 226 to upstream signal 114 based on free-running LO signal 220 provided to mixer 216.
Back-end Device
Back-end device 204 includes a Downstream Signal Processor (DSP) 230, an Upstream Signal Processor (USP) 232, a Local Oscillator (LO) 234, a differencer 236, a reference signal generator 238, and an estimator 240. DSP 230 receives initial downstream signal 224 from front-end device 202, a downstream LO signal 242 (frequency fdLO) from LO 234, and from estimator 240 a frequency-offset estimate Δed (identified as estimate signal 243 in
Similarly, USP 232 receives initial upstream signal 112, an upstream LO signal 244 from LO 234, and the frequency-offset estimate Δed from estimator 240. USP 232 uses LO signal 244 and estimate Δed to frequency up-convert initial upstream signal 112, and also to frequency pre-correct the initial upstream signal by an amount equal to the estimate Δed, thereby producing pre-corrected upstream signal 226 at the pre-corrected Intermediate Frequency (IF) (fIFu+Δfd). USP 232 provides pre-corrected upstream signal 226 to upstream frequency-converter 206 of front-end device 202.
DSP 230 provides corrected downstream signal 110, or alternatively, a signal 274 derived from the downstream signal, as a control signal to LO 234. LO 234 generates downstream LO signal 242, and upstream LO signal 244 in response to the control signal. The control signal synchronizes (for example, frequency-locks) downstream and upstream LO signals 242 and 244 to initial downstream signal 224, and thus to downstream signal 108, to the extent corrected downstream signal 110 is free of the undesired frequency offset Δfd (that is, to the extent estimate Δed represents frequency offset Δfd).
Differencer 236 derives a difference signal 246 indicative of a portion of the undesired frequency offset Δfd corrupting corrected downstream signal 110, based on a difference in frequency between upstream and downstream LO signals 242 and 244. Estimator 240 receives difference signal 246, and one or more reference signals (described below), and derives estimate Δed from the difference signal and the reference signals.
Detailed Operation
DSP 230 includes a first mixer 252 followed by an IF bandpass filter 254. Mixer 252 frequency-converts initial downstream signal 224 (also referred to as first IF signal 224) to a second IF signal 256 based on LO signal 242. In doing so, mixer 252 translates the frequency offset Δfd included in first IF signal 224 to second IF signal 256. Filter 254 filters second IF signal 256 to produce a filtered second IF signal 258. Filter 254 provides second IF signal 258 (including frequency offset Δfd) to a second mixer 260. In an alternative arrangement of the present invention, an analog-to-digital (A/D) converter, connected between filter 254 and second mixer 260, digitizes the signal output by filter 254. In this alternative arrangement, second IF signal 258 supplied to second mixer 260 is digitized.
DSP 230 includes a correction signal generator 262, having a combiner 263 coupled to a numerically controlled oscillator (NCO) 264. Combiner 263 derives a frequency control signal 265 based on frequency-offset estimate Δed and a frequency reference signal 266. Frequency reference signal 266 represents a predetermined frequency offset necessary to frequency-translate IF signal 258 to baseband, in the absence of frequency-offset Δfd. For example, if IF signal 258 has a nominal, predetermined IF frequency of 6 MegaHertz (MHz), then frequency reference signal 266 represents a frequency offset equal to 6 MHz.
In response to frequency-offset estimate Δed and frequency reference signal 266, NCO 264 generates a downstream correction signal 267 having a frequency representative of frequency-offset estimate Δed. For example, in the arrangement depicted in
In the arrangement depicted in
Mixer 260 frequency-converts second IF signal 258 to a baseband signal 268 based on downstream frequency correction signal 267. Mixer 260 removes from IF signal 258 a portion of the frequency offset Δfd represented by estimated Δed. That is, mixer 260 removes frequency offset Δfd from second IF signal 258 to the extent the frequency of downstream correction signal 267 represents frequency offset Δfd. Thus, when estimate Δed does not accurately represent frequency offset Δfd, baseband signal 268 includes an undesired residual portion of the frequency offset Δfd. Mixer 260 provides baseband signal 268 to a lowpass filter 270. Lowpass filter 270 filters signal 268 to produce corrected downstream signal 110, which may include the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd for the reason mentioned above.
Lowpass filter 270 provides corrected downstream signal 110 to an optional processor 272 to process corrected downstream signal 110. Processor 272 is used to process complex, baseband waveforms, such as a baseband OFDM signal, when downstream signal 110 includes such waveforms. Processor 272 derives an LO frequency control signal 274 from corrected downstream signal 110. Therefore, frequency control signal 274 is indicative of (for example, proportional to) the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd remaining in corrected downstream signal 110. Processor 272 provides the control signal to LO 234.
Alternative arrangements of DSP 230 are within the scope of the present invention. For example, first mixer 252 may operate as a frequency up-converter (instead of frequency down-converter) in one alternative arrangement. In another alternative arrangement, DSP 230 may include only a single mixer to frequency down-convert initial downstream signal 224 to a baseband frequency.
LO 234 includes a frequency tunable reference oscillator 276. Reference oscillator 276 generates a reference signal 278 (frequency fr) responsive to control signal 274. When corrected downstream signal 110 is free of frequency offset Δfd, control signal 274 causes oscillator 276 to generate reference signal 278 at a nominal predetermined frequency. On the other hand, when corrected downstream signal 278 includes a residual portion of frequency offset Δfd, control signal 274 causes frequency fr to be frequency-shifted from the nominal predetermined frequency of reference signal 278 by an amount ΨΔfd representative of the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd, where Ψ represents a constant of proportionality.
Reference oscillator 276 provides reference signal 278 to a downstream multiplier 280 and an upstream multiplier 282. Downstream multiplier 280 multiplies the frequency of reference signal 278 by a predetermined number (n) to produce downstream LO signal 242, having a frequency fdLO=nfr. Multiplier 280 provides downstream LO signal 242 to mixer 252. Similarly, upstream multiplier 282 multiplies reference signal 278 by a different predetermined number (k) to produce upstream LO signal 244, having a frequency fuLO=kfr. Multiplier 282 provides upstream LO signal 244 to USP 232. Frequencies fuLO and fdLO represent, for example, linearly scaled versions of frequency fr.
DSP 230, LO 234, and processor 272 operate together as a frequency-locked loop (FLL), including: mixer 252, filter 254, mixer 260, and filter 270 of DSP 232; processor 272; and oscillator 276 and multiplier 280 of LO 234. The FLL frequency-locks reference oscillator 276 (that is, frequency fr of reference signal 278) to frequency fIfd of IF signal 224, and thus, to frequency fRFd of downstream signal 108, at least to the extent mixer 260 removes frequency offset Δfd from IF signal 258. The reason the FLL frequency-locks frequency fr to frequency fIFd and not to frequency fIFd+Δfd, is that frequency control signal 274 derives from a signal (namely, corrected downstream signal 110) substantially free of frequency offset Δfd. The act of frequency-locking reference oscillator 276 to downstream frequency fRFd of downstream signal 108 (in the above-described manner) can be considered extracting inherent timing and/or frequency information from downstream signal 108.
In practice, reference oscillator 276 generates reference signal 278 at frequency fr, such that frequency fr tends to include an inherent frequency error term Δfr arising from imperfections in the reference oscillator. In frequency-locking frequency fr to frequency fIFd, the FLL reduces frequency error term Δfr to a sufficiently small value as to not adversely affect subsequent downstream processes (not shown) using corrected downstream signal 110.
Differencer 236 includes a mixer 284 followed by a bandpass filter 286. Mixer 284 subtracts (that is, differences) the frequencies of upstream and downstream signals 244 and 242 to produce a difference signal 288. Bandpass filter 286 filters difference signal 288 to produce a filtered version thereof, namely, difference signal 246, mentioned above. Difference signal 246 has a frequency ΔfLO=|fuLO−fdLO|=|(n−k)fr|.
When corrected downstream signal 110 is free of frequency offset Δfd, differencer 236 produces difference signal 246 at a nominal predetermined difference frequency α based on the nominal predetermined frequency of frequency fr. On the other hand, when corrected downstream signal 110 includes a residual portion of frequency offset Δfd, difference frequency ΔfLO is frequency-shifted from the nominal predetermined difference frequency α by an amount |(n−k)|ΨΔfd representative of the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd corrupting frequency fr. Therefore, difference signal 246 is indicative of the nominal predetermined frequency α and a frequency error term representative of (for example, proportional to) the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd corrupting corrected downstream signal 110.
Differencer 236 alone, or in combination with LO 234, can be considered generally as a circuit that generates a signal, generally referred to as an estimator signal, indicative of the residual portion of frequency offset Δfd corrupting corrected downstream signal 110. The estimator signal (for example, difference signal 246 in the embodiment of
Differencer 236 provides difference signal 246 to estimator 240. Estimator 240 includes, connected in series, a frequency detector 290, a combiner 292, and a loop filter/integrator 294. Frequency detector 290 receives difference signal 246, and a reference signal 296 from reference signal generator 238. Reference signal 296 represents a reference frequency fTRC or standard against which frequency detector 290 can derive frequency measurements. Frequency detector 290 detects/measures the frequency of difference signal 246, and provides a detected frequency 298 to combiner 292. Detected frequency 298 represents the predetermined nominal difference frequency α together with the frequency error term (that is, |(n−k)|ΨΔfd) included in difference signal 246, both mentioned above.
Combiner 292 receives detected frequency 298 and a reference signal 320 indicative of the frequency value α (from a source not shown). Combiner 292 subtracts the frequency value α from detected frequency 298, to produce a residual signal 322 indicative of the frequency error term included in difference signal 246, and thus, indicative of the portion of frequency offset Δfd included in corrected downstream signal 110.
Combiner 292 provides residual signal 322 to loop filter 294. Loop filter 294 integrates residual signal 322 into frequency-offset estimate Δed, whereby the frequency-offset estimate is continuously, adaptively updated over time. Estimator 240, DSP 230, processor 272, LO 234, and differencer 236, operate together, in the manner described above, as an adaptive frequency-offset estimating loop. When frequency-offset estimate Δed is too high or too low with respect to frequency offset Δfd, the frequency-offset estimating loop respectively reduces or increases the frequency-offset estimate. When frequency-offset estimate Δed accurately reflects frequency offset Δfd, the frequency-offset estimating loop maintains the present value of the frequency-offset estimate Δed.
In device 200, free-running frequency offset Δfd from free-running oscillator 208, and frequency error Δfr from oscillator 276, represent two unknown (and undesired) variables or quantities. Essentially, the FLL and frequency-offset estimating loop of the present invention operate together to resolve the two unknown quantities such that frequency errors resulting from the unknowns can be substantially reduced. This means that given arbitrary initial conditions for the above mentioned unknown quantities, the FLL and frequency-offset estimating loop operate together to cause frequency errors arising from the unknowns to converge to a correct (or rather acceptable) and stable operating condition.
Upstream Signal Processor
USP 232 includes a baseband filter 324, a first mixer 326 following the filter, and an upstream correction signal generator 328. Upstream correction signal generator 328 is similar to downstream correction signal generator 262. Upstream correction signal generator 328 receives frequency offset estimate Δed and a reference signal 330. In response to these input signals, correction signal generator 328 produces an upstream correction signal 331 having a frequency representative of frequency-offset estimate Δed (for example, in the same way upstream correction signal 267 is representative of frequency-offset estimate Δed). In an alternative arrangement of the present invention, downstream and upstream signal generators 262 and 328 are the same signal generator, and correction signals 267 and 331 are the same signal.
Upstream baseband filter 324 provides a filtered, initial upstream signal 332 to mixer 326. Mixer 326 frequency-converts signal 332 to a first IF signal 333 based on upstream correction signal 331. Mixer 326 adds to upstream signal 332 the portion of the frequency offset Δfd represented by estimate Δed. That is, mixer 326 adds frequency offset Δfd to upstream signal 332 to the extent the frequency of upstream correction signal 331 represents frequency offset Δfd. Mixer 326 provides first IF signal 333 to an IF bandpass filter 334. In an arrangement of the present invention, signals 112, 332, and 331 are digital signals, and a digital-to-analog (D/A) converter is connected between mixer 326 and filter 334 to converts a digital IF signal output by mixer 326 to an analog IF signal. In this arrangement, IF signal 333 supplied to filter 334 is an analog signal.
IF BPF 334 provides a filtered, first IF signal 336 to a second upstream mixer 338 of USP 232. Mixer 338 frequency-converts first IF signal 336 to pre-corrected upstream signal 226 based on upstream LO signal 244. Pre-corrected upstream signal 226 also includes the portion of the frequency offset Δfd represented by estimate Δed. Mixer 338 provides pre-corrected signal 226 to upstream frequency-converter 206 of front-end device 202.
Mixer 216 cancels frequency offset Δfd in LO signal 220 with the frequency-offset included in pre-corrected upstream signal 226 to the extent the two frequency offsets are equal to one another. Therefore, mixer 216 produces upstream signal 114 at a frequency (frequency fRFu) substantially free of frequency offset Δfd. Since the present invention (1) frequency-converts initial upstream signal 112 using an upstream LO signal (for example, LO signal 244) that is frequency-locked to downstream signal 108, and (2) substantially prevents free-running frequency offset Δfd from contaminating upstream signal 114, the present invention can be considered to generate an upstream signal (that is, signal 114) that includes inherent frequency and/or timing information matched closely to the frequency and/or timing characteristics of downstream signal 108.
Alternative arrangements of USP 232 are within the scope of the present invention. For example, USP 232 may include only a single mixer to frequency up-convert initial upstream signal 112. In an alternative embodiment of the back-end device, USP 232 is omitted. In such an embodiment, the back-end device processes only downstream signals.
As discussed above in connection with
Reference signal generator 400 includes a decoder 402 coupled to a signal generator 404. The decoder 402 decodes the encoded master timing signal included in signal 224, to recover the time stamps of the master timing signal. Decoder 402 derives a frequency control signal 406 from the time stamps. In response to frequency control signal 406 (that is, the recovered time stamps), generator 404 generates reference signal 296 such that reference signal 296 accurately represents a reference frequency of (that is, a frequency standard established at) transceiver 102.
Example Frequencies
Table 1 below includes a list of signal frequencies used in exemplary arrangements of environment 100 and transceiver 200.
Method Flow Charts
In describing various methods below, references are made to signals and/or elements depicted in
In a first step 502 of method 500, back-end device 204 receives initial downstream signal 224 including undesired frequency offset Δfd (also referred to below as the undesired frequency offset (FO)).
In a next step 504, DSP 230, processor 272, LO 234, differencer 236, and estimator 240, operate together to derive from corrected downstream signal 110 (available in the steady-state condition), frequency-offset estimate Δed indicative of frequency offset Δfd included in initial downstream signal 224.
In a next step 506, DSP 230 removes the estimated frequency offset Δed from initial downstream signal 224, thereby producing corrected downstream signal 110. In doing so, DSP 230 also frequency-converts initial downstream signal 224 to a baseband frequency. Steps 504 and 506 together comprise adaptively estimating frequency offset Δfd.
In a next step 508, USP 232 frequency pre-corrects initial upstream signal 112 using the estimated frequency offset Δed, thereby generating pre-corrected upstream signal 226. In doing so, USP 232 also frequency-converts initial upstream signal 112 from a baseband frequency to an IF frequency (of upstream signal 226).
In a next step 510, back-end device 204 provides pre-corrected upstream signal 226 to front-end device 202, whereby the front-end device mixes frequency pre-corrected upstream signal 226 with free-running LO signal 220 to produce upstream signal 114 such that the upstream signal is free of the undesired FO (that is, frequency offset Δfd) to the extent the estimated FO represents the undesired FO. Method 500 repeats over time.
Method 500 can be modified to a method of compensating for a frequency offset from a free-running oscillator in only a downstream direction by omitting method steps 508 and 510.
In a first sub-step 606 of step 602, LO 234 generates upstream LO signal 244 and downstream LO signal 242 each having a frequency responsive to corrected downstream signal 110. This frequency-locks upstream and downstream LO signals 244, 242 to downstream signal 108 received by front-end device 202 to the extent corrected downstream signal 110 is free of undesired frequency offset Δfd. In a next sub-step 608 of step 602, differencer 236 differences the upstream and downstream LO signals 242, 244 to produce estimator signal 246.
In next high-level step 604, estimator 240 estimates frequency offset Δfd, to produce frequency-offset estimate Δed. In a first sub-step 610 of step 604, detector 290 detects the frequency of estimator signal 246. In a next sub-step 612, combiner 292 subtracts the predetermined difference frequency α from the detected frequency 298, thereby producing a residual signal 322 indicative of the portion of the undesired Δfd contaminating corrected downstream signal 110. In a next sub-step 614, integrator 294 integrates residual signal 322 into the frequency offset estimate Δed.
CONCLUSION
While various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example, and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant art that various changes in form and detail can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present invention has been described above with the aid of functional building blocks and method steps illustrating the performance of specified functions and relationships thereof. The boundaries of these functional building blocks and method steps have been arbitrarily defined herein for the convenience of the description. Alternate boundaries can be defined so long as the specified functions and relationships thereof are appropriately performed. Any such alternate boundaries are thus within the scope and spirit of the claimed invention. One skilled in the art will recognize that these functional building blocks can be implemented by discrete components, application specific integrated circuits, processors executing appropriate software and the like or any combination thereof. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.
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6603958 | Gao et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
6765879 | Yamamoto et al. | Jul 2004 | B1 |
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2 347 285 | Aug 2000 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030078021 A1 | Apr 2003 | US |