1. The Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to improving performance of transmitting and receiving radio devices. More specifically, the invention relates to using a spread spectrum local oscillator in combination with a mixer to realize a spread spectrum intermediate frequency within the radio device.
2. State of the Art
Radio devices are often designed with multiple functional blocks to optimize cost and performance. These functional blocks may be circuits or electronic components which perform a specified function and which may be used for multiple similar applications. Receivers are designed to receive signals from a communications channel and prepare them for further processing. Transmitters are similarly designed to prepare and transmit the desired signal into a communications channel. Frequently transmitters and receivers can share functional blocks, such as amplifiers or filters, to reduce complexity and cost. When transmitter and receiver circuitry is shared in this manner, the device is known as a transceiver. Mixers and local oscillators can be used convert the input signal to a different frequency that is more practical for processing or transmitting. Modem radio devices frequently employ analog to digital (A/D) converters and digital signal processors (DSP), which permit complicated signal processing function to be implemented in the DSP firmware at very low cost.
While the processing done by these functional blocks is necessary to the functioning of the radio device, they often introduce distortion or interference due to their inherent limitations. A mixer may allow harmonic frequencies of the local oscillator to interfere with the desired signal. If the mixer is connected directly to an antenna, leakage from the local oscillator may be transmitted by the antenna as an unwanted tone to nearby receivers. Further, the conversion of the signal to an intermediate frequency by the mixer may result in the creation of an image frequency which can cause interference. In some receivers, the filtering of the image frequency can require complex and costly circuitry. Amplifiers and filters will also typically introduce some distortion to the desired signal. If the maximum input voltage of an analog to digital converter is exceeded (perhaps due to a large interfering signal), clipping of the signal may occur. The distortion and interference introduced in these ways has an undesirable effect on the radio device's performance.
For communication devices such as wireless radio receivers and transmitters, communications are sent through the atmosphere or space. A recent adaptation for improved performance in transmitting communications through space is the use of spread spectrum techniques, which are commonly employed in cell phone and Global Positioning Satellite systems. These systems obtain improved channel performance by transmitting a signal whose spectrum has been spread, or widened over frequencies larger than those required to by the basic communication bandwidth.
Spread spectrum channels have several advantages over traditional narrowband signals. Several spread spectrum signals can be simultaneously transmitted or received in the same frequency spectrum. Spread spectrum signals are also less susceptible to interference, have better signal to noise ratios, and suffer reduced distortion from strong nearby signals.
It would be desirable to realize the advantages of spread spectrum signals in communication channels other than space. The use of a spread spectrum channel communications implemented entirely within the electronics of a transmitter or receiver could improve the radio device's dynamic range and selectivity, common measures of radio performance. These measures relate to how well the device handles sources of distortion and noise, including those discussed previously.
There is thus a need for electronics devices which have improved performance such as improved dynamic range and selectivity and reduced sensitivity to distortion and noise through the use of spread spectrum techniques within the transmitter or receiver of a radio device.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for implementing spread spectrum techniques within the electronics of a radio receiver or transmitter to improve the radio device's performance.
According to one aspect of the invention, an electronic device is provided which takes an incoming narrowband signal, such as a radio signal, and spreads its spectrum preparatory to further processing. The device may employ one of many signal spreading techniques, including frequency hopping, pseudo-random bit sequencing, frequency modulation, phase modulation, or even modulation of the signal with true random noise. The device then further processes the signal (for example, through analog or digital filtering and amplification), taking advantage of the spread spectrum characteristics such as increased immunity to harmonics, better dynamic range, and image rejection. The device then despreads the signal to an appropriate frequency for transmission or use by a radio device.
These and other aspects of the present invention are realized in a method and apparatus for using spread spectrum techniques within the electronics of radio receivers or transmitters as shown and described in the following figures and related description.
Various embodiments of the present invention are shown and described in reference to the numbered drawings wherein:
It will be appreciated that the drawings are illustrative and not limiting of the scope of the invention which is defined by the appended claims. The embodiments shown accomplish various aspects and objects of the invention. It is appreciated that it is not possible to clearly show each element and aspect of the invention in a single figure, and as such, multiple figures are presented to separately illustrate the various details of the invention in greater clarity. Similarly, not every embodiment need accomplish all advantages of the present invention.
The invention and accompanying drawings will now be discussed in reference to the numerals provided therein so as to enable one skilled in the art to practice the present invention. The drawings and descriptions are exemplary of various aspects of the invention and are not intended to narrow the scope of the appended claims.
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The local oscillator 18 employed is not a traditional fixed frequency oscillator as is found in most receivers, but is an oscillator configured to generate a spread spectrum signal. The output frequency of the spreading local oscillator 18 is varied by techniques such as frequency hopping, by generating a pseudo-random bit sequence, by frequency modulation (FM), by phase modulation (PM), or by modulating the signal with true random noise. As this varied oscillator signal is mixed with the narrowband input signal by the mixer 16, the signal is spread across a broader spectrum.
This spread signal is then processed further, preparing the signal for use by the radio device. In the simple receiver shown in
Once the spread signal has been processed, it is despread by mixer 26 and local oscillator 28. The despreading local oscillator 28 is modulated by the identical spreading function used by the spreading local oscillator 18 so the signals are spread and despread properly. The base frequency of the despreading local oscillator 28, however, may be different from the spreading local oscillator 18, which would result in another shift in the signal's frequency to an appropriate output signal frequency. In
One advantage of using the spread spectrum processing of a signal within a RF receiver or transmitter is an increased immunity to received harmonics. Most receivers use a mixer to convert the received signal into an intermediate frequency signal more suited for processing. The mixer convolves the received signal's spectrum with the local oscillator's spectrum, but the local oscillator's spectrum usually contains harmonics of its base frequency. For example, a 5 MHz local oscillator 18 feeding a passive mixer 16 will convert a 6 MHz signal or a 4 MHz signal to 1 MHz, but because the local oscillator 18 and mixer 16 transfer function responds to the oscillator's third harmonic (15 MHz), it will also convert any 16 MHz or 14 MHz signal present at the input to 1 MHz. Thus strong signals at these frequencies may be convolved with and interfere with the desired signal.
In the present invention, if the local oscillator signal is spread (for example, to a bandwidth of 100 KHz), the bandwidth of the third harmonic signal will be spread to a bandwidth three times as wide (300 KHz). Filtering can then be used to remove the edges of the wider spectrum of the harmonic signal and still pass the desired 100 KHz signal that was originally at 4 MHz or 6 MHz. Further, the despreading mixer 26 will correctly despread the desired signal, but the undesired harmonic response that was spread over 300 KHz by the first mixer 16 will not be despread by the second mixer 26. The undesired harmonic signal is thus largely filtered out, and the remaining unfiltered signal is spread across a broader spectrum, primarily into the noise floor of the receiver. This remaining undesired signal can be filtered out by the use of an additional narrowband filter. Thus, the receiver's response to unwanted local oscillator harmonics is greatly reduced.
A further advantage to using spread spectrum techniques within the receiver or transmitter is better dynamic range. Dynamic range is a ratio of the largest to the smallest signal strengths capable of being received simultaneously without negative effects from circuit limitations such as blocking and intermodulation distortion. In an RF device using the present invention, any distortion generated by the signal processing stages between the spreading mixer 16 and despreading mixer 26 will be spread as well, but not well-correlated with the input spread spectrum signal set. The distortion will remain spread when the desired signal is despread, and will contribute to the system noise floor, usually in a minor way.
Devices employing A/D converters are subject to the inherent distortion within the A/D converter. This distortion can be a result of nonlinear steps, nonmonotonic transfer characteristics, and intermodulation distortion. These distortions are reduced in the same manner as the analog system described above.
Additionally, in a traditional narrowband receiver a few strong signals within the input filter's 14 passband can generate false signals via distortion and blocking in the input mixer and later stages. The spread spectrum input mixer 16 will spread the spectrum of these powerful undesired signals over a wider bandwidth, which reduces the peak voltages and currents of the IF signal. This reduction of the peak voltage allows the device to effectively receive a larger input signal without distortion, resulting in increased dynamic range in these stages.
If the receiver utilizes an A/D converter to allow digital processing of the signal, the A/D converter will have a maximum voltage limit on the input signal. If the input voltage exceeds this limit, the signal will be clipped or otherwise distorted. This limitation, along with the noise floor and resolution of the A/D converter, determines the dynamic range of the device. A single strong undesired signal may cause the input voltage limit to be exceeded, resulting in clipping and distortion. In a spread spectrum device, this strong signal's spectrum is spread, resulting in a lower peak voltage and decreasing the likelihood of the input voltage limit being exceeded. Thus, as long as the A/D converter has sufficient bandwidth to convert the desired signal's spread spectrum, dynamic range is increased for the device.
An additional advantage of the present invention is improved image rejection. When a mixer 16 converts the received signal to an appropriate intermediate frequency for processing, a second signal called the image frequency is often generated. The image frequency is undesirable and usually must be filtered out in some manner. Image rejection is a measure of how sensitive the receiver is to the desired frequency compared to how sensitive it is to the unwanted image frequency.
The simplest direct conversion receivers use a single mixer to convert signals directly to a baseband frequency, such as audio. The input mixer in this type of receiver cannot separate the image frequency from the desired frequency, as often both frequencies fall within the baseband range. To compensate for this deficiency, complex and sensitive phasing-type receiving systems must be employed which require two separate receive channels with carefully matched hardware. If the phases and amplitudes of both receive channels is not carefully controlled, image frequency rejection will not be good.
In the spread spectrum channel of the current invention, the desired intermediate frequency and the undesired image frequency are encoded differently in the spread spectrum signal, depending on the phase of the spreading function. By knowing the phase of the spreading function at all times, the despreading can be implemented such that only the desired frequency is despread. The unwanted image frequency is effectively rejected without the complexity and cost of using multiple receive channels.
Further, when a mixer in a direct conversion receiver is connected directly to an antenna (or connected through a filter or matching network to the antenna), leakage from the local oscillator is of a frequency that it may pass through back to the antenna. This leakage may result in an unwanted tone being transmitted, which can interfere with other nearby receivers. By using a local oscillator 18 modulated to a spread spectrum, this unwanted leakage signal is spread over a wider spectrum and is less detectible on nearby receivers.
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In
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When the transceiver is operating as a transmitter, the output signal generated by the device is amplified by the amplifier indicated generally at 74. The amplified output signal is then transmitted through antenna 66.
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When the transceiver is operating as a transmitter, the input signal is fed into the A/D converter 78 integrated within the DSP 76. The DSP 76 firmware then processes the signal and outputs a signal to the transmitter amplifier (74 in
Although the above description has detailed the implementation of spread spectrum in combination with signal processing within a receiver channel, it will be appreciated that the spread spectrum processing methods discussed herein may be similarly implemented within signal streams or signal channels of other electronic devices. In particular, the spread spectrum techniques may be implemented within instrumentation signal channels or other electronic devices which perform signal processing such as data acquisition electronics, etc.
There is thus disclosed a method and apparatus for using a spread spectrum channel within the electronics of a radio device. It will be appreciated that numerous changes may be made to the present invention without departing from the scope of the claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/000,118, filed Oct. 24, 2007, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.