This application is a continuation of International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/DE2003/002609, filed Aug. 4, 2003, which published in German on Apr. 8, 2004 as WO 2004/030300, and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to a method and a circuit arrangement for demodulating a digital amplitude-modulated radio signal received using a reception device.
Contactless chip cards, particularly RFID (radio frequency identification) chip cards, use a radio link to receive not just an information signal, comprising an amplitude-modulated radio signal, but also to take the operating voltage required for operating the chip card from the received signal.
As shown in
For this purpose, the demodulation device contains an RC element with the task of filtering the carrier frequency out of the received signal. The RC element's dimensions are chosen on the basis of the frequency of the received carrier signal and, its amplitude. This means that the dimensions of the RC element may be large and take up a correspondingly large amount of space and proportion of the area of a chip for the contactless chip card.
It is an object of the invention to reduce the space and area requirement for the known RC element significantly and hence likewise to reduce the production costs for chips for contactless chip cards.
This object is achieved with a method and a circuit arrangement for carrying out this method, where a digital amplitude-modulated radio signal, received using a reception device, having a carrier signal and a digital information signal impressed thereon is split into first and second signal components with the same polarization and the opposite phase, and the first and second signal components are “ANDed”.
The invention is described in more detail below using an exemplary embodiment with reference to the figures, in which:
In an embodiment of the present invention there is a method and circuit arrangement for carrying out this method, where a digital amplitude-modulated radio signal, received using a reception device, having a carrier signal and a digital information signal impressed thereon is split into first and second signal components with the same polarization and the opposite phase, and the first and second signal components are “ANDed”.
With this method, an RC element for demodulating the received signal is replaced by the AND function. Hence, the demodulation takes place in the AND function, with an RC element in the further signal processing having just a signal-smoothing task. For this purpose, the RC element can be given correspondingly smaller dimensions.
The demodulation by the AND function involves the respective positive half-waves of the received radio signal being taken from both outputs of the reception device simultaneously. Each of these two signal components is supplied independently to an inverter. This inverter changes the analog signal component comprising positive half-waves into a digital square-wave signal. The, amplitude of this square-wave signal assumes only two states in this case, U=UMAX or U=UMIN. As a result of the inversion in the inverter the signal component received has been phase-shifted through 90 degrees with respect to the original signal component.
Like the two signal components of the received radio signal, the digital signal components of the radio signal which are obtained as a result of the inversion are also in antiphase with respect to one another. In line with the invention, the two signal components are supplied to an AND function and are “ANDed” there.
Hence, a digital zero is obtained from the phase-shifted signal components after “ANDing”. Only for received radio signals whose amplitude is zero is a digital one obtained after “ANDing”. As a result, the digital information signal remains at the output of the AND function. This demodulated digital information signal is supplied to an arrangement comprising two field-effect transistors of complimentary conduction type. This brings about amplification of the digital signal.
As a result of the inventive digital and differential demodulation of the received radio signal, slight interference signals having twice the frequency of the received radio signal remain which are superimposed on the information signal. These have a relatively small amplitude. These interference signals need to be filtered out by the known RC element.
The doubled frequency of these interference signals and the small amplitude mean that the capacitive element of the RC element and also the resistive element of the RC element can be given much smaller dimensions.
The circuit arrangement in
In line with the invention, the two signal components ULA and ULB, each independently, are supplied to a respective inverter 4. This inverter 4 converts the respective analog signal components into digital square-wave signals having the same frequency, but the inversion and digitization mean that this involves a digital zero being formed for amplitudes below a predetermined limit and a digital one being formed for amplitudes above a predetermined limit.
The two inverted signals are supplied to an AND function, with the result produced at the output of the AND circuit being a one signal only if the amplitude ULA and ULB of the incoming radio signal is below a specific value. This signal from the output of the AND function is supplied to an arrangement comprising two field-effect transistors of complementary conduction type. As a result, the signal which is at the output of the AND circuit is amplified and inverted.
The RC element connected to the field-effect transistors smoothes the remaining interference signals, which have been superimposed on the digital signal with a smaller amplitude than the latter. In this case, the interference signals have a frequency amounting to twice the magnitude of the frequency of the received radio signal, but a significantly smaller amplitude. The RC element can thus be given significantly smaller dimensions than would be required for demodulating the radio signal. An inverter 5 connected downstream of the RC element is used to invert the smoothed digital signal again and to improve the edges of the digital signal.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 44 450.1 | Sep 2002 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE03/02609 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11084216 | Mar 2005 | US |