Certain designs of power amplifiers (PAs) of a transmitter chain in a communication system employ non-constant envelope modulation techniques to improve the bandwidth efficiency. In order to preserve the signal shape, the non-constant envelope modulation techniques require linear amplification. However, linear amplification is possible only when the power amplifier is operated with a small input signal, which in turn makes the amplifier least efficient. The nonlinear characteristic of the power amplifier makes it difficult to achieve power efficiency and bandwidth efficiency simultaneously.
Many techniques have been developed to improve the linearity of the PA in the transmitter chain. Three main categories of these techniques are feedforward, feedback, and predistortion.
Feedforward techniques are more expensive and less efficient than feedback techniques. The feedback linearization technique can be applied directly around the RF amplifier or indirectly upon the modulation.
Two well-known feedback techniques are Cartesian feedback and polar-loop feedback. The Cartesian feedback technique involves the suppression of nonlinearity in a complex-baseband, expressed by using rectangular Cartesian coordinates, so that it can reduce the shortcomings of quadrature modulators. However, it requires a large amount of memory to store the table of 2-dimensional coefficients for the I-Q data. Another disadvantage of the Cartesian feedback technique is the difficulty in implementing local phase control for the quadrature modulator and demodulator.
In the polar-loop feedback technique, the RF signal is directly generated by a voltage-controlled oscillator whose phase is controlled by feedback signals and whose amplitude is modulated by the difference between a reference signal and a feedback signal. The issues that complicate the design of polar-loop feedback are as follows: First, it requires a precision receiver within the transmitter; second, the control loop bandwidth greatly exceeds the signal bandwidth; third, it restricts the dynamic range of output power and last but not least, the maintainability of the stability of the feedback loop is tricky.
As such, what is desired is a system and method for improving the transmission linearization that costs less and is easy to implement.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof, will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention discloses a system and method to compensate for the nonlinearity of the wireless transmitter. The method includes sending a predetermined input bit stream to the power amplifier, calculating the coefficients of the polynomial representing the response curve of the power amplifier and generating the predistortion coefficients of the polynomial representing the response curve of the baseband predistortor. The method linearizes the response curve of the transmitter chain of a wireless station.
The drawings accompanying and forming part of this specification are included to depict certain aspects of the invention. The invention may be better understood by reference to one or more of these drawings in combination with the description presented herein. It should be noted that the features illustrated in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale.
The following detailed description of the invention refers to the accompanying drawings. The description includes exemplary embodiments, not excluding other embodiments, and changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims.
The present invention discloses a system and method to compensate for the nonlinearity introduced by a power amplifier and the band limiting devices in the transmitter chain of a wireless station. It is a general understanding that a wireless station is referred to as either a mobile terminal or a fixed terminal such as a base station.
The present invention describes a system, which includes a baseband predistortor in conjunction with a linear-phase prefilter, to improve transmitter lineralization. A basic concept of the predistortion techniques involves an insertion of a nonlinear element, a baseband predistortor, prior to the PA, which compensates for the nonlinearity of the PA. In the present system, the linear-phase prefilter filters out the signal around the transmitter passband edge and subsequently reduces its out-of-band spectral regrowth, caused by the nonlinear phase of transmit filtering.
The present invention also discloses a semi-analytical method that characterizes the nonlinearity of the PA and generates a transfer function for the baseband predistortor. Last but not least, the linearity of the transmitter chain is further improved with the optimization method disclosed in the present invention.
A clearer conception of the invention and of the operation of the systems provided with the invention will become more readily apparent by referring to the exemplary, and therefore non-limiting, embodiments illustrated in the drawings, wherein like reference numbers (if they occur in more than one view) designate the same elements.
A transfer function 210 of the baseband predistorter 110 is shown in
Let TXin and TXout denote the input and output signals of the nonlinear transmitter 140 correspondingly. Assuming that TX_F( . . . ) represents the transfer function of the nonlinear transmitter 140, TXout=TX_F(TXin)(1).
Assume a baseband predistortor (DP) has the transfer function DPout=DP_F(DPin) (2), where DP_F( . . . ) is the inverse function of the transfer function TX_F( . . . ), where DP_F=TX_F−1 (3).
The transfer function TX_F( . . . ) can be expanded into a polynomial, in which only the odd terms impact out-of-band transmitting emissions. The transmitting emissions generated by even terms are far away from the signal spectrum and will be filtered out by the transmitting harmonic filters.
The response curve of nonlinear transmitter 220 can be approximated by the following polynomial:
where Vout and Vin are the output and input voltages of the transmitter, respectively. G0 is the small signal gain (linear gain). In equation 4, only odd-term coefficients Ai can be characterized by the measuring of inter-modulation or adjacent channel power (ACP). The even-term coefficients Bi are unknown and cannot be measured.
Module 120 in
The effectiveness of the predistortion technique realized by the transmitter model, described in
First, the FCC regulation does not allow the PA to operate in the saturated region with continuous waveform (CW) tones. Second, even if the input signal drives the PA into the saturated region and the response curve is recorded, it is still difficult to extract the odd terms, which are required by the predistortion technique, from the polynomial that approximates the nonlinear response curve of the PA. The present invention discloses the semi-analytical method to characterize the nonlinearity of the PA.
A known bit stream {bin} is sent to a nonlinear transmitter 320 via a baseband predistortor 310 and a finder 330. The output of the nonlinear transmitter 320 is a bit stream {bout}. In the initial stage, the response curve of the baseband predistortor 310 is flat, i.e. the bit stream output from the baseband predistortor 310 is the same as the input bit stream {bin} in the first pass.
The finder 330 applies the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) operation on both input and out bistreams {bin} and {bout}. The coefficients Ai of the odd terms in the polynomial that approximate the response curve of nonlinear transmitter 320 can be calculated according to the following equation:
{mij}*{Ai}={Fi},i=1, . . . ,NF, j=0, . . . ,N;NF≧N (5), where mij=FFT{(bin)2j+1}|f
The response curve of baseband predistortor 210 in
where Vin′ and Vin are the output and input voltages of the baseband predistorter 310, respectively, and aj are the predistortion coefficients of the polynomial approximating the response curve of the baseband predistorter. Note that only the odd terms in equation (7) are retained. This is due to the fact that only the odd-term coefficients Ai in the polynomial of equation (4) approximating the response curve of the PA are necessary.
A following new equation is obtained by substituting Vin′ in equation (7) into Vin in equation (4) and retaining only odd terms.
Expand equation (8) lets the coefficients of the first N (N>1) odd terms equal to zero. F(a, A)=0 (9), where a=[a1, a2, . . . , aN] and A=[A1,A2, . . . ,AN]. Equation (9) shows a mathematical relationship between A and a. An approximation solution for equation (9) is given as follows: a=−A. (10)
The finder 330 forwards the predistortion coefficients a to baseband predistortor 310. The transfer function of baseband predistortor 310 has a response curve that closely approximates response curve 210.
To further refine the approximation solution, the procedure of characterizing the nonlinearity of the PA and generating the predistortion coefficients continues until the difference in the predistortion coefficients a between two consecutive iterations is less than a threshold or until the number of iterations exceeds a certain amount.
In step 420, the predistortion coefficients of the odd terms in representing the response curve of the baseband predistortor are approximated according to equation (9).
In step 430, the predistortion coefficients between two consecutive iterations are compared. If the difference in the predistortion coefficients a is less than a threshold or the number of iterations exceeds a certain amount, then the process ends. Otherwise, the same process is repeated by going back to step 410.
One of the embodiments of the input bit stream {bin} in the semi-analytical method is constructed from two CW tones, i.e. {bin}={sin(ω1t)+sin(ω2t)} (6). The benefit of using a two-tone test vector is that its FFT spectrum has peaks at inter-modulation frequencies that can be easily detected. The frequencies of the two CW tones are separated by slightly larger than 100 KHz, for example, 105 KHz.
The signal level of the CW is set in such a way that for each tone, the input signal level at the antenna input port is less than (63−17)−10log10(60)=28 dBm, which is FCC's requirement. By doing so, the total signal level of the two CW tones is 31 dBm and is high enough to drive the PA into the nonlinear region.
The present invention discloses a system and a method to compensate for the nonlinearity of the wireless transmitter. The present system incurs less overall costs than the conventional system and the simplicity of the present method reduces the complexity in implementing sophisticated algorithms for estimating amplifier nonlinearity.
The present invention describes a novel system that combines the functions of a baseband predistorter and a prefilter. The transmitter chain with a baseband predistorter and a prefilter suppresses the out-of-band spectral regrowth more efficiently than the conventional transmitter chain and improves the efficiency of the PA.
The present invention also describes a semi-analytical method that is easy to implement. This method uses two-tone test vectors to characterize the nonlinearity of the PA and an iterative optimization procedure to optimize the PA output.
The method disclosed in the invention is applicable to any system that has a low-efficient nonlinear PA and a nonlinear-phase transmit filter. If feedback exists between the PA output and input, the method can also be employed to adjust the baseband predistorter and the prefilter.
The above illustration provides many different embodiments or embodiments for implementing different features of the invention. Specific embodiments of components and processes are described to help clarify the invention. These are, of course, merely embodiments and are not intended to limit the invention from that described in the claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in one or more specific examples, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims. Accordingly, it is appropriate that the appended claims be construed broadly and in a manner consistent with the scope of the invention, as set forth in the following claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/748,567, which was filed on Dec. 7, 2005.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60748567 | Dec 2005 | US |