This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 22 180 923.9 filed Jun. 24, 2022, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosed subject matter relates to a method for calibrating a single sideband (SSB) receiver.
In typical SSB communications an SSB transmitter sends a signal with frequency components in one sideband only to reduce power and bandwidth required for signal transmission. The sent signal is received and processed to a baseband SSB signal by the SSB receiver. To this end the SSB receiver has an input for receiving the signal, an I/Q mixer for converting the signal into an I- and a Q-signal, a phase shifter for mutually phase shifting the I- and Q-signals by 90° and a combiner for combining the I- and Q-signals to an SSB signal. In this receiver structure, an unwanted sideband (the “image signal”), e.g., originating from an imperfect SSB transmitter, superposes and impedes the SSB signal and should, thus, ideally be cancelled after phase shifting and combining the I- and Q-signals.
However, due to residual misalignments of the I- and Q-signals, e.g., caused by component ageing or temperature, most often a residual image signal remains and impedes the SSB signal also in the single sideband of interest by distorting phases and amplitudes of its frequency components. The level of the residual image signal impacts the received SSB signal and, consequently, the accuracy of the application, wherefore a proper receiver calibration is crucial.
In road tolling applications, for instance, road-sided localisation transceivers comprise an array of SSB receivers and localise a passing vehicle carrying an on-board unit (OBU) via SSB communications between the array and the OBU. To localise the vehicle, a phase of a received SSB signal is measured at a target frequency by each SSB receiver of the array, and an angle of arrival of the SSB signal and the position of the OBU is determined from differences of the measured phases. Any residual image signals arising in the SSB receivers result in an incorrect measurement of the phase of each received SSB signal, in incorrect phase differences and, hence, in an incorrect localisation of the vehicle. Consequently, a receiver calibration which achieves an efficient image cancellation is desirable to correctly localise vehicles, e.g., in tolling or lane control applications. A variety of calibration methods for cancelling the image signal in an SSB receiver are known in the art, see, e.g., US 2002/0055347 A1, U.S. Pat. No. 6,714,776 B1 and US 2011/0182388 A1. However, current receiver calibrations still suffer from a too high residual image signal distorting the received SSB signal and/or a high complexity necessitating expensive hardware.
It is an object of the present disclosed subject matter to provide a method for calibrating an SSB receiver which overcomes the drawbacks of the state of the art and which is both efficient in image signal cancellation and easy to implement.
This object is achieved by a method for calibrating an SSB receiver having an input for receiving a signal, an I/Q mixer for converting the signal into an I-signal in an inphase path and a Q-signal in a quadrature path, a phase shifter for mutually phase shifting the I- and Q-signals by an adjustable phase shift, and a combiner for combining the mutually phase shifted I- and Q-signals to an SSB signal, the method comprising:
The inventive calibration method is based on adjusting an adjustable phase shift in the phase shifter in order to minimise an asymmetry of measured phase differences between three (the first, second and third) SSB signals originating from three (the first, second and third) test signals which have been generated with predetermined symmetric phase offsets around a phase of the second test signal. As the asymmetry of the measured phase differences indicates the strength of the unwanted residual image signal, a minimisation of the phase error calculated from the measured phase differences minimises the residual image signal and allows for an accurate image signal cancellation in the combiner. By repeatedly carrying out steps a) to c) for each of the two (optionally for more than two) phase shift values, that phase shift value which minimises the calculated phase error and, hence, the image signal strength, can be found and used for subsequent signal reception in the then calibrated SSB receiver.
Both the generation of the symmetrically phase shifted test signals as well as the detection of the phase difference asymmetricity of the resulting SSB signals are easy to implement and quick to execute. Therefore, simple and inexpensive hardware can be used, on the one hand, and a large number of (even more than two) phase shift values can be quickly set and evaluated by repeating steps a) to c) to find a (global) minimum of the phase error and the residual image signal strength. Hence, a large set of eligible phase shift values may be scanned, e.g., in a brute-force manner or by any optimisation algorithm known in the art.
The phase errors can be calculated according to a variety of functions depending on the first and second phase differences. In one embodiment, the first and second phase errors are calculated each as with
E
φ,j=|Δφ12−Δφ23| (1)
with
Such a phase error calculation is particularly easy to implement and fast in execution such that the phase error minimisation and the calibration can be carried out quickly.
The predetermined phase offset determines the range of phases spanned by the first, second and third test signals. In a further embodiment the predetermined phase offset is in the range of 10° to 80°, in particular in the range of 25° to 65°, e.g., approximately 45°. Choosing the phase offset from these ranges results in a calculated phase error which is a good indication of the strength of the image signal and, hence, the quality of image cancellation. As a result of calibrating the SSB receiver with such a phase offset, a high quality SSB signal can be obtained and particularly accurate phases and/or amplitudes can be measured therefrom.
In an advantageous embodiment the phase shifter comprises, in one of the inphase and quadrature paths, a filter with at least one variable capacitor or inductor. Such a filter—which may be a high pass, a low pass or a band pass filter—can filter out unwanted (out of band) frequencies and, at the same time, phase shift one of the I- and Q-signals by a phase shift value depending on the state of the variable capacitor or inductor.
In a favourable variant of this embodiment the filter comprises a capacitor bank having parallel capacitors that can be selectively connected to said one path to adjust the phase shift. The capacitor bank provides a variable capacitance which can be fast, easily and accurately controlled by connecting any desired subset of parallel capacitors to said path. The selective connection of each capacitor can be simply realised by a switch, e.g., an analogue switch such as an NMOS switch, which allows to implement the variable capacitor on an integrated circuit. The switches may be remotely controlled such that a calibration of the SSB receiver does not require the presence of a support technician. When the capacitances of the capacitors of said capacitor bank additionally form a geometric sequence with a common ratio of two, the capacitance of the capacitor bank can be adjusted in quantised steps of the smallest capacitance of the parallel capacitors to adjust the phase shift particularly accurately.
In addition to the filter in the inphase or quadrature path, the phase shifter can comprise another filter in the other one of said paths to filter (and optionally phase shift) the other one of the I- and Q-signals. With this 2-filter setup of the phase shifter, unwanted frequencies can be removed from the SSB signal such that its phases and/or amplitudes at respective target frequencies can be measured particularly precisely.
In a favourable embodiment the SSB receiver further comprises an amplitude adjuster for mutually adjusting the amplitudes of the I- and Q-signals by an adjustable amplitude gain, and in step a)—and its repetition in step d)—also the amplitude gain is adjusted to first and second amplitude gain values, respectively, wherein in step e) the SSB receiver is calibrated by using that combination of first phase shift and amplitude gain values and second phase shift and amplitude gain values that has yielded the smaller one of the first and second phase errors. Thereby, the I- and Q-signals can be tuned more precisely to cancel the image signal at the subsequent combiner.
It is beneficial when the amplitude adjuster comprises a resistor bank having parallel resistors that can be selectively connected to one of the inphase and quadrature paths to adjust the amplitude gain. Similar to the capacitor bank, the resistor bank provides a variable resistance which can be fast, easily and accurately controlled by connecting a desired selection of the parallel resistors via switches. Optionally, when resistances of the resistors of said resistor bank form a geometric sequence with a common ratio of two, the conductance (the inverse of the resistance) of the resistor bank can be set in steps of the smallest conductance of the parallel resistors to adjust the amplitude gain particularly accurately. Moreover, when the resistor bank has a respective capacitor in series to each selectively connectable resistor, a direct current component of the I- and Q-signals can be suppressed. This is particularly useful when the I- and Q-signals are converted to an intermediate frequency band to ease a further conversion of the received SSB signal to baseband in the combiner.
While the test signals can in principle be any phase shifted signals, in a further embodiment the test signals are generated by amplitude modulation. This allows to calibrate the SSB receiver at one or more target frequencies included in the amplitude signal used for amplitude modulation.
The disclosed subject matter shall now be described in further detail by means of exemplary embodiments thereof under reference to the enclosed drawings, in which:
The phase shifter 4 is arranged downstream of the I/Q mixer 3 and mutually phase shifts the I- and Q-signals I, Q by an adjustable phase shift ΔΘ whose determination will be described below. The combiner 5 is arranged downstream of the phase shifter 4 and combines the mutually phase shifted I- and Q-signals I′, Q′ to the SSB signal R, e.g., by adding or subtracting these signals I′, Q′ to/from one another, to cancel any unwanted sideband (“image signal”) in the SSB signal R.
The phase shift ΔΘ affects the cancellation of the image signal and is to be properly adjusted by calibrating the SSB receiver 1. A method M for calibrating the SSB receiver 1 shall now be described with reference to
In a first step a) of the method M, the phase shift ΔΘ is adjusted to a first phase shift value ΔΘ1. Typically, the first phase shift value ΔΘ is adjusted to approximately cause 180° dephased I- and Q-signals I, Q. In the embodiment shown in
In a second step b) of the method M a first, a second and a third test signal S1, S2, S3, generally Si (i=1, 2, 3), are fed to the input 2 to obtain—after receiving, I/Q mixing, phase shifting and combining each of the test signals Si in the SSB receiver 1—respective first, second and third SSB signals R1, R2, R3, generally Ri (i=1, 2, 3), therefrom. The first test signal S1 and the second test signal S2 have a predetermined phase offset ΔΦ12, and the second test signal S2 and the third test signal S3 have the same predetermined phase offset ΔΦ23=ΔΦ12=ΔΦ. Thus, the phase of the second test signal S2 is centred and separated from the phase of the first test signal S1 and the phase of the third test signal S3 by the absolute value of the phase offset ΔΦ.
The test signals Si may be generated by a variety of modulation techniques known in the art. An exemplary test signal generator 13 to generate the test signals Si is shown in
Coming back to
In the SSB receiver 1 of
It shall be noted that the feeding and measuring of step b) may be performed in several temporal orders: in a first exemplary variant by successively feeding all three test signals Si into the input 2 one after the other while measuring the respective phases φi of the SSB signals Ri and then computing the phase differences Δφ12, Δφ23 therefrom; or in a second exemplary variant by successively feeding two of the three test signals Si, e.g., the first and the second test signals S1, S2, while measuring the phases φ1 and φ2 and computing their phase difference Δφ12 and then feeding other two of the three test signals S i, e.g., the second and the third test signals S2, S3, while measuring the phases φ2 and φ3 and computing their phase difference Δφ23.
In a subsequent step c) of the method M a first phase error Eφ,1 is calculated on the basis of the first and second phase differences Δφ12, Δφ23 measured in step b). To this end, a variety of mathematical functions depending on the phase differences Δφ12, Δφ23 can be used, e.g.,
E
φ,1=|Δφ12−Δφ23|, (1)
E
φ,1=max(Δφ12/Δφ23,Δφ23/Δφ12), (2)
E
φ,1=|Δφ12+Δφ23−2·ΔΦ|, etc. (3)
with
In the SSB receiver 1 of
In a subsequent step d) of the method M, steps a)-c) are repeated in a loop 27 at least once, i.e. in the first repetition, a second phase shift value ΔΘ2 is set in step a), to obtain a second phase error Eφ,2 at the end of step c). In other words, within the first repetition of the loop 27, in step a) the phase shift ΔΘ is adjusted to a second phase shift value ΔΘ2 different from the first phase shift value ΔΘ1; with this adjustment the test signals Si are successively fed into the input 2 and the resulting phase differences Δφ12, Δφ23 of the then obtained (and differently phase shifted) SSB signals Ri are measured in step b); and from the new phase differences Δφ12, Δφ23 a second phase error Eφ,2 is calculated in step c). The phase shift values ΔΘ2 may be stored together with the second phase error Eφ,2 in the memory 26.
In a final step e) the SSB receiver 1 is calibrated by using that one of the first and second phase shift values ΔΘ1, ΔΘ2 that has yielded the smaller one of the first and second phase errors Eφ,1, Eφ,2, i.e. by using the first phase shift value ΔΘ1 in case the first phase error Eφ,1 is smaller than the second phase error Eφ,2 and the second phase shift value ΔΘ2 otherwise. To this end, the smallest phase error Eφ,1 or Eφ,2 and the corresponding phase shift value ΔΘ1 or ΔΘ2 can be retrieved from the memory 26 and used by the controller 12.
After carrying out steps a) to e), the SSB receiver 1 is roughly calibrated and ready to receive further signals S at a higher quality, i.e. with a lower residual image signal.
As indicated by the loop 27 in
Alternatively, e.g., in case of a small number of possible phase shift vales ΔΘj, all possible phase shift vales ΔΘj may be employed one after the other in a brute-force manner to find a minimal phase error Eφ,j.
In other embodiments (not shown) the SSB receiver 1 can comprise low, high and bandpass filters in the inphase and/or quadrature paths 8, 11 each with or without a variable capacitor and/or inductor to filter and phase shift the I- and Q-signals I, Q.
Moreover, as shown in
As can be seen in
While the optional amplitude adjuster 33 is arranged in the quadrature path 11 only and attenuates the Q-signal Q in the embodiment shown in
The present disclosed subject matter is not restricted to the specific embodiments described in detail herein, but encompasses all variants, combinations and modifications thereof that fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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22180923.9 | Jun 2022 | EP | regional |