The present disclosure relates to communication systems, more particularly to a method for selecting a transmission signal power level and a transmitter device implementing same.
The regulatory requirements given by standard associations specify limits for the average equivalent isotropic radiated power (EIRP) and peak EIRP levels for wireless communication devices. In the specific case of ultra-wideband (UWB) signals, the average EIRP is measured in a 1 MHz resolution band-width (RBW) using a Root Mean Square (RMS) average detector and referenced to an ideal Gaussian bandwidth. The peak power spectral density (PSD) of an Ultra-Wide Band (UWB) transmission is the peak power in a Gaussian filter with a bandwidth of 50 MHz (swept receiver architecture or oscilloscope with data postprocessing). Peak power mainly influences the radio-frequency (RF) front end of a receiver, e.g. the saturation of the low noise amplifier. Therefore the measurement bandwidth is chosen to represent the widest bandwidth of a susceptible in-band receiver. Most spectrum analyzers only have an 8 MHz or less IF bandwidth filter available at maximum. The ITU recommended correction factor from 8 to 50 MHz is insufficiently accurate.
The present disclosure presents a method for generating a pulsed transmission signal. The method comprises the steps of generating a plurality of transmission bursts by encoding data with a predetermined spreading code. Each of these bursts comprises a train of adjacent pulses defining a burst length of the burst. Further, the transmission bursts are sized or modified to obtain a transmission peak and/or average power level within a predetermined limit (e.g. below a predetermined maximum peak/average transmission power level), thereby forming the pulsed transmission signal which is ready for transmission. The sizing for at least one of the plurality of bursts comprises: modifying the amplitude of the pulses on the basis of a predetermined relationship between the burst length and the peak/average transmission power level, the modification being such that the peak/average transmission power level is modified towards the predetermined limit. This means that for each different burst length, a different pulse amplitude can be applied, which can be chosen such that the peak/average transmission power level of the burst approaches the predetermined limit as closely as possible.
By using this method, it is possible to transmit at a higher output power. The performance of a wireless link can thus be enhanced and/or power consumption of a radio can thus be lowered. Using different amplitudes for different burst-length or codes can also improve the integral wireless link performance.
The choice of imposing a limit for the average power or the peak power of the transmission signal can be made dependent on the pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of the pulses in the burst.
In an embodiment, the pulsed transmission signal comprises a plurality of frames, each frame comprising at least a first part in which the transmission bursts have a first burst length and a second part in which the transmission bursts have a second burst length and wherein a different amplitude sizing is applied over the first part with respect to the second part.
In an embodiment, each frame comprises a preamble of isolated pulses followed by a header part having a first set of the transmission bursts and a payload part having a second set of the transmission bursts. The header part can be the first part where the transmission bursts have the first burst length and the payload part can be the second part where the transmission bursts have the second burst length. Alternatively, the first and second parts can both be parts of the payload part of the frame. In general, according to the disclosure a plurality of different pulse amplitudes can be applied over the frame, for example a first amplitude over the header part and a second, third, . . . , n-th amplitude over the payload part, i.e. a different amplitude for each burst of the payload part depending on its burst length.
In an embodiment, the predetermined relationship between the peak/average power and the burst length is defined by means of an equation, in which the peak/average power is dependent on the peak amplitude of pulses in the transmission signal, the number of bursts in the transmission signal taken into account, the load impedance of a transmitter used for transmitting the transmission signal, the burst length, minimal time between bursts and the spectrum analyzer's resolution band-width (RBW). In this embodiment, the peak/average power level can be measured with a spectrum analyzer having a limited bandwidth, while applying a correction factor to compensate for the limited bandwidth. The correction factor is related to the spectrum analyzer's RBW filter variance for a BW wide filter, to the spectrum analyzer's RBW filter variance for a 50 MHz wide filter, and to the effective pulse width. An advantage of this embodiment is the ability to predict the measured peak/average power for a given pulse duration, burst length, pulse amplitude, resolution bandwidth, and load impedance.
The present disclosure further presents a transmitter device, comprising a baseband section provided for generating a baseband signal comprising a plurality of transmission bursts by encoding data with a predetermined spreading code, each of said bursts comprising a train of adjacent pulses defining a burst length of the burst; a local oscillator for generating a signal carrier; a modulator connected to the baseband section and the local oscillator and provided for upconverting the baseband signal by means of the signal carrier to a transmission signal and therein sizing the transmission bursts to a peak/average transmission power level within a predetermined level; and an antenna for transmitting the transmission signal. The transmitter device comprises a control means for controlling the modulator to modify the amplitude of the pulses of each burst individually on the basis of a predetermined relationship between the burst length and the peak/average transmission power level. The control means determines the modification to be applied by the modulator such that the peak/average transmission power level is modified towards the predetermined limit and for example approaches the limit as much as possible.
The disclosure will be further elucidated by means of the following description and the appended figures.
The present disclosure will be described with respect to particular embodiments and with reference to certain drawings but the disclosure is not limited thereto. The drawings described are only schematic and are non-limiting. In the drawings, the size of some of the elements may be exaggerated and not drawn on scale for illustrative purposes. The dimensions and the relative dimensions do not necessarily correspond to actual reductions to practice of the disclosure.
Furthermore, the terms first, second, third and the like in the description and in the claims, are used for distinguishing between similar elements and not necessarily for describing a sequential or chronological order. The terms are interchangeable under appropriate circumstances and the embodiments of the disclosure can operate in other sequences than described or illustrated herein.
Moreover, the terms top, bottom, over, under, and the like in the description and the claims are used for descriptive purposes and not necessarily for describing relative positions. The terms so used are interchangeable under appropriate circumstances and the embodiments of the disclosure described herein can operate in other orientations than described or illustrated herein.
The term “comprising,” used in the claims, should not be interpreted as being restricted to the means listed thereafter; it does not exclude other elements or steps. It needs to be interpreted as specifying the presence of the stated features, integers, steps, or components as referred to, but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps or components, or groups thereof. Thus, the scope of the expression “a device comprising means A and B” should not be limited to devices consisting of only components A and B. It means that with respect to the present disclosure, the only relevant components of the device are A and B.
The peak power spectral density (PSD) of an Ultra-Wide Band
(UWB) transmission is the peak power in a Gaussian filter with a bandwidth of 50 MHz (swept receiver architecture or oscilloscope with data post-processing). Peak power mainly influences the radio frequency (RF) front end of a receiver, e.g. the saturation of the low noise amplifier. Therefore the measurement bandwidth is chosen to represent the widest bandwidth of a susceptible in-band receiver. As mentioned in the background, regulations define the peak power measurement at a 50 MHz resolution bandwidth. Most spectrum analyzers only have a 8 MHz or less IF bandwidth filter available as maximum. The ITU recommended correction factor from 8 to 50 MHz is insufficiently inaccurate.
In the present disclosure, an equation for the worst-case scenario is derived. This provides on one hand (see part II below) a method for generating a pulsed transmission signal where the peak power level of the signal better approaches the prescribed limit, for example those of the ITU regulations, and on the other hand (see part I below) a method for estimating a peak power level of a pulsed transmission signal by applying an improved correction factor.
The method of the present application can be used for controlling pulsed RF signals or bursts of pulsed RF signals. The method will be illustrated by means of IEEE 802.15.4a standard compliant signals. The IEEE 802.15.4a standard deviated from the original IR-UWB air interface in a sense that the pulses (see
The IEEE 802.15.4a data sequence can be modeled as a wide-sense stationary random process, composed of equally likely symbols. Therefore we can calculate the average Power Spectral Density (PSD) by taking the Fourier transform of a single pulse. This single pulse is described in the time domain as for example a trapezoidal shaped pulse:
With A being the pulse amplitude (which is the peak value of the modulated RF carrier), Tp being the pulse duration and Tr the rise time.
Taking the Fourier transform of (1), we find the PSD as:
With A being the peak voltage level of the pulse shape, Tr being the rise time, Tp the pulse or chip duration and mPRF the mean pulse repetition frequency. Different Tp values are available in the IEEE 802.15.4a standard as shown in Table I.
In the following part, the peak power is calculated as measured either by a spectrum analyzer or by an oscilloscope with data post-processing. An equation for a worst case scenario is derived. This provides the improved correction factor. For the case of multiple bursts falling within the IF bandwidth filter response, extra conversion equations are derived.
The regulatory requirements specify limits for the average equivalent isotropic radiated power (EIRP) and peak EIRP levels for UWB devices (ITU-R, “Measurement techniques of ultra-wideband transmissions,” Recommendation ITU-R SM 1754, 2006). The average EIRP is measured in a 1 MHz resolution band-width (RBW) using a RMS (root mean square) average detector and referenced to an ideal Gaussian bandwidth. The peak PSD of an UWB transmission is the peak power in a Gaussian filter with a bandwidth of 50 MHz. The measurement is made using a peak detector and max hold.
Peak power mainly influences the RF front end of a receiver, e.g. the saturation of the low noise amplifier. Therefore the measurement bandwidth is chosen to represent the widest bandwidth of a susceptible in-band receiver.
Average power is a measure of the interference to a victim system. Using EIRP means the antenna has to be taken into account as well.
Measuring peak power, using a spectrum analyzer, boils down to convolving the time domain (transmitter) signal with the time domain response of a Gaussian filter (the IF band-pass filter). This filter is centered at a certain RF frequency. The output voltage is captured for each time bin, in which the analyzer measures (set by sweep time and number of samples) and the maximum value per time bin is noted. This is the value we see when using a peak detector.
Note that for different pulse shapes (triangular, trapezoidal, rectangular), the spectrum around the center frequency gives similar results up to 50 MHz bandwidth with an accuracy better than 0.1 dB. Therefore we can do the analysis just for rectangular shapes only for convenience reasons.
A Gaussian filter at baseband can be described as following:
The width of a Gaussian filter is defined by the filter variance σ:
with BW being the filter bandwidth.
A single rectangular pulse can be described as:
Such a pulse is illustrated in
This function resembles the normal distribution function, well known from e.g. statistics theory.
As g(t) is defined around t=0, the function (f*g)(t) has its maximum at t=0, which is the value taken from a spectrum analyzer using a peak detector, as required by the regulations for peak power using UWB signals.
To transform the latter equation into an integral that can be evaluated using a standard normal distribution function we use the substitution z=τ/σ with which (6) converts into:
For this we will make use of the one-dimensional Gaussian Q-function (often referred to as the Gaussian probability integral), Q(x), which is defined as the complement (with respect to unity) of the cumulative distribution function (CDF) corresponding to the normalized (zero mean, unit variance) Gaussian random variable X. The canonical representation of this function is in the form of semi-infinite integral of the corresponding probability density function (PDF), namely:
Which can also be written as a definite integral form (for x≧0):
With this we can describe the peak power value for a single pulse, using equation 7 and 8 or 9 as:
The peak power value is found by adding the extra factor of 1/√{square root over (2)}. This factor is used to take into account the RF carrier on which the baseband signal is modulated. To convert voltage into power, the voltage is squared and divided by the load impedance (typically the antenna impedance).
Example: when using a √{square root over (0.1)} square pulse of 2 ns duration measured in a 50 Ohm load using a 50 MHz RBW, we measure a peak power of −16.47 dBm/50 MHz (see table II).
The dashed line (20) shows a wider rectangular pulse, corresponding to eight times a “1” coded 2 ns pulse grouped together as a burst. The next section shows the effect wider pulses have on peak power.
By taking into account the length of a burst of pulses (number of pulses—known in the 802.15.4a standard as number of chips per burst-times pulse-time: NcpbTp=Tb) and assuming the “all 1” or “all −1” codes produce the maximum peak power value (which is proved by simulation as shown later on), we end up with an equation for the expected peak power value for a burst of pulses as shown in Equation 11.
For a rectangular pulse, with amplitude A, in which we also use an extra factor of 1/√{square root over (2)} to take into account the RF carrier on which the baseband signal is modulated, we find the following equation for the expected peak power value:
By using the effective pulse width τeff as defined by equation (14), Tb can be seen as an effective pulse width of kcpb times the pulse width Tp. With that we can use equation (10) to calculate the peak power value for a wider equivalent pulse.
When performing a peak power measurement, in most cases a spectrum analyzer is used. Typically these instruments have today an IF bandwidth which is less than 50 MHz. The peak PSD limit can be scaled to a different bandwidth using a conservative scaling equation as suggested in “ITU-R, “Measurement techniques of ultra-wideband transmissions,” Recommendation ITU-R SM 1754, 2006″:
LimitRBW=LimitBW+20 log10(RBW/BW) (12)
1Using Tp = 2 ns, A = {square root over (0.1)} V, all “1” codes
2Using 20log (RBW/BW) correction
The graph of
To quantify the maximum possible effect of capturing multiple consecutive bursts inside the spectrum analyzer filter, the following equation can be derived (based on a rectangular pulse shape):
with b1,2,3 being three consecutive bursts shown as an example in the
To calculate Ppeak we take the maximum value of Ppeak(t). As σ is a function of the spectrum analyzers resolution bandwidth (RBW), we can plot the resulting peak power for the different Ncpb values against a few RBW values. It is important to notice that this equation is based on multiple consecutive bursts of all ‘1’ sequences, being the worst case situation and giving the upper bound.
Taking the IEEE 802.15.4a standard as an example, focusing on the payload (PSDU) part of a frame and comparing between a spectrum analyzer with a RBW filter of 8 MHz and 50 MHz we can find the impact of using a different RBW filter.
1see appendix for IEEE 802.15.4a data rate modes
Looking at the preamble (SHR) part of an IEEE 802.15.4a frame, where single pulses (Ncpb=1) are used, we find a peak power value of −16.47 dBm/50 MHz for pulses with √{square root over (0.1)} V amplitude. This is for the 1.x and 2.x modes (see Table V for the meaning of the modes) that the peak power for {square root over (0.1)} amplitude pulses equals −12.04 dBm/50 MHz.
The values shown are taken from a 50 MHz bandwidth measurement. As shown in
To verify the approach of the disclosure, a measurement is carried out. The results of the peak EIRP measurement are shown in
Above, a novel and more accurate peak power estimation method for impulse radio UWB systems has been shown. The method can be applied in the design of new wireless systems, when designing for maximum achievable distance. By analyzing the required measurement procedure a set of equations was derived matching simulated and measured signals. Compared to existing methods in use, this enables proper estimation and measurement interpretation of emerging, IEEE 802.15.4a-like, IR-UWB signals. In particular, using the proposed method enables usage of up to 16 to 24 dB more pulse amplitude, depending on the equipment available.
Table V shows a definition of twelve different IEEE 802.15.4a data rate modes by mode numbers, which are used throughout the disclosure.
1Data rate mode number, as used throughout this paper
2Mean Pulse Repetition Frequency - PSDU part of frame
The better knowledge of the relation between peak/average power and burst length leads to new insights is aspects of pulsed transmission signals. In particular, it is found that by controlling the amplitude of pulses in dependency of the burst length, the power of the transmission can be optimized without crossing the prescribed limits.
Accordingly, the disclosure provides a transmitter device as shown in
The modulator is controlled by the digital baseband to modify the amplitude of each transmission burst individually on the basis of a relationship between the peak/average power level and the burst length. The modulator is preferably controlled in such a way that the peak/average power level of each transmission burst is modified towards the limit, i.e. approaches the limit as close as possible.
In this way, it is possible to transmit at higher output power. As a result, the performance of the wireless link can be enhanced and/or power consumption of the radio can be lowered. Using different amplitudes for different burst-length or codes can also improve the integral wireless link performance.
The predetermined relationship between the peak/average power level and the burst length, which is used for determining the pulse amplitude to be applied, is preferably the relationship determined in part I above, but is not limited thereto.
The choice of imposing a limit for the average power or the peak power of the transmission signal can be made dependent on the pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of the pulses in the burst. For higher PRF the average power limitations are dominant, whereas for lower PRF the peak power limitations are dominant.
In the embodiment where the transmitter device generates a signal according to
In particular, each frame can comprise a preamble of isolated pulses followed by a header part having a first set of the transmission bursts and a payload part having a second set of the transmission bursts. The header part can be the first part where the transmission bursts have the first burst length and the payload part can be the second part where the transmission bursts have the second burst length. Alternatively, the first and second parts can both be parts of the payload part of the frame. In general, with the transmitter device of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10170853.5 | Jul 2010 | EP | regional |
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/263,708, filed in the United States Patent and Trademark Office on Nov. 23, 2009, and to European Patent Application No. EP 10170853.5, filed in the European Patent Office on Jul. 27, 2010, the entire contents of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61263708 | Nov 2009 | US |