Various embodiments described herein relate generally to resonator circuits and modulating resonators, including systems, apparatus, and methods employing resonators.
It may be desirable to modulate one or more resonators including shifting its resonate and anti-resonate points and provide resonator circuits, the present invention provides such modulation and circuits.
At the antenna 50 the TX band signal energy 73A may be greater than the RX band signal energy as shown in
The PA module 12 may also introduce noise or interface due to its fall off in power about the TX band to be amplified. The excess PA power may interfere with the LNA module 14 operation. A blocker signal near the TX, RX bands 73A, 73B or between same present on the antenna 50 (may be due to other signals in the communication network) may also interfere with the LNA module 14 operation and cause loss in the RX signal 24.
Duplex systems or architecture 10 may employ filter modules including duplexer modules. The duplexer modules may include known filter elements such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, digital signal processors (DSPs), and resonators. Configurations of these components may form filter modules to attempt to meet or exceed adjacent channel or band interface requirements according to one or more communication protocols or standards. In an embodiment, the channel configuration 70A may be used for a CDMA band five (V) signals where the TX band 73A extends from 824 to 849 MHz (72A, 72B) and the RX band 73B extends from 869 to 894 MHz (72C, 72D). In this configuration, The TX band 73A and RX band 73B are 25 MHz in width and separated by 20 MHz (72C minus 72B). As shown in
In order to limit interface between adjacent bands, a filter module having a frequency characteristic 76A as shown in
Resonators may include surface acoustic wave (SAW) and bulk acoustic wave (BAW) devices. Such devices may be used in filters, oscillators and transformers and commonly cause the transduction of acoustic waves. In SAW and BAW, electrical energy is transduced to mechanical energy and back to electrical energy via piezoelectric materials. The piezoelectric materials may include quartz, lithium niobate, lithium tantalate, and lanthanum gallium silicate. One or more transverse fingers of conductive elements may be placed in the piezoelectric materials to convert electrical energy to mechanical energy and back to electrical energy. The SAW or resonator may include one or more one or more interdigital transducers (IDTs) (transverse fingers of electrical conductive elements) for such energy conversions or transductions. A resonator construction and material requirements may be more complex and expensive for electrical signals having high frequency content such as signals transmitted according to one or more RF communication protocols or standards.
It may be desirable for a filter or duplexer module 20 to generate frequency characteristics 76C, 76D specific to one or more sub-unit or bands of a TX or RX band 73A, 73B such as shown in
An acoustic wave resonator 80A, 80B, 80C may be represented by corresponding electrical components according to various embodiments such as shown in
The Cm and Lm may be related to the elasticity and inertia of an AW device 80A, 80B, 80C. Co may represent the effective capacitance of the transverse electric fingers in the piezoelectric material of the AW 80A, 80B, 80C. Rm may represent the heat generated by mechanical motion in the AW 80A, 80B, 80C (the effective quality or Q limiter of the AW). Using the values Co, Cm, Lm, and Rm for first capacitor 82A, inductor 86A, second capacitor 82B, and resistor 84A, the resonance wr and the anti-resonance wa of an acoustic wave (AW) device 80A may be defined by the following equations:
Using these equations AW 80C may form a short path and the resultant filter formed by the AW 80A, AW 80B, and AW 80C may have a pass band about the wr of 80A, 80B and wa of 80C (77C as shown in
It may be desirable to shift the wr and wa of AW 80A, 80B, 80C to shift the pass-band or stop-bands to tune to specific sub-bands 74A, 74B, 74C, 75A, 75B, 75C or different TX or RX bands 73A, 73B. It is also noted that the wr and wa of AW 80A, 80B, 80C may vary as a function of the temperature of the AW, respectively. In such an embodiment it may be desired to correct for temperature variations accordingly. It is also noted that the wr and wa of AW 80A, 80B, 80C may vary due to manufacturing variances, respectively. In such an embodiment it may be desirable to correct for manufacturing variances accordingly. In an embodiment various capacitors 98A may be coupled in parallel or serially with a AW 80A, 80B, 80C to be able to shift, tune, or modulate the wr or wa of the AW 80A, 80B, 80C and accordingly its pass-band and stop-band(s).
As noted above AW 80C may form a short path and the resultant filter formed by the AW 80A, AW 80B, and AW 80C may have a pass band about the wr of 80A, 80B and wa of 80C (77C as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The electrical component board or module 140 may include three tunable capacitors 98A, 98B, 98C, a control logic module 146, and an oscillator 144. Each tunable capacitor 98A, 98B, 98C may be coupled in parallel to an AW 80A, 80B, 80C, respectively via two conductance lines 134 between the modules 140, 150. Accordingly, the combination of an AW 80A and a tunable capacitor 98A may form a tunable AW module 96A as shown in
The control logic module 146 may receive control signals SPI for controlling the capacitance of tunable capacitors 98A, 98B, and 98C and a stable clock or reference frequency (such a phase lock loop signal). In an embodiment, the AW 80I resonate or anti-resonate frequencies may vary as function of temperature. Similarly the oscillator 144 frequency may vary as the AW 80I resonate or anti-resonate frequencies fluctuate with temperature. The control logic 146 may monitor the change of oscillator frequency 144 via the stable reference frequency signal. The control logic 146 may then modulate the tunable capacitor's capacitance based on known deltas to account for the oscillator frequency and thereby corresponding AW 80A, 80B, 80C resonate or anti-resonate frequencies. In an embodiment, the delta may be added to the SPI control signals as needed to adjust for temperature effects of the AW 80A, 80B, 80C.
In
In
In
In an embodiment each resonator 82A to 82N, 83A to 83N, and 84A to 84N may have a different resonance in each respective SRM 184D, 184E, and 184F. The different resonances of the SRM 184D, 184E, and 184F may enable a system 190B to tune to different channels (different resonance frequencies) as shown in
In an embodiment control signals SxN in each corresponding SRM 184D, 184E, 184F may be similarly opened or closed, e.g., control signals 182A, 183A, and 185A may be simultaneously opened or closed (coordinated between modules 184D, 184E, 184F). In a further embodiment the only one switch 182A to 182N, 183A to 183N, 185A, to 185N may be open at any time so only one resonator 82A to 82N, 83A to 83N, 84A, to 84N is active at any time. In an embodiment, the variable capacitor 98C in parallel with the SRM 184F may only module or tune the anti-resonate wa of the active resonators 82A to 82N, 83A to 83N respectively. By selectively bypassing resonators 84A to 84N, the anti-resonate frequency or effective pass-bands of the SRM 196C may be tuned in addition to the stop bands.
In an embodiment it may be desirable to increase the isolation and stop-band rejection of a filter module.
The impedance of the filter module 202A may be determined by the equation
As noted with reference to
The elasticity and inertia of an AW 214A, 214B may be configured or selected to have an equivalent Lm about L1 or L2 and Cm about C1 and C2 in an embodiment. In AW 214A, 214B, the parallel capacitance Co may represent the effective capacitance of the transverse electric fingers in the piezoelectric material and the resistance Rm may represent the heat generated by mechanical motion in the AW 214A, 214B (the effective quality or Q limiter of the AW). As a function of the signals to be filtered the pass bands and effective stop band between the pass bands w1 and w2 may need to be shifted or changed.
In an embodiment two or more inductor-capacitor filter modules (LCF) 202A, 202B, in series with a low resistive switch 205A, 205B may be coupled in parallel as shown
In an embodiment it may be desirable to process signals with larger voltage or limit circuit elements. The LCF 202A, 202B of filter module 208A may be replaced by acoustic wave filters (AWF) 212A, 212B as shown in
In an embodiment, the first capacitive-tunable, parallel switched AW module filter 232A may include AW modules 214A, 214B, switches 216A, 216B, and variable capacitor 218A. AW module 214A is series coupled to switch 216A and AW module 214B is series coupled to switch 216B. Each module, switch pair 214A, 216A, 214B, 216B is coupled in parallel to the variable capacitor 218A. Similarly, the second capacitive-tunable, parallel switched AW module filter 232B may include AW modules 214C, 214D, switches 216C, 216D, and a variable capacitor 218B. AW module 214C is series coupled to switch 216C and AW module 214D is series coupled to switch 216D. Each module, switch pair 214C, 216C, 214D, 216D is coupled in parallel to the variable capacitor 218B.
The capacitive-tunable, parallel switched AWF module filter 224A may include AWF modules 212A, 212B, switches 216E, 216F, and variable capacitor 218C. AWF module 212A is series coupled to switch 216E and AWF module 212B is series coupled to switch 216F. Each module, switch pair 212A, 216E, 212B, 216F is coupled in parallel to the variable capacitor 218C. Each AWF module 212A, 212B includes two parallel coupled AW modules 214C, 214D and 214E, 214F, respectively. The capacitive-tunable AW module 234A includes an AW module 214G coupled in parallel to a variable capacitor 218D.
In an embodiment, the inversion module 228A, 228B may be a K-filter 228 as shown in
In an embodiment, the module 234A may provide a fixed high rejection and tunable pass-band, the modules 232A, 232B may provide a movable, switchable pass-band and tunable rejection band, and the module 224A may provide a movable, switchable high rejection point and pass-band. The filter module 230A of
Given the potential filter module 292B frequency response shift (from 258B to 258A), the passband 261 region or width of a signal processed by the filter module 292B may be narrowed or reduced to ensure that the minimum required attenuation 256 is achieved by a required frequency 254. The required frequency 254 may be the start of another channel and the filter module 292B may be required to prevent signal leakage into adjacent channels. The distance between the channel boundary 254 and passband edge 262 is commonly termed the guard band of a filter or channel. In a system or architecture such as channel architecture 310A, 310B, 310C shown in
In the method 270 the minimum stopband edge 254 of a non-tunable filter 292B may be pre-shifted to ensure the filter response 258B when shifted due to temperature or process variations achieves the minimum attenuation 256 by the desired or required boundary or edge 254 (activity 278). Further, the filter passband 262 edge may also be shifted, effectively reducing the usable signal bandwidth to ensure less than the maximum loss 252 is present in the passband (activity 282). Accordingly the effective guard band 316B, 318B may be increased.
The tunable filter 294A may have a tunable frequency response such as module 294B shown in
In an embodiment, the filter module 292A, 292B and tunable filter 294A, 294B, 290A, 290B respectively, in combination may create the frequency response 300C shown in
In an embodiment, the tunable resonator 294B may include one or more acoustic wave modules or devices 214A, 214B, and a tunable capacitor 218A. The AW modules 214A, 214B, and tunable capacitor 218A may be coupled in parallel in an embodiment as shown in
The filter architecture 290A may be modified such as shown in
Each AWF module 212A, 212B may include two AW modules 214C, 2124D, and 214E, 214F coupled in parallel and a variable capacitor 218C, 218D further coupled in parallel to the two AW modules 214C, 214D and 214E, 214F, respectively. The tunable modules 335A, 335B may include the AW module 96C, 96D located between the AW 332B, 332C and 212A, 212B and ground. Each AW module 96C, 96D may include an AW module 80C, 80F and a tunable capacitor 98C, 98F coupled in parallel to the AW module 80C, 80F. Each switchable, tunable module 335A, 335B may be coupled in parallel. As noted above each AWF module 212A, 212B may have a frequency response that includes two pass bands at w1 and w2 surrounding a rejection point at wt. In an embodiment, the switchable, tunable architecture 330B may operate in two modes: mode 1 (switch pair 216E, 217E closed and switch pair 216F, 217F open) (frequency responses 320A and 320B shown in
The AW module 332B, 332C may have a frequency response 320A, 320D shown in
In the channel configuration 310A shown in
In channel configuration 310B during band 38 transmit mode, a guard band 316B may be located between band 38's transmit section or passband 316A and band 7's receive band 312B. In mode 1 the filter architecture 330B may generate the frequency response 320C shown in
Another filter embodiment 330C is shown in
Similarly, the second, tunable switchable filter module 334D may include a second resonator 332C, a second tunable resonator 212B, a second, grounded tunable resonator module 96F, and a second opposite switch pair 216F, 217F. The switch 217F, the second resonator 332C, and the second tunable resonator 212B may be serially coupled together and the serial group (217F, 332C, 212B) may be coupled in parallel to the switch 216F. The AWF module 96F may be located between the AW 332C and 212B and ground. The AWF 96F may include an AW module 80F and a tunable capacitor 98F coupled in parallel to the AW module 80F.
The filter module 334C, when active (switch 216E open, switch 217E closed, switch 216F closed, switch 217F open (mode 1)) may produce the frequency response 320C shown in
The filter system or architecture 330C may have an unacceptable insertion loss in mode 1 or 2 given the potential loss and capacitance of the open switches 216F, 217E (mode 2), switch 216E, 217F (mode 1). Another filter architecture 330D enabling modes 1, 2, and 3 with a lower insertion loss is show in
The second filter module 336B includes a second resonator 332C, a second AWF 212B, a second, grounded AWF 96F, and a switch pair 216F, 217F coupled in series where these resonators in series may produce the frequency response 320F shown in
A signal processing architecture 330E is shown in
The filtered, amplified signal may be coupled to the antenna 50 via the switch 216H. Similarly a signal 42 received on the antenna 50 may be filtered by the second filter system 215B. The filter system 215B may include the second resonator module 332C, a second grounded resonator module 96F (including a resonator 80F and a tunable capacitor 98F) and a second parallel resonator module (including resonator 214E, 214F and a tunable capacitor 218D). In an embodiment, the second filter system 215B may generate the frequency response 320F shown in
In an embodiment, the method 340 shown in
The values of CMA, CMB, CMC and LMA, LMB, LMC may be related to the elasticity and inertia of an AW 80A, 80B, 80C in an embodiment. The values of COA, COB, COC may represent the effective capacitance of the transverse electric fingers in the piezoelectric material of the AW 80A, 80B, 80C in an embodiment. The values of RMA, RMB, RMC may represent the heat generated by mechanical motion in the AW 80A, 80B, 80C (the effective quality or Q limiter of the AW) in an embodiment. Using the values COA, CMA, LMA, and RMA for the first capacitor 81A, the inductor 86A, the second capacitor 82B, and the resistor 84A for resonator 80A, the resonance wr and the anti-resonance wa of the acoustic wave (AW) device 80A may be defined by the following equations:
Using these equations the AW 80A may form the frequency response 362A shown in
In
In
The short part AW device 80C frequency response 362C stop-band resonate frequency, fr3 may be configured to be greater than fc of the filter 364A and accordingly its pass-band about the anti-resonance fa3 also greater than fc of the filter 364A and its resonate frequency, fr3. As shown in
Similar to
It is noted that the resonator AW devices 80A, 80C, 80D resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr1, fr3, fr4 and fa1, fa3, fa4 may be fixed as a function of the physical characteristics of the AW devices 80A, 80C, 80D. The variable capacitors 98A, 98C, 98D may shift the device 80A, 80C, 80D characteristics as described above. Using the resultant frequency response of a AW device 80A, 80C, 80D based its physical characteristics various filter responses may be formed by various combinations of the devices 80A, 80C, 80D.
In
As shown in 20A a resonator 80A, 80B, 80C may be represented by a first capacitor 81A, 81B, 81C in parallel with a series coupling of an inductor 86A, 86B, 86C, second capacitor 82A, 82B, 82C, and resistor 84A, 84B, 84C where the capacitors 81A, 81B, 81C, 82A, 82B, 82C may have a capacitance of COA, COB, COC, CMA, CMB, CMC, respectively, inductors 86A, 86B, 86C may have an inductance of LMA, LMB, LMC and the resistors 84A, 84B, 84C may have a resistance of RMA, RMB, RMC in an embodiment. As noted the AW devices 80A, 80B, 80C physical characteristics may be selected to create one or filter modules (band-pass 364C of
A variable capacitor 98A, 98B, 98C may consume significant die area of a semiconductor including the capacitors and affect the Q (quality) of a filter 370A including the capacitors 98A, 98B, 98C. In an embodiment a filter 364D of
In an embodiment, the AW device 80A may be similar to the AW device 80B. In this embodiment the variable capacitor 98A may also be similar to the variable capacitor 98B. As shown in
As noted above an acoustic wave (AW) device such as 80A, 80B, 80C shown in
In an embodiment a temperature sensor module 444A electrically coupled to a contact 444B near the AW modules 98A, 98B, 98C may calculate the temperature near the AW modules 98A, 98B, 98C. A control logic module 446 may use the calculated temperature and known manufacturing variants for the system 430 components to control or modulate one or more variable capacitors 98A, 98B, 98C via their control signals 442A, 442B, 442C.
In an embodiment, the AW modules 98A, 98B, 98C may be configured to operate at a nominal operating temperature where the actual environmental temperature may be below or above the nominal operating temperature. The control logic module 446 may determine the differential between the AW modules' 98A, 98B, 98C nominal operating temperature and the calculated or determined environmental temperature. An AW modules' 98A, 98B, 98C nominal operating temperature may be stored in the PROM 448 (
In an embodiment a programmable read only memory (PROM) 448 may include manufacturing variance characteristics for one or more components 80A to 80C and 98A to 98C of the system 430. The PROM 448 characteristics may include the possible resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 for each AW module 80A to 80C or a delta between the optimal or normal resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 and the probable resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 for each AW module 80A to 80C. The control logic module 446 may use the delta or differential frequency or probable frequency for each AW module 80A to 80C to calculate a desired correction to be achieved by modulating a corresponding variable capacitor 98A to 98C.
In an embodiment a programmable read only memory (PROM) 448 may also include temperature variance characteristics for one or more components 80A to 80C of the system 430. The PROM 448 characteristics may include the possible resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 for each AW module 80A to 80C or a delta between the optimal or normal resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 and the probable resonate and anti-resonate frequencies fr0, fa0 for each AW module 80A to 80C based on temperature. The control logic module 446 may use the temperature delta or differential frequency or probable frequency for each AW module 80A to 80C to calculate a desired correction to be achieved by modulating a corresponding variable capacitor 98A to 98C.
In an embodiment, the resonant and anti-resonant frequency variation 392C for an AW module 80A to 80C may be linear as shown in
In an embodiment, the control logic module 446 may combine manufacturing variation deltas and temperature variation deltas provided by the PROM 448 for a component 80A to 80C to determine or calculate an overall delta or correction for corresponding variable capacitor 98A to 98C. In a further embodiment the control logic module 446 may combine manufacturing variation deltas and temperature variation deltas provided by the PROM 448 for a component 80A to 80C and a manufacturing variation deltas provided by the PROM 448 for a corresponding variable capacitor 98A to 98C to determine or calculate an overall delta or correction for the corresponding variable capacitor 98A to 98C.
In an embodiment, the PROM 448 data may be updatable via one or more methods. In such an embodiment the PROM 448 characteristic data for temperature or manufacturing variants for one or more components 80A to 80C may be updated based on measured response or updated component testing. Similarly characteristic data for manufacturing variants for one or more capacitors 98A to 98C may be updated based on measured response or updated component testing. In an embodiment, the system 430 control logic module 446 may include memory for storing temperature and manufacturing characteristics for components 80A to 80C and manufacturing characteristics for components 98A to 98C.
In order to produce AW modules 80A to 80C or variable capacitors 98A to 98C or other components having possible variable system characteristics due to manufacturing a process 400 shown in
Based on the test devices and a consistent or well behaved manufacturing process, probability curves or standard deviations for critical parameters of the test devices may be determined. In an embodiment, a Gaussian distribution may be applied and first standard deviations may be determined for each critical parameter probability function. Using correlation(s) between the test devices and an AW module or variable capacitor module to be designed and produced, probability functions (such as each Pr(f) 392A, Pa(f) 392B, Pc(f) 392C) may be determined for the AW module or variable capacitor modules.
Based on the correlations between the test devices and resultant probability functions for critical parameters, an AW module or capacitor module may be designed (activity 404). Without compensating modules or methods as recited by the present invention, an AW module or capacitor module design parameters may be required to be loose to compensate for the manufacturing variants. Employing the AW modules or capacitors in a system 430 (with compensating modules) of the present invention may enable tighter design parameters given the ability to compensate for variants of the system 430. In an embodiment initial, final components (AW module or capacitor modules) based on a design may be produced (activity 406). Then, the initial components based on the associated design may be tested to determine the probability characteristics for key or critical parameters (activity 408).
The determined probability characteristics for the initial final, designed components may be compared to the determined probability characteristics for the test devices. Where the characteristics are correlated as expected, larger quantities of the final, design components may be produced and randomly tested (activity 412). Where the manufacturing process and source is controlled and well-behaved only sparse or random components may need to be tested to confirm correlation to the previously determined probability functions Pr(f) 392A, Pa(f) 392B, Pc(f) 392C. For temperature sensitive components including AW modules, the temperature effects may also be modeled (activity 402) and considered during the component design (activity 404). The temperature characteristics of initial, final components may also be determined (activity 408) prior to producing higher quantities of temperature sensitive components (activity 412). In an embodiment each or batch groups of final, designed component (AW module or variable capacitor module) may be tested and resultant probability function determined for key or critical module characteristics. As noted the determined probability functions may be stored in a system 430 employing a corresponding module (80A to 80C, 98A to 98C).
In addition to adjusting for AW modules' performance variants due manufacturing variants and operating temperature, impedances present at a filter module 452A input or output port may affect the filter module 452A (
The ratio between target loads 94A, 94B is related to the Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR) for the module. As noted, a filter module 452A may be configured for a common VSWR of 1:1 (where the input load 94A is about equal to the output load 94B). For a filter module 452A configured for a VSWR of 1:1 an input-output mismatch (VSWR other than 1:1) may result in a greater input signal insertion loss (greater filter passband loss).
As shown in the
Each sub-filter module 454A, 454B may include a first tunable AW module 96C, 96E and a second tunable AW module 96D, 96F coupled to ground, respectively. As noted above an AW device 80A, 80C, 80D, 80E, 80F may be modeled from a series of a inductor 86A, 86C, 86D, 86E, 86F, capacitor 82A, 82C, 82D, 82E, 82F, resistor 84A, 84C, 84D, 84E, 84F coupled in parallel with a capacitor 81A, 81C, 81D, 81E, 81F, respectively. Each variable capacitor 98A, 98C, 98D, 98E, and 98F coupled in parallel with an AW device 80A, 80C, 80D, 80E, and 80F may be varied to affect the filter characteristics of the AW device 80A, 80C, 80D, 80E, and 80F.
As noted previously a variable capacitor 98A, 98C, 98D, 98E, and 98F may be employed to modulate an AW device 80A, 80C, 80D, 80E, and 80F to shift a resonant or anti-resonant frequency to select different bands, sub-bands, correct for manufacturing variants, and temperature shifts. A variable capacitor 98A, 98C, 98D, 98E, and 98F may also be employed to modulate an AW device 80A, 80C, 80D, 80E, and 80F to reduce a input signal insertion loss due to an unexpected or non-conforming VSWR (not equal to VSWR the filter model 452B was designed to process).
In an embodiment, the filter module 452B may be designed for a VSWR of about 1:1 and the variable capacitors 98A, 98C, 98D, 98E, and 98F may be modulated to reduce insertion loss due to a VSWR other than 1:1 (non-forming). For example,
In another embodiment the PROM 448 of
As shown in
As noted the VSWR is based on the balance between the input load and output load of a system. As shown in
The inductor 464A may provide the impedance matching function of the impedance matching module 470A. In an embodiment, the inductor may be about a 2 to 3 nH inductor.
As shown in the
Each sub-filter module 474A, 474B may include a first tunable/switchable AW module 476A, 476E and a second tunable AW module 476D, 476F coupled to ground, respectively. Tunable AW module 476A may include AW device 80A in series with a switch 472B coupled in parallel to AW device 80F in series with a switch 472A, the set coupled in parallel to a variable capacitor 98A. Tunable AW module 476E may include AW device 80H in series with a switch 472C coupled in parallel to AW device 80I in series with a switch 472D, the set coupled in parallel to a variable capacitor 98E.
In a first mode the switches 474A to 474D may operate to switch AW module 80A and AW module 80H on (closed) and AW module 80F and AW module 80I off (switch open) for band 13 or 17. In a second mode the switches 474A to 474D may operate to switch AW module 80A and AW module 80H off (switch open) and AW module 80F and AW module 80I on or active (switch closed) for the other of band 13 or 17. The variable capacitors 98A, 98E, 98F, and 98D may be employed to adjust the operation of the AW modules 80F, 80A, 80I, 80H, 80G, and 80D to correct for temperature, output impedance, and manufacturing variants. It is noted that variable capacitor 98A modulates AW module 80A or 80F (is shared) and variable capacitor 98E modulates AW module 80H or 80I (is shared).
The variable capacitor 98C may be modulated to provide impedance matching between the filter module 462B and the impedance matching module 470A.
In an embodiment, the switches 472A to 472D may be comprised of stacked CMOS FETs to pass the PA amplified signals. The use of multiple sub-filters 474A, 474B in series may reduce the stack size and power across the switches 474A to 474D as the signal is shared across the sub-filters. In a further embodiment the capacitors 98A and 98E may be fixed. Their capacitance may be preset based on known manufacturing variants, operating temperature variants, and impedance matching (output) corrections that are fixed for the filter module 462B. In another embodiment of all the variable capacitors 98A to 98G described in the application capacitance range and granularity may be varied as function of corrections needed to maintain the associated AW modules 80A to 80G nominal resonant and anti-resonant frequencies within acceptable tolerances. The corrections may be known or calculated based on the AW modules 80A to 80G known manufacturing and operating temperature variants and output impedance compensation conditions.
As noted, the ratio between loads or impedance 94A, 94B is related to the Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR) for the module 480A where a module 480A may be configured for a common VSWR of 1:1 (where the input impedance 94A is about equal to the output impedance 94B). For a filter module 482A configured for a VSWR of 1:1 an input-output mismatch (VSWR other than 1:1) may increase an input signal 92A insertion loss (greater filter passband loss).
The resultant L-C circuit formed by the inductor 86J and the capacitor 82J may provide balancing impedance between the source 94A and output port 94B. As a function of the inductance and capacitance of the inductor 86J and capacitor 82J and loads 94A, 94B, the L-C circuit of module 484C may balance the impedance 94A, 94B at or about predetermined frequenc(ies). When the input impedance 94A is about 50 ohms and the output impedance 94B is about 100 ohms, the VSWR may be about 1:2 causing about a 6 dB insertion loss for an input signal 92A. In an embodiment, the inductance and capacitance of the inductor 86J and capacitor 82J may be about 9.406 μH (micro-Henries) and 1.881 pF (pico-Farads). In such an embodiment, the IMM 484C may provide an impedance of about 50 ohms about a frequency of 846 MHz. In this embodiment, the IMM 484C may balance the source and output impedance so the VSWR is about 1:1 and the input signal insertion loss about 2 dB.
It is noted that the inductor 86J may consume substantial real estate and lower the quality (Q) of architecture 480C due to its substantial inductance. In an embodiment, it may be desirable to balance architecture impedance while not employing a large inductor as in an L-C resonator circuit shown in
In an embodiment, a post-IMCM 492A may include one or more components configured along with the AWM 490A to create a balancing impedance between 94A and 94B, such as 492B in
In other embodiments, an IMM's 484D pre-IMCM 491A and post-IMCM 492A may both include one or more components configured to interact or resonate with the AWM 490A to affect architecture 480D input/output impedance ratios or VSWR. In an embodiment, the AWM 490A of a IMM 484D may be configured to filter an input signal 92A in addition to resonating with one or more components of a pre-IMCM 491A or post-IMCM 492A to modulate or modify the impedance ratio of architecture 480D for various frequencies. As a function of the pre-IMCM 491A and post-IMCM 492A components the resonate frequency, fr and the anti-resonance fa of the AWM 490A may be shifted or modified in a predetermined and configurable manner. In particular, the AWM nominal resonate frequency, fr and the anti-resonance fa may be selected based on the known shift of these frequencies due to the interaction with components of a pre-IMCM 491A or post-IMCM 492A.
In an embodiment, the IMM 484F may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480F at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 484F may be configured to add impedance to architecture 480F when output impedance is greater than the input impedance. In IMM 484F, a capacitor 82J is coupled to ground and between the AWM 490A and the output load 94B to form a resonator circuit with the AWM 490A, the resonator circuit having a desired impedance at desired frequency fr′. The AWM 490A may be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the capacitor 82J where the capacitor 82J effectively borrows inductance L (represented by inductor 86J in
As shown in
Using the values Cr, Cm, Lm, and Rm for first capacitor 82A, inductor 86A, second capacitor 82B, and resistor 84A, a AWM's 490A nominal resonance frequency fr may be defined by the following equation:
In an embodiment, the capacitance of Cr is modified so the modified resonator 494A (with −L) resonates at fr′. Cr may be determined when
Accordingly based on desired effective L-R module 484C having impedance at fr′, a AWM 490A may be configured to provide inductance L and resonate at fr′.
In an embodiment, IMM 484F may be configured to balance an input impedance 94A of about 50 ohms with an output impedance 94B about 100 ohms for a frequency fr′ of 846 MHz. Similar to the capacitor 82J of L-C module 484C of
The IMM 484F may provide an impedance of about 50 ohms about a frequency of 846 MHz. In this embodiment, the IMM 484F may balance the source and output impedance so the VSWR is about 1:1 and the input signal insertion loss is nominal as shown in the frequency response graph 498B in
Other components may be coupled with an AWM in an embodiment for various desired impedance matches at various desired resonate frequencies.
In an embodiment, the IMM 484G may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480I at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 484G may be configured to add impedance to architecture 480G when output impedance is greater than the input impedance. In IMM 484G, an inductor 86L is coupled to ground and between the AWM 490B and the output load 94B to form a resonator circuit with the AWM 490B, the resonator circuit having a desired impedance at desired frequency fr′. The AWM 490B may be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the inductor 86L where the inductor 86L effectively borrows capacitance C (represented by capacitor 82K in
As shown in
In an embodiment, IMM 484G may be configured to balance an input impedance 94A of about 50 ohms with an output impedance 94B about 414 ohms for a frequency fr′ of 846 MHz. The inductor 89L may have an inductance of about 29.21 nH. The capacitor 82K may have an effective capacitance of about 1.411 pF and the capacitor 82L may have an effective capacitance of about −1.411 pF. Accordingly, the AWM 490A may provide an effective capacitance of about 1.411 pF to the L-C module 484H shown in
The IMM 484G may provide an impedance of about 364 ohms about a frequency of 836 MHz. In this embodiment, the IMM 484G may balance the source and output impedance so the VSWR is about 1:1 and the input signal insertion loss is nominal as shown in the frequency response graph 498C in
In an embodiment, the IMM 4841 may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480L at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 4841 may be configured to remove impedance from architecture 480L when output impedance is less than the input impedance. In IMM 4841, a capacitor 82J is coupled to ground and between the AWM 490A and the input load 94A to form a resonator circuit with the AWM 490A, the resonator circuit having a desired impedance at desired frequency fr′. The AWM 490A may be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the capacitor 82J where the capacitor 82J effectively borrows inductance L (represented by inductor 86J in
In an embodiment, the IMM 484K may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480M at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 484K may be configured to remove impedance from architecture 480M when output impedance is less than the input impedance. In IMM 484K, an inductor 86L is coupled to ground and between the AWM 490B and the input load 94A to form a resonator circuit with the AWM 490B, the resonator circuit having a desired impedance at desired frequency fr′. The AWM 490B may be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the inductor 86L where the inductor 86L effectively borrows capacitance C (represented by capacitor 82K in
In an embodiment, the IMM 484M may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480N at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 484M may be configured to add impedance to architecture 480N when output impedance is greater than the input impedance. In IMM 484M, the post-IMCM 492D includes a capacitor 82J and inductor 86N. The capacitor 82J is coupled to ground and between the AWM 490A and the inductor 86N. The inductor 86N is coupled between the AWM 490A and the output load 94B. The post-IMCM 492D forms a T-shaped resonator circuit with the AWM 490A, the resonator circuit having a desired impedance at desired frequency fr′. The AWM 490A may be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the capacitor 82J where the capacitor 82J effectively borrows inductance L (represented by inductor 86J in
The AWM 490A and AWM 490B may be single acoustic wave devices or a plurality of devices and variable capacitors in various configurations as shown and described above. In an embodiment, the IMM 484P may be configured to provide a balancing impedance to architecture 480N at a desired or target frequency. The IMM 484P may be configured to add impedance to architecture 480Q when output impedance is not equal to the input impedance. As noted, input and output impedance 94A, 94B may include a real and imaginary imbalance. As shown in
Similarly, the second AWM 490B may provide an effective capacitor 82J with capacitance C. The capacitance C may balance a real load difference between the input and output loads 94A, 94B and may balance an imaginary load differential. The borrowed capacitance C from capacitor 82J may shift the effective capacitance of the AWM 490A by −C (82K) as represented by the block 487A. In an embodiment, the AWM 490A and AWM 490B may be selected to have a desired frequency response based on the borrowed or shifted inductance (AWM 490A) or capacitance (AWM 490B), the effect on a resonant or anti-resonant frequency of the AWM 490A, 490B due to the borrowed inductance or capacitance. For example, the AWM 490A be configured to have a nominal frequency fr that is shifted to resonate at fr′ by the inductor 86J.
Applications that may include the novel apparatus and systems of various embodiments include electronic circuitry used in high-speed computers, communication and signal processing circuitry, modems, single or multi-processor modules, single or multiple embedded processors, data switches, and application-specific modules, including multilayer, multi-chip modules. Such apparatus and systems may further be included as sub-components within a variety of electronic systems, such as televisions, cellular telephones, personal computers (e.g., laptop computers, desktop computers, handheld computers, tablet computers, etc.), workstations, radios, video players, audio players (e.g., mp3 players), vehicles, medical devices (e.g., heart monitor, blood pressure monitor, etc.) and others. Some embodiments may include a number of methods.
It may be possible to execute the activities described herein in an order other than the order described. Various activities described with respect to the methods identified herein can be executed in repetitive, serial, or parallel fashion.
A software program may be launched from a computer-readable medium in a computer-based system to execute functions defined in the software program. Various programming languages may be employed to create software programs designed to implement and perform the methods disclosed herein. The programs may be structured in an object-orientated format using an object-oriented language such as Java or C++. Alternatively, the programs may be structured in a procedure-orientated format using a procedural language, such as assembly or C. The software components may communicate using a number of mechanisms well known to those skilled in the art, such as application program interfaces or inter-process communication techniques, including remote procedure calls. The teachings of various embodiments are not limited to any particular programming language or environment.
The accompanying drawings that form a part hereof show, by way of illustration and not of limitation, specific embodiments in which the subject matter may be practiced. The embodiments illustrated are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the teachings disclosed herein. Other embodiments may be utilized and derived there-from, such that structural and logical substitutions and changes may be made without departing from the scope of this disclosure. This Detailed Description, therefore, is not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of various embodiments is defined only by the appended claims, along with the full range of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
Such embodiments of the inventive subject matter may be referred to herein individually or collectively by the term “invention” merely for convenience and without intending to voluntarily limit the scope of this application to any single invention or inventive concept, if more than one is in fact disclosed. Thus, although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, any arrangement calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. This disclosure is intended to cover any and all adaptations or variations of various embodiments. Combinations of the above embodiments, and other embodiments not specifically described herein, will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing the above description.
The Abstract of the Disclosure is provided to comply with 37 C.F.R. § 1.72(b), requiring an abstract that will allow the reader to quickly ascertain the nature of the technical disclosure. It is submitted with the understanding that it will not be used to interpret or limit the scope or meaning of the claims. In the foregoing Detailed Description, various features are grouped together in a single embodiment for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted to require more features than are expressly recited in each claim. Rather, inventive subject matter may be found in less than all features of a single disclosed embodiment. Thus the following claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separate embodiment.
This application is a continuation of co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 15/607,388 filed May 26, 2017, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”; and application Ser. No. 15/607,388 is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/046,363 filed Feb. 17, 2016, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,698,752 issued Jul. 4, 2017; and application Ser. No. 15/046,363 is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/214,119 filed Mar. 14, 2014, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,300,038 issued Mar. 29, 2016; and application Ser. No. 14/214,119 claims priority under 35 USC 119 to U.S. provisional application No. 61/801,699 filed Mar. 15, 2013, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, and application Ser. No. 14/214,119 is a Continuation-in-part (CIP) of commonly assigned and co-pending U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 13/316,243 filed Dec. 9, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,041,484 issued on May 26, 2015, and entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, which application Ser. No. 13/316,243 claims priority under 35 USC 119 to the following U.S. provisional patent applications: provisional application No. 61/422,009 filed Dec. 10, 2010 and entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, U.S. provisional application No. 61/438,204 filed Jan. 31, 2011, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS” (attorney docket number PER-060-PROV-2), U.S. provisional application No. 61/497,819 filed Jun. 16, 2011, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, U.S. provisional application No. 61/521,590 filed Aug. 9, 2011, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, U.S. provisional application No. 61/542,783 filed Oct. 3, 2011, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”, and U.S. provisional application No. 61/565,413 filed Nov. 30, 2011, entitled “METHOD, SYSTEM, AND APPARATUS FOR RESONATOR CIRCUITS AND MODULATING RESONATORS”; and the contents of each application and patent cited above are hereby incorporated herein by reference as if set forth in full.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190393853 A1 | Dec 2019 | US |
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61801699 | Mar 2013 | US | |
61422009 | Dec 2010 | US | |
61438204 | Jan 2011 | US | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14214119 | Mar 2014 | US |
Child | 15046363 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15607388 | May 2017 | US |
Child | 16453409 | US | |
Parent | 15046363 | Feb 2016 | US |
Child | 15607388 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13316243 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14214119 | US |