The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings:
As used herein, a “nonlinear circuit element” will mean any element that provides a nonlinear response to electrical signals. Such elements include, but are not limited to, diodes, bipolar junction transistors, metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (“MOSFET”) etc.
In illustrative embodiments of the invention, a microchip in a voice communication device, such as a cellular telephone, receives and processes voice signals from a microphone. The microchip is configured to internally attenuate RF carrier noise signals that may be induced in circuit elements of the microchip. Such noise signals are generated by transceiver circuitry that transmits and receives voice signals using a modulated RF carrier signal. A filter is provided at microchip ports through which such noise can enter the microchip. The filter attenuates RF carrier noise while allowing audio signals to pass substantially unaffected. Thus, modulated RF carrier noise signals are substantially suppressed before these signals interact with non-linear circuit elements in the microchip. Therefore, these non-linear circuit elements are less likely to convert these modulated noise signals into audio interference signals that disrupt audio signals from the microphone.
A cellular telephone similar to the cellular telephone 10 shown schematically in
Associated microphone circuitry processes microphone signals from the microphone 14 for transmission through the antenna 18. For example, among other things, the microphone circuitry may amplify the microphone signal, provide a bias voltage to the microphone, and/or suppress potentially destructive electrostatic discharges. This circuitry may implement one or more sound signal processing functions such as, buffering 38, analog-to-digital conversion 36, signal processing 34, interleaving 32, and modulating 30, as shown in the block diagram of
Audio signals entering the interior cavity 47 interact with the MEMS microphone 44 to produce an electrical signal that, after being processed by the microphone microchip 42 and additional (exterior) components (e.g., a transceiver), is transmitted via the antenna 18 to a receiving device (e.g., a cell tower). Although not shown, the bottom face of the package base 46 has a number of contacts for electrically (and physically, in many anticipated uses) connecting the microphone with a substrate, such as a printed circuit board or other electrical interconnect apparatus. In illustrative embodiments, the package base 46 is a premolded, lead frame-type package (also referred to as a “premolded package”). Other types of packages may be used, however, such as ceramic packages. Wire bonds 48 may connect the MEMS microphone 44 outputs with microphone microchip 42 inputs.
The microphone microchip 42 has an input pad 54A for receiving a microphone signal from the MEMS microphone 44. The input pad 54A connects to an amplifier/output buffer 56 that both buffers and level shifts the microphone signal. (For example, the amplifier 56 may shift the signal from the microphone anywhere from 0.6 volts to 1.2 volts DC.) The microphone microchip 42 also has a voltage bias generator 58 for providing a bias voltage for the variable capacitor C1 of the MEMS microphone 44. For example, this bias voltage may be about 4 volts. The voltage bias generator 58 communicates the bias voltage to the MEMS microphone 44 through a voltage bias output pad 54B to a voltage bias input pad 52B on the microphone 44. The amplifier/output buffer 56 in the microphone microchip 42 may be a programmable amplifier/output buffer. Further, electrostatic discharge suppression circuitry (referred to as “ESD”) for suppressing electrostatic discharges may be employed. ESD circuitry 62 typically includes a diode and may include other non-linear circuit elements.
The microphone signal is output from the microphone microchip 42 via bond pad 54C. Filter circuitry 60 may be provided as shown in
As noted above, the transmission/reception of RF signals by antenna 18 of the cellular telephone 10, as shown in
In accordance with illustrative embodiments of the invention, the microphone microchip 42 includes an internal filter 60 that can substantially attenuate the induced RF carrier noise signals while allowing audio signals from the MEMS microphone 44 to pass substantially undisturbed. To that end, the microphone microchip 42 has a filter 60 configured to substantially attenuate interference signals at or near the frequency of the carrier signal that are coupled into the microchip. As shown in
For example, this filter 60 may be a notch filter having its notch frequency (i.e., its frequency of greatest attenuation) at about 1.4 GHz. If the filter 60 is configured to have a notch at this frequency, then this filter should significantly attenuate the RF carrier noise signal in the range from about 1 GHz to 2 GHz, which may be induced on the microphone microchip 42.
One method of implementing this filter 60, as shown in
As known by those skilled in the art, audio signals processed by the microphone microchip 42 have much lower frequencies than GigaHertz RF carrier signals. For example, audio signals may have frequencies on the order of tens of Hertz to several thousand Hertz. The filter 60 components, therefore, are selected to negligibly attenuate such low frequencies, while substantially attenuating signals at RF carrier frequencies. While a notch filter has been shown in
In other embodiments of the invention, filter circuitry may be used on other entry points for RF noise into the microphone microchip 42. For example, a filter may be inserted between microphone microchip power supply pads and the microchip circuitry. The filter is implemented so that RF carrier frequencies are substantially attenuated. Since the filter, in this case, is not in the signal path for the microphone signal, a simple low pass filter may be used, for example. Any filter circuit may be used, as is known in the art, that substantially attenuates RF frequency signals while passing, substantially unattenuated, signals at audio frequencies.
Although the above description discloses various exemplary embodiments of the invention, it should be apparent that those skilled in the art can make various modifications that will achieve some of the advantages of the invention without departing from the true scope of the invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application, Ser. No. 60/829,000, filed Oct. 11, 2006, entitled “Microphone Microchip with Internal Noise Suppression,” attorney docket no. 2550/B32, which is incorporated herein by reference.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60829000 | Oct 2006 | US |