The present invention is generally directed to a radio frequency (RF) receiver and, more particularly, to mixing digital-to-analog converter and polyphase filter architectures for an RF receiver.
In communication systems having weak desired signals accompanied by broadband strong blocker signals that fall into an image channel of a desired channel, radio frequency (RF) receivers with high image rejection are desirable. One approach to achieve high image rejection for an RF receiver has implemented two quadrature mixer stages within the receiver (known as a Weaver receiver). Unfortunately, Weaver receivers tend to be relatively complex, due to the implementation of two quadrature mixers and two frequency synthesizers, and also tend to have relatively large power requirements. An alternative solution has implemented a single quadrature mixer and a passive ninety-degree phase shifter that caused desired channel components to add in-phase, while image channel components added out-of-phase to provide first-order image cancellation. In at least one prior art receiver, the ninety-degree phase shifter has been provided by a polyphase filter (PPF), e.g., a passive PPF.
In general, a passive PPF does not draw power and phase shifting accuracy of the passive PPF is determined by matching on-chip resistors and capacitors. To achieve a relatively large image rejection, a PPF may implement a number of cascaded stages. To avoid undesirable signal attenuation, resistor values of a PPF have been scaled-up from an input of the PPF to an output of the PPF. In high-order PPFs, resistors in the last stages of the PPF may contribute a relatively large amount of noise. In a typical receiver that implements a quadrature mixer in combination with one or more PPFs, the image rejection of the receiver is generally limited by phase matching of in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) local oscillator (LO) signals. In the case of an analog implementation using a phase locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizer, a native image rejection of a receiver is normally limited to about 30 to 40 decibels (dBs) which is usually not adequate for modern hybrid analog/digital terrestrial TV or cable TV.
What is needed are techniques that increase an image rejection capability of a radio frequency receiver.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a receiver includes a mixing digital-to-analog converter (DAC), a direct digital frequency synthesizer (DDFS), a transimpedance amplifier (TIA) and a first polyphase filter (PPF). The mixing DAC includes a radio frequency (RF) transconductance section and a switching section. The RF transconductance section includes an input for receiving an RE signal and an output for providing an RF current signal. The switching section is coupled to the RF transconductance section and includes inputs for receiving bits associated with a digital local oscillator (LO) signal. The switching section is configured to mix the RF current signal with the LO signal to provide an analog output signal at outputs of the switching section. The DDFS includes outputs configured for providing the bits associated with the LO signal to the inputs of the switching section. The transimpedance amplifier (TIA) includes inputs each coupled to a respective one of the outputs of the switching section and outputs. The first PPF includes inputs each coupled to a respective one the outputs of the TIA.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a receiver includes a mixing digital-to-analog converter (DAC), a direct digital frequency synthesizer (DDFS), a first polyphase filter (PPF), a second PPF and a plurality of buffers. The mixing DAC includes a radio frequency (RF) transconductance section, a switching section and a pair of resistive loads. The RF transconductance section includes an input for receiving an RF signal and an output for providing an RF current signal. The switching section is coupled to the RF transconductance section and includes inputs for receiving bits associated with a digital local oscillator (LO) signal. The switching section is configured to mix the RF current signal with the LO signal to provide an analog output signal at outputs of the switching section. The resistive loads are each coupled to respective ones of the outputs of the switching section. The DDFS includes outputs configured for providing the bits associated with the LO signal to the inputs of the switching section. The first PPF includes inputs coupled to respective ones of the outputs of the switching section. The second PPF includes a plurality of inputs and a plurality of outputs. The plurality of buffers each couple a respective one of the outputs of the first PPF to a respective one of the inputs of the second PPF.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, a receiver includes a mixing digital-to-analog converter (DAC), a direct digital frequency synthesizer (DDFS), a passive polyphase filter (PPF), a differential amplifier and a bandpass filter. The mixing DAC includes a radio frequency (RF) transconductance section, a switching section and a pair of resistive loads. The RF transconductance section includes an input for receiving an RF signal and an output for providing an RF current signal. The switching section is coupled to the RF transconductance section and includes inputs for receiving bits associated with a digital local oscillator (LO) signal. The switching section is configured to mix the RF current signal with the LO signal to provide an analog output signal at outputs of the switching section. The resistive loads are each coupled to respective ones of the outputs of the switching section. The DDFS includes outputs configured for providing the bits associated with the LO signal to the inputs of the switching section. The passive PPF includes inputs each coupled to respective ones of the outputs of the switching section. The differential amplifier includes inputs each coupled to respective outputs of the PPF. The bandpass filter includes inputs each coupled to respective outputs of the differential amplifier.
The present disclosure may be better understood, and its numerous features and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings.
The use of the same reference symbols in different drawings indicates similar or identical items.
According to various aspects of the present invention, a radio frequency (RF) receiver is designed to include a mixing digital-to-analog converter (DAC) and one or more polyphase filters (PPFs). As used herein, a “radio frequency” signal means an electrical signal conveying useful information and having a frequency from about 3 kilohertz (kHz) to thousands of gigahertz (GHz), regardless of the medium through which such signal is conveyed. Thus, an RF signal may be transmitted through air, free space, coaxial cable, fiber optic cable, etc. Depending upon the implementation, a front-end PPF may operate in current-mode or voltage-mode. In various configurations, multi-stage PPFs may be implemented to reduce noise, as well as optimize linearity and image rejection ratio (IRR) performance of an associated RF receiver. For example, placing a low-order PPF prior to an active stage may result in a relaxation of matching requirements for the active stage. Using known design techniques, PPFs having 70 to 75 dB of image rejection may be readily designed. Circuit techniques, such as transconductance (gm) boosting and capacitive bootstrapping, may be employed to minimize an impact of parasitic and layout capacitances of a mixing DAC and, thus, increase an IRR of the mixing DAC.
The mixing DAC 118 also includes a DAC 122, which receives at a first input the RF input signal, and a mixer (switching section) 126. An output of the DAC 122 is coupled to a first input of the mixer 126. A second input of the mixer 126 receives a digital quadrature LO (LO(Q)) signal from the synchronization circuit 134. In an ideal case, the LO(Q) signal provided to the second input of the mixer 126 is ninety degrees out-of-phase with the LO signal provided to the second input of the mixer 124. An output of the mixer 124 provides an intermediate frequency (IF) in-phase IF(I) signal and an output of the mixer 126 provides an IF quadrature IF(Q) signal. Depending upon the application, the IF(I) and IF(Q) signals may be baseband signals. Outputs of the mixing DAC 118 are coupled to inputs of an IF section 128, which may be configured according to the various embodiments disclosed herein. As is depicted, a crystal 108 provides a reference frequency to a constant frequency phase locked loop (PLL) 130, which provides a constant frequency reference signal to a direct digital frequency synthesizer (DDFS) 132. Outputs of the DDFS 132 are coupled to inputs of the synchronization circuit 134, whose outputs, as previously mentioned, are coupled to the second inputs of the mixer 124 and the mixer 126, respectively.
With reference to
Uniformly distributing the nulls across an IF range allows a designer to avoid the use of switched PPFs for each TV standard. It should be appreciated that implementing switched PPFs degrades a noise figure and linearity of an IF path of an associated receiver. It should also be appreciated that a fifth-order (or higher-order) passive PPF generally requires relatively large resistors in the last stages of the PPF, if signal attenuation is to be minimized. Unfortunately, implementing relatively large resistors in the last stages of a PPF may result in a relatively large noise figure which degrades sensitivity of the receiver. On the other hand, in integrated circuit (IC) processing, passive devices have a much better matching, as compared to active devices having comparable device size.
In general, I/Q matching of complex mixers that operate at GHz frequencies requires implementation of relatively small devices. Unfortunately, relatively small devices may experience significant mismatches between devices, due to processing limitations. In general, active and passive device mismatches and parasitic capacitive components may dominate the IRR performance of a mixing DAC, as fabricated. To minimize noise contribution of a PPF filter, it is generally desirable to provide a relatively large gain in a mixer of the mixing DAC. Unfortunately, providing a large gain in the mixer requires a relatively large load resistance which, in turn, requires a PPF with a relatively high input impedance to avoid undesirable signal attenuation. Moreover, requiring a PPF to have a relatively high input impedance results in high sensitivity to parasitic capacitance mismatch at outputs of the mixer. Moreover, mixers with high output impedance suffer from poor gain flatness, due to frequency dependent loading of the mixer, which may be attributed to the PPF.
Referring to
As the TIAs 204 and 206 provide a small signal ground (not shown in
Turning to
With reference to
In general, to relax the linearity requirements of the buffers B1-B4, a real pole (set by values of output load resistance RL and load capacitance CL) at the outputs of the mixing DACs 408 and 410 should generally be set as low as possible within a targeted gain drop specification. Placing buffers B1-B4 between the outputs of the PPF 412 and the inputs of the PPF 402 in effect resets the increasing resistor pattern which further reduces the noise contributed by the last stage(s) of the PPF 402. It should be appreciated that achieving high matching of buffers that also provide gain may result in compromises. In high-order PPFs (e.g., fifth-order or higher), the front-end PPF may have an order of two and a back-end PPF may have an order of N−2. In any case, the back-end PPF generally has a relatively large number of cascaded stages that generally require relatively large resistor values for the last stages. Thus, the relatively large resistors in a last stage of the back-end PPF generally dominate the IF path noise figure.
It should be appreciated that in some applications it may be desirable to use a higher number of split PPFs and inter-PPF active buffers. Depending upon the application, better performance may be achieved by using a front-end PPF, an intermediate PPF and a back-end PPF with inter-PPF buffers. For example, when linearity and IRR are more important, a fifth-order PPF (with inter-PPF buffers) can be split into a front-end PPF having two stages, an intermediate PPF having two stages and a back-end PPF having one stage. As another example, when noise figure is more important, a fifth-order PPF (with inter-PPF buffers) can be split into a front-end PPF with a single stage, an intermediate PPF with two stages and a back-end PPF with two stages.
Referring to
It should be appreciated that different configurations can be used for the inter-stage buffers. For example, the buffers in the buffer stages 512 and 504 may have different gains. As another example, the buffers B1-B4 of the buffer stage 512 may have a unity gain for best linearity, while the buffers B5-B8 in the buffer stage 504 may have a gain of two in order to effectively attenuate noise in later stages of the back-end PPF 502. It should be understood that implementing buffer stages, while reducing a noise figure performance, increases the power requirements of the receiver. It should also be appreciated that the same multi-PPF technique may be applied to receivers having a current-mode front-end PPF, which receives input from a mixing DAC via a transimpedance amplifier. In the case where a front-end PPF operates in current-mode, following PPFs operate in voltage-mode. In a multi-stage PPF, the designer should consider the order in which the poles are realized. For example, progressing from a highest frequency pole at a front-end PPF to a lowest frequency pole at a back-end PPF may result in optimum resistor ratios between adjacent stages. However, minimizing loading on outputs of a mixing DAC may require a lowest frequency pole to occur at a front-end PPF. Thus, depending upon the application, a designer should carefully consider the placement of the poles of the PPFs.
An output of a PPF may be configured in a number of ways. With reference to
With reference to
In the embodiment depicted in
In a typical implementation, transistors of the cascode transconductance section 710 are selected to have a relatively small size. In general, small size transistors have a relatively low transconductance value. As such, the transistors of the cascode transconductance section 710, without boosting, have a low transconductance value and, therefore, provide a high impedance to an output of the switching section 708. Unfortunately, this may cause a translation of the critical matching point from the mixing DAC 704 output to the output of the switching section 708. To avoid this effect, it is desirable to increase the transconductance value of the transistors of the cascode transconductance section 710. To achieve a relatively large value for a small size device, transconductance (gm) boosting may be implemented by incorporating an operational amplifier (OA) having differential inputs and differential outputs. Inputs of operational amplifier OA are coupled to outputs of the switching section 708 and outputs of the operational amplifier OA are coupled to gates of the transistors of the cascode transconductance section 710.
As an alternative to a implementing a fully differential-in, differential-out operational amplifier, a pseudo-differential architecture, as is incorporated in receiver 750 of
In general, an output parasitic capacitance Cout of an IF cascode transconductance section is dominated by a drain-to-substrate capacitance. In this case, a better matching of a mixing DAC output can be achieved by using a bootstrap technique to address the drain-to-substrate capacitance. With reference to
Turning to
In a typical IC, to minimize IC size, different bit circuits are packed relatively close together. Unfortunately, packing the different bit circuits in close proximity results in relatively large parasitic capacitance (CparRF) and (CparCASCRF) between the different bit lines. According to one aspect of the present invention, the positive bits are routed together and the negative bits are routed together in order that the parasitic capacitors CparRF and CparCASCRF see the same potential on both sides and, therefore, are essential invisible up to frequencies of interest. Implementing this technique reduces the impact of parasitic capacitance on the mixing DAC signal path nodes by essentially neutralizing the layout parasitic capacitance which leaves the device parasitic capacitance (Cdev) to set the effective pole position. The neutralizing effect is generally effective up to frequencies comparable to the gm of McascRF/Cdev.
Depending upon the application, it may be desirable for a PPF to exhibit a bandpass characteristic that rejects most out-of-band intermodulation products (in order to relax linearity requirements of IF stages following the PPF). Unfortunately, passive PPFs do not generally exhibit a bandpass characteristic. With reference to
Moving to
Turning to
Accordingly, a number of radio frequency receiver architectures have been disclosed herein that implement mixing digital-to-analog converters in conjunction with one or more polyphase filters to improve an image rejection performance of a receiver.
The above-disclosed subject matter is to be considered illustrative, and not restrictive, and the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications, enhancements, and other embodiments that fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, to the maximum extent allowed by law, the scope of the present invention is to be determined by the broadest permissible interpretation of the following claims and their equivalents, and shall not be restricted or limited by the foregoing detailed description.