The invention relates to passive amplification of received signals in a radio receiver.
In radio transceivers, and particularly in direct-conversion receivers, amplifiers having low noise figures and capable of handling high-level signals are needed in front-ends of an in-phase (I) and a quadrature (Q) signal paths.
In case the baseband amplifiers 6 and 7 are active amplifiers, noise figures of the baseband amplifiers 6 and 7 are typically relatively poor due to flicker noise (known also as 1/f noise), among others. Nowadays, supply voltages applied to the active amplifiers 6 and 7 are quite low, which degrades their ability to handle input signals having large amplitudes. As a consequence, the amplifiers 6 and 7 may distort input signals severely causing difficulties in further processing of the input signals. Low-pass filters may be arranged to have low impedance levels in order to minimize noise levels. This may result in high capacitance values in the low-pass filter components and, as a consequence, increase the size of an actual implementation in an integrated circuit.
An object of the invention is to provide an improved solution for amplifying a received radio signal.
According to an aspect of the invention, there is provided a method, comprising: receiving an input signal voltage into a first and a second input port of a balanced input port, connecting, in a first stage in response to a first oscillator signal, a first and a second capacitance between the first and the second input port of the balanced input port, connecting, in a second stage in response to a second oscillator signal, the first capacitance between the first input port and a third capacitance and the second capacitance between the second input port and the third capacitance, and obtaining the voltage over the third capacitance as an output voltage.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method, comprising: producing a first and a second oscillator signal having the same frequency, charging a first capacitance and a second capacitance with an input signal sample received into a first and a second input port of a balanced input port during the first half cycle of the oscillator signals, and charging a third capacitance operationally coupled with the first and the second capacitance, with the charges in the first and the second capacitances together with an input signal sample received into the first and the second input port of the balanced input port during the second half cycle of the oscillator signal.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided an apparatus, comprising an input interface comprising a balanced input port to receive a balanced input signal and a oscillator signal input port to receive a first and a second oscillator signal, a first, a second, and a third capacitance, a first set of switches responsive to the first oscillator signal and arranged to connect, in response to the first oscillator signal, the first and the second capacitance between a first and a second input port of the balanced input port, a second set of switches responsive to the second oscillator signal and arranged to connect, in response to the second oscillator signal, the first capacitance between the first input port and the third capacitance and the second capacitance between the second input port and the third capacitance, and an output port connected to terminals of the third capacitance.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided an apparatus, comprising input means comprising a balanced input port to receive a balanced input signal and an oscillator signal input port to receive a first and a second oscillator signal, first, second, and third capacitance means, first switching means responsive to the first oscillator signal and arranged to connect, in response to the first oscillator signal, the first and the second capacitance means between a first and a second input port of the balanced input port, second switching means responsive to the second oscillator signal and arranged to connect, in response to the second oscillator signal, the first capacitance means between the first input port and the third capacitance means and the second capacitance means between the second input port and the third capacitance means, and output means connected to terminals of the third capacitance means.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided an automatic gain control amplifier comprising the above-described apparatus.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a radio transmitter comprising the above-described apparatus.
In the following, the invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the embodiments and the accompanying drawings, in which
The amplifier comprises an input interface including a balanced input port to receive a balanced input signal to be amplified. The balanced input port comprises a first and a second input port IN_P and IN_N to receive a balanced input signal. As known in the art, the balanced input signal comprises two components having opposite phases. Referring to
The input interface further comprises an oscillator signal input port to receive a first and a second oscillator signal LO_0 and LO_180. A local oscillator may provide a local oscillator signal which may be modified into the first and the second oscillator signals LO_0 and LO_180 input to the oscillator signal input port of the amplifier. The oscillator signals LO_0 and LO_180 may be modified to have substantially the same frequency.
The amplifier according to the embodiment of the invention includes a first capacitance C21, a second capacitance C22, and a third capacitance C23. Additionally, the amplifier comprises a first set of switches responsive to the first oscillator signal LO_0 and a second set of switches responsive to the second oscillator signal LO_180. In the embodiment illustrated in
The second set of switches may include a fifth switch 42, a sixth switch 43, a seventh switch 45, and an eighth switch 48. The fifth switch 42 may be disposed between the first terminal of the first capacitance and a first end of the third capacitance C23. The sixth switch 43 may be disposed between the first input port of the balanced input port and the second terminal of the first capacitance C21. The seventh switch 45 may be disposed between the second input port of the balanced input port and the first terminal of the second capacitance C22. The eighth switch 48 may be disposed between the second terminal of the second capacitance C22 and the second terminal of the third capacitance C23.
As described above, the first oscillator signal LO_0 may be applied to each switch of the first set of switches and the second oscillator signal LO_180 may be applied to each switch of the second set of switches.
Let us now consider the operation of the amplifier according to this embodiment of the invention during a clock cycle of the local oscillator signals LO_0 and LO_180. The clock cycle may be divided into two stages. In the first stage, the value of the first oscillator signal LO_0 is high and the value of the second oscillator signal LO_180 remains low. Accordingly, the first set of switches, i.e. the switches 41, 44, 46, and 47, is closed in the first stage. Thereby, the closed first set of switches forms a circuit illustrated in
When connected in parallel between the first and the second input port, the first and the second capacitance are charged with a voltage corresponding to the voltage between the first and the second input port IN_P and IN_N. The voltages over the first and the second input port IN_P and IN_N are illustrated in
In the second stage, the value of the first oscillator signal LO_0 is low and the value of the second oscillator signal LO_180 is high. Accordingly, the first set of switches, i.e. the switches 41, 44, 46, and 47, is open in the second stage, and the second set of switches, i.e. the switches 42, 43, 45, and 48, is closed. Thereby, the closed second set of switches forms a circuit illustrated in
Accordingly, the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22 release their charges into the third capacitance C23. In addition to the voltages in the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22, the third capacitance C23 is charged with the input voltage which sums up together with the voltages in the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22 in the second stage. Referring to
The principles of the amplifier according to the embodiment of the invention are based on charging the first and the second capacitance C21 in the first stage and C22 and releasing the charges in the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22 in series with the input signal to the third capacitance C23 in the second stage. This operation of sequentially charging and discharging the first capacitance C21 makes the first capacitance C21 and the switches 41, 42, 43, and 44 (the first, second, fifth and sixth switch) to function as a resistor implemented with a switched capacitor filter (SC filter) technique.
where C2 is the capacitance of the second capacitor. It can be seen that if the frequency of the oscillator signals is constant, the corner frequency depends on the ratio of the capacitances C1 and C2. In CMOS implementations, the absolute capacitance values may have a high diversity, but the ratio of the capacitance values remains very stable and accurate. That is, the ratio C1/C2 remains quite constant regardless of variations in the absolute values of C1 and C2. Accordingly, the corner frequency may be defined accurately and it has only marginal variations.
Consequently, the amplifier according to an embodiment of the invention may be used as a low-pass filter by designing the components, i.e. the first, the second, and the third capacitance C21, C22, and C23, the switches 41 to 48 and the oscillator signals LO_0 and LO_180 properly. Now, the first, second, fifth, and sixth switch 41, 42, 43, and 44 and the first capacitance C21 function as a first resistor, and the third, fourth, seventh, and eighth switch 45, 46, 47, and 48 and the second capacitance C22 function as a second resistor. The corner frequency is defined by the ratio of the capacitance values of the first and the third capacitance C21 and C23 and the ratio of the capacitance values of the second and the third capacitance C22 and C23. If the capacitance value of the second capacitance C22 equals to that of the first capacitance C21, the corner frequency simplifies into
Accordingly, the amplifier according to an embodiment of the invention is configured to function also as a low-pass filter having a corner frequency defined by capacitance values of the first, second, and third capacitance C21, C22, and C23. Therefore, no additional components are required for implementation of the low-pass filter. This reduces the size of a receiver structure employing the passive amplifier according to the embodiment of the invention.
In an embodiment illustrated in
The first and the second switching mechanism may be controlled by a controller 76 according to the desired voltage multiplication factor. The controller 76 may determine the desired voltage multiplication factor according to a method known in the art related to AGC amplifiers. When the desired voltage multiplication factor is three (amplification is 9 dB), the controller 76 may control the first switching mechanism 72 to connect the first connection port A to output port E, i.e. to the second input port IN_N, and the second switching mechanism 74 to connect the second connection port B to output port H, i.e. to the first input port IN_P. This configuration corresponds to the embodiment described above with reference to
When the desired voltage multiplication factor is two (amplification is 6 dB), the controller 76 may control the first switching mechanism 72 to connect the first connection port A to output port D and the second switching mechanism 74 to connect the second connection port B to output port G. In other words, the first connection port A is connected to the second connection port B. Accordingly, the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22 are connected in series between the input ports IN_P and IN_N of the balanced input port in the first stage, as illustrated in
When the desired voltage multiplication factor is one, the controller 76 may control the first switching mechanism 72 to connect the first connection port A to output port C, i.e. to the first input port IN_P, and the second switching mechanism 74 to connect the second connection port B to output port F, i.e. to the second input port IN_N. This configuration is illustrated in
In some cases, the desired voltage multiplication factor may, however, be other than 1 (0 dB), 2 (6 dB), or 3 (9 dB).
In this embodiment, the amplification depends on the amount of input voltage charged into the fourth capacitance C5, i.e. on the capacitance value of the fourth capacitance C5, according to the following equation:
where C21, C23, and C5 represent the capacitance values of the first, third, and fourth capacitance C21, C23, and C5, respectively. Here, it is assumed that the capacitance value of the second capacitance C22 equals that of the first capacitance C21. The higher the capacitance value of the fourth capacitance C5 is, the lower is the voltage over the fourth capacitance C5 in the first stage, i.e. the higher is the voltage multiplication factor of the amplifier. The voltage multiplication factor of the amplifier may be adjusted on-the-fly by adjusting the capacitance value of the fourth capacitance C5. For that purpose, an adjustment circuit may be arranged into the amplifier.
In the embodiment described above with reference to
In other words, the amplification may be adjustable up to 6 dB.
In the first stage, the first set of switches connects the first capacitance C21 in series with the fifth capacitance C26 and in parallel with the second and the sixth capacitance C22 and C25 between the input ports IN_P and IN_N. Consequently, the voltage between the input ports IN_P and IN_N is divided between the first and the fifth capacitance C21 and C26 and between the second and the sixth capacitance C22 and C26. Therefore, the voltage over the first capacitance C21 depends on the capacitance value of the fifth capacitance C26 and the voltage over the second capacitance C22 depends on the capacitance value of the sixth capacitance C25. The higher is the capacitance values of the fifth and the sixth capacitance C26 and C25, the higher is the voltage over the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22, respectively. The second stage is similar to the embodiments described above, i.e. the second set of switches connects the first and the second capacitance C21 and C22 in series with the third capacitance C23 between the input ports IN_P and IN_N. Accordingly, the fifth and the sixth capacitance C26 and C25 are isolated from the circuit in the second stage.
The capacitance values of the fifth and the sixth capacitance C26 and C25 may be adjusted according to the desired voltage multiplication factor. For example, an adjustment circuit similar to that illustrated in
where C21, C23, and C26 represent the capacitance values of the first, third and fifth capacitance, respectively. In this case, it is assumed that the second capacitance C22 and the sixth capacitance C25 have the same capacitance values as the first and the fifth capacitance C21 and C26, respectively. It should be noted that equation (3) is simplified in the sense that it does not take into account on-resistances of the switches 41 to 48 and input and output impedances of the amplifier. The same simplification has been applied to equation (3), too.
Embodiment illustrated in
Both switching mechanisms 80 and 82 comprise an additional output port which are connected to each other through an additional capacitance C7 (seventh capacitance). Accordingly, output port I of switching mechanism 80 is connected to output port J of switching mechanism 82 through the seventh capacitance C7. The capacitance value of the seventh capacitance C7 may be selected to provide a desired amplification factor (3 dB, for example) for the amplifier.
Switching mechanisms 80 and 82 may be controlled by a controller 84. The controller 84 may have a functionality similar to the controller 76 described above with reference to
With the embodiments having adjustable voltage multiplication factor as described above, the passive amplifier may be implemented with automatic gain control functionality. This feature is very practical in radio transceivers, since the level of a received radio signal may have high variations.
In general, the embodiments of the invention are advantageous in multi-mode radio receivers (or transceivers) operating at multiple frequency bands and requiring high linearity and noise figures from the receiver components. In such transceivers, it is generally difficult to arrange a low-noise amplifier (amplifier 2 in
In practice, the passive amplifier according to embodiments of the invention may be implemented by arranging the first set of switches to respond to the first oscillator signal and the second set of switches to respond to the second oscillator signal, as described above. In that case, the first and the second oscillator signals may be different oscillator signals and the individual switches may have the same functionality, i.e. a switch may be closed when the level of an oscillator signal controlling the switch is high and open when the level of the oscillator signal is low. Alternatively, the first and the second set of switches may be arranged to respond to the same oscillator signal which may be the first or the second oscillator signal. In this case, the first set of switches may be arranged to be closed when the level of the oscillator signal is high (and open otherwise), and the second set of switches may be arranged to be closed when the level of the oscillator signal is low (and open otherwise). This functionality may be achieved by implementing the first set of switches by NMOS transistors and the second set of switches by PMOS transistors, for example. Accordingly, the operation of the first and the second set of switches may be complementary in the sense that both sets of switches are not closed at the same time.
In the description above, it is mentioned that the first and the second oscillator signals may have the same frequency. Accordingly, the oscillator signals may have different pulse ratios and/or pulse shapes, for example, as long as the first and the second set of switches are not closed at the same time. The first and the second oscillator signals may also have opposite phases.
The third capacitance C23 may be implemented by three capacitors C111, C108 and C130. Capacitor C130 may be connected in parallel with capacitors C111 and C108, and capacitors C111 and C108 may be connected in series, as shown in
While the embodiments are described above in conjunction with balanced input and output ports, an embodiment employing dual balanced input ports and output ports may be formed by arranging two balanced passive amplifier structures in parallel and providing input signals into corresponding balanced input ports of the parallel structures in opposite phases.
It is obvious to one skilled in the art that the embodiments of the invention may be carried out in numerous ways in terms of practical implementation. For example, the switches 41 to 48 or Q89 to Q96 may be realized with GaAs field effect transistors, SOI-CMOS transistors, diodes, etc. Additional components may also be included in the embodiments described above, depending on the practical implementation. The embodiments may be realized on an integrated circuit, a printed circuit board, or any other material. Applications of the embodiments include radio transceivers or radio transmitters or receivers according to the following exemplary technologies: mobile telephones, Global Positioning System (GPS), Galileo, Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN), Bluetooth®, FM radio, television receivers, digital video broadcasting for handheld devices (DVB-H), AM receivers, audio amplifiers, measuring instruments, etc.
Even though the invention has been described above with reference to an example according to the accompanying drawings, it is clear that the invention is not restricted thereto but it can be modified in several ways within the scope of the appended claims.
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