1. Technical Field
The disclosed embodiments relate generally to wireless communication systems, and more particularly, to Phase Locked Loops (PLLs) in radio front end circuitry for up-converting and down-converting transmission signals.
2. Background Information
At times during operation of the mobile handset, the PLL 10 may be perturbed. The transmitter 21 is disabled and the PLL 10 is allocated an amount of time to resettle. After the PLL 10 has resettled, the transmitter 21 is enabled for transmission and wireless communication can resumed. The amount of time allocated for PLL resettling is referred to as a settling time requirement. The settling time requirement varies depending on the type of communication and the protocols supported.
In the present specific example involving GSM communications, the settling time requirement is one millisecond. When PLL 10 is perturbed, the PLL 10 switches from a low bandwidth mode (100 kHz) into a high bandwidth mode (1 MHz). The PLL 10 operates in the high bandwidth mode for a first five-hundred microsecond time period. The PLL 10 then switches back to operate in its normal low bandwidth mode. After switching back to the low bandwidth mode, the PLL 10 resettles within a second five-hundred microsecond time period. A digital logic control signal HB 22 controls whether the PLL 10 is operating in the low bandwidth mode or in the high bandwidth mode. The digital logic control signal HB 22 is supplied to charge pump 12 and to loop filter 13 via conductor 23.
At time T1 , at the beginning of the second five-hundred microsecond time period, the control signal HB 22 is switched back to the digital logic low level. Deasserting control signal HB 22 at time T1 causes the charge pump 12 to decrease the charge pump output current ICP 24 to the normal charge pump current level. Deasserting control signal HB 22 also controls switch 25 in loop filter 13 to couple resistor R026 into the loop filter. The decrease in charge pump output current ICP 24 and the coupling of resistor R0 into the loop filter causes the PLL 10 to exhibit a decreased loop bandwidth. The waveform of the VCO frequency at the top of
A Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) of a local oscillator is operable in two modes, a first low bandwidth mode and a second high bandwidth mode. In the first low bandwidth mode, the PLL uses a first control loop that includes a first charge pump and a first loop filter, and has a bandwidth BW1. The first control loop drives the Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO) of the PLL. In the second high bandwidth mode, the PLL uses a second control loop that includes a second charge pump and a second loop filter, and has a bandwidth BW2 that is at least twice BW1. The second control loop drives the VCO.
In one embodiment, the local oscillator is part of a transmitter of a mobile communication device. The VCO of the PLL outputs a VCO output signal (VO) that in turn is used to generate a local oscillator output signal (LO). The local oscillator output signal LO is output from the local oscillator and is supplied to a mixer of the transmitter. The transmitter is operable in a high power (HP) TX mode and in a Low Power (LP) TX mode. The HP TX mode is high current consumption mode, whereas the LP TX mode is a low current consumption mode. In certain circumstances it is desirable to switch the transmitter from operating in the HP TX mode to operating in the LP TX mode in order to reduce power consumption. When the transmitter switches from the HP TX mode to LP TX mode, however, the PLL may be perturbed, for example due to a change in loading on the VCO. The PLL may, for example, be perturbed due to a VCO buffer and/or an LO buffer switching from a high power mode to a low power mode coincidental with the transmitter switching from the HP TX mode to the LP TX mode. By operating the PLL in the second high bandwidth mode for a predetermined and controlled High Bandwidth Time Period (HBWTP) after the transmitter switches into the LP TX mode, the PLL settles within a reduced settling time (for example, twenty-five microseconds).
In one specific example, the mobile communication device engages in a
Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (W-CDMA) communication that requires the PLL to have a settling time of twenty-five microseconds after the PLL is perturbed. Initially, the transmitter operates in the HP TX mode and the PLL operates in the first low bandwidth mode. Accordingly, the first control loop that has a loop bandwidth (BW1) of 100 KHz is used to drive the VCO. The VCO output signal has a frequency FVCO
The transmitter is then made to switch from operating in the HP TX mode to operating in the LP TX mode. In response to the transmitter switching power modes, a mode control circuit in the PLL controls the PLL to switch from operating in the first low bandwidth mode to operating in the second high bandwidth mode. In the second high bandwidth mode, the second control loop (that has a loop bandwidth (BW2) of 1 MHz, or ten times BW1) drives the VCO. The PLL operates in this second high bandwidth mode for the HBWTP time period. In this example, HBWTP is fifteen microseconds. By the end of this HBWTP time period, the VCO output frequency FVCO
After operating in the second high bandwidth mode for this HBWTP time period, the mode control circuit of the PLL controls the PLL to switch from operating in the second high bandwidth mode to operating in the first low bandwidth mode. Within ten microseconds, the VCO output frequency FVCO settles to be within one ppm of the initial VCO frequency FVCO
After the twenty-five microsecond settling time, the mode control circuit of the PLL continues to keep the PLL operating in the first low bandwidth mode. The PLL is said to resume “normal operation”. The transmitter, however, is now operating in its LP TX mode.
The foregoing is a summary and thus contains, by necessity, simplifications, generalizations and omissions of detail; consequently, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the summary is illustrative only and does not purport to be limiting in any way. Other aspects, inventive features, and advantages of the devices and/or processes described herein, as defined solely by the claims, will become apparent in the non-limiting detailed description set forth herein.
If the cellular telephone 100 is transmitting, then information to be transmitted is converted into analog form by a Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) 116 in the digital baseband integrated circuit 104 and is supplied to a “transmit chain” 117 in the RF transceiver integrated circuit 103. Baseband filter 118 then filters out noise due to the digital-to-analog conversion process. Mixer block 119 under control of local oscillator 120 then up-converts the signal into a high frequency signal. Driver amplifier 121 and an external power amplifier 122 amplify the high frequency signal to drive antenna 102 so that a high frequency RF signal 123 is transmitted from antenna 102. The digital baseband integrated circuit 104 controls the transmitter 125 by controlling the frequency of a Local Oscillator (LO2) signal 124 to mixer 119. Transmitter 125 includes the transmit chain 117 and the local oscillator 120. Local oscillator signal LO2124 includes a differential In-phase (I) signal and a differential Quadrature (Q) signal that are supplied via conductors 156-159 (see also
A transmit mode control circuit 131 generates a digital logic control signal TX HP/LP 132. The TX HP/LP signal 132 is indicative of whether the cellular telephone 100 is operating in a High Power (HP) mode or in a Low Power (LP) mode. The HP mode is also referred to as a high current consumption mode, and the LP mode is also referred to as a low current consumption mode. The transmit mode control circuit 131 supplies the digital logic control signal TX HP/LP 132 to the local oscillator 120 via conductor 133. In operation, transmitter 125 may operate in the HP TX mode. In the HP TX mode, the transmit mode control circuit 131 asserts the control signal TX HP/LP 132 and supplies signal TX HP/LP 132 to local oscillator 120 via conductor 133. While transmitter 125 is transmitting in the HP TX mode, processor 134 may determine that transmitter 125 should switch from transmitting in the HP mode to transmitting in the LP TX mode to reduce power consumption. If processor 134 decides to switch the transmitter 125 to the LP TX mode, then processor 134 controls circuitry within the transmit chain 117 to operate in the LP TX mode. Upon transitioning from the HP TX mode to the LP TX mode, the transmit mode control circuit 131 deasserts the control signal TX HP/LP 132 and supplies signal TX HP/LP 132 to local oscillator 120 via conductor 133.
Mode control circuit 155 controls whether the PLL 137 operates: 1) in a first low bandwidth mode using a first control loop, or 2) in a second high bandwidth mode using a second control loop. The mode control circuit 155 receives the divided down reference clock signal FREF 164 onto input lead 165 and the control signal TX HP/LP 132 onto input lead 166, and generates control signal EN_MAIN 167, control signal EN_AUX 168, control signal VCO HP/LP 169, control signal VCO BUF HP/LP 271 and control signal LO BUF HP/LP 272. The control signal EN_MAIN 167 is supplied to the main switch 145 via conductor 170. The control signal EN_AUX 168 is supplied to the auxiliary switch 148 via conductor 171. The control signal VCO HP/LP 169 is supplied to the VCO 152 via a mode control input lead 172. The control signal VCO BUF HP/LP 271 is supplied to the VCO buffer 138 via conductor 273. The control signal LO BUF HP/LP 272 is supplied to the LO buffer 139 via conductor 274. The PH) 144 receives the clock signal FREF 164 onto input lead 173 and receives a divided-down single-bit feedback signal DIV_OUT 174 onto input lead 175. From these signals, PFD 144 generates and supplies an up charge pump control signal UP 176 onto output lead 177 and a down charge pump control signal DN 178 onto output lead 179. The signals UP 176 and DN 178 are digital signals. Mode control circuit 155 determines whether the digital signals UP 176 and DN 178 propagate through the first control loop (in the first low bandwidth mode) or through the second control loop (in the second high bandwidth mode), as explained below.
If the mode control circuit 155 determines the PLL 137 should operate in the first low bandwidth mode, then mode control circuit 155 asserts the control signal EN_MAIN 167 to a digital logic high level and deasserts the control signal EN_AUX 168 to a digital logic low level. This causes the up charge pump control signal UP 176 and the down charge pump control signal DN 178 to be supplied to the main charge pump146 via conductors 180 and 181, respectively. The main charge pump 146 receives the charge pump control signals UP 176 and DN 178 and generates a charge pump output current pulse train signal MICP 182 supplied to main loop filter 147 via conductor 183. In this example, the main loop filter 147 is a low-pass filter and includes a resistor 184. After low-pass filtering of the pulse train signal MICP 182, the main loop filter 147 supplies a tuning signal VTUNE1185 onto VCO 152 via tuning control input lead 186. The signal VTUNE1185 controls the VCO 152 to output signal VO 142 onto conductor 143. In this example, signal VTUNE1185 has a desired operating point of 1.0 volts +/−300.0 millivolts. Accordingly, in the first low bandwidth mode, the PLL 137 uses the main switch 145, the main charge pump 146 and the main loop filter 147 which are parts of the first control loop. A signal propagation path through the first control loop is identified by a bold line and arrow 230 in
If, on the other hand, the mode control circuit 155 determines the PLL 137 should operate in the second high bandwidth mode, then mode control circuit 155 deasserts the control signal EN_MAIN 167 to a digital logic low level and asserts the control signal EN_AUX 168 to a digital logic high level. This causes the up charge pump control signal UP 176 and a down charge pump control signal DN 178 to be supplied to the auxiliary charge pump 149 via conductors 187 and 188, respectively. The auxiliary charge pump 149 receives the charge pump control signals UP 176 and DN 178 and generates a charge pump output current pulse train signal AICP 189 supplied to auxiliary loop filter 150 via conductor 190. In this example, the auxiliary loop filter 150 is a low-pass filter and includes resistor 191. Resistor 191 has a lower resistance than does resistor 184 of the main loop filter 147. After low-pass filtering of the pulse train signal AICP 189, the auxiliary loop filter 150 supplies a tuning signal VTUNE2192 onto VCO 152 via tuning control input lead 193. The signal VTUNE2192 controls the VCO 152 to output signal VO 142 onto conductor 143. Accordingly, in the second high bandwidth mode, the PLL 137 uses the auxiliary switch 148, the auxiliary charge pump 149 and the auxiliary loop filter 150 which are parts of the second control loop. A signal propagation path through the second control loop is identified by a bold line and arrow 231 in
Processor 134 in the digital baseband IC 104 may determine that transmitter 125 is to switch from transmitting in the HP TX mode to transmitting in the LP TX mode in order to decrease power consumption. In one example transmit operation using the PLL 137 of
In order to resettle the PLL 137, the transmit mode control circuit 131 controls
PLL 137 to switch into the second high bandwidth mode. The PLL 137 operates in the second high bandwidth mode using the second control loop for a period of time referred to here as a “High Bandwidth Time Period” (HBWTP). In this example, HBWTP is fifteen microseconds. By the ending of this HBWTP time period, the VCO output signal VO 142 has settled to a frequency substantially identical to (within one ppm of) the initial frequency of 3.96 GHz. After the HBWTP time period, the transmit mode control circuit 131 controls the PLL 137 to resume operation in the first low bandwidth mode. Within ten microseconds of switching the PLL 137 to operate in the first low bandwidth mode, the PLL 137 has resettled so that its VCO output frequency is within 1 ppm of the initial VCO output frequency of 3.96 GHz. Thereafter, in what is referred to as “normal operation”, the PLL 137 remains operating in the first low bandwidth mode. By operating the PLL 137 in this fashion, the PLL 137 is seen to resettle within twenty-five microseconds of the transmitter 125 switching from the HP TX mode to the LP TX mode.
The diagrams of the main charge pump 146 and the auxiliary charge pump 149 in
Voltage clamp 151 includes resistors 214, 215 and 216. VDD is approximately 2.0 volts. Voltage clamp 151 clamps the voltage on the VTUNE2 node 217 to a pre-determined mid-range voltage VMID when the PLL is operating in the first low bandwidth mode. Clamping the voltage on this node 217 to a mid-range voltage prevents the VTUNE2 node 217 from drifting to VDD or to GND due to leakage current from the main charge pump 146 and VCO 152. In the first low bandwidth mode, the signal VTUNE1185 is to control VCO 152.
In accordance with another novel aspect, VCO 152 is operable in a high current consumption mode and a low current consumption mode. The high current consumption mode is referred to as a VCO High Power (VCOHP) mode, and the low current consumption mode is referred to as a VCO Low Power (VCOLP) mode. If the transmitter 125 is operating in the HP TX mode, then the mode control circuit 155 controls the VCO 152 to operate in the VCOHP mode by asserting the control signal VCO HP/LP 169 supplied onto mode control input lead 172. To place the VCO 152 in the VCOHP mode, the compensation capacitors 221 are switched into the VCO 152. The VCO 152 is put into the higher current mode by increasing VCO current IVCO, the bias voltage of the VCO core is increased and the effective sizes of the cross-coupled N-channel transistors 222 and 223 are increased. The VCO 152 is controlled to operate in the VCOHP mode because when the transmitter 125 is operating in the HP TX mode, a lower phase error and a lower error vector magnitude (EVM) are desired. If, on the other hand, the transmitter 125 is operating in the LP TX mode, then phase error and EVM requirements are relaxed and power is saved by operating the VCO in the low power, VCOLP mode.
In one example, each of the dashed boxes 222 and 223 is actually a symbol that represents a multi-transistor circuit. Consider, for example, dashed box 222. In one example, box 222 represents two transistors that can be programmably coupled together in parallel. If the effective size of the illustrated transistor symbol 222 is to be increased in the VCOHP mode, then both the two transistors (not shown) are programmably coupled together in parallel so that the combination of the two transistors will be the same as one larger transistor. In the VCOLP mode, on the other hand, the second transistor is not coupled in parallel to the first transistor. The second transistor cannot conduct current so the combination of the two transistors (not shown) will be the same as one smaller transistor. Accordingly, what is shown in dashed box 222 in the simplified illustration of
Initially the transmitter 125 is transmitting in the HP TX mode. The PLL 137 is operating in the first low bandwidth mode using the first control loop having a bandwidth BW1. VCO 152 is generating the output signal VO 142 having a frequency FVCO
At time T0, control signal TX HP/LP transitions to a digital logic low level (233), thereby causing the transmitter 125 to stop operating in the HP TX mode and to start operating in the LP TX mode. In response to the transmitter 125 changing its operating power mode, the mode control circuit 155 deasserts EN_MAIN 167 and asserts EN_AUX 168, thereby causing PLL 137 to switch to the second high bandwidth mode. The mode control circuit controls EN_MAIN 167 and EN_AUX 168 to transition on a falling edge 232 of FREF 164. The mode control circuit 155 also deasserts control signal VCO HP/LP 168 causing the VCO 152 to switch to the low power VCOLP mode, desserts control signal VCO BUF HP/LP 271 causing the VCO buffer 138 to switch to the low power mode, and desserts control signal LO BUF HP/LP 272 causing the LO buffer 139 to switch to the low power mode.
Starting at time T0, PLL 137 operates in the second high bandwidth mode for a time period 234 referred to as the High Bandwidth Time Period (HBWTP). In the second high bandwidth mode, PLL 137 uses the second control loop having a bandwidth of BW2. In this example, HBWTP 234 is fifteen microseconds and BW2 is 1 MHz. During HBWTP 234, the signal VTUNE1185 floats to a DC level, whereas the signal VTUNE2192 primarily controls the VCO 152. At an ending of HBWTP 235, the VCO 152 is outputting the signal VO 142 to have a frequency FVCO
At time T1, after the period of time HBWTP 234 has expired, the mode control circuit 155 asserts EN MAIN 167 and deasserts EN_AUX 168. This causes PLL 137 to switch to the first low bandwidth mode. Transmitter 125, however, remains in the LP TX mode. The signal VTUNE1185 now primarily controls the VCO 152. The signal VTUNE2192 is set at VMID due to voltage clamp 151. The PLL 137 is perturbed again as shown in
By time T2, the frequency of the VCO output signal is again within one ppm of FVCO
In one example, the PLL is only operated in the second high bandwidth mode during transient times when the transmitter power mode is being changed, whereas at all other times the PLL is operated in the first low bandwidth mode. The first low bandwidth mode is used throughout normal operation of the PLL. When the PLL is settling following a transmitter power change induced perturbation, the bandwidth of the PLL control loop is not changed by switching components in a loop filter nor by modifying charge pump operation as in the conventional PLL of
During normal operation of digital PLL 240 (the transmitter is operating in the
HP mode), the mode control circuit 250 enables main switch 244 by asserting control signal EN_MAIN 261 supplied onto conductor 262 and disables auxiliary switch 246 by deasserting control signal EN_AUX 263 supplied onto conductor 264. The main voltage buffer 245 supplies a tuning voltage control signal VTUNE1265 onto a first tuning input of VCO 248. Under certain circumstances, the transmitter may switch to operate in the LP TX mode. In response to the transmitter switching to operate in the LP TX mode, the mode control circuit 250 disables main switch 244 by deasserting control signal EN_MAIN 261 and enables auxiliary switch 246 by asserting control signal EN_AUX 263. The auxiliary voltage buffer 247 supplies a tuning voltage control signal VTUNE2266 to VCO 248.
In the second high bandwidth mode, the mode control circuit 250 controls digital filter 242 to have a wide loop bandwidth. Mode control circuit does this by supplying control signal HBW 267 onto conductor 268. The control signal HBW 267 in turn adjusts the cutoff frequency of the digital filter 242 such that in the first low bandwidth mode the digital filter 242 has a lower cutoff frequency, whereas in the second high bandwidth mode the digital filter 242 has a higher cutoff frequency. After the digital PLL 240 has resettled (frequency of output signal VO 255 is within 1 ppm of initial frequency prior to transmitter switching to LP mode), the mode control circuit 250 controls digital PLL 240 to operate in the first low bandwidth mode. In addition, the mode control circuit 250 deasserts control signal VCO HP/LP 275 causing the VCO 248 to switch to the low power VCOLP mode, desserts control signal VCO BUF HP/LP 276 causing the VCO buffer 257 to switch to the low power mode, and desserts control signal LO BUF HP/LP 277 causing the LO buffer 259 to switch to the low power mode. In this example, the output signal VO 255 has an initial frequency of 3.96 GHz and the digital PLL 240 resettles in less than twenty microseconds after the transmitter has switched to the LP TX mode.
In a second step (step 302), the local oscillator signal LO is supplied to a transmit chain of a transmitter while the transmitter is operating in a High Power (HP TX) mode. In the HP TX mode, the VCO outputs a signal VO having a frequency FVCO
In a third step (step 303), the transmitter switches from operating in the HP TX mode to operating in a Low Power (LP TX) mode. For example, in the waveform diagram of
In a fourth step (step 304), in response to the transmitter switching to the LP TX mode, the PLL is switched from operating in the first low bandwidth mode to operating in the second high bandwidth mode. In the second high bandwidth mode, the PLL uses a second control loop to supply a second tuning voltage to the VCO. For example, in the PLL 137 of
In a fifth step (step 305), the PLL operates in the second high bandwidth mode for a High Bandwidth Time Period (HBWTP). At the end of the HBWTP time period, the output frequency of the VCO output signal VO is FVCO
In a sixth step (step 306), the PLL is switched from operating in the second high bandwidth mode to operating in the first low bandwidth mode. For example, in the waveform diagrams of
In a seventh step (step 307), the VCO output frequency settles so that the VCO output frequency FVCO is within one ppm of FVCO
Although certain specific embodiments are described above for instructional purposes, the teachings of this patent document have general applicability and are not limited to the specific embodiments described above. For example, the PLL 137 may be a part of the local oscillator 107 of receiver 105 in which the PLL 137 is controlled in a similar fashion as in transmitter 125. If the receiver 105 switches from operating in a HP RX mode to a LP RX mode, then PLL 137 may be perturbed due to a change in loading of the VCO. In response to switching the receiver 105 from the HP RX mode to the LP RX mode, the PLL 137 is controlled to operate in the second high bandwidth mode for the period of time HBWTP and is then switched back to operate in the first low bandwidth mode. By operating the PLL 137 in a similar fashion as in the transmitter 117, the PLL 137 is able to achieve fast resettling in the receiver 105. In addition, although the above examples pertain to switching a transmitter from a HP TX mode to a LP TX mode, the PLL 137 may be controlled to operate according to the novel technique when the transmitter switches from the LP TX mode to the HP TX mode, or similarly when the receiver switches from the LP RX mode to the HP RX mode. Accordingly, various modifications, adaptations, and combinations of the various features of the described specific embodiments can be practiced without departing from the scope of the claims that are set forth below.