The present invention will be more clearly understood from the description as set below with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below while referring to the attached figures. The configuration of a radio device in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is shown schematically in
The radio device 1 comprises the modulation/demodulation portion 2, which modulates a transmission baseband signal (transmission BB signal) into an analog transmission intermediate-frequency signal or demodulates an analog received intermediate-frequency signal into a received baseband signal (received BB signal); the frequency converter 3, which converts the frequency of the transmission intermediate-frequency signal to form a transmission radio-frequency signal and the frequency of a reception signal to form a received intermediate-frequency signal; and the radio high-frequency portion 4, which amplifies the transmission radio-frequency signal and also switches between output of the transmission radio-frequency signal to the antenna and input of the received radio-frequency signal from the antenna.
The radio device 1 also comprises a baseband signal processor 6, which inputs a transmission baseband signal (BB signal with control information) that contains transmission on/off control information within the overhead information, that switches the operating state of the radio device 1 between transmission operation and reception operation (or non-transmission operation), and separates a main transmission baseband signal and transmission on/off control information by using a multiplex separator (DeMUX) 61; the control portion 5 that switches the operating state of the radio device 1 between transmission operation and non-transmission operation, in accordance with the transmission on/off control information that was separated by the baseband signal processor 6; and a power source 7, which supplies power to the radio high-frequency portion 4 that amplifies the transmission radio-frequency signal.
The internal configurations of a first example of the modulation/demodulation portion 2, the frequency converter 3, and the radio high-frequency portion 4 of
In addition, an example of the configuration of each of the high-power transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 of
Returning to
When the operating state of the radio device 1 is set to transmission operation, the control portion 5 switches the radio-frequency band switch 40 so as to connect the transmission-side frequency converter 32 and the transmission output amplifier 41. The control potion 5 switches the time division duplex switch 44 such that the transmission output amplifier 43 is connected to the antenna (not shown in the figure), and such that the reception circuitry and the antenna are disconnected.
This state will now be described with reference to
The control portion 5 shown in
In this case,
The transmission baseband signal that is input to the baseband signal processor 6 of
The overhead information includes transmission on/off control information which consists of switch on/off information and switching time specification information, as shown in
In this case, the switch on/off information is information that indicates whether the operating state of the radio device 1 is to be transmission operation or non-transmission operation. When the switch on/off information is a value that indicates the non-transmission operation, the switching time specification information specifies the time from when the control portion 5 receives the switch on/off information until the transition to non-transmission operation (such as the switching of the radio-frequency band switch 40 and the time-division duplex switch 44).
In the example shown in
When the value of the switch on/off information is 1, the timer 52 of the control portion 5 measures the elapsed time from the reception of on/off information by the control portion 5 and, when the time specified in the switching time specification information (Δt0 ms) has elapsed, the timer 52 inverts the switching signal that switches over the radio-frequency band switch 40 and the time-division duplex switch 44 to switch the operating state of the radio device 1 to a non-transmission operation.
The transmission baseband signal containing the transmission on/off control information that is shown in
The signal source 90 comprises a main signal processor 91 that generates a main signal for a transmission baseband signal that does not contain transmission on/off control information; a transmission on/off control information generation portion 92 that detects whether or not there is a main signal at predetermined periods, and causes the generation of the above-described transmission on/off control information; and a multiplexer (MUX) 94 that multiplexes the main signal of the transmission baseband signal and the transmission on/off control information.
The multiplexer (MUX) 94 causes the generation of the transmission baseband signal containing the transmission on/off control information by multiplexing the transmission on/off control information shown in
Returning to
In other words, when the value of the switch on/off information indicates that the operating state of the radio device 1 is to be non-transmission operation, the timer 52 measures the elapsed time from the time the control portion 5 receives the switch on/off information and, when the time specified in the switching time specification information (Δt0) has elapsed, the power source 7 causes a decrease in the drain bias voltage supplied to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 by varying the drain voltage control signal that controls the drain bias voltage supplied to the field-effect transistor Q4 of each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43. The drain bias voltage supplied to the amplifiers 41 to 43 is zero preferably.
An example of the configuration of the power source 7 that can provide variable control of the drain bias voltage supplied to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 by the drain voltage control signal from the control portion 5 is shown in
The power source 7 comprises a fixed-voltage power source 71 which is supplied with a primary power source input from outside the radio device 1 and which supplies power at a constant voltage; and a field-effect transistor Q7 that controls the drain bias voltage supplied to the field-effect transistor Q4 of each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 from the fixed-voltage power source 71, in accordance with a drain voltage control signal that provides variable control from the control portion 5.
The timer 52 of the control portion 5 shown in
When the drain bias voltage of each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 drops, the gain thereof also drops. Thus the timer 52 of the control portion 5 and the field-effect transistor Q7 of the power source 7 correspond to a gain modification portion as set forth in the claims of the present invention.
As the control portion 5 also switches over the radio-frequency band switch 40 and the time-division duplex switch 44 to switch the operating state of the radio device between transmission operation and non-transmission operation, the control portion 5 corresponds to an operating state switching portion as set forth in the claims of the present invention.
Even if a noise component is generated in the transmission circuitry during non-transmission operation, the reduction of the gain of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, preferably by halting the power supply to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 completely, ensures that the noise component appearing at the input terminals of the time-division duplex switch 44 remains low and thus the amount of noise leaking into the reception circuitry through the time-division duplex switch 44 can be kept low.
In addition, power dissipation in the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 can be reduced during non-transmission operation by reducing the drain voltage supplied to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 during the non-transmission operation, preferably by halting the supply thereof completely.
When the drain voltage supplied to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 is reduced during non-transmission operation, the drain voltage of each of the plurality of transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 connected in series, as described above, can be made to drop simultaneously.
Alternatively, the gains of the amplifiers 41, 42, and 43 could be lowered in sequence such that the gain of the previous-stage amplifier is lowered in advance of that of the later-stage amplifier. As the later-stage amplifiers (such as the amplifier 43) that form high-output stages handle higher powers, this process ensures that damage to the later-stage amplifiers due to sudden drops in the power supply can be prevented by first halting the supply of power for the low-output previous-stage amplifiers then lowering or halting the power to the later-stage amplifiers after the input power to the later-stage amplifiers has dropped. A second example of the configuration of the control portion 5 that enables this sequential control of the drain voltages of the amplifiers 41, 42, and 43 is shown in
As shown in
The following description concerns an operating method of the control portion 5 to either reduce or halt the supply of the bias drain voltages in sequence to the multi-stage transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, in order, from the most previous-stage during non-transmission operation, with reference to
In this case, if the switching signal that switches the radio-frequency band switch 40 and the time-division duplex switch 44 is in an on state during transmission operation and an off state during non-transmission operation, when each of the drain bias voltage control signals is in an on state, that indicates that the normal drain bias voltage is to be supplied to the corresponding transmission output amplifier 41 to 43 during transmission operation; when it is in an off state, that indicates that a comparatively low drain bias voltage is to be supplied to the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 during non-transmission operation, or that the supply of the drain bias voltage is to be halted.
First of all, when the control portion 5 receives transmission on/off control information that has been input from the baseband signal processor 6 at a time t0 shown in
If the switch on/off information does not have the value (1) that indicates that the operating state of the radio device 1 is to be non-transmission operation, the flow goes to step S13 in which the switching signal and all the drain bias voltage control signals are set to the on state. If the setting of the switching signal and all the drain bias voltage control signals to the on state occurs, that state is maintained.
If the switch on/off information does have the value (1) that indicates that the operating state of the radio device 1 is to be non-transmission operation, the flow moves to a step S14 to output switch on/off information and switching time specification information to the timer 52.
In step S14, the timer 52 determines whether or not a predetermined wait time Δt0 that is specified in the switching time specification information has elapsed and, if the wait time Δt0 has elapsed, the switching signal is set to the off state in a step S15. This state is shown in
In a step S16, the timer 52 determines whether or not a time that is the predetermined wait time Δt0 plus a predetermined time difference Δt1 has elapsed and, if that time Δt0+Δt1 has elapsed, the timer 52 sets the drain voltage control signal for the transmission output amplifier 41 at the most previous-stage to the off state in a step S17. This state is shown in
In a step S18, the timer 52 determines whether or not a time that is the predetermined wait time Δt0 plus a predetermined time difference Δt2 has elapsed and, if that time Δt0+Δt2 has elapsed, the timer 52 sets the drain voltage control signal for the intermediate-stage transmission output amplifier 42 to the off state in a step S19. This state is shown in
In a step S20, the timer 52 determines whether or not a time that is the predetermined wait time Δt0 plus a predetermined time difference Δt3 has elapsed and, if that time Δt0+Δt3 has elapsed, the timer 52 sets the drain voltage control signal for the final-stage transmission output amplifier 43 to the off state in a step S21. This state is shown in
After the timer 52 determines whether or not the wait times for switching the switching signal and the drain voltage control signals of the amplifiers 41 to 43 have elapsed, in steps S14, S16, S18, and S20, the flow returns to step S11 and steps S11 to S21 are repeated.
As can be seen from reference to the times t3 to t5 in
Various problems such as a delay of the operation of the amplifiers due to residual charges in the drain terminals of the field-effect transistors within the amplifiers can be avoided in this manner, by varying the number of amplifiers for which the drain bias voltage is reduced or turned off, depending on the length of the period of non-transmission operation, and thus ensuring that the switching of the drain bias voltage of the later-stage amplifiers that handle higher power levels is restricted.
Returning to
Since the gain of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 in which the drain current is reduced or blocked is reduced in comparison to that during transmission operation, the timer 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 also correspond to part of the gain modification portion as set forth in the claims of the present invention.
A first example of the configuration of the gate bias control portion 54 is shown in
In the configurational example shown in
Note that the timer 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 could use a method similar to that by which the timer 52 and the power source 7 modify the drain bias voltage of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, as described previously with reference to
In addition, the gate bias control portion 54 could be provided separately for each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, and the gate bias voltages of the serially-connected plurality of transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 could be modified in sequence from the previous-stage amplifiers, by varying the timings of the modification of the gate bias voltage for each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 by a method similar to that by which the drain bias voltages of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 are modified, as described previously with reference to
Furthermore, it is possible to implement both the modification of the gate bias voltages of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43 by the timer 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 and the modification of the drain bias voltage by the timer 52 and the power source 7. In such a case, the timer 53 introduces a time difference between the modification of the drain bias voltage and the modification of the gate bias voltage, to ensure that the modification of the gate bias voltage is done before the timer 52 and the power source 7 reduces or turns off the drain bias voltage, during switchover to non-transmission operation.
The introduction of such a time difference makes it possible to avoid sudden changes in drain bias voltage in a state in which the drain current is flowing through each of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, so that the amplifiers 41 to 43 can be designed to be stable even when field-effect transistors that are susceptible to power source fluctuations are used therein.
Returning to
The configuration of an example of the local oscillator signal control portion 36 of
The drain voltage control signal that controls the drain bias voltage of the field-effect transistor Q35 of the local oscillator signal control portion 36 by the timer 52 is generated in a similar manner to the drain voltage control signal for controlling the drain bias voltage of the transmission output amplifiers 41 to 43, as described above.
The drain bias voltage supplied to the drain terminal D of the field-effect transistor Q35 of the local oscillator signal control portion 36 is modified by controlling the field-effect transistors Q7 and Q74 of the power source 7, shown in
In addition, the gate bias signal that controls the gate bias voltage of the field-effect transistor Q35 of the local oscillator signal control portion 36, using the timer 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 as shown in
In this case, the timers 52 and 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 of the control portion 5, together with the local oscillator signal control portion 36, correspond to a local oscillator signal strength modification portion as set forth in the claims of the present invention.
It is also possible to perform both the modification of the gate bias voltage of the local oscillator signal control portion 36 by the timer 53 and the gate bias control portion 54 and the modification of the drain bias voltage by the timer 52 and the power source 7. In such a case, the timer 53 introduces a time difference between the modification of the drain bias voltage and the modification of the gate bias voltage, to ensure that the modification of the gate bias voltage is done before the timer 52 and the power source 7 reduces or turns off the drain bias voltage, during switchover to non-transmission operation.
In this manner, the frequency component of the local oscillator signal that appears in the radio-frequency signal that is output from the transmission-side frequency converter 32 during non-transmission operation in which there is no input baseband signal can be reduced or removed by reducing or halting the local oscillator signal that is input to the transmission-side frequency converter 32 during non-transmission operation.
The local oscillator signal control portion 36 that reduces or halts the local oscillator signal during non-transmission operation has a particularly large effect if provided in a radio device that employs direct conversion modulation to implement quadrature modulation by mixing the local radio-frequency oscillator signal into an analog baseband signal.
The configuration of a radio device that employs direct conversion modulation in accordance with a second embodiment of the present invention is shown in
In this configurational example, the frequency converter 3 is not provided, but a transmission baseband signal is converted into an analog baseband signal by a digital/analog converter 27, and unwanted components in the analog baseband signal are removed by a low-pass filter 28, and the quadrature modulator (QMOD) 29 modulates the analog baseband signal into a transmission ratio-frequency signal directly, by using the local oscillator signal generated by the local oscillator signal generation portion 33.
This direct conversion modulation is inconvenient in that, if there is no transmission baseband signal to be modulated, the frequency of the local oscillator signal appears at the center of band of the radio-frequency signal that is output from the quadrature modulator 29, which is difficult to remove by subsequent filtering.
In such a case, it is possible to efficiently remove the frequency component of the local oscillator signal that appears at the center of band of the radio-frequency signal that is output from the quadrature modulator 29 during non-transmission operation by providing the local oscillator signal control portion 36, which was described with reference to
Note that in the above-described embodying examples, the control portion 5 switches the operating state of the radio device 1 between transmission operation and non-transmission operation in accordance with the transmission on/off information contained within the overhead information of the transmission baseband signal, but the switching of the operating state of the radio device 1 between transmission operation and non-transmission operation may also be done by detecting the presence or absence of the transmission baseband signal itself.
In a radio device that transmits a high-output signal, it is possible to save wasteful consumption of power in a non-signal-transmission state (such as during reception), and thus reduce the amount of power consumed by the entire transmission circuitry, by lowering the gain of each transmission output amplifier in the non-signal-transmission state.
In addition, leakage of noise components from the transmission circuitry to the reception circuitry can be reduced by lowering of the gain of the transmission output amplifier in the non-signal-transmission state, or by reducing the strength of the local oscillator signal used for the conversion of the frequency of the transmission signal to a radio signal frequency and thus reducing the local oscillator signal components that appear in the center of the band of the radio-frequency signal in the non-signal-transmission state.
The present invention can be used in a radio device that performs a type of half duplex transfer such as time division duplex or half frequency division duplex, and, in particular, it is ideal for use in a radio device that conforms to WiMAX.
While the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments chosen for purpose of illustration, it should be apparent that numerous modifications could be made thereto, by those skilled in the art, without departing from the basic concept and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-158408 | Jun 2006 | JP | national |