The present invention relates to a radio frequency receiver and a method for receiving an analog radio frequency (RF) signal.
Receivers are electronic circuits that receive RF signal at high frequency and down-convert it to baseband for further processing and demodulation. They usually amplify the weak desired RF signal and filter undesired adjacent signals and blockers around. A receiver is commonly tunable by changing the frequency of its local oscillator (LO) to receive a specific channel in a certain band.
Multi-band receivers are able to receive a signal from two or more different bands located at different frequencies. Since these bands might be located far from each other, a multi-band receiver should be tunable or programmable to cover all desired bands.
A multi-standard receiver can receive signals in different standards. One of the main differences between these standards is signal bandwidth. Therefore, bandwidth of a multi-standard receiver must be selectable to cover different standards. However, other requirements of receiver such as receiving frequency, sensitivity, linearity, filtering requirement, etc. might be different in different standards. Rather than including multiple different receivers for different bands or standards, a single multi-band/multi-standard receiver might be used with programmable receiving frequency and input bandwidth.
The conventional superheterodyne receiver architecture 1100 as illustrated in
However, due to the lack of the quadrature operation of mixers 1205 (1105 on
Receivers should support a multi-band multi-standard operation to cover a wide range of communication standards. On the other hand, to be cost effective, it is desired to highly integrate it as a single chip preferably in a nano-scale Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) process. Homodyne architecture (including Zero Intermediate Frequency (ZIF) and Low Intermediate Frequency (LIF)) is a common receiver structure due to its well-recognized capability of monolithic integration.
However, the homodyne receiver architecture 1300 suffers from several technical problems that require special attention to make this architecture suitable for different communication standards. Different interference phenomena are illustrated in
Direct Current (DC) offset is a common problem in ZIF structure caused by self-mixing of the LO signal cos ωLOt amplified, or not amplified, through the LNA 1401 or strong interferer at the down-converting mixer 1403 as illustrated in
Superheterodyne architecture as depicted in
However, the conventional superheterodyne architecture 1500, as depicted in
It is the object of the invention to provide a concept for a radio frequency receiver providing improved noise rejection, flexible bandwidth filtering and efficient implementation.
This object is achieved by the features of the independent claims. Further implementation forms are apparent from the dependent claims, the description and the figures.
The invention is based on the finding that a discrete-time receiver front-end with high sampling rate at RF input with deferred decimation improves the noise floor of the received signal. The received signal is oversampled at RF stage and this high sampling rate is maintained at least after the first discrete time (DT) filter. This is feasible and preferable in nano-scale CMOS with transistors acting as very fast switches and with high density capacitors such as metal-oxide-metal (MoM), and metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS). The discrete-time receiver front-end can be employed in both receiver architectures, homodyne (low-IF) and superheterodyne (high-IF) receivers.
The invention is further based on the finding that a radio frequency receiver applying high sampling rate at RF input with deferred decimation provides excellent image rejection and is easy to implement. By employing image reject topology for the mixers, a full rate Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) filter at IF stage can be used for filtering out alias frequencies of the IF mixer. By using variable high-IF frequency, e.g. sliding IF, one LO is sufficient for the whole receiver providing flexible bandwidth filtering. A powerful discrete-time baseband filtering before delivering the receive signal to ADC further improves image rejection.
In order to describe the invention in detail, the following terms, abbreviations and notations will be used:
RF: radio frequency,
IF: intermediate frequency,
ZIF: zero intermediate frequency,
LIF: low intermediate frequency,
LO: local oscillator,
BB: baseband,
BW: bandwidth,
LPF: low-pass filter,
BPF: band-pass filter.
According to a first aspect, the invention relates to a radio frequency receiver for receiving an analog radio frequency signal, the radio frequency receiver comprising: a sampling mixer being configured to sample the analog radio frequency signal using a predetermined sampling rate to obtain a discrete-time signal, and to shift the discrete-time signal towards an intermediate frequency to obtain an intermediate discrete-time signal sampled at the predetermined sampling rate; and a processing circuit for discrete-time processing the intermediate discrete-time signal at the predetermined sampling rate.
By using a radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect, disadvantages of both ZIF (including LIF) and superheterodyne architectures can be avoided. The radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect of the invention is insensitive to 2nd-order nonlinearities.
In a first possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect, the predetermined sampling rate is an oversampling rate with an oversampling factor, which is at least 2 or at least 4 with respect to a frequency (fLO) of a local oscillator of the sampling mixer (101).
A radio frequency receiver according to the first implementation form of the first aspect can provide substantially reduced LO leakage to antenna.
In a second possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to the first implementation form of the first aspect, the sampling mixer is a direct-sampling mixer.
The direct-sampling mixer can be advantageous in regarding a tradeoff between noise figure and distortion characteristics.
In a third possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the sampling mixer is configured to oversample the analog radio frequency signal with an oversampling rate and to provide a number of discrete-time sub-signals collectively representing the discrete-time signal, each discrete-time sub-signal representing the analog radio frequency signal sampled with a sampling rate corresponding to a frequency of a local oscillator.
A radio frequency receiver according to the third implementation form of the first aspect solves the time varying DC offset problem and is insensitive to the flicker noise. The flicker noise typically gets worse with CMOS scaling, thereby presenting severe impediments to the integration progress, which are solved when using the radio frequency receiver according to the third implementation form of the first aspect.
In a fourth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the sampling mixer is a quadrature mixer comprising an in-phase path and a quadrature path.
A radio frequency receiver according to the fourth implementation form of the first aspect can provide an improved leakage suppression.
In a fifth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the fourth implementation form of the first aspect, the in-phase path is configured to generate an in-phase oscillator signal with the repeating function [1 0 −1 0] and the quadrature phase path is configured to generate a quadrature phase oscillator signal with the repeating function [0 1 0−1].
The repeating functions [1 0 −1 0] and [0 1 0−1] are easy to implement as they consist of only three different numbers.
In a sixth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the fourth implementation form of the first aspect, the in-phase path is configured to generate an in-phase oscillator signal with the repeating function [1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2 −1−√2 −1] and the quadrature phase path is configured to generate a quadrature phase oscillator signal with the repeating function [−1−√2 −1 1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2].
The repeating functions [1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2 −1−√2 −1] and [−1−√2 −1 1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2] are easy to implement as they consist of only four different numbers.
In a seventh possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the processing circuit comprises an in-phase path coupled to an in-phase path of the sampling mixer, and a quadrature path coupled to a quadrature path of the sampling mixer.
The processing circuit is coupled to the sampling mixer and operates at the same sampling rate as the sampling mixer thereby facilitating design of the radio frequency receiver.
In an eighth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the processing circuit comprises a channel selector.
Thus, the radio frequency receiver is able to receive a signal from two or more different bands located at different frequencies. The radio frequency receiver is flexible for selecting the desired channel.
In a ninth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the processing circuit comprises a discrete-time filter being configured to filter the intermediate discrete-time signal at the predetermined sampling rate.
A radio frequency receiver according to the ninth possible implementation form is flexible for performing filter requirements of different standards.
In a tenth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the discrete-time filter is a low-pass filter or band-pass filter, in particular a complex band-pass filter.
A radio frequency receiver according to the tenth implementation form is able to filter a baseband signal as well as an intermediate frequency signal.
In an eleventh possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the processing circuit is configured to perform a charge sharing between an in-phase and a quadrature component of the intermediate discrete-time signal.
A radio frequency receiver performing charge sharing can be space-efficiently designed and can be integrated on a single chip.
In a twelfth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the processing circuit comprises a switched capacitor circuit.
Switched capacitor circuits are more suitable for use within integrated circuits, where accurately specified resistors and capacitors are not economical to construct.
In a thirteenth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the intermediate frequency is zero within a zero frequency region.
A radio frequency receiver with intermediate frequency being zero can be efficiently implemented on a chip as the extra mixing stage for the intermediate frequency can be omitted.
In a fourteenth possible implementation form of the radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect as such or according to any of the previous implementation forms of the first aspect, the radio frequency receiver further comprises an analog amplifier arranged upstream of the sampling mixer.
The analog amplifier provides for improved dynamics and higher precision of the radio frequency receiver.
A radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect of the invention can be fully integrated without an off-chip IF filter, thus it is a low cost receiver. As filtering bandwidth can be precisely selected with capacitor ratio and clock rate, the radio frequency receiver according to aspects of the invention is less sensitive to process-voltage-temperature (PVT). The receiver's
IF frequency is selectable. For example, for a given input RF frequency, IF can be selected between fLO/4, fLO/8, fLO/16 etc. This capability allows changing IF from one to another in a busy environment to tolerate more powerful blocker signals. Discrete-time signal processing can be done by switches and capacitors. The more the advanced technology is, the faster switches the switches are and the higher the capacitor density is. Therefore, it is process scalable with Moore's law.
The superior structure of a radio frequency receiver according to the first aspect of the invention allows using simple inverter-based gm stage instead of complex opamp-based structures for signal processing and filtering. This results in lower power consumption.
According to a second aspect, the invention relates to a method for receiving an analog radio frequency signal, the method comprising: sampling the analog radio frequency signal using a predetermined sampling rate to obtain a discrete-time signal, and shifting the discrete-time signal towards an intermediate frequency to obtain an intermediate discrete-time signal sampled at the predetermined sampling rate; and discrete-time processing the intermediate discrete-time signal at the predetermined sampling rate.
Further embodiments of the invention will be described with respect to the following figures, in which:
The sampling mixer 101 is configured to sample the analog radio frequency signal 102 using a predetermined sampling rate fs to obtain a discrete-time signal 104, and to shift the discrete-time signal 104 towards an intermediate frequency fIF=|fRF−fLO| to obtain an intermediate discrete-time signal 108 sampled at the predetermined sampling rate fs. The processing circuit 103 is configured for discrete-time processing the intermediate discrete-time signal 108 at the predetermined sampling rate fs.
The analog amplifier 107 is configured to receive and amplify the analog radio frequency signal 102 providing an amplified analog radio frequency signal 122. The sampling mixer 101 is coupled to the analog amplifier 107 and is configured to receive the amplified (through transconducting amplification) analog radio frequency signal 122 from the analog amplifier 107. In an operational form, the analog amplifier 107 comprises a gm stage as described below with respect to
The sampling mixer 101 is a quadrature mixer comprising an in-phase path 110 and a quadrature path 112. The sampling mixer 101 comprises a sampler 121 and a quadrature discrete-time mixer 123. The sampler 121 is configured to sample the amplified analog radio frequency signal 122 providing the discrete-time signal 104. An in-phase part of the quadrature discrete-time mixer 123 is configured to mix the discrete-time signal 104 with an in-phase oscillator signal 114 generated by a local oscillator 125. A quadrature part of the quadrature discrete-time mixer 123 is configured to mix the discrete-time signal 104 with a quadrature oscillator signal 116 generated by the local oscillator 106. In an operational form, the sampling mixer 101 is a direct-sampling mixer. In an operational form, the sampling mixer 101 is configured to oversample the analog radio frequency signal 102 with an oversampling rate and to provide a number of discrete-time sub-signals collectively representing the frequency shifted version of discrete-time signal 104, each component of the differential discrete-time sub-signal representing the frequency shifted version of analog radio frequency signal 102 sampled with a sampling rate corresponding to a frequency of the analog radio frequency signal 102.
In an operational form, the sampler 121 is a current integrating sampler for sampling current. The sampler 121 can be represented by a continuous-time (CT) sinc filter with a first notch at 1/Ti with sampling time (Ti) and anti-aliasing for foldover frequencies. The sampling frequency may correspond to the input-output rate. In discrete-time (DT) signal processing input charge qin[n] is considered as the input sampled signal and output voltage Vout[n] is considered as the output sampled signal according to the following equations:
In an operational form, the predetermined sampling rate fs is an oversampling rate with an oversampling factor that is 4, i.e., the predetermined sampling rate fs corresponds to four times the frequency of the local oscillator fs=4 fLO.
In an operational form, the in-phase path 110 is configured to generate an in-phase oscillator signal 114 with the repeating function [1 0 −1 0]. In an operational form, the quadrature path 112 is configured to generate a quadrature oscillator signal 116 with the repeating function [0 1 0−1]. In an operational form, the in-phase path 110 is configured to generate an in-phase oscillator signal 114 with the repeating function [1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2 −1−√2 −1]. In an operational form, the quadrature path 112 is configured to generate a quadrature oscillator signal 116 with the repeating function [−1−√2 −1 1 1+√2 1+√2 1 −1 −1−√2].
In an operational form, the processing circuit 103 comprises an in-phase path 118 coupled to the in-phase path 110 of the sampling mixer 101 and a quadrature path 120 coupled to the quadrature path 112 of the sampling mixer 101.
In an operational form, the processing circuit 103 comprises a discrete-time filter 105 configured to filter the intermediate discrete-time signal 108 at the predetermined sampling rate fs. The discrete-time filter 105 is a low-pass filter or band-pass filter, in particular a complex band-pass filter. In an operational form, the processing circuit 103 is configured to perform a charge sharing (not shown) between an in-phase and a quadrature component of the intermediate discrete-time signal 108. In an operational form, the processing circuit 103 comprises a switched capacitor circuit. In an operational form, the intermediate frequency is zero within a zero frequency region.
In an operational form, the sampling mixer 101 can be considered as a quad DT mixer operating at quadruple (4×) rate. The quadruple (4×) sampling concept is for keeping the original sample rate in the subsequent stage, thereby avoiding early decimation. In an operational form, further IIR filters are added before decimation.
In an operational form, the radio frequency receiver 100 is integrated on a single chip without using external filters.
The radio frequency receiver 200 may correspond to the radio frequency receiver 100 described with respect to
The sampling mixer 201 is configured to sample the analog radio frequency signal Vin(t) using a predetermined sampling rate fs to obtain a discrete-time sampled signal, and to shift the discrete-time sampled signal towards an intermediate frequency to obtain an intermediate discrete-time signal 208 sampled at the predetermined sampling rate fs. The processing circuit 203 is configured for discrete-time processing of the intermediate discrete-time signal 208 at the predetermined sampling rate fs.
The analog amplifier 207 is configured to receive and amplify the analog radio frequency signal Vin(t) corresponding to the analog amplifier 107 described with respect to
The sampling mixer 201 is a quadruple mixer, also called quad mixer or 4×-mixer comprising a first path 208a, a second path 208b, a third path 208c and a fourth path 208d. The sampling mixer 201 comprises a first switch 209a for controlling the first path 208a by a first control signal φ1, a second switch 209b for controlling the second path 208b by a second control signal φ2, a third switch 209c for controlling the third path 208c by a third control signal φ3 and a fourth switch 209d for controlling the fourth path 208d by a fourth control signal φ4. A representation of the control signals φ1, φ2, φ3 and φ4 is described with respect to
The processing circuit 203 comprises a first path 211a connected to the first path 208a of the sampling mixer 201, a second path 211b connected to the second path 208b of the sampling mixer 201, a third path 211c connected to the third path 208c of the sampling mixer 201 and a fourth path 211d connected to the fourth path 208d of the sampling mixer 201 such that the intermediate discrete-time signal 208 passes from the paths 208a, 208b, 208c and 208d of the sampling mixer 201 to the respective paths 211a, 211b, 211c and 211d of the processing circuit 203. Each of the paths 211a, 211b, 211c, and 211d of the processing circuit 203 comprises a capacitor Ch shunted to ground and a respective filter 205a, 205b, 205c, 205d coupled into the respective path 208a, 208b, 208c, and 208d of the processing circuit 203 in a cascaded manner.
In an operational form, each of the respective paths 211a, 211b, 211c, 211d of the processing circuit 203 respectively forms together with the respective filter 205a, 205b, 205c, 205d in a first-order full-rate IIR low-pass filter. In an operational form, each of the paths 211a, 211b, 211c, 211d provides together with the respective filter 205a, 205b, 205c of the processing circuit 203 the transfer function described by:
with Cs as a shunting capacitor (e.g. as shown in
The sampling rate at the input 302 can be described as fs-in−1/Ts with sampling interval Ts and the sampling rate at each of the sub-paths 301, 303, 305 and 307 can be described as fs-sub=(1/Ts)/4, i.e. a decimation by 4 can be used. However, since the sub-path outputs are combined in a time-staggered manner, the original data rate is restored.
The discrete-time filter 300 depicted in
The in-phase signal 514 and the quadrature signal 516 represent the in-phase oscillator signal 114 and the quadrature oscillator signal 116 as described with respect to
The processing circuit 503 comprises an in-phase input coupled to an in-phase path of the processing circuit 503 for receiving the in-phase output signal 508a of the sampling mixer 501 and a quadrature input coupled to a quadrature path of the processing circuit 503 for receiving the quadrature output signal 508b of the sampling mixer 501.
The in-phase path of the processing circuit 503 comprises a first IIR filter 513, a first FIR filter 517, and a first downsampler 521. The quadrature path of the processing circuit 503 comprises a second IIR filter 515, a second FIR filter 519, a second downsampler 523 and a gain stage 525 (j=exp(pi/2) operator). The in-phase output signal 508a passes the first IIR filter 513, the first FIR filter 517 and the first downsampler 521 and is summed in a summer 527 with the quadrature output signal 508b having passed the second IIR filter 515, the second FIR filter 519, the second downsampler 523 and the gain stage 525. The summer 527 provides an output signal, which is converted in further conversion devices 531, 533 in a suitable signal representation.
In an operational form, the transfer function in z-domain representation IIR1(z) of the first IIR filter 513 is IIR1(z)=1/(1−0.95z−1) and the transfer function in z-domain representation IIR2(z) of the second IIR filter 515 is IIR2(z)=1/(1−0.95z−1). In an operational form, the transfer function in z-domain representation FIR1(z) of the first FIR filter 517 is FIR1(z)=(1+z−1+z−2+z−3)/4 and the transfer function in z-domain representation FIR2(z) of the second FIR filter 519 is FIR2(z)=(1+z−1+z−2+z−3)/4. In an operational form, the first and second downsamplers 521 and 523 use a downsampling factor of 4.
The analog amplifier 800 may correspond to the analog amplifier 107 or to the analog amplifier 207 as described with respect to
Thus, the analog amplifier 900 corresponds to a gm stage representing a discrete-time (DT) gain.
The analog amplifier 900 may correspond to the analog amplifier 107 or to the analog amplifier 207 as described with respect to
This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/EP2012/062030, filed on Jun. 21, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2012/062030 | Jun 2012 | US |
Child | 14145316 | US |