1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a front-end of a wireless communication receiver and, more particularly, to a wide-band intermediate frequency (IF) radio receiver and a direct conversion radio receiver.
2. Background of the Related Art
The radio frequency (RF) front-end design in a wireless transceiver is perhaps the most important part of the receiver's design, because its performance in terms of the noise figure and linearity determines the overall performance of the receiver. There exist a number of architectures for implementing the radio transceiver. Two common ones are the heterodyne architecture and the homodyne or direct conversion architecture.
As the demand for multi-mode and multi-band radio receivers grows, so too does the attention given to the direct conversion radio receiver. Although it has a simply illustrated configuration, practical use of the direct conversion receiver in the wireless market has been delayed due to its inherent problems. These problems relate to a direct current (D/C) component offset noise, which is proportional to the inverse value of the frequency (1/f), and even-order distortion. Of these, the DC offset problem is more difficult to solve, because there is a conflicting condition between DC offset measurement and DC offset correction. The main cause of the DC offset results from carrier leakage.
Since the DC offset is located very close to DC, the measurement process of the DC offset requires too much time to perform for an offset cancellation technique based on averaging. Also, the correction time for cancelling the DC offset tends to be long. In wireless systems requiring a fast DC offset cancellation, most approaches are not feasible because of the above-described reasons. Therefore, reducing the DC offset to a negligible level, rather than completely eliminating it, may be highly desired. To reduce the DC offset, it is quite important to reduce the amount of carrier leakage to the antenna 4 and to the input of the LNA 2.
The principal difference between the designs of
In the wide-band zero IF receiver, the sum of the two local oscillator frequencies 21 and 22 is equal to the original carrier frequency 23. Whenever signal amplification is done at baseband, careful design of the RF front-end is required to produce a low DC offset. This is because alternating current (AC) coupling or its equivalent is not as pronounced, due to its long settling time constant. The most critical source for the DC offset is the carrier leakage.
Referring now to
Since the signal isolation is not perfect in any RF front-end implementation, spectral leakage occurs through electromagnetic radiation, substrate-coupling, and parasitic coupling. In the related art implementations, this spectral coupling is compounded by harmonic components of LO signals having the same frequency as the carrier frequency, thereby producing the DC offset component at the down-conversion mixer output. This occurs in the related art implementations because the designs use a divide-by-N circuit to generate each of the mixing frequencies, from a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) producing a signal at the RF carrier frequency. Since N is an integer in these designs, a harmonic having the same frequency as the RF carrier being mixed will necessarily be produced by the down-converter.
The above references are incorporated by reference herein where appropriate for appropriate teachings of additional or alternative details, features and/or technical background.
An object of the invention is to solve at least the above problems and/or disadvantages and to provide at least the advantages described hereinafter.
Therefore, an object of the present invention is to provide a radio frequency (RF) front-end that reduces carrier leakage.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an RF front-end that reduces DC offset at the mixer output.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide an RF front-end for use in a highly integrated radio receiver.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a fractional divider, or its equivalent, for the generation of LO signals in the RF front-end.
A further object of the present invention is to employ a fractional divider in the RF front-end to eliminate the generation of frequency components, by the down-converter, that are harmonically related to the RF carrier.
The objects of the present invention may be achieved in whole or in part by a frequency converter, including a frequency divider that divides an input signal frequency by a prescribed value to produce an output signal frequency; and a frequency mixer that mixes the output signal frequency with a carrier signal frequency to produce a converted signal frequency, which is substantially equal to a difference between the output signal frequency and the carrier signal frequency. The prescribed value and the input signal frequency are selected such that the carrier signal frequency is not substantially equivalent to an integer multiple of the output signal frequency.
The objects of the present invention may be further achieved in whole or in part by a frequency converter, including N frequency dividers that each divides an Nth input signal frequency by an Nth value to produce an Nth output signal frequency; and N frequency mixers that each mix a separate corresponding one of the N output signal frequencies with a separate one of N corresponding carrier signal frequencies to produce an Nth converted signal frequency, which is substantially equal to a difference between the Nth output signal frequency and the Nth carrier signal frequency. N is an integer greater than one and the Nth value and the corresponding Nth input signal frequency are selected such that the Nth carrier signal frequency is not substantially equivalent to an integer multiple of the Nth output signal frequency.
The objects of the present invention may be further achieved in whole or in part by a method of frequency conversion, including dividing an input signal frequency by a predetermined value to produce an output signal frequency; and mixing the output signal frequency with a carrier signal frequency to produce a converted signal frequency, which is substantially equal to a difference between the output signal frequency and the carrier signal frequency. The predetermined value and the input signal frequency are selected such that the carrier signal frequency is not substantially equivalent to an integer multiple of the output signal frequency.
The objects of the present invention may be further achieved in whole or in part by a method of frequency conversion, including dividing each of N input signal frequencies by a corresponding Nth value to produce a corresponding Nth output signal frequency; and mixing each of the N output signal frequencies with a separate one of N corresponding carrier signal frequencies to produce an Nth converted signal frequency, which is substantially equal to a difference between the Nth output signal frequency and the Nth carrier signal frequency. N is an integer greater than one and the Nth value and the corresponding Nth input signal frequency are selected such that the Nth carrier signal frequency is not substantially equivalent to an integer multiple of the Nth output signal frequency.
The objects of the present invention may be further achieved in whole or in part by a communication system including a frequency converter, wherein the frequency converter includes N frequency dividers that each divides an Nth input signal frequency by an Nth value to produce an Nth output signal frequency, and N frequency mixers that each mix a separate corresponding one of the N output signal frequencies with a separate one of N corresponding carrier signal frequencies to produce an Nth converted signal frequency, which is substantially equal to a difference between the Nth output signal frequency and the Nth carrier signal frequency, wherein N is an integer greater than one, and the Nth value and the corresponding Nth input signal frequency are selected such that the Nth carrier signal frequency is not substantially equivalent to an integer multiple of the Nth output signal frequency, an antenna that receives signals including selected signals having a frequency equal to a highest valued input signal frequency, a RF filter coupled to the antenna that filters the received selected signals, a low noise amplifier coupled to the RF filter that amplifies the filtered selected signals with a gain, an image reject filter that filters signals received from the low noise amplifier, wherein the N frequency mixers convert the selected signals having the highest valued input signal frequency to baseband signals, an A/D converting unit that converts the base-band signals into digital signals, and a discrete-time signal processing unit that receives the digital signals.
Additional advantages, objects, and features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and in part will become apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned from practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained as particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
The invention will be described in detail with reference to the following drawings in which like reference numerals refer to like elements wherein:
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The circuit configuration of
In equation 1, fc is the desired carrier frequency and each of the ith Ni/Mi is a mixing frequency provided to the ith down-converting mixer.
Any combination of the terms Ni/Mi meeting the following requirement becomes a solution for identifying the mixing frequencies and, thereby, identifying the divisor values of first divider 407 and second dividers 411, 412. The constraint is that no potential integer multiple of the selected Ni/Mi (i.e., k·Ni/Mi, where k is any integer value) may produce a product equal to the desired carrier frequency, fc. In other words, the harmonics of all LO signals should be different from the carrier frequency.
A principal difference between preferred embodiments according to the present invention and the related art circuit of
An examination of equation 1 reveals that numerous solutions for combinations of mixing frequencies used by the RF front-end can be devised, while meeting the specified requirement.
In equation 2, the LO frequency, fLO, is selected as the product of the desired carrier frequency, fc, and the fractional multiplicand {fraction (6/5)}. Therefore, first divider 407 is selected to divide fLO by two and second dividers 411, 412 are selected to divide the first mixing frequency by {fraction (3/2)}. Stated another way to reflect the correspondence between equation 2 and
Most modern communication receivers require the recovery of both an in-phase and a quadrature-phase base-band signal. Thus, the LO 408 should provide both the in-phase and quadrature-phase mixing frequencies. Two well-known methods for producing both the in-phase and quadrature-phase mixing signals from a single LO make use of either a phase shifter or a divide-by-two circuit. Although the phase accuracy is better with the divide-by-two circuit, the LO should operate at twice the mixing frequency.
The in-phase IF signal is provided to second mixer 513 either directly or after being amplified or filtered by an optional gain or filter stage 509. Similarly, the quadrature-phase IF signal is provided to second mixer 514 either directly or after being amplified or filtered by an optional gain or filter stage 510. Second divider 511 divides the first mixing frequency by 3 and provides the quotient to second mixers 513, 514, respectively, as the second mixing frequency. Second mixer 513 mixes the second mixing frequency 518 with the in-phase IF signal received directly or indirectly from first mixer 505. The signal product produced by second mixer 513 is the in-phase baseband signal 515. Similarly, second mixer 514 mixes the second mixing frequency 518 with the in-phase IF signal received directly or indirectly from first mixer 506. The signal product produced by second mixer 514 is the quadrature-phase baseband signal 516.
Using equation 1 above, the carrier frequency generation in
In equation 3, the LO frequency, fLO, is selected as the product of the desired carrier frequency, fc, and the fractional multiplicand {fraction (6/5)}. Therefore, first divider 507 can be selected to divide fLO by two and second divider 511 can be selected to divide fLO by 3. Stated another way, first divider 507 is selected to multiply fLO by ½ and second divider 511 is selected to multiply fLO by ⅓. Notice that no integer multiples of the mixing frequencies, Ni/Mi (i.e., ⅗·fc and ⅖·fc), produce a product equal to the desired carrier frequency, fc. Since the frequency of the local oscillator is {fraction (6/5)} of the desired carrier frequency in the second preferred embodiment, the divide-by-two divider followed by the fractional divider in
Referring to the general formula for the LO signal generation in equation 1, the number of down-conversion stages is equal to the number of terms, identified by index i, summed together in equation 1. Since certain structure of preferred embodiments is similar to the wide-band zero IF, RF front-end illustrated in
Like the frequency conversion performed by the multi-phase mixer described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,313,688, the teachings of which are hereby incorporated by reference, the present invention may make use of a single stage down-converter, employing a multi-phase mixer.
As shown in
Mixers 605, 606 each preferably include a mixer load 620, two stacked switches 621 and 622, and a transistor 623. The stacked switches 621, 622 are preferably connected in parallel with mixer load 620 and with transistor 623. Mixer load 620 is connected in series with transistor 623 through a voltage source. Other mixer configurations may be used with preferred embodiments according to the present invention and are well known to one of ordinary skill in the art, including those taught by the above-mentioned reference.
Preferably stacked switches 621, 622 are formed of two MOSFET transistors connected in series with the drain of one transistor from each stacked switch 621, 622 connected to mixer load 620 and the source of the other transistor from each stacked switch 621, 622 connected to transistor 623. The gate of one transistor, forming the series connected transistors, in each stacked switch 621, 622 receives the first mixing frequency 617 to modulate its switching operation. The gate of the other transistor, forming the series connected transistors, in each stacked switch 621, 622 receives the second mixing frequency 618 to modulate its switching operation. However, stacked switch 621 preferably receives first and second mixing frequencies 617, 618 with a 180-degree phase inversion to the first and second mixing frequencies 617, 618 simultaneously received by stacked switch 622.
Preferably, transistor 623 is also a MOSFET, having its drain connected to both stacked switches 621, 622 and its source connected to one potential of the voltage source. The other potential of the voltage source is series connected to mixer load 620. The gate of transistor 623 receives the RF signal from the optional image reject filter 604, or from LNA 603 if the image reject filter is not included in the circuit. This RF signal modulates the switching operation of transistor 623. Mixers 605, 606 mix both the first and second mixing frequencies 617, 618 with the RF signal to produce the in-phase baseband signal 615 and the quadrature-phase baseband signal 616, respectively.
Using equation 1 above, the carrier frequency generation in
In equation 4, the LO frequency, fLO, is selected as the product of the desired carrier frequency, fc, and the fractional multiplicand {fraction (6/5)}. Therefore, first divider 607 is selected to divide fLO by two and second divider 611 is selected to divide fLO by 3. Stated another way, first divider 607 is selected to multiply fLO by ½ and second divider 611 is selected to multiply fLO by ⅓. Notice that no integer multiples of the mixing frequencies, Ni/Mi (i.e., ⅗·fc and ⅖·fc), produce a product equal to the desired carrier frequency, fc.
As was the case with regard to the circuit illustrated by
Table 1 lists several other combinations of LO signals that may be used according to the present invention to eliminate the DC offset problem. The term FLOi in the table refers to the ith mixing frequency (where i=1, 2, . . . ). The LO frequency combinations of Table 1 may used with multi-stage mixers, such as those illustrated in
The invention may be applied to the RF front-end in any kind of wireless communication receiver, including cellular systems and wireless-LAN systems. Since the invention deals with the reduction of carrier leakage and DC offset, it is especially suitable for wide-band IF and direct conversion radio receivers.
The foregoing embodiments and advantages are merely exemplary and are not to be construed as limiting the present invention. The present teaching can be readily applied to other types of apparatuses. The description of the present invention is intended to be illustrative, and not to limit the scope of the claims. Many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In the claims, means-plus-function clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents but also equivalent structures.
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5640698 | Shen et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
5761615 | Jaffee | Jun 1998 | A |
5825254 | Lee | Oct 1998 | A |
5937335 | Park et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6233444 | Nakanishi | May 2001 | B1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040023624 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |