This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2007-244322, filed Sep. 20, 2007, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sample rate converter capable of converting a sample rate.
2. Description of the Related Art
When, for example, a high-speed digital signal output of an oversampling-type A/D converter is downsampled, a problem arises that alias components of quantization noise are generated in a desired signal band and the signal deterioration is thereby caused. To solve this problem in the prior art, the alias components have been removed and downsampling has been executed by employing a decimation filter. As a decimation filter employed in this situation, a Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filter capable of obtaining characteristics including a phase linearity has been frequently employed and, especially, a sinc-type filter has been employed (cf., for example, Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 10-209815 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,501,406).
However, since the sinc-type filter has a comb-shaped frequency characteristic, the alias components are increased, an ability to remove the alias components is not only lowered but the signal amplitude is also deteriorated as the desired signal becomes a broadband. For this reason, in a system which needs to have a high alias signal removing rate, a high-order decimation filter is required and the hardware is large.
As means for increasing the ability to remove the alias, employing a low-pass filter to form a decimation filter is effective. Especially, implement employing the Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) filter is an effective technique as means for designing a high-order filter with small hardware. In this system, however, the phase linearity cannot be assured due to the characteristics of the filter.
In the conventional sample rate converter, obtaining a sufficient suppression characteristic against an unnecessary signal while satisfying the flat amplitude characteristic and phase linearity in a desired signal band is difficult, and problems arise that the hardware becomes large to obtain desired characteristics and that the phase characteristic becomes nonflat.
An object of the present invention is to provide a sample rate converter capable of obtaining the flat amplitude characteristic and flat phase characteristic in a desired signal band with a comparatively small hardware amount, and of obtaining a necessary alias signal removing ability.
An aspect of the present invention provides a sample rate converter which converts a sample rate by filtering an input signal sampled with frequency fs by a feedback alias. The sample rate converter comprises a synthesizing unit which synthesizes an input signal sampled with frequency fs with a feedback signal of the frequency fs, in a frequency band from 0 to fs/N (where N indicates a natural number), with a gain greater than at least 1, to generate a synthesized signal, a downsampler which downsamples the synthesized signal to obtain an output signal of sample rate fs/N, and an upsampler which upsamples the output signal to generate the feedback signal.
A sample rate converter according to a first embodiment of the present invention will be explained below with reference to the accompanying drawings. The sample rate converter shown in
The filter circuit 1 is a linear filter circuit which inputs an input signal sampled with frequency fs and a feedback signal output from the upsampler circuit 3, and which outputs a synthesized signal of the input signal and the feedback signal. More specifically, the filter circuit 1 has a function of supplying a gain greater than at least 1 to two input signals in desired signal band fs/N and outputting a synthesized signal of the input signals at a sample rate of the frequency fs. A gain smaller than a gain in a desired signal band is supplied to a signal band inverted in the desired signal band at the time of downsampling. Therefore, a signal sequence of the sample rate of the frequency fs is output from the filter circuit 1 as the synthesized signal.
The downsampler circuit 2 downsamples the sample rate of the synthesized signal to fs/N by executing downsampling to decimate number N−1 of data elements per N samples (where N represents an integer equal to or greater than 2), for the signal sequence of the sample rate of the frequency fs output from the filter circuit 1, and outputs the downsampled signal to the upsampler circuit 3 and a circuit of a subsequent stage (not shown).
The upsampler circuit 3 raises again the sample rate reduced by the downsampler circuit 2 to fs by executing upsampling to insert number N−1 of zero data elements between the sample value data, for the downsampled signal of sample rate fs/N, and outputs the signal to the filter circuit 1 as a feedback signal.
In other words, the sample rate converter comprises the filter circuit 1, the downsampler circuit 2 and the upsampler circuit 3, these circuits form the feedback loop circuit, the filter circuit 1 synthesizes the input signal and the feedback signal by supplying a gain greater than 1 to each of the signals in the band fs/N of the desired signal obtained by downsampling, and the synthesized signal is downsampled by the downsampler circuit 2 and then output.
For this reason, a phase linearity and a substantially flat amplitude characteristic hardly having deterioration in the amplitude can be obtained as a desired signal subjected to rate conversion. In addition, the sample rate converter can effectively delete the only alias component by the feedback effect. The alias component can be thereby removed comparatively easily in a high order while maintaining a substantially flat amplitude characteristic.
The effect of the sample rate conversion will be explained here with reference to a negative feedback circuit shown in
In this circuit, a relation between the input and the output is represented below in formula (1).
If it is assumed that the gain A of the amplifier circuit 4 is sufficiently high as compared with 1 and the feedback factor is 1, the formula (1) is modified to formula (2).
The formula (2) indicates that an influence of the error E to the output becomes increased 1/A-fold due to the gain A of the amplifier circuit 4. Thus, the negative feedback circuit has the feedback effect of avoiding most influence of the error E mixed in the output of the amplifier circuit 4 and outputting the input signal which is hardly deteriorated, if the gain A of the amplifier circuit 4 is sufficiently high as compared with 1.
The sample rate converter shown in
Therefore, substantially flat amplitude characteristic and phase linearity that hardly include the deterioration in amplitude can be obtained as the desired signal subjected to the rate conversion, by employing the sample rate converter. In addition, the sample rate converter can effectively delete the alias component, by the feedback effect. The alias component can be thereby removed comparatively easily in a high order while maintaining a substantially flat amplitude characteristic.
The sample rate converter can employ, for example, an IIR-type filter which has a problem of phase distortion but can be designed in a high order with a small circuit area if the filter has the above characteristic. The circuit area and the power consumption can be thereby reduced as compared with the prior art.
Next, a more specified configuration example 1 of the sample rate converter according to the first embodiment will be described.
The adder 7 subtracts a delay signal 101 obtained by delaying the feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 12 by the delay unit 10, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 102.
The adder 8 adds the synthesized signal 102 and a delay signal 103 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 104 to be output from the adder 8 by the delay unit 10, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 104. The delay unit 9 and the delay unit 10 delay the input signal by one sample.
The downsampler circuit 11 inputs the synthesized signal 104 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/2.
The upsampler circuit 12 inserts zero data into the signal downsampled by the downsampler circuit 11, upsamples the signal to double sample rate fs, and outputs the upsampled signal to the delay unit 10 as a feedback signal.
By thus forming the sample rate converter, the alias component is generated in the output signal at the time of downsampling in the downsampler circuit 11. The alias component is suppressed in accordance with the characteristic of the filter circuit 1. The sample rate converter shown in
A transfer function of the filter circuit 1 in the sample rate converter shown in
The transfer function has a frequency characteristic having an infinite gain in the vicinity of the DC as shown in
Therefore, as shown in
Next, a more specified configuration example 2 of the sample rate converter according to the first embodiment will be described.
The adder 13 subtracts a signal 105 obtained by delaying the feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 3 by the delay unit 17 and dividing the signal amplitude by the divider 18, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 106.
The adder 14 adds the synthesized signal 106 and a delay signal 108 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 107 to be output from the adder 14 by the delay unit 15, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 107. The delay unit 15 and the delay unit 17 delay the input signal by one sample.
The adder 16 adds the synthesized signal 107 and the delay signal 108 and outputs the addition result as a synthesized signal 109.
The downsampler circuit 2 inputs the synthesized signal 109 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/4.
The upsampler circuit 3 inserts zero data into the signal downsampled by the downsampler circuit 2, upsamples the signal to four-fold sample rate fs, and outputs the upsampled signal to the delay unit 17 as a feedback signal.
The sample rate converter implements a transfer function represented below in formula (4), by adding the adder 16 to the filter circuit 1 shown in
The filter circuit 1 having such a configuration can obtain an infinite gain in the vicinity of the DC and has the frequency characteristic which becomes 0 with the frequency of fs/2, by inserting zero point into the DC point with the pole and the frequency of fs/2. The alias component in the desired signal band can be restricted on the basis of the feedback effect while preliminarily reducing the alias component in the characteristic of the linear filter, and the alias component can be removed in terms of the quadratic characteristic while obtaining a substantially flat, desired signal characteristic similarly to the sample rate converter shown in
Since the filter circuit 1 can obtain the quadratic characteristic as the alias component removing ability, the circuit area can be substantially reduced to a half as compared with the conventional sinc-type filter when the downsampling ratio is 4. For this reason, the sample rate converter using the filter circuit 1 as shown in
Next, a more specified configuration example 3 of the sample rate converter according to the first embodiment will be described.
The adder 19 subtracts a signal 110 obtained by delaying the feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 3 by the delay unit 22, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 111.
The adder 20 adds the synthesized signal 111 and a delay signal 112 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 113 to be output from the adder 20 by the delay unit 21, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 113. The delay unit 21 and the delay unit 22 delay the input signal by one sample.
The downsampler circuit 2 inputs the synthesized signal 113 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/4.
The upsampler circuit 3 inserts zero data into the signal downsampled by the downsampler circuit 2, upsamples the signal to four-fold sample rate fs, and outputs the upsampled signal to the delay unit 21 as a feedback signal.
By thus forming the sample rate converter, the alias component is generated in the output signal at the time of downsampling in the downsampler circuit 2. The alias component is suppressed in accordance with the characteristic of the filter circuit 1. The sample rate converter shown in
In addition, since the number of frequency division of downsampling is increased from 2 to 4 as compared with the sample rate converter shown in
On the other hand, in the sample rate converter shown in
Next, a more specified configuration example 4 of the sample rate converter according to the first embodiment will be described.
The adder 24 subtracts a signal 114 obtained by delaying the feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 32 by the delay unit 25, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 115.
The adder 25 adds the synthesized signal 114 and a delay signal 116 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 117 to be output from the adder 25 by the delay unit 26, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 117.
The adder 27 subtracts the delay signal 114 delayed by the delay unit 30 from the synthesized signal 117, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 118.
The adder 28 adds the synthesized signal 118 and a delay signal 119 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 120 to be output from the adder 28 by the delay unit 29, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 120. The delay unit 29 and the delay unit 30 delay the input signal by one sample.
The downsampler circuit 31 inputs the synthesized signal 120 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/2.
The upsampler circuit 32 inserts zero data into the signal downsampled by the downsampler circuit 31, upsamples the signal to double sample rate fs, and outputs the upsampled signal to the delay unit 30 as a feedback signal.
By thus forming the sample rate converter, the alias component is generated in the output signal at the time of downsampling in the downsampler circuit 31. The alias component is suppressed in accordance with the characteristic of the filter circuit 1. The sample rate converter shown in
In addition, since the order of the transfer function is made higher as compared with the sample rate converter shown in
A sample rate converter according to a second embodiment of the present invention will be explained. The sample rate converter shown in
The filter circuit 33 is a linear filter circuit which inputs an input signal sampled with frequency fs and also inputs a feedback signal output from the upsampler circuit 35 via the interpolation filter circuit 36, and which outputs a synthesized signal of the input signal and the feedback signal. More specifically, the filter circuit 33 has a function of supplying a gain greater than at least 1 to two input signals in a desired signal band and outputting a synthesized signal of the input signals at a sample rate of the frequency fs. Therefore, a signal sequence of the sample rate of the frequency fs is output from the filter circuit 33 as the synthesized signal.
The downsampler circuit 34 downsamples the sample rate of the synthesized signal to fs/N by executing downsampling to decimate number N−1 of data elements per N samples (where N represents an integer equal to or greater than 2), for the signal sequence of the sample rate of the frequency fs output from the filter circuit 33, and outputs the downsampled signal to the upsampler circuit 35 and a circuit of a subsequent stage (not shown).
The upsampler circuit 35 raises again the sample rate reduced by the downsampler circuit 2 to fs by executing upsampling to insert number N−1 of zero data elements between the sample value data, for the downsampled signal of sample rate fs/N, and outputs the signal to the interpolation filter circuit 36 as a feedback signal.
The interpolation filter circuit 36 comprises, for example, a FIR filter, executes filtering by multiplying the output of the sample rate fs output from the upsampler circuit 35 by a window function and outputs the filtering result to the filter 33 as a feedback signal.
In the sample rate converter having the above-described configuration, too, the characteristic of the linear filter can be implemented on the basis of the feedback effect and the desired signal downsampled without substantially receiving an influence of the alias component can be output, by setting a sufficiently high gain as compared with 1 in the desired signal band in the filter circuit 33.
Therefore, substantially flat amplitude characteristic and phase linearity that hardly include the deterioration in amplitude can be obtained as the rate-converted desired signal by employing the above-described sample rate converter. The sample rate converter can effectively remove the only alias component by the feedback effect. The alias component can be thereby removed comparatively easily in a high order while maintaining a substantially flat amplitude characteristic.
In addition, in the sample rate converter shown in
The sample rate converter can use an IIR filter which has a problem of phase distortion but is capable of designing a high-order filter with a small circuit area if it satisfies the above-described characteristic. The circuit area and the power consumption can be thereby reduced as compared with the prior art.
Next, a more specified configuration example of the sample rate converter according to the second embodiment will be described.
The adder 37 subtracts a delay signal 201 obtained by delaying the feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 44 by the delay unit 42 via the interpolation filter circuit 36, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 202.
The adder 38 adds the synthesized signal 202 and a delay signal 203 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 204 to be output from the adder 38 by the delay unit 39, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 204.
The adder 41 adds the synthesized signal 204 and a delay signal 205 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 204 by the delay unit 40, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 206. The delay unit 39, the delay circuit 40 and the delay unit 42 delay the input signal by one sample. The output of the delay unit 39 may be used as the delay signal 205 by the adder 41 without using the delay unit 40.
The downsampler circuit 43 inputs the synthesized signal 206 which is the output of the filter circuit 33, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/2.
The upsampler circuit 44 inserts zero data into the signal downsampled by the downsampler circuit 43, upsamples the signal to double sample rate fs.
The interpolation filter circuit 36 comprises an adder 45 and a delay unit 46. The adder 45 adds the output of the sample rate fs output from the upsampler circuit 44 and a delay signal 207 obtained by delaying the output by the delay unit 46, and outputs the addition result to the delay unit 42 as a feedback signal.
By thus forming the sample rate converter, the alias component is generated in the output signal at the time of downsampling in the downsampler circuit 43. The alias component is suppressed in accordance with the characteristic of the filter circuit 33. The filter circuit 33 is a filter circuit which has a bilinear frequency characteristic having a pole in the vicinity of the DC and a zero point at the Nyquist frequency of the sampling frequency fs. Therefore, the characteristic of a primary integrator inserting the pole into the DC point can be obtained as the characteristic of the filter circuit 33, and the alias component can be removed while making the desired signal characteristic substantially flat.
In addition, in the sample rate converter having the above-described configuration, since the interpolation filter circuit 36 is provided in the feedback loop, amplitude attenuation in a high-pass portion can be improved. The order of the filter circuit 33 shown in
Next, a sample rate converter according to a third embodiment of the present invention will be explained.
The adder 47 subtracts a delay signal 301 obtained by inputting the feedback signal from the downsampler circuit 52 via the D flip-flop circuit 53, from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 302.
The adder 48 adds the synthesized signal 302 and a delay signal 303 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 304 to be output from the adder 48 by the delay unit 49, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 304.
The adder 51 adds the synthesized signal 304 and a delay signal 305 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 304 by the delay unit 50, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 306. The delay unit 49 and the delay circuit 50 delay the input signal by one sample. The output of the delay unit 49 may be used as the delay signal 305 by the adder 51 without using the delay unit 50.
The downsampler circuit 52 inputs the synthesized signal 306 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the input signal to decimate the signal sequence such that the sample rate becomes fs/2.
The D flip-flop circuit 53 serves as an upsampler circuit and an interpolation filter circuit by sampling the output of the downsampler circuit 52 at a clock of 2/fs. In addition, the D flip-flop circuit 53 also serves as a delay unit which delays the feedback signal by delaying the sample edge by 1 clock (i.e. reversing the phase of the clock of the downsampler circuit 52) at 1/fs sample rate.
By thus forming the sample rate converter, the alias component is generated in the output signal at the time of downsampling in the downsampler circuit 52. The alias component is suppressed in accordance with the characteristic of the filter circuit 1. Therefore, the alias component can be removed while making the desired signal characteristic substantially flat, by using the characteristic of the primary integrator which inserts a pole into a DC point as the characteristic of the filter circuit 1.
In addition, in the sample rate converter having the above-described configuration, since the D flip-flop circuit 53 is provided in the feedback loop as the interpolation filter circuit, amplitude attenuation in a high-pass portion can be improved. The order of the filter circuit 1 shown in
Since the functions of the upsampler circuit 44, the interpolation filter circuit 36 and the delay unit 42 shown in
Next, a sample rate converter according to a fourth embodiment will be described. The sample rate converter is formed by making the filter circuit shown in
In the sample rate converter, the filter circuit 1 comprises an adder 54, an adder 55, a delay unit 56, an adder 57, an adder 58, a delay unit 59, a delay unit 60, and a multiplier 61. In addition, the sample rate converter comprises the downsampler circuit 2 and the upsampler circuit 3 shown in
The feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 3 is delayed by the delay unit 60 and output as a delay signal 401. The delay signal 401 is output to the adder 57, and is multiplied by coefficient k1 in the multiplier 61 and output to the adder 54 as a signal 402.
The adder 54 subtracts the signal 402 from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 403.
The adder 55 adds the synthesized signal 403 and a delay signal 404 obtained by delaying a synthesized signal 405 to be output from the adder 55 by the delay unit 56, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 405.
The adder 57 subtracts the delay signal 401 delayed by the delay unit 60, from the synthesized signal 405, and outputs the subtraction result as a synthesized signal 406.
The adder 58 adds the synthesized signal 406 and a delay signal 407 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 408 output from the adder 58 by the delay unity 59, and outputs the addition result as a synthesized signal 408. The delay unit 56, the delay circuit 59 and the delay unit 60 delay the input signal by one sample.
The downsampler circuit 2 inputs a synthesized signal 408 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the sample rate of the synthesized signal to fs/N by executing downsampling to decimate number N−1 of data elements per N samples (where N represents an integer equal to or greater than 2), for the signal 408, and outputs the downsampled signal to the upsampler circuit 3 and a circuit of a subsequent stage (not shown).
The upsampler circuit 3 raises again the sample rate reduced by the downsampler circuit 2 to fs by executing upsampling to insert number N−1 of zero data elements between the sample value data, for the downsampled signal of sample rate fs/N, and outputs the signal to the filter circuit 1 as a feedback signal.
Thus, the filter circuit 1 uses two feedback signals to implement the quadratic filter characteristic, multiplies one of the feedback signals by coefficient k1, and uses the output of multiplication as the feedback signal. For this reason, the same filter characteristic as that of the quadratic sinc function can be obtained by appropriately setting the value of rate N for downsampling and upsampling and the coefficient k1.
Therefore, since the sample rate converter comprises the filter circuit 1 having the same filter characteristic as that of the quadratic sinc function, the alias component removing ability can be further enhanced as compared with the sample rate converter shown in
In the sample rate converter shown in
In the sample rate converter, the filter circuit 1 comprises the adder 54, the adder 55, the delay unit 56, the adder 57, the adder 58, the delay unit 59, the delay unit 60, the multiplier 61, an adder 62, a multiplier 63, an adder 64 and a delay unit 65. In addition, the sample rate converter comprises the downsampler circuit 2 and the upsampler circuit 3 shown in
The feedback signal from the upsampler circuit 3 is delayed by the delay unit 60 and output as the delay signal 401. The delay signal 401 is output to the adder 62, and is multiplied by coefficient k1 in the multiplier 61 and output to the adder 57 as a signal 409.
The adder 54 subtracts the signal 402 from the input signal sampled at the frequency fs, and outputs the subtraction result as the synthesized signal 403.
The adder 55 adds the synthesized signal 403 and the delay signal 404 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 405 to be output from the adder 55 by the delay unit 56, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 405.
The adder 57 subtracts the signal 409 from the synthesized signal 405, and outputs the subtraction result as the synthesized signal 406.
The adder 58 adds the synthesized signal 406 and the delay signal 407 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 408 output from the adder 58 by the delay unity 59, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 408.
The adder 62 subtracts the delay signal 401 from the synthesized signal 408, and outputs the subtraction result as the synthesized signal 408.
The adder 64 adds the synthesized signal 410 and the delay signal 411 obtained by delaying the synthesized signal 412 output from the adder 64 by the delay unity 65, and outputs the addition result as the synthesized signal 412. The delay unit 56, the delay circuit 59, the delay unit 60 and the delay unit 65 delay the input signal by one sample.
The downsampler circuit 2 inputs the synthesized signal 412 which is the output of the filter circuit 1, and downsamples the sample rate of the synthesized signal to fs/N by executing downsampling to decimate number N−1 of data elements per N samples (where N represents an integer equal to or greater than 2), for the signal 412, and outputs the downsampled signal to the upsampler circuit 3 and a circuit of a subsequent stage (not shown).
The upsampler circuit 3 raises again the sample rate reduced by the downsampler circuit 2 to fs by executing upsampling to insert number N−1 of zero data elements between the sample value data, for the downsampled signal of sample rate fs/N, and outputs the signal to the filter circuit 1 as a feedback signal.
Thus, the filter circuit 1 uses three feedback signals to implement the cubic filter characteristic, multiplies one of the feedback signals by coefficient k1, multiplies another one by coefficient k2, and uses each of them as the feedback signal. For this reason, the same filter characteristic as that of the cubic sinc function can be obtained by appropriately setting the value of rate N for downsampling and upsampling and the coefficients k1 and k2.
Therefore, since the sample rate converter comprises the filter circuit 1 having the same filter characteristic as that of the cubic sinc function, the alias component removing ability can be further enhanced as compared with the sample rate converter shown in
On a quartic or higher-order filter, the same characteristic as that of the sinc function can be implemented by appropriately multiplying the feedback signal by a coefficient in the same manner as that shown in
The present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above but the constituent elements of the invention can be modified in various manners without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Various aspects of the invention can also be extracted from any appropriate combination of a plurality of constituent elements disclosed in the embodiments. Some constituent elements may be deleted in all of the constituent elements disclosed in the embodiments. The constituent elements described in different embodiments may be combined arbitrarily.
For example, in the above-described embodiments, one sample rate converter is employed, but a plurality of sample rate converters may be connected serially.
As shown in
The conventional sinc-type filter circuit has a problem that when a high downsampling ratio is implemented, the power consumption is not increased but the circuit area is increased. On the other hand, in the sample rate converter of the present invention, the circuit area can be reduced but the power consumption may be increased to implement a high downsampling ratio.
To solve this, the conventional sinc-type filter circuit 66 which is advantageous for the power consumption is arranged as a prior-step circuit and the circuit of the present invention is arranged as a subsequent-step circuit as shown in
In the above-described embodiments, the output of the oversampling-type A/D converter is subjected to sample rate conversion. However, the present invention is not limited to this, but can be applied widely and generally to sample rate conversion of the digital signal.
In addition, the input signal input to the filter circuit of the embodiments is sampled with the frequency fs. This input signal is converted into a digital signal by, for example, a delta-sigma converter which converts an analog signal into a digital signal. The order of the transfer function of the filter function may be set to be equal to or higher than the order of the delta-sigma converter.
The present invention can also be otherwise variously modified within a scope which does not depart from the gist of the present invention.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-244322 | Sep 2007 | JP | national |