The present invention will now be described, by way of example, the best mode contemplated by the inventors for carrying out the present invention, in reference with the accompanying drawings. It shall be understood that the following description, together with numerous specific details, may not contain specific details that have been omitted as it shall be understood that numerous variations are possible and thus will be detracting from the full understanding of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to those skilled in the art, that the present invention may be put into practice while utilizing various techniques.
Disclosed herewith is a smart antenna system and method for calibrating a smart antenna array having a plurality of Transmit—Receive Modules (TRMs). (As used herein a Transmit—Receive Module, or TRM, includes at least a transmit or a receive path but may preferably include both.) In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a smart antenna system comprises a plurality of TRM-integrated antennas, a beam steering module (e.g., a backplane), and a suitably coupled interface. Although a fiber optic backplane (FOB) and a fiber optic interface are preferred and are referred to herein, the invention is not so limited and a coaxial or other coupling to the BTS may be employed.
TRMs co-operating with a fiber optic backplane (FOB) are combined into a receiving/transmitting array adapted for receiving multichannel/multicarrier uplink (UL) CDMA signals from user terminal equipment (UTE) and transmitting multichannel/multicarrier downlink (DL) CDMA signals towards UTE's. The TRMs employ an interface that provides power supply lines and control lines for the module operation. Each TRM incorporates a first signal sampling coupler for providing a sampled output from TRM transmitted (TX) DL signal.
In addition to TX sampling, the first signal sampling coupler is also used for injecting a receive (RX) path pilot signal between the antenna and a common port of a duplexer interface. A second signal sampling coupler is used to sample the received signal, just before a demodulator. The receive path pilot signal is delivered to an injection port from a 1:N signal power divider network coupled from an isolator. The isolator provides both isolation and signal direction to the pilot signal supplied by the pilot signal source.
For TX path (DL), a CDMA pilot signal code domain cancellation scheme, similar to discrete RF pilot cancellation scheme may be employed. This advantageously utilizes existing pilot channels for the purposes of calibrating an SA system. In a CDMA modulated carrier signal each user is assigned a unique (Walsh) code which is carried by the user's signal. The orthogonality of these codes allows the base station and mobile unit(s) to distinguish the each other's signals from all other signals within the received spectrum. In IS-97 standard (as well as other CDMA based standards) used extensively in PCS-1900 service, a dedicated Walsh code, e.g., code 0 for a pilot signal, is used to assist UTE's acquiring synchronization establishing downlink between BTS and UTE. Typically the power of the pilot signal (in code domain) is greater than that of any other channels. A high power pilot signal allows UTE to achieve quick synchronization with the pilot signal of the transmitting BTS by performing cross correlation search between the received signal (from BTS) and the locally generated pilot. A similar cross-correlation method is adapted to attain downlink path calibration by providing TX RF sample from each TRM and routing to a dedicated rake receiver for relative phase and amplitude determination.
A preferred embodiment of the invention is now described with reference to
The TRMs employ an interface that provides power supply lines and control lines for the module operation.
As seen in
As shown in
As shown in
Each TRM incorporates a first signal sampling coupler for providing a sampled output from TRM transmitted DL signal. In addition to TX sampling, the first signal sampling coupler is also used for injecting a receive path pilot signal between the antenna and a common port of a duplexer interface.
A sample port of the first signal coupler 228 is coupled to the first sample port 208 connection. Sample port 208 connection is coupled via signal path 108 to the corresponding port, e.g., 308d, of the FOB 116. Duplexer 226 is of conventional design and intended to provide isolation between transmitter section 222 and receiver section 224. Although transmitter section 222 and receiver section 224 are shown schematically as triangles and indicating an amplification stage, they may employ numerous design implementations to achieve desired performance parameters as known to those skilled in the art.
A second signal sampling coupler is used to sample the received signal, just before a demodulator. The receiver section 224 output is coupled to an input of the Demodulator 218 through the second coupler, e.g., a directional coupler 220. A coupled port of the coupler 220 is coupled to the interface 210 connection. Interface 210 is coupled via signal path 110 to the corresponding port 308 of the FOB 116.
The Demodulator 218 output is coupled to I/O controller 202. 1/O controller 202 may be implemented to be in communication with FOB 116 via a suitable interface 214, while providing receiving and transmitting communications means to a demodulator 218 and modulator 212. Modulator 212 is used to up-convert composite downlink signals to suitable RF carrier signals. An output of Modulator 212 is coupled to transmitter section 222 for a suitable amplification and frequency conversion (not shown).
Referring to
Establishment of a known reference signal plane (or wave front) at the antenna 102 requires precise knowledge of phase, amplitude and delay characteristics of the signal path between the input port and combining port. One way to achieve a reference signal plane is to inject a known test (pilot) signal and perform a network analysis between the input and output signals, and to compute differences between each TRM. Signal minimization through destructive signal combining has been commonly used in Feed Forward Power Amplifiers (FFPA) to attain Inter-Modulation Distortion (IMD) signal cancellation by amplifying and phase-inverting corresponding error signal. An error path test (pilot) signal based control system has been successfully used to attain high degree of cancellation of IMD products in the output of the FFPA system. A similar test (pilot) signal controlled cancellation technique can be used to attain a high degree of phase and amplitude alignment in SA.
The present invention preferably utilizes a pilot cancellation technique to facilitate reference plane calibration. Such techniques have been described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,796,304, issued Aug. 18, 1998 entitled “Broadband Amplifier with Quadrature Pilot Signal”; U.S. Pat. No. 6,169,450, issued Jan. 1, 2001 entitled “Feed Forward Compensation Using Phase and Time Modulation;” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/818,546 filed Apr. 5, 2004 entitled “Multi-transmitter Communication System Employing Anti-Phase Pilot Signals,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,110,739 issued Sep. 19, 2006. These patents and patent applications are assigned to the assignee of the present application, and their disclosures are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to establishing calibrated phase and amplitude reference planes for both transmit (TX) and receive (RX) paths.
For calibrating an uplink wavefront based on calibration pilot signal reception, a receive path test signal is delivered to an injection port from a 1:N signal power divider network coupled from a signal circulator. The circulator provides both isolation and signal direction to the test signal supplied by a pilot signal source. For TX path (DL), a CDMA pilot signal code domain cancellation scheme, similar to discrete RF pilot cancellation schemes, may be employed.
As shown in
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, a 4-way network with equal amplitude division while providing 90 degree phase difference between adjacent ports is employed. Table 1 as shown below provides a summary of amplitude and phase relationships for such network:
Table 1 refers to amplitude of the signal at the common port 440 (assuming that all phase/amplitude adjusters are kept at nominal settings). Similarly, a four-port network is only one example and not a limiting factor, as an N-port network may be implemented if N TRMs are used.
Test signal 316s is coupled via interconnection paths 108a-108d into TRMs' first sample port 208. Referring back to
Upon injection into the RX path of each of the TRMs 112a-112d, test signal 316s is passed through a duplexer 226 onward into the receiver section 224, through l/Q modulator 230 before being sampled by suitably constructed coupler 220 disposed at the input of the de-modulator 218.
Coupled port of the coupler 220 contains UL RF signals as well as test signal 316s, which are fed into RF interface 210. From interface 210, sampled test signal 316s, together with UL signals, are fed through interconnections 110a-110d back into the second port of the TRM interface 308a-308d. From the second port of the TRM interface 308a-308d, UL composite RF signals are coupled into the pilot signal in-phase aggregator 302, as shown in
Pilot signal in-phase aggregator 302 separates test signal 316s from each composite UL RF signals received from individual TRM interfaces 308a-308d, while summing each isolated test signals 316s together in phase. This can be implemented using numerous receiver techniques as well known to one skilled in the art. The summed test signal output from in-phase aggregator 302 is sent into RX Pilot RSSI processor 304. RX Pilot RSSI processor 304 may provide a digital or analog signal indicative of the combined total of all received test signals 316s to master controller 322. Test (pilot) signal minimization as determined by processor 304 can be used to achieve signal minimization to establish reference phase between each TRM DL paths, by adjusting phase (assuming that amplitude levels are the same) for the test (pilot) signal.
Coupler 220 may be replaced by a demodulated data diverter 221, shown as an optional component in
For either implementation, master controller 322 can periodically verify cancellation of pilot signals in order to maintain the RX reference plane.
As shown in
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to establishment of calibrated phase and amplitude reference planes for both transmit (TX) and receive (RX) paths.
Reference plane determination for the DL path is somewhat different from that of the UL path. In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, a cross-correlation method, similar to that used in the UTE to achieve synchronization with the pilot signal of the transmitting BTS, is adapted to attain DL path calibration by providing TX RF sample from each TRM and routing to a dedicated rake receiver for relative phase and amplitude determination. A downlink wavefront can be calibrated based on Walsh-code cross correlated signal reception. Thus, existing signals in the TX path can be utilized as pilot signals without a need for a separate TX pilot generator as the RX pilot generate 316.
In a CDMA-modulated carrier signal, each user is assigned a unique (Walsh) code carried by the user's signal. The orthogonality of these codes allows the base station and mobile unit(s) to distinguish each other's signals from all other signals within the received spectrum. In IS-97 and other CDMA-based standards, a dedicated Walsh code, for example, code 0, is employed for a pilot signal used to assist user terminal equipment (UTE) in acquiring synchronization, establishing downlink (DL) between the BTS and the UTE.
The power of the pilot signal (in code domain) is typically greater than that of any other channel. A high power pilot signal allows the UTE to achieve quick synchronization with the pilot signal of the transmitting BTS by performing a cross-correlation search between the received signal (from BTS) and the locally generated pilot.
In an SA system, a pilot signal is transmitted and used by a User UTE to determine if a suitable downlink channel is available. A conventional UTE cannot accurately determine a pilot signal's arriving direction. Received signal strength indication (RSSI) and pilot signal code-domain power are the only means available to UTE, which cross-correlates the received signal with the appropriate spreading codes, thus extracting a pilot signal from the received beam, to estimate the DL signal path.
Referring back to
Referring back to
To establish a DL reference wavefront, each TRM operates to transmit a calibration CDMA wave form. In a typical IS-97 system, the following CDMA signal configuration may be used:
A code domain graph is presented in
Since BTS 24 is supplying CDMA signal information to the master controller 322, all of the information in Table 2 is available to rake receiver 318. Input to rake receiver 318 is a summation of the TRM 112a-112d downlinks. Each TRM can be commanded by master controller 322 to turn on/off its downlink output and to adjust relative phase and amplitude of its output signal. Consequently, a calibration procedure starts with master controller 322 turning on and off each TRM 112a-112d, to establish and adjust reference signal amplitude contributed by each module. Upon establishment of reference amplitude 318i, master controller 322 enables all TRM 112a-112d to transmit in DL mode, while adjusting relative phase of a traffic signal in modulator 212 and in each TRM 112a-112d, to achieve maximum pilot signal while minimizing a selected traffic channel, as measured by rake receiver 318.
A minimum code domain level is achieved when relative phase of each traffic channel is at 90 degrees with respect to each other as shown in
Initial phase and amplitude characteristics for each modulator 212 may be determined during the manufacturing process, and stored into each TRM calibration storage memory 204. Thus, the stored initial phase and amplitude characteristics are available to master controller 322 for initial phase cancellation setting. Once cancellation has been achieved, each modulator 212 can be commanded to align phase to achieve desired radiation pattern shift, since the downlink reference plane relationship between all TRMs has been determined.
As discussed earlier, reference plane determination for the uplink path is somewhat different from that for the downlink path. In order to establish a reference plane as close as possible to the antenna 102, a RX Pilot generator 316 is used to generate test CDMA 316s signal, which is injected between antenna 102 and duplexer 226 within each of the TRMs 112a-d. As described earlier, test CDMA signal 316s may be demodulated by each TRM demodulators 218 before being fed back into FOB 116 pilot signal summing network 302 before being fed into RX Pilot Receiver 304. Pilot signal minimization as determined by RX Pilot Receiver 304 can be used to achieve similar signal minimization technique in order to establish reference phase between each TRM downlink paths by adjusting phase (assuming that amplitude levels are the same) for the demodulated pilot signal.
Despite of the differences in the RX and the TX reference plane calibration, the signal combining network 306 shown in
The present invention has been described in relation to a presently preferred embodiment, however, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that a variety of modifications, too numerous to describe, may be made while remaining within the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the above detailed description should be viewed as illustrative only and not limiting in nature.
The present application claims priority under 35 USC section 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/812,820, filed Jun. 12, 2006, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60812820 | Jun 2006 | US |