The present invention generally relates to radio transmitters and radio receivers and particularly to audio and data transmission in an FM broadcast system.
FM (Frequency Modulation) radio transmitter has been widely used in portable devices such as cellphone, MP3 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3) player, PDA (Portable Digital Assistant), and PMP (Portable Media Player) to output audio contents on the device to an external FM radio receiver. The FM radio provides an instant wireless audio link between the portable device and the FM audio receiver that is available almost everywhere worldwide. This wireless link allows a user to playback the audio contents onto the FM radio receiver in a car for driving safety. Also a user may enjoy the better audio quality usually available in a car or home radio receiver. The FM radio transmitter may comply with the worldwide FM audio broadcast standard (for example, the FM broadcast system in US occupying a nominal spectrum from 87.5 to 108 MHz or any other similar FM systems). The radio transmitter may also be an AM (Amplitude Modulation) system that complies with the worldwide AM audio broadcast system (for example, the AM broadcast system in US occupying the nominal spectrum from 520 to 1710 kHz, other similar AM systems, or other broadcast bands such as SW and MW.
On the other hand, FM radio receiver is even more widely used in portable devices such as cellphone, MP3, PDA, and PMP. The FM radio receiver provides a user the convenience to enjoy FM radio listening experience anywhere anytime. Paired with a portable device equipped with an FM transmitter, the portable devices may share audio contents among them. In another application, the FM receiver may be used as a wireless earphone to be paired with a portable device equipped with an FM transmitter.
In the radio transmitter application, scanning and finding an unoccupied or vacant channel for transmission and avoiding interference with a licensed broadcast channel or other undesirable channels is highly desirable in an effort to increase efficiency and quality and to take advantage of such available channels. If the selected channel for transmission is also being used by a local broadcast radio station, the transmission from the portable device will interfere with the signal being transmitted from the local radio station. This will result in poor reception quality of the signal from the portable device, or otherwise the portable device may have to transmit at a much higher power level to “over-power” the local radio station which may interfere with the intended reception of the local radio and may violate the regulatory compliance. Consequently, it is extremely important to scan for an unoccupied channel before the portable device starts to transmit.
In the U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/137,535, filed Jun. 11, 2008, entitled “Frequency Modulation (FM) Clear Channel Scanning System and Method of Using Same,” a reliable and fast clear-channel-scan (CCS) method and system are described. In the U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/172,147, filed Jul. 11, 2008, entitled “Channel Coordination between a Wireless Earphone and a Transmitter,” a method and system of automatic coordination between a wireless transmitter and earphone is described. The FM broadcast band is commonly available in most regions worldwide and can be used for applications beyond the originally intended audio broadcasting. Such applications may include wireless remote control based on the FM broadcast band, audio broadcast with high-rate data service, and secure wireless voice communication. The current Radio Broadcast Data System (RBDS) or the Radio Data System (RDS) along with the associated FM audio broadcast does not address the needs of the above mentioned applications. For example, in the wireless remote control application, the required data rate is very low and however, it is more important to achieve high reliability than high data rate for such application. The bandwidth allocated for the RBDS/RDS standard uses small frequency deviation to carry the underlying data. Therefore, the integrity of transmitted data is often compromised. In FM broadcast application, there are cases where high-fidelity stereo audio is non-essential while high data rate transmitted in the side channel is very desirable. Traffic message channel is good example of such application where the digital data may carry local traffic updates including events, locations, and clock. Currently, RBDS or RDS only allocates a data rate about 1.1875 Kbits per second for each FM channel. This data rate is too slow for the traffic message application in metropolitan areas where the traffic condition is fairly complex and requires much higher data rate to carry real-time traffic information, or other high data applications.
In the radio transmit and receive applications, where both transmitter and receiver can be designed to accommodate needed features that the standard FM broadcast system does not offer. Such features may include privacy for the underlying audio signal, automatic channel coordination between receivers and a transmitter, automatic channel following in a mobile environment, and high-rate digital data with or without associated audio.
In light of the foregoing discussions, the need arises for providing reliable and/or high data rate services using the existing FM broadcast band. Furthermore, there is also a need for providing secure audio transmission along with the digital data in the broadcast band that everyone can listen into the channels.
The present invention discloses a system for remote control using an FM broadcast band. The remote control transmitter unit comprises a channel condition assessment module to identify a best channel to transmit. The remote control transmitter unit then transmits digital data at the channel identified. On the other end of the wireless channel, an FM receiver is configured to receive radio signals in the band. The FM receiver identifies the channel having the digital data and receives the digital data. The received digital data can then be used by the receiver end for intended applications such as controlling sound volume of an electronic device embedding the present invention.
The present invention also discloses an FM data transmission system using an FM broadcast band. At the transmit side, a first device is used to accept digital data and an FM transmitter having a channel condition assessment module to identifies a channel transmits the digital data using the identified channel. At the receive end, an FM receiver is configured to receive radio signals in the band. The FM receiver identifies the channel having the digital data and receives the digital data. The received digital data is provided to a second device and the settings associated with the second device are controlled according to the received digital data. In one embodiment of the current invention, a user ID is used for automatic coordination between the FM receiver and the FM transmitter.
The present invention further discloses an FM audio and data transmission system using an FM broadcast band. At the transmit side, a first device is used to accept digital data and an audio interface module is configured to provide audio signal. An FM transmitter identifies an empty channel, where the channel includes a main channel and a side channel, and transmits the digital data at the side channel and the audio signal at the main channel. At the receive end, an FM receiver is configured to receive radio signals in the band. The FM receiver identifies the channel having the digital data in the side channel and receives the digital data in the side channel and the audio signal in the main channel. The received digital data is provided to a second device and the settings associated with the second device are controlled according to the received digital data. In one embodiment of the present invention, the audio is encrypted by an audio encryption module using an audio encryption key at the transmit side and decrypted by an audio decryption module using a decryption key at the receive side. The decryption key can be either stored at the receive side or recovered from the transmitted digital data using a user ID where the user ID is stored at the receive side. The encryption/decryption can be implemented using either a digital technique or an analog technique.
In another embodiment, the present invention discloses an FM audio and data transmission system using an FM broadcast band. At the transmit side, a first device is used to accept digital data and an audio interface module is configured to provide audio signal. An FM transmitter, having a channel condition assessment module to identify a channel having a main channel and a side channel, transmits the digital data at the side channel and the audio signal at the main channel. At the receive end, an FM receiver is configured to receive radio signals in the band. The FM receiver identifies the channel having the digital data in the side channel and receives the digital data in the side channel and the audio signal in the main channel. The received digital data is provided to a second device and the settings associated with the second device are controlled according to the received digital data.
Furthermore, the current invention allocates a digital data bandwidth other than the bandwidth defined in RDS/RBDS standard so that a different data rate service can be provided for FM audio and data transmission systems.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide a more thorough explanation of embodiments of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art, that embodiments of the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form, rather than in detail, in order to avoid obscuring embodiments of the present invention.
Reference herein to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment can be included in at least one embodiment of the invention. The appearances of the phrase “in one embodiment” in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment, nor are separate or alternative embodiments mutually exclusive of other embodiments. Further, the order of blocks in process flowcharts or diagrams representing one or more embodiments of the invention do not inherently indicate any particular order nor imply any limitations in the invention.
Embodiments of the present invention are discussed herein with reference to
Although the present invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments it is anticipated that alterations and modifications thereof will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the art. It is therefore intended that the following claims be interpreted as covering all such alterations and modification as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
In U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/137,535, filed Jun. 11, 2008, entitled “Frequency Modulation (FM) Clear Channel Scanning System and Method of Using Same” and U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/473,281, filed May 28, 2009, entitled “Radio Transmitter and Radio Receiver with Channel Condition Assessment”, channel condition assessment methods and systems are described as a means to identify an un-occupied or empty channel. A channel so identified is free from noticeable interference and can be used to deliver high quality audio or/and digital data transmission.
In a conventional FM broadcast system, the baseband signal spectrum is shown in
While the conventional standard FM broadcast system can satisfy the application of FM stereo audio broadcasting, it may not fulfill the needs for personal wireless earphone, wireless telephone, or FM audio broadcast with high-rate data. In these applications, the underlying audio may be voice which has signal spectrum primarily under 4 kHz and the conventional FM broadcast system would be wasteful for such applications. For the personal wireless earphone or wireless telephone applications, the privacy of the underlying voice is often a concern. However, the conventional FM broadcast system does not address the privacy issue at all.
The standard FM broadcast system accommodates digital data broadcast via RDS/RBDS transmitted at side channel within the channel. The data carried in RDS/RBDS can be used to deliver various types of service information such as metadata associated with the music, clock, weather, traffic, and etc. However, the data service is primarily for static service where the information flow is small. For the traffic message service, particularly in metropolitan areas where the data volume may be very high, the digital data rate available through RDS/RBDS may not be sufficient. Accordingly, a new spectrum allocation, as shown in
The digital data carried in the side channel can be used to coordinate automatic pairing between an FM transmitter and an FM receiver equipped with the auto-pairing capability. In the U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/172,147, filed Jul. 11, 2008, entitled “Channel Coordination between a Wireless Earphone and a Transmitter,” systems and methods of channel coordination between a wireless earphone and an FM transmitter are disclosed. The wireless earphone device includes an FM receiver with an RDS or RDBS receiver and an audio decryption module, and the FM transmitter unit includes an FM transmitter with RDS and audio encryption capability. The wireless earphone device automatically tunes to a vacant channel found by the FM transmitter unit without or with minimum human intervention and in real-time thereby allowing the process of tuning and receiving audio signals through the wireless earphone device transparent to the user of the wireless earphone device.
Though the signal spectrum for the current invention is different from the conventional FM broadcast system, they all share the same FM broadcast band. Therefore, it is important to identify a channel not being used by a conventional FM broadcast signal or any other signal transmitted at the channel. In the US Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/137,535, filed Jun. 11, 2008, entitled “Frequency Modulation (FM) Clear Channel Scanning System and Method of Using Same,” reliable and fast clear-channel-scan methods and systems are described and can be used in the current invention as well.
The filter 351 and the on-channel FOM block 316 collectively comprise the on-channel selection block 319. In some embodiments, the filter 351 and the on-channel FOM block 316 are physically the same block and in other embodiments they may appear, as shown in
RX Antenna 305 is shown to receive signals, in the form of an analog signal, and to transmit the same to the tuner 312. Tuner 312 receives the analog signal is operative to select a single station by excluding substantially all others and to generate a tuned analog signal 330 for use by the CCA ADC 314. Tuner 312 is user-programmable to select a start and stop frequency range and a step frequency and in this manner divides the band into multiple sub-bands when desired.
In an exemplary embodiment, the selected step frequency is 200 kHz and the band is divided into sub-band. The CCA ADC 314 is operative to receive the signal 330 and to convert the same to digital signal 332. The signal 332 is then coupled onto filter 351 and filter 352. Filter 351 is designed to select substantially only the on-channel frequencies and to substantially disregard the out-of-channel frequencies from the signal 332 to generate the on-channel signal 334. Filter 352 is operative to select substantially only the out-of-channel frequencies and to substantially disregard the on-channel frequencies from the signal 332 to generate the out-of-channel signal 336.
The filter 351 is further operative to transfer the on-channel signals 334 to the on-channel FOM block 316. The on-channel FOM block 316 is operative to measure the FOM of the on-channel signals 334 (a measurement representing the measurement of signal quality of the on-channel signal), and the out-of-channel FOM block 318 is operative to measure the out-of-channel signals 336 (a measurement representing the measurement of signal quality of the out-of-channel signal). The CCA FSM 320 is operative to determine an unoccupied or empty channel and information associated with the selected channel is provided via signal line 342.
The data interface module 420 accepts digital data from signal line 402. Depending on the application, the data interface module 420 may simply pass the digital data input 402 to digital data output 404. However, in many applications, the data interface module will format the digital data input arrived at line 402 to make it suitable for transmission in the FM broadcast channel. The formatting may include forward error correction (FEC), padding with data delimiter, data tagging for identifying data type, and data insertion such as a user ID. The above are exemplary functions associated with the data interface module 420. Other functions may also be included such as data scrambling for privacy and data conversion for compact data representation.
The receive unit 450 receives signals from RX antenna 455 in the FM broadcast band. The receive tuner 460 receives antenna signal 458 and performs FM receiving function and may include low-noise-amplifier (LNA), filters, mixer, LO, and FM demodulator. Unlike a conventional FM broadcast receiver where a user selects a channel or uses automatic channel search to tune to a next valid channel, the receive unit 450 needs to identify the channel that carries the intended digital data. An RX processor 470 is considered as part of the FM receiver and the RX processor 470 examines the signals received and identifies the channel containing the intended digital data. The RX processor 470 is coupled with the receive tuner 460 to manage the procedure of searching for the channel. When the desired channel is identified, the receive tuner 460 receives the digital data and provides the received digital data 452 it to the data output interface module 480. The data output interface module 480 processes the digital data 452 and outputs it through signal line 454. The data output interface module 480 is a counterpart of the data interface module 420 and performs inverse functions to undo the process by the data interface module 420.
The electronic device illustrated in this exemplary application represents a digital photo frame containing a receive unit 450. Other electronic devices such as television set, portable media player (PMP), multimedia gateway, and cordless phone may also be benefited by the present invention. The digital photo frame may provide a plurality of settings for a user to control. The settings may include, for example, photo navigation and display control, and power on/off. The LCD display of the digital photo frame may also be used to display setting options as on-screen-display (OSD) for convenient user interface. The RX antenna required by the receive unit 450 is not shown explicitly. However it is understood that an RX antenna is either embedded as an internal antenna or included as an external antenna in the digital photo frame 550. In typical digital photo frame applications, the device will use a power adaptor instead of batteries for extended use. The wire used by the power adaptor may be used as the antenna for the receive unit 450 by properly coupling the RF signal pickup up by the wire of the power adaptor to the input of the RX tuner 460. The coupling will require tuning circuits as is well known by those skilled in the art.
The digital photo frame 690 may provide a plurality of settings for a user to control the electronic device. The settings may include, for example, photo navigation and display control, power on/off, and volume control of associated audio. The LCD display of the digital photo frame may also be used to display setting options as on-screen-display (OSD) for convenient user interface. Also, the received digital data by the receive unit 650 may be displayed on the LCD of the digital photo frame 690. Furthermore, the digital photo frame may include a standard FM receiver to receive the FM stereo audio and associated RDS/RBDS data. These data may include metadata associated with a song, program type, station ID, clock, weather, and traffic information, and can be conveniently displayed on the LCD screen of the digital photo frame 690. The RX antenna 455 required by the receive unit 650 is not shown explicitly. However it is understood that an RX antenna is either embedded as an internal antenna or included as an external antenna in the digital photo frame 690. When the digital photo frame 690 also includes a standard FM receiver for receiving the conventional FM broadcast signal, the receive unit 650 may easily accommodate the conventional receiving function for FM broadcast signal with a minimum cost increase. The additional advantage of using the FM broadcast based remote control is apparent.
In one exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the system can be used to provide privacy for the underlying audio. The transmit side is shown in
The receive side corresponding to the transmit unit 700 with antenna 405 is shown in
In accordance with the various embodiments of the present invention, a radio transmit system and a radio receive system incorporating the scan system are disclosed. The systems are partitioned into various component blocks to fulfill the required processing. However, it is understood by a skilled person in the art that there are many different ways to partition a radio transmit system or a radio receive system to achieve the same goal.
The present invention is related and claims priority to U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/137,535, filed Jun. 11, 2008, entitled “Frequency Modulation (FM) Clear Channel Scanning System and Method of Using Same,” U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/172,147, filed Jul. 11, 2008, entitled “Channel Coordination between a Wireless Earphone and a Transmitter,” and U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 12/473,281, filed May 28, 2009, entitled “Radio Transmitter and Radio Receiver with Channel Condition Assessment”. These U.S. Non-Provisional patent applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12137535 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 12495796 | US |