The invention relates to radio receivers in general and particularly a method of determining inaccuracy of properties of analog blocks in OFDM receivers in a mobile communication system.
In modern telecommunication systems, the mobile terminals are faced with new and higher requirements. To maximize the data throughput every part of the terminal has to be optimized and imperfections minimized. This applies to all parts of the terminal from the antenna to the display and battery.
The analog blocks 140 may for example be analog filters, local oscillators, analog amplifiers, mixers, and phase shifters The digital blocks may for example provide, additional filtering, resampling, channel estimation, frequency corrections, and error correction decoding. The signal, received by the antenna, called the traffic signal passes through the analog blocks 140 before being digitized in the ADC 150. The traffic signal is defined as the received wireless signal that is received by receiver. The FFT unit 160 transforms the digitized signal from the time domain to the frequency domain before passing through the digital blocks 170. There may also be other digital blocks between the ADC and the FFT.
Whereas the digital blocks 170 have known and well defined properties, the analog blocks 140 have random variations and random offset from desired design values. Undesired properties of analog blocks include component spread between different chips or instances on a chip, temperature dependence, linear and nonlinear distortion, different types of noise such as phase noise ,and different types of signal path mismatch such as I/Q gain and phase imbalance. The random variations of the analog blocks may degrade the performance of the whole receiver 120.
One way to handle the undesired properties of analog blocks is to try to design blocks with smaller amount of undesired properties such as smaller spread or lower noise. This is however not always possible, or might cause negative side effects such as larger chip area, higher power consumption, or longer design time. Another way to handle the undesired properties is to include estimation and calibration or compensation capabilities in the receiver. By estimation, the unknown variations may be estimated by digital signal processing. With calibration the slowly varying properties of analog blocks may be adjusted towards more ideal values by means of control inputs. With compensation, the effect of undesired properties can be compensated for.
Typically, properties of analog blocks are estimated by digital processing from digital signals obtained after analog-to-digital conversion. Some methods estimates properties from the existing traffic signal also used for the normal transmission of data. Other methods use a known test signal that is inserted in the receiver's analog signal processing path, from which the response measured in the digital domain properties may be estimated.
It's an object of the present disclosure to overcome at least some of the drawbacks of prior art receivers as disclosed above.
The object is achieved by providing a method of determining properties of an analog block in an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex, OFDM, receiver.
The method involves the steps of receiving a traffic signal at the antenna and adding an analog test signal to the traffic signal. This combined test and traffic signal is inserted into the analog blocks where it is modified by the properties of the analog block into a modified combined test and traffic signal.
The modified combined test and traffic signal is extracted and analyzed after the analog blocks to obtain a measure of the properties of the analog block.
It is advantageous to insert the analog test signal into the traffic signal in such a way that it does not interfere with the ongoing reception of data. This may be done according to several embodiments of the invention. The analog test signal may be inserted during a cyclic prefix of the OFDM signal, outside the frequency range of the traffic signal or on empty resource elements of the traffic signal. The analog test signal may also be inserted on a resource element used by another receiver or the current receiver.
Embodiments of the invention include those where the modified signal is extracted in the analog or in the digital domain. In the digital domain it may also be extracted prior or after a fast Fourier transform.
Embodiments of the invention also include a receiver with logic adapted to implement the method summarized above containing a front end receiver unit, a signal generator, an addition unit, analog blocks and a signal analyzer.
In many cases the test signal based methods provide better performance, compared to pilot-based methods (pilot from the air), because the test signal is not affected by the channel and may have higher power to overcome the noise in the receiver. Also, the test signal may be arbitrarily designed, and thus it eases the estimation of analog properties, since the standard-compatible pilot is generally designed for other purposes, e.g., in favour of channel estimation etc. It is thus beneficial for receiver to use test signal based methods. However the drawback with the use of a test signal inserted into the analog blocks is that the test signal may not without caution be used while receiving a traffic signal or else the test signal will corrupt the traffic signal, and vice versa. Conventional OFDM receivers that insert a test signal must therefore choose during a time period to either insert a test signal to enable estimation, or to not insert a test signal to be able to receive its traffic signal. A conventional receiver thus cannot support both continuous reception of data from the traffic signal, and simultaneous estimation of analog properties. This may be a serious drawback in many scenarios, and an advantage of the invention is that it overcomes this limitation.
The invention enables calibration of OFDM receiver with test signal during continuous reception of data.
The invention will now be described more fully below with reference to the drawings, in which
An analog test signal 215 is added in an addition unit 210 to the traffic signal 205 to form a combined test and traffic signal 220. The analog test signal 215 is added simultaneously as the receiver is receiving data on the traffic signal 205. The combined test and traffic signal 220 is inserted into the analog block 225 to measure the properties of the analog block 225, as will be discussed below.
The properties of the analog block 225 transforms the combined test and traffic signal 220 into a modified combined test and traffic signal 230. The modified combined test and traffic signal 230 is extracted by a signal analyzer 250. The modified combined test and traffic signal 230 may be extracted as an analog signal after the analog block, or as a digitized signal after the ADC 235 or as a frequency domain signal after the FFT unit 240. The signal analyzer analyzes the modified combined test and traffic signal 230 and estimates the properties of the analog block 225.
The analog test signal 215 is generated by a signal generator 260. The signal generator receives information about at which time point, and also information where in the frequency domain, on which sub-carrier frequencies the analog test signal shall be added. This information is received from a controller 255. Time point is here defined as a start time and duration of the analog test signal.
The controller receives information from the signal analyzer about the properties of the analog block. The controller may modify the properties of the analog block 225 by sending an analog modification signal 265 to the analog block. The properties that can be modified include gain, phase, and transfer function of blocks as well as imbalance between gain, phase, and transfer function of blocks. The controller may also provide information to compensate the modified combined test and traffic signal for the properties of the analog block in a digital compensation unit 245. The controller sends in that case a compensation signal 270 to the digital compensation unit 245. The digital compensation unit may implement any of the known methods in the art to compensate the digital signal, including DC-compensation, IQ-imbalance compensation, and common phase error correction.
To ensure that the receiver 200 still can decode the data in the traffic signal 205 that is sent to the UE the signal generator 260 inserts the analog test signal in a way that it interferes as little as possible with that data. Several embodiments of the invention of how the analog test signal is generated will be discussed below.
To avoid generating inter carrier interference ICI, and to enable analysis after the FFT, it is preferred if the analog test signal is essentially a sum of one or more tones that aligns with frequencies of FFT-bins. But it is understood that a small leakage into neighboring subcarriers will also work.
In some embodiments the analog test signal 215 is inserted only within a cyclic prefix, CP, or else it might corrupt the used part of the OFDM symbol. To increase the signal to noise ratio of the analog test signal the traffic signal 205 may during the period of the CP be blocked at a point in the processing chain before the point of insertion. Note that this does not mean that the traffic signal 205 cannot be received, because the traffic signal is still received during the used part of the OFDM symbol. A CP is used in OFDM systems to protect transmitted symbols from inter symbol interference, ISI, due to time dispersion in the radio channel, and analog and digital filters. After ADC the CP is typically discarded before the FFT is applied. This means that part of the received CP may be discarded already in the analog signal path and replaced with the analog test signal.
In this case it might be necessary to keep a portion of the last part of the CP to protect against the dispersion of the analog and digital filters. The length of portion to keep depends on the specifics of the used filters. In practice, temporarily switching off the input signal in favor of the analog test signal also need to account for the presence of strong interfering signals, in particular if the desired signal is weak. The dispersion introduced by filters also applies to interfering signals. Additional margins in time may therefore be required in such scenarios. In case some interference affects the next symbol after the CP which has been used for the analog test signal it is also possible to account for the lower quality of the symbol in the decoding process.
In some embodiments the analog test signal is inserted just outside the frequency range of the traffic signal.
In an OFDM system there is to enable realistic filters to be used in the receiver typically unused frequency space at both sides of the band of used subcarriers for a given channel. In for example LTE 20 MHz mode the guard band on each side is about 1 MHz, which corresponds to about 66 subcarriers. This is illustrated in
A 0 indicates that the resource element currently is empty, i.e. no information is sent from the BS on that resource element to any UE. Resource elements indicated with 1, 2 or 3 indicates that those resource elements contain data aimed for three different UEs.
In some embodiments the analog test signal may be inserted on an empty resource element. In LTE slot 0 and slot 5 comprises synchronization elements. The resource elements above the synchronization elements are always empty in slot 0 and 5. This is illustrated in the upper right corner of
The analog test signal may be inserted on one or several resource elements.
In a system like LTE different users may be allocated different resource elements on one OFDM symbol. Some resource elements may also be common to several users, but might not always be needed for every user. In a fourth embodiment of the invention it is thus possible to superimpose the analog test signal on resource elements not currently used or needed for the given user without interfering with the data for that user. For LTE this include Physical Downlink Shared Channel PDSCH in which some resource elements are assigned to at least one different user, or PDCCH in which some resource elements are for a different set of users, or synchronization elements which might not be needed for a user once synchronization is complete. For some types of resource elements the allocation is given by control signaling and may thus be known in advance for several OFDM symbols. When the analog test signal is inserted on already occupied resource elements the analog test signal is interfered by the data on the superimposed resource elements. Without additional steps this would typically lead to too noisy test signal. Two means to improve the Signal to Noise Ratio, SNR, of the analog test signal is to use higher power on the analog test signal and to average over several sub carriers. Averaging can be done either over time, or over frequency or a combination thereof. Typically it will be possible without negative effect on the analog blocks to use higher power on the analog test signal than the normal power on the resource elements because the power of the analog test signal should still be small compared to whole total power. To have better control over the SNR of the analog test signal the power of the analog test signal may also depend on the estimated power of one or more other received resource elements.
The analog test signal may be superimposed on resource elements assigned to the given UE. In case the approximate response of the analog test signal is known it may be subtracted from the affected resource elements. If the response of the analog test signal cannot be estimated then the affected resource elements may be given low reliability in the further decoding process, which would lead to small performance loss. With this method the SNR of the analog test signal may be further improved by subtracting the known data transmitted on the resource element after decoding.
For several embodiments it is preferred that the start time and stopping time of the analog test signal do not lie within the FFT window because that would cause inter carrier interference on all subcarriers. In other words, the analog test signal should preferably start and stop somewhere in CPs which are discarded before the FFT, but the duration of analog the test signal may span one or more OFDM symbols.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10171021.8 | Jul 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/62834 | 7/26/2011 | WO | 00 | 4/10/2013 |