The present invention relates to the field of data communications and more particularly relates to a transmitter employing a sigma delta modulator having a noise transfer function that is adapted to shift quantization noise outside at least one frequency band of interest.
Digital RF Processor or Digital Radio Processor (DRP™) based transceivers are also known in the art. The performance of DRP based transmitters is typically limited by the quantization noise of the digital power amplifier (DPA). DPA architectures employing large bit widths, e.g., 10, 12 or more bits, incorporating many hundreds of transistors become unfeasible due to the level of quantization noise generated. The quantization noise generated is sufficient to cause the transmitter to fail to meet the specifications of cellular or other communications standards, depending on the particular application.
Sigma delta or delta sigma modulators are known in the art. Digital sigma delta modulators are currently used in CMOS wireless SoC designs to achieve high resolution data conversion while controlling the quantization noise spectrum. Conventional sigma delta modulators typically have a high pass transfer function. In other words, they amplify the noise (or push the noise into higher frequencies) as the frequency difference from the carrier frequency increases. In DRP applications, this characteristic is undesirable. In fact, the opposite is desired in certain frequency bands wherein noise is attenuated as the frequency increases from the center frequency.
Further, conventional sigma delta modulator structures designed to achieve such noise shaping are hardware intensive, are not designed to exhibit an arbitrary noise transfer function and typically do not meet the requirements of communication standards such as typical cellular standards.
Thus, there is a need for a technique for synthesizing a sigma delta modulator to have an arbitrary noise transfer function whereby quantization noise can be shifted from one frequency band to another. There is a further need for a DRP transmitter incorporating a spectral emission shaping sigma delta modulator that is able to shape the quantization noise of the transmitter so as to avoid certain frequency bands.
The present invention provides a solution to the problems of the prior art by providing a novel and useful transmitter employing a sigma delta modulator having a noise transfer function adapted to shift quantization noise outside at least one frequency band of interest. A technique is presented to synthesize the controllers within a single-loop delta sigma modulator such that the noise transfer function can be chosen arbitrarily from a family of functions satisfying certain conditions. Using the novel modulator design technique, a polar and Cartesian transmit modulation technique is presented. A transmitter employing polar transmit modulation is presented that shapes the spectral emissions of the digitally-controlled power amplifier such that they are significantly and sufficiently attenuated in one or more desired frequency bands. Similarly, a transmitter employing Cartesian transmit modulation is presented that shapes the spectral emissions of a hybrid power amplifier such that they are significantly and sufficiently attenuated in one or more desired frequency bands. This technique enables the designer to use virtually unfiltered amplitude modulation and create desired noise shaping using a digital sigma delta modulator.
Assuming a linear model (additive, signal independent uniform white quantization noise), the invention provides a technique to synthesize the controllers within a single-loop delta sigma modulator such that the noise transfer function can be chosen arbitrarily from a family of functions satisfying certain conditions.
In the case of a polar transmitter, the present invention is operative to shape the quantization noise through sigma delta modulation of the amplitude (i.e. the magnitude) so as to avoid one or more restricted bands wherein transmission noise must be kept below a specified level. Note that the noise is not necessarily made flat but rather noise is increased in certain places and reduced other in order to meet cellular or other communication standards requirements. Thus, the invention does not eliminate quantization noise but rather shifts it out of some bands and into others in accordance with the particular communication standard.
Note that some aspects of the invention described herein may be constructed as software objects that are executed in embedded devices as firmware, software objects that are executed as part of a software application on either an embedded or non-embedded computer system such as a digital signal processor (DSP), microcomputer, minicomputer, microprocessor, etc. running a real-time operating system such as WinCE, Symbian, OSE, Embedded LINUX, etc. or non-real time operating system such as Windows, UNIX, LINUX, etc., or as soft core realized HDL circuits embodied in an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) or Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), or as functionally equivalent discrete hardware components.
There is thus provided in accordance with the invention, a polar transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an amplitude information signal, a second input for receiving an angle information signal, a frequency synthesizer coupled to the second input and operative to generate an angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the angle information signal, a sigma delta modulator having an associated noise transfer function, the sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered amplitude signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the noise transfer function, an amplifier coupled to the frequency synthesizer and the sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to control the amplitude of the angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the dithered amplitude signal and wherein quantization noise exhibited by the amplifier is significantly attenuated at one or more selected frequencies.
There is also provided in accordance with the invention, a radio frequency (RF) polar transmitter comprising a first digital input for receiving an amplitude control word signal, a second digital input for receiving a frequency control word signal, a frequency synthesizer coupled to the second digital input and operative to generate a phase modulated carrier signal in accordance with the frequency control word signal, a sigma delta modulator having an associated noise transfer function, the sigma delta modulator coupled to the first digital input and operative to generate a dithered amplitude control signal and to selectively attenuate the noise transfer function, a digitally controlled amplifier comprising a plurality of discrete levels of amplitude and coupled to the frequency synthesizer and the sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to control the amplitude of the phase modulated carrier signal in accordance with the dithered amplitude control signal and wherein quantization noise exhibited by the amplifier is significantly attenuated at one or more selected frequencies.
There is further provided in accordance with the invention, a method of polar modulation, the method comprising the steps of receiving an amplitude information signal, receiving an angle information signal, generating an angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the angle information signal, inputting the angle modulated carrier signal to an amplifier having a plurality of discrete output amplitude levels, controlling the amplitude of the output of the amplifier in accordance with the amplitude information signal and wherein the step of controlling provides selective attenuation of a noise transfer function resulting in substantial attenuation of quantization noise exhibited by the amplifier at one or more selected frequencies.
There is also provided in accordance with the invention, a quadrature transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an in-phase information signal, a second input for receiving a quadrature information signal, a first sigma delta modulator having an associated first noise transfer function, the first sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered in-phase signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the first noise transfer function, a second sigma delta modulator having an associated second noise transfer function, the second sigma delta modulator coupled to the second input and operative to generate a dithered quadrature signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the second noise transfer function, an amplifier coupled to the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to combine the output of the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator to yield a combined radio frequency output signal and wherein quantization noise exhibited by the amplifier is significantly attenuated at one or more selected frequencies.
There is further provided in accordance with the invention, a quadrature transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an I+Q information signal, a second input for receiving a I−Q information signal, a first sigma delta modulator having an associated first noise transfer function, the first sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered I+Q signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the first noise transfer function, a second sigma delta modulator having an associated second noise transfer function, the second sigma delta modulator coupled to the second input and operative to generate a dithered I−Q signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the second noise transfer function, an amplifier coupled to the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to combine the output of the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator to yield a combined radio frequency (RF) output signal and wherein quantization noise exhibited by the amplifier is significantly attenuated at one or more selected frequencies.
There is also provided in accordance with the invention, a hybrid Cartesian/polar transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an in-phase information signal, a second input for receiving a quadrature information signal, a first sigma delta modulator having an associated first noise transfer function, the first sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered in-phase signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the first noise transfer function, a second sigma delta modulator having an associated second noise transfer function, the second sigma delta modulator coupled to the second input and operative to generate a dithered quadrature signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the second noise transfer function, means for generating an amplitude information signal and an angle information signal from the the output of the first sigma delta modulator and the output of the second sigma delta modulator, a frequency synthesizer operative to generate an angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the angle information signal, a hybrid amplifier comprising a plurality of discrete levels of amplitude and coupled to the frequency synthesizer, the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator, the hybrid amplifier operative to dynamically switch between a polar operation and a Cartesian operation depending on the output of the first sigma delta modulator and to control the amplitude of the angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the amplitude information signal and wherein the selective attenuation of the noise transfer functions of the first sigma delta modulator and the second sigma delta modulator is operative to substantially reduce quantization noise of the hybrid amplifier at one or more selected frequencies.
There is further provided in accordance with the invention, a polar transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an amplitude information signal, a second input for receiving an angle information signal, a frequency synthesizer coupled to the second input and operative to generate an angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the angle information signal, a sigma delta modulator having an associated noise transfer function, the sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered amplitude signal therefrom and to encode data such that quantization noise exhibited by an amplifier is distributed outside at least one frequency band of interest, the sigma delta modulator comprising a programmable order low pass sigma delta stage, a programmable order band pass sigma delta stage, or any combination thereof, a comb filter, a combiner operative to combine the output of the programmable order low pass sigma delta stage, the programmable order band pass sigma delta stage and the comb filter and the amplifier comprising a plurality of discrete levels of amplitude and adapted to receive the output of the frequency synthesizer and the sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to control the amplitude of the angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the output of the sigma delta modulator.
There is also provided in accordance with the invention, a polar transmitter comprising a first input for receiving an amplitude information signal, a second input for receiving an angle information signal, a frequency synthesizer coupled to the second input and operative to generate an angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the angle information signal, a MASH type sigma delta modulator having an associated noise transfer function comprising one or more notches for providing significant attenuation at one or more selected frequencies, the sigma delta modulator coupled to the first input and operative to generate a dithered amplitude signal therefrom and to selectively attenuate the noise transfer function, the sigma delta modulator comprising at least one sigma delta stage, a comb filter, a combiner operative to combine the output of the at least one sigma delta stage and the comb filter and an amplifier comprising a plurality of discrete levels of amplitude and coupled to the frequency synthesizer and the sigma delta modulator, the amplifier operative to control the amplitude of the angle modulated carrier signal in accordance with the dithered amplitude signal.
The invention is herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following notation is used throughout this document.
The present invention provides a solution to the problems of the prior art by providing a novel and useful transmitter employing a sigma delta modulator having a noise transfer function adapted to shift quantization noise outside at least one frequency band of interest. A technique is presented to synthesize the controllers within a single-loop delta sigma modulator such that the noise transfer function can be chosen arbitrarily from a family of functions satisfying certain conditions. Using the novel modulator design technique, a polar and Cartesian transmit modulation technique is presented. A transmitter employing polar transmit modulation is presented that shapes the spectral emissions of the digitally-controlled power amplifier such that they are significantly and sufficiently attenuated in one or more desired frequency bands. Similarly, a transmitter employing Cartesian transmit modulation is presented that shapes the spectral emissions of a hybrid power amplifier such that they are significantly and sufficiently attenuated in one or more desired frequency bands. This technique enables the designer to use virtually “unfiltered” (i.e. by continuous-time filtering) amplitude modulation and create desired noise shaping using a digital sigma delta modulator.
The sigma delta modulator circuit architecture can be used in a polar modulator in an ADPLL within a digital radio processor. To aid in understanding the principles of the present invention, the description of the spectral emission shaping sigma delta modulator is provided, in one example embodiment, in the context of an all digital PLL (ADPLL) based RF transmitter. An ADPLL suitable for use in the present invention is described in more detail in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,791,422 and 6,809,598 and U.S. application Ser. No. 11/203,019, filed Aug. 11, 2005, entitled “Hybrid Polar/Cartesian Digital Modulator”, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
The invention is intended for use in a radio transmitter and transceiver but can be used in other applications as well. It is appreciated by one skilled in the art that the spectral emission shaping sigma delta modulator scheme of the present invention is not limited for use with any particular communication standard (wireless or otherwise) can be adapted for use with numerous wireless (or wired) communications standards such as EDGE, extended data rate Bluetooth, WCDMA, Wireless LAN (WLAN), Ultra Wideband (UWB), coaxial cable, radar, optical, etc. Further, the invention is not limited for use with a specific modulation scheme but is applicable to other complex amplitude modulation schemes as well.
Note that throughout this document, the term communications device is defined as any apparatus or mechanism adapted to transmit, receive or transmit and receive data through a medium. The communications device may be adapted to communicate over any suitable medium such as RF, wireless, infrared, optical, wired, microwave, etc. In the case of wireless communications, the communications device may comprise an RF transmitter, RF receiver, RF transceiver or any combination thereof. In addition, the terms sigma delta (ΣΔ) and delta sigma (ΔΣ) are used interchangeably and are intended to
Assuming a linear model (i.e. additive, signal independent uniform white quantization noise), the present invention provides a technique to synthesize the controllers within a single-loop Delta Sigma (ΔΣ) modulator such that the noise transfer function can be picked arbitrarily from a family of functions satisfying certain conditions.
Delta sigma (ΔΣ) modulators have become basic building blocks in many fields in electronics (e.g., analog to digital and digital to analog converters, DC to DC converters). The concept of modulating a high frequency waveform with a low number of bits, while opting to shape the quantization noise away from the signal lends itself to low current, mid frequency and high resolution applications. Determining the spectrum of the noise depends on the input signal and is a difficult task due to the presence of a nonlinear quantizer in the feedback loop. Under the premise of a uniform, signal independent and additive white quantization noise (henceforth “the linear model”) the system can easily be analyzed with linear system tools. Several works provide insight into the moments and spectra of the quantization noise under either a DC or sinusoidal input without the use of a signal-independent, white noise assumption for both single-loop as well as multi-loop ΔΣ modulators.
The linear model provides an approximation of the modulator behavior to signal excitations and output noise spectrum. This approximation has been shown to be quite good for several cases and very poor for others (e.g. DC). Several conditions with which the linear model approximation provides good results include:
1) The quantizer does not overload;
2) The quantizer has a large number of levels;
3) The bin width or distance between levels is small; and
4) The probability distribution of pairs of input samples is given by a smooth probability density function (PDF).
In most oversampled ΔΣ ADCs these assumptions are not likely to hold since usually a 1-bit (i.e. 2-level) quantizer is used, the bin width is not small and the quantizer is likely to overload. In other applications such as high-rate oversampled DACs using a multiple bit quantizers the assumptions may hold and the linear model may provide significant insight into the loop's behavior.
The invention assumes the linear model as the basis for the following analyses and provides a synthesis technique through which single-loop ΔΣ modulators with arbitrary noise transfer functions (NTF) can be synthesized.
Following is a brief outline of this work. Section 1.2 outlines the problem as well as the various conditions a solution (synthesis procedure) must meet. Section 1.3 shows the underlying mathematical foundations for the synthesis procedure in Section 1.4. A theorem is proven whereby the overall noise energy out of a ΔΣ modulator satisfying several conditions is always greater than or equal to the unmodulated noise energy. A sufficient no-overloading condition for such systems through non-linear analysis is provided. A numerical example is shown of an application of the synthesis procedure along with a comparison of the resultant modulator to a standard 4th order ΔΣ modulator. Also described is a simulation of a communications system employing the modulator presented herein and a modified 4th order modulator. The results are compared against well-known theoretical MSE results.
A block diagram illustrating a linear model of a single loop general ΔΣ modulator is shown in
We assume that the quantizer 16 can be modeled as a uniform, signal independent and i.i.d additive noise source and is distributed n(k)˜U(−Δ/2,Δ/2). Where Δ is the quantizer step size.
The signal and noise transfer functions of such a system are given by:
Where Y(z), X(z) and N(z) are the z-transforms of y(k), x(k) and n(k) respectively.
Assuming that the controllers can be represented as a quotient of polynomials (of z−1):
We wish to synthesize a system {W(z),Q(z), P(z),R(z)} that satisfies the following conditions:
Where Bd(z) and Ad(z) are arbitrary polynomials of z−1 and the desired NTF is a BIBO stable and causal system.
In this section, the underlying equations for the synthesis procedure in Section 1.4 are derived, following the conditions outlined in Section 1.2.
Substituting (3) and (4) into (1) and (2), we obtain:
Following (5):
Equating the numerator and denominator we obtain:
R(z)Q(z)=Bd(z) (10)
W(z)P(z)=Ad(z)−Bd(z) (11)
For the system of
Proof: setting n(k)=0, since A is LTI and causal:
y(0)=hA(0)[x(0)−z(0)] (12)
Where hA(0) is the impulse response of A at the 0th sampling instance. Since B is LTI and causal:
z(0)=hB(0)y(0) (13)
Where hB(0) is the impulse response of B at the 0th sampling instance. Combining (12) and (13), we obtain:
y(0)=hA(0)[x(0)−hB(0)y(0)] (14)
Since the output of a causal system depends only on its present and past inputs we obtain that hB(0)y(0)=0, which means that either hB(0)=0 or ∀x(0), y(0)=0=>hA(0)=0. Therefore since hA(0), hB(0) are finite:
hA(0)hB(0)=0 (15)
Since both A and B are BIBO stable and causal, their regions of convergence (ROC) are the exterior of circles, which include the unit circle. We can thus invoke the initial value theorem:
Combining (3), (4) and (16) we obtain that condition 2 can be met if and only if the following is true:
substituting (17) into (11) we obtain:
Equation (18) implies that only a certain class of arbitrary noise transfer functions can be synthesized to satisfy the causality criterion. If this is not the case, any polynomial quotient transfer function can be normalized to satisfy this condition. Without loss of generality we can write that any polynomial quotient function satisfying condition (18), can be written as:
Where: NB and NA are the numerator and denominator respective polynomial degrees, and bk, kε{1 . . . , NB} and ak, kε{1 . . . , NA} are the numerator and denominator polynomial coefficients respectively.
Assuming W(z), P(z),R(z) and Q(z) that satisfy conditions 1 and 2 have been synthesized and that the existing STF has a finite gain at frequency z=ejθ, R(z) and Q(z) can be normalized by reciprocal factors such that the NTF remains unchanged but condition 3 is met. It is easily shown that if the following transformations are made: R′(z)=αR(z) and Q′(z)=Q(z)/α then the resultant STF is STF′(z)=αSTF(z) and the resultant NTF remains unchanged NTF′(z)=NTF(z).
Since Bd(z) and Ad(z) are real functions of z, it is required to find two sets of real polynomials whose products are Bd(z) and Ad(z)−Bd(z):
R(z)Q(z)=Bd(z)
W(z)P(z)=Ad(z)−Bd(z) (20)
Although it is generally desirable to have two equally complex controllers at each product, this is not a requirement. Therefore, a set of real controllers that satisfies (20) can always be produced by splitting the complex conjugate solution pairs of Bd(z) and Ad(z)−Bd(z) among R(z), Q(z) and W(z), P(z) respectively.
This requirement essentially stipulates that given a BIBO stable NTF, the synthesis procedure must synthesize a BIBO stable STF. We aim to show that this is an inherent property of this procedure and that requirement 5 is effectively redundant.
Proof: We are given a BIBO stable and causal NTF Bd(z)/Ad(z). This means that the roots of Ad(z) are inside the unit circle:
∀p|Ad(z)|z=p=0|p|<1 (21)
Applying (21) to (9) we obtain:
∀p|{R(z)Q(z)+W(z)P(z)}|z=p=0|p|<1 (22)
Therefore the STF given by (7) is BIBO stable.
The following procedure may be used to synthesize controller functions for an arbitrary noise transfer function.
Where Mx(z) is defined as:
The modulator design technique described in Section 1 is used to construct a transmitter employing polar modulation, while shaping the emissions from the digitally-controlled power amplifier (DPA) so that they are significantly and sufficiently attenuated in several desired frequency bands. This novel technique enables the designer to use virtually unfiltered amplitude modulation and create the noise shaping using a digital ΔΣ modulator.
Delta Sigma (ΔΣ) modulators have become a common basic building block in the design of electronic systems. The techniques described in Sections 1 and 3 can be used to synthesize such modulators given any properly normalized noise transfer function. The resultant controllers satisfy a few requirements including real coefficients, causality and BIBO stability. While the common ΔΣ modulator used in analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) or digital-to-analog converters (DACs) has a typical high-pass noise shape, which assumes analog or digital filtering to filter out the unwanted noise in the high frequency areas, the technique of the present invention allows the designer to shape the noise into any shape or even make the noise shape software programmable.
A recent technique for cellular transmitters is the use of polar modulation, where instead of using quadrature (i.e. Cartesian) representation (I/Q) in a dual mixer configuration, the signal is represented by the amplitude signal r(t) and the phase signal θ(t), where:
s(t)=I(t)+jQ(t)=r(t)ejθ(t) (35)
Where s(t) is the transmitted signal in complex envelope representation, I(t) and Q(t) are the in-phase and quadrature signal components, respectively, and j=√{square root over (−1)}.
The in-phase and quadrature components feed two separate mixers, which mix the signals with a local oscillator signal with a center frequency fc at 0 and 90 degree phase shifts. The result is a radio frequency (RF) signal centered around fc, which is then amplified using a power amplifier (PA) and fed to an antenna (not shown) for RF transmission.
where Δt is the sampling period. This signal is then fed into an all-digital phased-locked loop (ADPLL) acting as a phase modulator (PM), with a carrier frequency fc. The output of the ADPLL is a constant envelope signal having a complex envelope of exp(jθ[n]). The ADPLL output voltage is given by
Where fn is the ADPLL natural frequency, fs=1/Ts is the sampling frequency and f[k] is the instantaneous frequency at sampling instance k. Equation (37) reveals that the ADPLL is analogous to a VCO but works in the discrete and digital domain. One implementation of the ADPLL employs a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO), which translates a digital frequency control word (FCW) into an analog frequency using a bank of switched varactors. A more detailed description of the ADPLL can be found in U.S. application Ser. No. 11/203,019, cited supra.
The output of this device is fed into a power amplifier with a voltage controlled power. The power control is fed by r[n] and the output voltage is given by:
νrf(t)=r[n]|n=└tf
where νrf(t) is the RF output voltage of the voltage controlled power amplifier.
An advantage of this system over the Cartesian transmitter is that while a major power drain in any wireless transmission system is its power amplifier (PA), in the polar representation, the PA can be kept in saturation (yielding high efficiency) and the saturation level is changed along with the power control. An example implementation of the digitally-controlled PA (DPA) is a class E power amplifier with a bank of gates controlling the amplitude according to a digital amplitude control word (ACW).
Another advantage of this method is that it maintains the efficiency of its analog counterpart, while the modulating signals are kept digital and so are most of the ADPLL circuits. This offers a clear migration path with process scaling and other advantages such as easy design for testing.
A drawback of this technique is that the DPA, having a finite set of amplitudes, generates quantization noise that fills up the spectrum, possibly causing unwanted disturbance. Furthermore, the digital discrete time nature of the DPA amplitude changes causes frequency replicas, similar to the spectrum of a sampled signal.
A second example embodiment, uses the DPA in a Cartesian or Cartesian/polar hybrid mode. The IQ samples directly modulate two orthogonal branches within the DPA, generating the composite RF signal. In this implementation, similar to the first example embodiment described in Section 2.2 above, the DPA quantization noise is virtually unfiltered and may fall directly onto restricted bands. The addition of a ΔΣ modulator to each branch and using the synthesis method described in Section 1 reduces the quantization noise in said bands dramatically.
A high level block diagram illustrating this architecture is shown in
Since the goal is to prevent interference to neighboring cellular bands, we consider a dual notch ΔΣ modulator as an illustrative example. Note that it is not intended that the invention be limited to the examples presented herein. It is appreciated by one skilled in the art that ΔΣ modulators of different orders and having different spectral emission shaping may be constructed using the techniques presented herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The NTF is given by:
NTF(z)=(ejθ
θ1 and θ2 are the discrete-time frequencies of the desired notch frequencies, where:
Where f1 and f2 are the analog equivalent notch frequencies and fs is the modulator sampling frequency. Please note that the four zeros in (39) are required to keep the NTF real. Collecting the terms relating to θ1 and θ2 separately in Equation (39) we obtain:
NTF(z)=(z−2−2 cos(θ1)z−1+1)(z−2−2 cos(θ2)z−1+1) (42)
Applying the synthesis procedure described supra (see Equation (5)) we start out by writing the explicit form for the numerator and denominator of the desired transfer function Bd and Ad, respectively, preceded by an expansion of Equation (42).
NTF(z)=z−4−2 (cos(θ1)+cos(θ2))z−3+(4 cos(θ2)cos(θ1)+2)z−2−2(cos(θ1)+cos(θ2 ))z−1+1 (43)
Bd=z−4−2 (cos(θ1)+cos(θ2))z−3+(4 cos(θ2)cos(θ1)+2)z−22 (cos(θ1)+cos(θ2))z−1+1 (44)
Ad=1 (45)
As can be seen, the NTF is properly normalized since:
Therefore, step number one of the synthesis procedure can be skipped. Proceeding, we need to find the roots of Bd and Ad−Bd, respectively:
Ad−Bd=−z−4+2 (cos(θ1)+cos(θ2))z3−(4 cos(θ2)cos(θ1)+2)z−2+2 (cos(θ1)+cos(θ2))z−1 (47)
z1=ejθ
z2=e−jθ
z3=ejθ
z4=e−jθ
p1=0
p2= . . .
p3=p*2
p4=α (48)
Where (•)* is the complex conjugate operator and α is a real scalar. p1 and α can be solved through the use of well-known numeric or symbolic techniques. Steps 4-8 require that zi and pi be divided among two sets of mutually exclusive sets. There are several options to accomplish this task. Tables 4 and 5 list the possibilities of this split:
To get maximum flatness in the STF we shall choose mode (2,2).
The controller functions obtained using mode (2,2) following the synthesis procedure presented supra are:
Assuming fs=1 GHz and the notch frequencies are: f1=200 MHz and f2=220 MHz, we obtain:
θ1=0.4π (51)
θ2=0.44π (52)
NTF(z)=1−0.9928z−1+2.232z−2−0.9928z−3+z−4 (53)
The resultant controllers following (49) and (50) are:
The resultant NTF is obviously given by (53) and the STF is given by:
STF=1 (56)
The goal of the simulation presented in this section is to show that the techniques presented herein provide noise reduction in the desired bands. The simulation block diagram follows closely the system presented in
The simulation was run three times for different modulators (three scenarios):
In every scenario 3.27×106 samples at a sampling frequency of fs=1 GHz were simulated. For both ΔΣ modulators, gain blocks preceded the actual modulator insuring that the output of the modulators would be limited to 8 unsigned bits.
The upper modulator represents the novel ΔΣ modulator whose transfer functions are given by A(z) and B(z) in Equations (54) and (55), respectively. The bottom modulator is a standard 4th order ΔΣ integrator based modulator, whose transfer functions are given by C(z) and D(z), respectively:
The post processing included reconstruction of the signal (e.g., multiplying the modulated magnitude information by the angle information exp{jθ(t)} and performing a long periodogram on the resultant signals. The length of the periodogram non-overlapping FFTs were N=217=131072 and the windowing function used was a Blackman-Harris type window.
The discrepancy between the shaped quantization noise spectrum shown in
It has therefore been shown above that polar modulation in conjunction with spectral noise shaping provided by appropriately configured ΔΣ modulation can be combined and implemented in digital transmitters for use in communication systems, including but not limited to, cellular, wireless, wired, cable, and other types as well. The invention is operative to combine (1) the efficiency of digital transmission as well as (2) the desired rejection in certain bands much like prior art analog transmitters.
With reference to
The DPA is described in more detail in U.S. application Ser. No. 11/115,815, filed Apr. 26, 2005, entitled “Low Noise High Isolation Transmit Buffer Gain Control Mechanism,” incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In the DPA, digital control bits represent amplitude data bits which are applied to a transistor array. Depending on the status of an amplitude bit, a corresponding transistor turns ON or OFF. The output power is proportional to the summation of the current output of each transistor turned ON. The current output of a certain transistor is proportional to the size of that transistor. Thus, the DPA can be constructed in one of the following three ways:
For complex modulation standards, such as EDGE, the DAC in the DPA has high resolution to accommodate the spectral mask and the far out noise floor specifications. Alternatively, a SAW filter may be used at the output of the digital PPA to suppress far-out spurious emissions and noise. Table 6 presents the GSM/EDGE frequency bands.
When the transmitter is on, the noise added to the receive band is preferably below −158 dBc/Hz for low band operation and −152 dBc/Hz for high band operation. The following shows the maximum and minimum frequency separation between different transmit channels and the receive bands.
(1) GSM-850:
(2) E-GSM:
(3) DCS-1800:
(4) PCS-1900:
A 10-bit DAC cannot realize all the requirements and specifications for EDGE transmission, if an analog filtering is not used, i.e. no SAW filter at the output of the PPA. To be able to achieve the higher resolution needed, thus eliminating the need for the analog filtering, a sigma delta modulator is added.
The input amplitude signal is represented by Nt number of bits which are split into an integer part having Ni bits and a fractional part having Nf bits. Ni splits into Nli and Nlf. Nlf is always 2, since it is fed to a 1× sized device. On the other hand, Nli depends on particular routing and layout of the PPA transistors. In a preferred embodiment, Nli is 8-bits, which translates to 256 transistors arranged in an array with X=32 columns and Y=8 rows.
The integer part is output to the PPA at the Nyquist sampling frequency, Fsbb. The fractional part is typically output at the RF sampling frequency Fsrf after passing through the ΣΔ modulator. The effective amplitude resolution is equivalent to Nt=Ni+Nf bits. Note that the SAM uses a hybrid PPA design.
To analyze the ΣΔ amplitude modulation (SAM) block three main components of the output spectrum need to be analyzed:
Let the step size in the 1-bit quantizer
where the number of bits N=1, the amplitude signal peak V=1. Thus Δ=2 and the quantization noise variance
A quantized signal sampled at frequency FS has all of its quantization noise power folded into the frequency band of
Assuming that the noise is random, the spectral density of the noise is given by E(f)=σe√{square root over (2 Ts)}.
For a low pass first order ΣΔ modulator the noise is shaped by the transfer function H(z)=(1−Z−1). Converting the z-domain transfer function to the frequency domain yields:
Combining the transfer function with the quantization noise spectral density, the first order sigma delta modulator noise spectral density is defined as:
For higher order ΣΔ modulators, the spectral density function of the modulator noise is given by:
where L denotes the order of the ΣΔ modulator order.
The total dynamic range for the input amplitude signal to the SAM block is 6·(Ni+Nf) dB. Thus, |N(f)| is shifted by the integer part having a dynamic range of 6·Ni dB and 3 dB is subtracted due to the conversion from DSB to SSB. The final power spectral density of the fractional part is given by:
The power spectral density of the Nyquist quantization noise of the input amplitude signal sampled using a clock running at frequency Fsbb is given by:
where the 3 dB subtracted is due to the conversion from DSB to SSB. If the signal is normalized, meaning
where STD(x) is the standard deviation of x, then Sx=−3 dB.
The zero-order hold resulting from the over sampling of the amplitude signal from Fsbb to Fsrf can be considered as a cascade of impulse sampling with a zero-order hold rectangular filter, i.e. a filter with impulse response of:
where Π(t) is the rectangular pulse waveform.
The frequency response of this filter is given by:
where zero crossings occur at f=nFsbb, n=1,2,3, . . . . The filter magnitude response |H(f)| is shown in
Point (b) is at f=2.5·Fsbb, resulting in |H(f)|=−17.9 dBc.
Considering x(t) to be the sampled amplitude signal, the impulse-sampled version of x(t) can be written in the frequency domain as follows:
By passing this signal through the zero order hold, the output becomes:
Using (70) and (65), the noise spectral density for the input signal with Nt=(Ni+Nf) number of bits oversampled from Fsbb to Fsrf is given by:
For example, consider x(t), a 16-bit sine wave having a frequency of 1.33 MHz with a sampling frequency of 26 MHz, as shown in
Point A in
The same can be done for an EDGE amplitude signal.
At point A in
In this section the structure of a programmable order MASH sigma delta used in the SAM block of the present invention is presented.
A block diagram illustrating a 1st order ΣΔ modulator is shown in
W1(z)=X(z)+R1(z)Z−1 (73)
W1(z)+E1(z)=Co1 (74)
R1(z)=W1(z)−Co1 (75)
Substituting (75) into (73) results in:
W1(z)=X(z)+(W1(z)−Co1)Z−1
W1(z)−W1(z)Z−1=X(z)−Co1Z−1
W1(z)(1−Z−1)=X(z)−Co1Z−1 (76)
From (74)→W1(z)=Co1−E1(z), substituting into (107) yields
(Co1−E1(z))(1−Z−1)=X(z)−Co1Z−1
Co1(1−Z−1)=X(z)−Co1Z−1+E1(z)(1−Z−1)
The equation for a first order low pass ΣΔ is therefore given by:
Co1=X(z)+E1(z)(1−Z−1) (77)
From (76),
Substituting in (75) results in:
Treating the 2nd stage as a 1st order ΣΔ, we can reuse the above equations. As shown in
From (77) we write:
Co2=X2(z)+E2(z)(1−Z) (80)
Substituting (78) into (77) gives
Thus, the equation for a 2nd order low pass ΣΔ is given by:
Co2−Co2Z−1+Co1Z−1=X2(z)Z−1+E2(z)(1−Z−1) (81)
Treating the 2nd and 3rd stages as 1st order ΣΔs, we can reuse the above equations. As shown in
Using (77), Co3=X3(z)+E3(z)(1−Z−1), substituting (82) results in
Therefore, the equation for a 3rd order low pass ΣΔ is given by:
Co3(1−2Z−1+Z−2)+Co1Z−2−Co2(Z−1Z−2)=X(z)Z−2+E3(z)(1−Z−1)3 (83)
Treating the 2nd, 3rd and 4th stages as 1st order ΣΔs, we can reuse the above equations. As shown in
Thus, the equation for a 4th order low pass ΣΔ is given by:
Co4(1−3Z−1+3Z−2−Z−4)+Co1Z−3+Co2(1−Z−1)Z−2+Co3Z−1(1−2Z−1+Z−2)=X(z)Z−3+E4(z)(1−Z−1)4
The performance of the SAM block output can be found by overlaying the noise density of Equation (64) on top of Equation (71). At each frequency point the power spectral density of (64) versus (71) is compared. The one with the highest value is selected to get the total theoretical power spectral density of the output of the SAM block.
This section illustrates the performance of the SAM block under different scenarios. A comparison is drawn between simulation output and the combination of Equations (64) and (71). Note that:
The following three cases are tested wherein FSbb=26 MHz, Fsrf=832 MHz is used for each case:
For the first case, the following parameters were used: Ni=10, Nf=6, Fsbb=26 MHz, Fsrf=832 MHz, SD order=4th. A spectrum plot of the relative power versus frequency for the 4th order ΣΔ modulator is shown in
For the second case, the following parameters were used: Ni=10, Nf=6, Fsbb=26 MHz, Fsrf=832 MHz, SD order=2nd. A spectrum plot of the relative power versus frequency for the 2nd order ΣΔ modulator is shown in
For the third case, the following parameters were used: Ni=8, Nf=4, Fsbb=26 MHz, Fsrf=832 MHz, SD order=4th. A spectrum plot of the relative power versus frequency for the 4th order ΣΔ modulator is shown in
The low pass sigma delta modulation yields good noise rejection in frequency regions near the carrier. Since the noise is shaped to have stronger spectral content at higher frequencies, other bands of interest may be impacted by the high level of emissions. In order to avoid such impact in the absence of a SAW filter that could suppress such out-of-band noise, the invention provides several features that are added to the basic SAM block.
A comb filter is added to the SAM block in order to suppress unwanted spurs in the output spectrum. A feed forward comb filter is normally implemented as shown in
y(n)=b0x(n)+bMx(n−M)
The transfer function of the feed forward comb filter, assuming b0=bM=0.5, is
H(z)=0.5·(1+Z−M)
Therefore, the magnitude response (gain versus frequency, wherein −π≦ω≦π) can be written as
The relationship between the location of notches in the output spectrum and the value of M is described in the following equation:
For example, for M=6, the output spectrum will have notches at the following frequencies:
As the value of M increases, additional notches will appear in the output spectrum. The drawback is that the widths of these notches decreases as the number of notches increases.
The number of integer bits used in this scenario is less than in the previous architecture by one bit. The reason is that the integer number of bits that can be used is derived from the number of transistors that can be implemented in the PPA. Since half the number of transistors must be used for the delayed version of the signal, the resolution of the signal is reduced by half, which is equivalent to one bit. The dimensions of the transistor matrix, however, remain the same. The maximum output power of the PPA is the same as the structure without the comb filter.
Equation (64) stated the power spectral density for the fractional part output from the ΣΔ:
Adding the effect of the comb filter using Equation (84) yields
Similarly, Equation (71) stated the power spectral density of the Nyquist quantization noise
Adding the effect of the comb filter using Equation (84) gives
A plot illustrating an example of the output spectrum of the SAM block with the parameters: Ni=9, Nf=7, 3rd order ΣΔ, Fsbb=26 MHz, Frf=832 MHz, and comb filter M=5, is shown in
For a single notch ΣΔ modulator the noise is shaped by the transfer function H(z)=(1−2 Cos(φ)Z−1+Z−2), where 0≦φ≦π, corresponds to the frequency range
For example, if the band-pass notch needed to be at 52 MHz and Fs=832 MHz, then
Converting the z-domain transfer function to the frequency domain yields:
H(ω)=(1−2 Cos(φ)e−jωT
Therefore,
|H(ω)|=|1−2 Cos(φ)e−jωT
For a double notch ΣΔ modulator the noise is shaped by the transfer function H(z)=(1−2 Cos(φ1)Z−1+Z−2)(1−2 Cos(φ1)Z−1+Z−2), where φ1,φ2 correspond to the locations of the two notches, as explained above.
|H(ω)|=|[2 Cos(ωTs)−2 Cos(φ1)][2 Cos(ωTs)−2 Cos(φ2)]| (87)
From Equations (85) and (87), if the low pass ΣΔ is combined with the band-pass stages and the comb filter, the power spectral density of the noise shaping output of the fractional part of the SAM block is as follows:
Where
A single notch band-pass ΣΔ modulator is shown in
Substituting Equation (88) into (89) yields:
Substituting Equation (91) into (90) results in
Where NTF(z)=1−(2−r)z−1+z−2 has a second order notch. If 0<r<4, NTF(z) can be written as
NTF(z)=1−2 cos(φ)z−1+z−2
If r=0.03843, then
If Fs=832 MHz, then the notch is located at 26 MHz.
To simplify the implementation, we shall choose r to be a negative integer power of 2.
Since this is a MASH structure, we use the single notch structure described supra to construct the double notch as shown in
From Equation (92) the output of a single stage is given by:
Since the input to the second stage is g1E1(z), then the output of the second stage is given by
The final output of Y(z) after the combiners is
If r11=r12=r13=r14=r1 and r21=r22=r23=r24=r2
then
D1(z)=D2(z)=1
Let
g1=−1
Y(z)=z−4x(z)+z−2E1(z)T1(z)−z−2E1(z)T1(z)+E2(z)T1(z)T2(z)
Y(z)=z−4x(z)+E2(z)T1(z)T2(z) (93)
where
T1(z)=1−z−1(2−r1)+z−2
T2(z)=1−z−1(2−r2)+z−2
where T1(z) and T2(z) represent two notches defined by r1 and r2, respectively.
A second example using a double notch band pass ΣΔ without a low pass ΣΔ uses the following parameters: Ni=9, Nf=7, FSbb=26 MHz, FSrf=832 MHz. Let L=0 with no low pass ΣΔ in the fractional part. Let r1=0.5 and r2=1.5 for the double notches in the band-pass sigma-delta stage. This corresponds to φ1=0.7227 rad and φ2=1.3181, which are equivalent to frequencies 0.115·FSrf and 0.21·Fsrf. For FSrf=832 MHz, the notches appear at 96 MHz and 174.5 MHz frequency distances from the carrier. Let M=3, which is the comb filter notch that appears at
A frequency spectrum plot of a double notch band pass ΣΔ for EDGE is shown in
As an illustrative example, we will derive the 1st order low pass combined with the single notch band pass as shown in
From Equation (77):
Colp=X(z)+E1(z)(1−Z−1)
and from Equation (92)
The quantization noise in the final output is shaped by both the low-pass and the band-pass transfer functions. It is appreciated by one skilled in the art that different combinations of different orders of low-pass and band-pass can be derived in a similar manner.
The following example illustrates the combination of a 2nd order low pass ΣΔ stage, comb filter stage and a single notch band pass ΣΔ stage. We set Ni=9, Nf=7, FSbb=26 MHz, FSrf=832 MHz. Let L=2, which enables a 2nd order low pass ΣΔ in the fractional part. Let r1=0.5 for a single notch in the band pass ΣΔ stage. This corresponds to φ1=0.7227 rad, which is equivalent to a frequency of 0.115·FSrf. For FSrf=832 MHz, the notch occurs at 96 MHz. Let M=3, the comb filter notch that occurs at
The output spectrum for this example EDGE system is shown in
According to Table 6 presented above, we can set the different parameters for the SAM block to meet the receive band noise floor requirements. For all cases the following default parameters are used: Ni=9, Nf=7, FSbb=104 MHz, FSrf=832 MHz.
For GSM-850, when the TX is at 824 MHz; the RX band starts 45 MHz from the TX and ends 70 MHz away. In this case a 3rd order low pass ΣΔ and a comb filter with M=6 are used. With a TX frequency of 849 MHz, the RX band starts 20 MHz away and ends the RX band ends 45 MHz away. In this case, a 2nd order low pass ΣΔ and a comb filter with M=9 are used.
For E-GSM, with a TX of 880 MHz, the RX band starts 45 MHz away and ends 80 MHz away. In this case a 3rd order low pass ΣΔ and a comb filter with M=5 are used. With the TX at 915 MHz, the RX band starts 10 MHz away and ends 45 MHz away. In this case a 2nd order low pass ΣΔ with a comb filter with M=9 are used.
For DCS-1800, with a TX channel at 1710 MHz, the RX band starts 95 MHz away and ends 170 MHz away. In this case we do not use a low pass ΣΔ but rather use a double notch band pass ΣΔ with r1=0.5 and r2=1.5 combined with a comb filter with M=3. The EDGE spectrum for this DCS-1800 band with a TX channel of 1710 MHz is shown in
For PCS-1900, with a TX channel at 1850 MHz, the RX band starts 80 MHz away and ends 140 MHz away. In this case a 1st order low pass ΣΔ, a double notch band pass ΣΔ with r1=0.5 and r2=1 and a comb filter with M=4 are used. With a TX channel at 1910 MHz, the RX band starts 20 MHz away and ends 80 MHz away. In this case a 3rd order low pass ΣΔ and a comb filter with M=5 are used.
In an alternative embodiment, the spectral emission shaping sigma delta modulator scheme of the present invention can be applied to a fully digital Cartesian (I, Q) architecture for a complex modulator. An example Cartesian modulator suitable for use with the present invention is described in detail in U.S. application Ser. No. 11/203,504, filed Aug. 11, 2005, entitled “Method And Apparatus For A Fully Digital Quadrature Modulator,” incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The complex modulator described herein can substitute for existing prior art analog quadrature modulator structures. Further, the complex modulator can also substitute for existing prior art modulators based on a digital polar architecture (r, θ).
The digital complex modulator described herein may be regarded as a complex digital-to-analog converter where the digital inputs are given in Cartesian form (i.e. I and Q representing the complex number I+jQ) and the output is an RF signal having a corresponding amplitude and phase shift. The phase shift being with respect to a reference phase dictated by the local oscillator, which is also input to the converter/modulator.
The complex modulator can be constructed using dual I and Q transistor arrays, single ended and differential outputs, and single and dual polarities. Both positive and negative values of I and Q are supported. For a single polarity (i.e. single-ended structure), negative values of I and Q are effectively generated by phase shifting the I or Q value 180 degrees. This is realized by inverting the phase of the switching signal of the transistors such that they would be turned on during the negative portion rather than the positive portion of the RF cycle.
With reference to
A block diagram illustrating an example structure of a complex digital modulator incorporating a single shared array of single-ended topology with binary weighting is shown in
Note that only a single (i.e. combined) sigma delta dithering mechanism is required at the outputs of the complex modulator logic of
Diagrams illustrating waveforms of example outputs of the array for the modulator structure of
It is intended that the appended claims cover all such features and advantages of the invention that fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention. As numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the limited number of embodiments described herein. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that all suitable variations, modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/634,658, filed Dec. 8, 2004, entitled “Synthesis Of Sigma Delta Modulators From Arbitrary Noise Transfer Functions”, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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