The present application is a non-provisional patent application claiming priority to European Patent Application No. EP 19157207.2, filed Feb. 14, 2019, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present disclosure relates to transmitter-receiver leakage suppression in integrated radar systems, and is more particularly concerned with integrated millimeter-wave frequency-modulated continuous wave radar systems.
Millimeter-wave radar systems are of growing interest as scaling of the radio frequency provides power-efficient broadband radar circuits. The key interest in such broadband radar circuits is that fine radar range resolution can be obtained.
However, in radar systems, there is a leakage signal path, or a spillover path, between the transmitter antenna and the receiver antenna. In a frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar, the leakage signal, or spillover, gets correlated with the frequency modulated (FM) reference signal in the receiver, resulting in a beat frequency at intermediate frequency (IF). Delays in the transmit circuit, due to the power amplifier (PA), and delays in the receive circuit, due to the low-noise amplifier (LNA), can shift the leakage-beat into the passband of the receiver thereby saturating the receiver and producing ghost targets. This effect is exacerbated in millimeter-wave radar systems, especially when both the transmitter and receiver antennas are integrated on a single chip or off-chip on the same substrate.
The effect of leakage at millimeter-wave frequencies becomes more pronounced due to a greater path loss that results in reduced signal power from targets. Therefore, leakage can create fake targets or saturate the high-gain receiver.
The article by entitled “Short-Range Leakage Cancellation in FMCW Radar Transceivers Using an Artificial On-Chip Target” by Alexander Melzer, Alexander Onic, Florian Starzer and Mario Heumer, referred to hereinafter as Melzer et al. (IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing, Vol. 9, No. 8, pages 1650 to 1660, December 2015) and US-A-2017/0153318 disclose the use of an artificial on-chip target to mitigate short-range leakage in FMCW radar systems based on the cross-correlation properties of the residual phase noise in the intermediate frequency (IF) domain. The artificial on-chip target comprises a delay line having a significantly smaller delay than the round-trip delay time of the short-range leakage. A phase-locked loop is used to feed a chirp signal to both the artificial on-chip target and to a transmit channel. Reflections or echoes received from targets illuminated by the transmit channel are processed in isolation to the artificial on-chip target, the latter not being perturbed by other reflections and is only limited by the intrinsic noise. A leakage canceller is provided in the channel containing signals from the artificial on-chip target after it has been down-converted, the leakage canceller extracting decorrelated phase noise from an intermediate frequency (IF) signal of the artificial on-chip target to generate a cancellation signal. The cancellation signal is subtracted from the received radar signal in baseband.
Whilst both Melzer et al. and US-A-2017/0153318 are directed to addressing short range leakage, the solution they provide is complex and has a power cost because two receivers, as well as associated circuitry, are required. Moreover, the cancellation is performed in IF and no delay is implemented in the reference line or path branching off from the transmit signal path.
In the article entitled “Leakage Mitigation and Internal Delay Compensation in FMCW Radar for Small Drone Detection” by Junhyeong Park, Seungwoon Park and Seong-Ook Park, hereinafter referred to as Park et al. (School of Electrical Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon 34141, Republic of Korea), an FMCW radar system is described in which a down-conversion technique addresses phase noise of the leakage (which deteriorates the dynamic range) and internal delay (which decreases the maximum detectable range). In the disclosed down-conversion technique, there are two steps, namely, deramping or mixing and then down-converting the exact IF beat frequency of the leakage. The exact IF beat frequency and the exact constant phase are used to reduce the phase noise skirt and hence decrease the noise floor. Internal delay is compensated thereby preventing the reduction of the maximum detectable range, and after delay cancellation, the leakage can then be represented as a DC value.
However, the delay cancellation is performed in the frequency domain and the frequency of the local oscillator used changes constantly. As a result, the constant change may be tracked to be able to perform the cancellation calculation at any time. Moreover, leakage compensation tends to be sensitive to phase noise. Furthermore, as there are effectively two down-conversion steps, increasing the implementation complexity with additional costs in power consumption and the number of components.
The present disclosure may provide a leakage cancellation in integrated FMCW radar systems which is straightforward to implement.
In accordance with one aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a front-end for a radar system comprising:
Such a front-end can fully compensate for a leakage path between the transmit antenna and the receive antenna and is particularly effective in frequency-modulated continuous wave radar systems.
In an embodiment, the compensation unit is further configured for compensating for delay in leakage propagation time due to at least the leakage between the transmit path and the receive path.
In this way, the delay in the leakage path can be fully compensated for in the intermediate frequency signal prior to further processing irrespective of whether a target is within the field-of-view of the radar system. This has the effect of removing the effect of leakage and phase noise at the intermediate frequency.
In addition, it is also possible to compensate for delays due to the power amplifier in the transmit path and the low-noise amplifier in the receive path as well as buffering in the reference path.
The front-end further comprises a control loop configured for determining maximum power at a modulating waveform frequency and for generating a corresponding adaptive delay due to that maximum power, the control loop including a power detector configured for determining the maximum power and a controller for adjusting the compensation unit in accordance with the determined maximum power.
Such a control loop optimizes leakage compensation based on the modulating waveform frequency so that an adaptive delay can be provided to compensate for maximum power thereat.
In an embodiment, the control loop is configured to be connected between the compensation unit and the output from the leakage suppression filter, the compensation in the reference path comprising a fixed delay and an adaptive delay.
In another embodiment, the front-end further comprises a delay unit in the transmit path, the delay unit being configured for applying a transmit delay to the at least one transmit signal, and wherein the control loop is configured to be connected between the compensation unit and the output from the mixer, the compensation in the reference path comprising a fixed delay, and the transmit delay corresponding to the adaptive delay.
In an embodiment, the compensation unit may comprise a programmable delay.
By having a programmable delay, the delay from the front-end can be compensated.
In an embodiment, compensation unit comprises a circuit including inverters and multiplexers.
In an embodiment, the leakage suppression filter is configured to suppress DC offsets and is configured to be combined with the mixer. The leakage suppression filter may be configured as a high pass filter.
In an embodiment, wherein the DC suppression filter comprises a voltage regulation loop.
In some embodiments, the front-end is implemented on a chip.
In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a radar system comprising a front-end as described above.
In some embodiments, the radar system comprises a frequency-modulated continuous wave radar system.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a method of canceling transmitter leakage in a radar system, the method comprising:
The method may further include the step of compensating for delay due to at least leakage propagation time between the transmit path and the receive path.
While the present disclosure also provides a method which can compensate for delay due to leakage propagation time between the transmit path and the receive path irrespective of whether a target is in the field-of-view of the system, it is also possible to apply compensation for delays due to the power amplifier in the transmit path and the low-noise amplifier in the receive path as well as buffering in the reference path.
For a better understanding of the present disclosure, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings.
The present disclosure will be described with respect to particular embodiments and with reference to certain drawings but the disclosure is not limited thereto. The drawings described are only schematic and are non-limiting. In the drawings, the size of some of the elements may be exaggerated and not drawn on scale for illustrative purposes.
The front-end 100 is also configured to receive reflected radar signals or echoes at a receive antenna 150, the received signals or echoes being amplified by a low-noise amplifier (LNA) 160 to generate amplified received signals or echoes 165 which are then mixed in a mixer 170 with a reference chirp or signal 135 having a delay, τBUFFER, due the buffer 130. The mixer 170 mixes the amplified received signals or echoes 165 with the reference chirp or signal 135 and outputs a signal 175 at intermediate frequency (IF) for further processing (not shown).
A leakage path 180 is present between the transmit antenna 140 and the receive antenna 150 and which comprises a delay due to the power amplifier 120, τPA, a delay due to the leakage, τLeakage, and a delay due to the LNA 160, τLNA. The signal in the leakage path is correlated with the reference signal 135 in the mixer 170 resulting in a beat frequency at IF in the IF signal 175.
The leakage path 180 is present irrespective of whether a target is within the field-of-view of the front-end 100 of a radar system and reflects the transmit signal from the transmit antenna as a reflected signal to the receive antenna 150. Leakage compensation may still be made at any time the transmit antenna 140 and the receive antenna 150 are operating to allow or compensate for any leakage between the transmit antenna and the receive antenna.
τPA+τLeakage+τLNA−τBUFFER
Delays due to the PA 120 and the LNA 160 shift the leakage-beat into the passband of the receiver as shown in
In accordance with the present disclosure, the transmitter-leakage comprises a two-step approach. In a first step, the delays of the PA, LNA, and leakage are compensated in the receive path which results in a DC component at IF. In a second step, the DC component is filtered out using a leakage suppression filter. This leakage suppression filter includes DC-offset suppression circuitry and may also have high-pass filter characteristics (as described in more detail below with reference to
The front-end 300A is also configured to receive reflected radar signals or reflections at a receive antenna 350, the received signals or reflections being amplified by a LNA 360 to generate amplified received signals or reflections 365 before being mixed in a mixer 370 with a reference signal. The reflected radar signals or reflections also include leakage signals from the transmit antenna 340.
As described above with reference to
In accordance with the first embodiment of the present disclosure, the reference signal comprises a compensated signal 390a which has a delay compensating for the delay due to the power amplifier 320, τPA, a delay due to the leakage 380, τLeakage, an a delay due to the LNA 360, τLNA, as described above. The compensated signal 390a is generated in a compensation unit 390 from output 335 from the buffer 330 and compensates for all delays in the front-end. The compensating delay, τcomp, can be expressed as:
τcomp=τPA+τLeakageτLNA−τBUFFER
This is the same as the offset between the reference chirp 200 and the transmit leakage 210 as described above with reference to
The FMCW chirp 310 may be expressed as:
A1 cos(ωct+f(t)+∅n(t))
where ωc is the carrier frequency,
f(t) is the modulating signal generating the frequency chirp, and
∅n(t) is the phase noise.
The amplified received signal (RF signal) 365 received at the mixer 370 can be expressed as:
A2 cos(ωc(t−τtotal)+f(t−τtotal)+∅n(t−τtotal))+NPA,LNA
where the total delay, τtotal, can be expressed as:
τtotal=τLNA+τPA+τleakage
and NPA,LNA is excess thermal noise from the PA 320 and the LNA 360.
The delay compensated signal 390a as applied as the reference signal to the mixer 370 can be expressed as:
A3 cos(ωc(t−τref)+f(t−τref)+∅n(t−τref))+NBUFFER
where the delay to the reference signal, τref, can be expressed as:
τref=τcomp+τbuffer
and NBUFFER is the excess thermal noise from the buffer 330.
After multiplying the amplified received signal (RF signal) and the delay compensated reference signal 390a in the mixer 370 (together with optional low-pass filtering (not shown in
Therefore, the compensated signal 390a can be used to compensate for the delay in the amplified received signal 365, and, also to compensate for phase noise due to the PA 320 and the LNA 360.
The signal in the leakage path 380 is correlated with the reference signal 390a in the mixer 370 resulting an output signal 375 which has a DC component at IF as described below with reference to
In accordance with the present disclosure, the DC component is then filtered from the output signal 375 from the mixer 370 in a leakage suppression filter 395 to provide an output signal 395a at IF in which the DC component has been removed.
The front-end as described with reference to
τref=τtotal
where fbeat, in this embodiment, is shifted to DC and subsequently removed by DC-offset cancellation implemented in the leakage suppression filter 395.
However, this is not always achievable without adaptive estimation.
The front-end 300A is configured to receive an FMCW chirp 310 as described above with reference to
The front-end 300A is also configured to receive reflected radar signals at a receive antenna 350, the received reflected radar signals being amplified by a LNA 360 to generate amplified received signals or reflections 365 before being mixed in a mixer 370 with a reference signal. The reflected radar signals or reflections include leakage signals from the transmit antenna 340.
A leakage path 380 is present between the transmit antenna 340 and the receive antenna 350 and which comprises a delay due to the power amplifier 320, τPA, a delay due to the propagation path of the leakage 380, τLeakage, and a delay due to the LNA 360, τLNA.
As described above with reference to
However, in this embodiment:
τcomp<τtotal
and
fbeat>framp
where the IF beat frequency, fbeat, is greater than the frequency of a modulating sawtooth or triangular waveform, framp. In this case, the beat frequency comprises a continuous tone at IF with a power component at fbeat. Although a modulating sawtooth or triangular waveform is described, other waveforms may be implemented.
The front-end 300B therefore comprises a control loop including a power detector 400B and a controller 410. The power detector 400B is connected to receive output IF signals 395a from the leakage suppression filter 395 and which is configured for detecting the power component in the IF at fbeat. The controller 410 is provided for receiving an output signal from the power detector 400B and for generating an adaptive delay for the compensation unit 390.
Here, the total compensation delay, τref_path, can be expressed as:
τref_path=τcomp_fixed+τcomp_adapt
where τcomp_fixed corresponds to a fixed delay used to bring the power component at framp to DC and fcomp_adapt corresponds to an adaptive delay used to shift fbeat to framp. τcomp_adapt is determined in accordance with the detected power component in the IF at framp.
The adaptive delay, τcomp_adapt, corresponds to the delay used to shift the power component in the IF at fbeat to framp In effect, the power detector 400B determines a maximum power component at framp together with a corresponding delay, τcomp_adapt. By determining the power component at one frequency point, such as, framp, the adaptive delay, τcomp_adapt, can also be determined.
The fixed delay, τcomp_fixed, is determined mathematically based on the bandwidth of the FMCW chirp 310 and framp. The implementation of the mathematical determination of the fixed delay, τcomp_fixed, may be a standardized technique and, as such, will not be discussed further here. The fixed delay, τcomp_fixed, once determined, is pre-programmed on a radar chip for an FMCW radar system.
In this embodiment:
τcomp<τtotal
and
fbeat<framp
As the beat frequency, fbeat, is less than framp, the beat signal will not be able to complete a cycle within one modulation period. Therefore, the low frequency beat signal is gated or sampled at framp. This results in a DC component and frequency components at framp and its harmonics.
As described above with reference to
τref_path=τcomp_fixed
and
τtx_path=τcomp_adapt
In a first step, the delay is varied so that the leakage beat falls at framp. This is done by using a narrowband power detector at framp. The delay is varied until the determined power at framp is at its maximum so that the corresponding adaptive delay, τcomp_adapt, can be determined. In a second step, the delay used to bring the leakage to DC is determined mathematically based on the FMCW chirp duration and the beat frequency. This delay is referred to as the fixed delay, τcomp_fixed.
When fbeat<framp, adding delay in the transmit path shifts the leakage beat towards framp. Adding delay in the transmit path is analogous to subtracting the delay in the reference path. Detecting peak power at framp ensures the leakage beat is shifted to the frequency framp and determines the corresponding delay, τtx_path, in the transmit path provided by the delay unit 315. The leakage beat is then shifted from framp to DC using τcomp_fixed in the reference path.
Leakage is therefore entirely canceled as both components 220 and 230 as shown in
In the embodiment of
The embodiments of the present disclosure provide a robust method for leakage suppression based on peak power detection rather than on detecting low or diminishing power levels.
In accordance with the present disclosure, the components of the front-end may be implemented on an FMCW radar chip taped out in 28 nm CMOS.
The use of increasing frequencies results in smaller wavelengths and therefore smaller antenna sizes can be implemented. These antennas can be integrated on chip, which can be cost-effective and fully integrated. Applications using detection of gestures, people, and vital signs may include broadband radar systems, and, the present disclosure enables the design of integrated broadband radar systems.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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19157207 | Feb 2019 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20030148750 | Yan | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20100159837 | Dent | Jun 2010 | A1 |
20170146646 | Nakabayashi | May 2017 | A1 |
20170153318 | Melzer et al. | Jun 2017 | A1 |
20190250246 | Murakami | Aug 2019 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2960672 | Dec 2015 | EP |
Entry |
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Park, Junhyeong, Seungwoon Park, and Seong-Ook Park. “Leakage Mitigation and Internal Delay Compensation in FMCW Radar for Small Drone Detection.” arXiv preprint arXiv:1807.06324 (2018). |
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Lin, Kaihui, Yuanxun Ethan Wang, Cheng-Keng Pao, and Yi-Chi Shih. “A Ka-band FMCW radar front-end with adaptive leakage cancellation.” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques 54, No. 12 (2006): 4041-4048. |
Visweswaran, Akshay, Kristof Vaesen, Siddhartha Sinha, Ilja Ocket, Miguel Glassee, Claude Desset, Andre Bourdoux, and Piet Wambacq. “9.4 A 145GHz FMCW-radar transceiver in 28nm CMOS.” In 2019 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference—(ISSCC), pp. 168-170. IEEE, 2019. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200264272 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |