The present invention discloses a transmitter with an increased degree of efficiency.
A transmitter will normally comprise at least one amplifier, the efficiency of which can be enhanced by means of pulsed modulation, i.e. mapping of the modulated communication signal to the characteristics of a pulse train, such as, for example, duration, position or density. In such a transmitter, the pulses are used as input to the amplifier. The purpose of driving the amplifier with a pulse train is to make the amplifier operate more of the time at its high efficiency operating points. By using a pulse train, the power amplifier is only operated in one of two highly efficient regions; deep compression or completely off.
However, pulse modulation schemes such as the one described above will introduce undesired signal distortion caused by quantization noise when generating the pulses, which needs to be handled by means of a bandpass filter, a so called reconstruction filter. Due to the nature of the quantization noise, narrowband filters are needed in order to reconstruct the signal before transmitting. These types of filters have a large insertion loss at microwave frequencies, which leads to increased power dissipation in the filter, thus reducing the power efficiency of the transmitter.
Document WO 2006/110590 discloses a power control module which receives a dynamic power control signal, and generates a differential bias signal which is proportional to the dynamic power control signal.
As previously described, there exists a need for a solution which can suppress quantization noise in a transmitter which uses pulses as input to an amplifier in the transmitter. In particular, the solution should be able to suppress such noise in or around a Radio Frequent, RF, carrier, since that is where the noise can cause the most “damage”.
Such a solution is disclosed by means of the present solution in that it discloses a transmitter which comprises:
In the transmitter of the invention, a control signal for controlling a function of the amplifier comprises an output signal from the compensation signal generator, and an input signal to the amplifier comprises an output from said mixer or I/Q modulator.
In the transmitter, a control signal for controlling a function of the amplifier comprises an output signal from the compensation signal generator, and an input signal to the amplifier comprises an output from the said mixer or I/Q modulator having been modulated to a desired frequency. The transmitter additionally comprises a band pass filter at the output of the amplifier. In the transmitter, the control signal is at each instant chosen such that the output of the amplifier with the compensation filter is a linear copy of the input signal to the transmitter. The function in the amplifier which the control signal is used for controlling being the maximum output amplitude of the amplifier or the impedance of an output matching network comprised in the amplifier.
As will be shown in the following detailed description, the transmitter of the invention is advantageous when it comes to reducing quantization noise from the pulse encoder.
In one embodiment, the function in the amplifier which the control signal is used for controlling is maximum output amplitude of the amplifier, so called “amplitude modulation”. In one embodiment, the function in the amplifier which the control signal is used for controlling is the impedance of an output matching network comprised in the amplifier, so called “load modulation”.
In one embodiment, the transmitter of the invention additionally comprises a delay circuit for delaying the output of the mixer before it is used as input to the amplifier, in order to compensate for delays in the compensation signal generator.
In one embodiment, the transmitter of the invention additionally comprises a digital to analogue converter connected at the output of the delay circuit.
The invention will be described in more detail in the following, with reference to the appended drawings, in which
Prior to being used as input to the amplifier in the transmitter, the amplitude component A[n] of the input signal x[n], is passed through a pulse encoder which “maps” the signal onto an N-bit representation (or in a general case to some discrete signal levels) in order to use the power amplifier more efficiently. The N-bit representation is usually a 1-bit representation, and creates pulses as the output from the pulse encoder.
However, the pulse encoder also introduces an error term, commonly labelled as quantization noise, which, in the frequency domain, is primarily centred around the RF-carrier about to be transmitted.
The input signal to the transmitter, x[n]=A[n]*ejφ(n), is shown as x[n] in
In
Thus, as also stated previously, it is an objective of the invention to obtain a solution to the problem of quantization noise in the output signal of a transmitter with an amplifier which has a pulse-train as its input signal.
In the following, the invention will be described by means of three embodiments of transmitters.
The signal separator 305 delivers said amplitude component A[n] to a pulse encoder 310, i.e. a component which generates pulses as its output in response to the amplitude of the input signal A[n]. As mentioned previously, the pulse encoder 310 will also generate signal distortion in the form of so called quantization noise, so that the output signal from the encoder 310 can be written as A[n]+q[n], where q[n] represents the quantization noise.
The output signal A[n]+q[n] from the pulse encoder 310 is mixed with the phase signal ejφ(n) from the signal component separator 305 in a mixer 307, so that the output from the mixer 307, here denoted as S[n], can be written as S[n]=(A[n]+q[n])*ejφ(n), which can also be written as X[n]+q[n]*ejφ(n). The signal S[n] is then mixed in a mixer 340 with a radio frequency signal, an RF carrier, from a local oscillator, an LO, (not shown in
The modulated signal is then used as input to an amplifier 320, in order to amplify the output signal from the transmitter to a desired level. Thus, the input signal to the amplifier 320 comprises an output from the mixer 307 which has been modulated to a desired frequency. This is also the case for the other embodiments of the transmitter of the invention which will be described in this text.
According to the invention, and as shown in
Turning now to a more detailed description of the compensation signal generator 315, the input to this component in the embodiment of the invention shown in
In other words, one of the input signals to the compensation signal generator 315 is the “pure” amplitude signal A[n], and the other input signal is the output from the pulse encoder 310, i.e. A[n]+q[n]. As explained previously, the output from the compensation signal generator 315, here denoted as CA[n], is used as control signal to the amplifier 320. Thus, the output signal from the compensation signal generator 315 is used to control a function of the amplifier 320, in this case the amplification of the modulated input signal to the amplifier 320.
A more exact description of the nature and function of the compensation signal generator 315 is as follows: the compensation signal CA should at every instant be chosen such that the output signal of the amplifier is a linear copy of the input signal to the transmitter taking the reconstruction filter into consideration. This can be expressed as:
A[n]e
jφ[n]=Σk=0bf[k−n]·CA[n]·(A[n]+q[n])ejφ[n] (1)
where f[k−n] is the impulse response from a filter used at the output of the transmitter, a so called reconstruction filter.
The invention's use of the output signal from the compensation signal generator 315 as control signal to the amplifier 320 is advantageous since an extra degree of freedom is introduced in obtaining the final output signal given a reconstruction filter, which will make it possible to maximize the power efficiency of the transmitter. The RF input signal to the amplifier can be maintained in a so called “deep saturation mode”, thereby ensuring optimum efficiency, while the control signal to the amplifier will set the correct signal level at the output of the amplifier.
Apart from the components of the transmitter 300 of
The output of the delay circuit, in
As shown in
The suppression obtained of the quantization noise by means of the invention is also shown in
The compensation signal generator 315 of the embodiment 600 has two input signals, one of which is the input signal x[n] and the other of which is the output from the mixer 307, again denoted as S[n]. Thus, the two input signals to the compensation signal generator 315 in
The output S[n] from the mixer 307 is, in the embodiment of
As opposed to the embodiments shown and described previously, the compensation signal generator 315 of the embodiment 600 produces both a first and a second compensation signal, here denoted as CA[n] and CRF[n]. The first compensation signal, CA[n], is used as a control signal to the amplifier 320, after having been passed through a second delay circuit 631. The second delay circuit 630 serves to align (in time) the input signals to the different components.
The output from the first delay circuit 630 is added to the second compensation signal from the circuit 315, CRF[n] in an adder 607, with the sum output from the adder 607, denoted in
The combination of the compensation signals CA and CRF should be chosen as follows:
A[n]e
jφ[n]=Σk=0bf[k−n]·CA[n]·(A[n]+q[n])−CRF[n])ejφ[n] (2)
The invention is not limited to the examples of embodiments described above and shown in the drawings, but may be freely varied within the scope of the appended claims. For example, the control signal CA[n] can also, instead of being used as a means of controlling the output amplitude of the amplifier by means of supply modulation, be used for controlling the impedance of the an output matching network of the amplifier in the transmitter, which is referred to as “load modulation”. In such an embodiment, the matching network is suitably comprised in the amplifier.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/320,372, filed 14 Nov. 2011 and still pending, which is a 371 of International Application No. PCT/SE2009/050552, filed 18 May 2009, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13320372 | Nov 2011 | US |
Child | 13899757 | US |