The present invention relates to a signal receiver and in particular, but not exclusively, to a signal receiver suitable for receiving a wireless signal having a wide bandwidth.
The use of digital signal processing techniques to implement at least the baseband processing of a wireless receiver can bring benefits such as increased versatility and decreased cost. Commonly, an RF signal is mixed down to a low IF or to baseband before digitisation because digitisation at a high frequency requires a high speed analogue-to-digital converter (ADC). If conventional low-pass sampling is used to sample at the Nyquist rate, an ADC is required that can sample at twice the highest frequency of the signal. The sampling rate required for digitisation at RF may exceed the capability of commercially available ADCs, or require an ADC having a high power consumption or a high cost. Even after mixing down to a lower frequency, sampling at the Nyquist rate for the signal may exceed the capability of commercially available ADCs, or require an ADC having a high power consumption or a high cost.
Ultra-wideband is a technique for performing radio communication and radio positioning which relies on sending a signal comprising ultra-short pulses. Such ultra-short pulses typically occupy frequencies from zero to one or more GHz and it is not practical to use a single ADC which will digitise at the Nyquist rate a signal containing such high frequencies. One solution for reducing the sampling rate below the Nyquist rate for the signal is reported in “Ultra-wideband radar technology”, edited by J. D. Taylor, CRC Press, 2001, pages 77-78. This solution uses a bank of filters to separate the frequency spectrum of the signal into several sub-bands, mix each sub-band down to DC, and to digitise each sub-band separately using a bank of ADCs, each ADC sampling at a rate equal to the highest frequency in the mixed-down sub-band. A block schematic diagram of this prior art solution is illustrated in
A further solution is disclosed in “A Channelised DSSS Ultra-Wideband Receiver”, Won Namgoong, Proceedings RAWCON 2001, 2001 IEEE Radio and Wireless Conference, Waltham Mass., USA, 19-22 Aug. 2001, pages 105-108. This solution uses a bank of mixers each requiring a different local oscillator signal and with each mixer followed by a sub-band filter, so suffers the same disadvantages.
An object of the present invention is to provide a signal receiver that overcomes at least some of the disadvantages of the prior art described above.
According to the invention there is provided a signal receiver comprising digitisation means for digitising a received signal and demodulation means for extracting the information content of the digitised received signal, wherein the digitisation means comprises filtering means for dividing the received signal into a plurality of frequency sub-bands, analogue-to-digital conversion means for digitising the signal in each sub-band, transform means for transforming the digitised signal in each sub-band into the frequency domain, and reconstruction means for concatenating in the frequency domain the digitised signal in each sub-band thereby reconstructing the spectrum of the received signal.
The reconstructed spectrum of the received signal may be at the same frequency as spectrum of the received signal prior to being divided into sub-bands, or may be at a lower frequency, for example a received signal having a bandpass spectrum may be shifted to DC.
By dividing the received signal into a plurality of sub-bands and digitising the signal in each sub-band, the requirement for an ADC capable of digitising the whole signal bandwidth by operating at the Nyquist rate is avoided. By digitising each sub-band without first downconverting each sub-band, the requirement for a bank of mixers and means for generating a different local oscillator signal for each mixer is avoided.
Optionally the received signal, if a bandpass signal, may be down-converted from a transmission frequency to a lower frequency prior to the digitisation means.
The sample rate required for digitising the signal in a sub-band depends on the bandwidth of that sub-band, as described below.
By judicious selection of sample rate for each sub-band, it is possible to use a common sample rate for a plurality of sub-bands, thereby simplifying the sample rate clock generation. Such sub-bands may have a common bandwidth.
By judicious selection of sample rate and bandwidth for each sub-band, it is possible to use a common sample rate for odd numbered sub-bands and a different common sample rate for even numbered sub-bands thereby simplifying the sample rate clock generation to two rates.
The analogue-to-digital conversion means may comprise an ADC for each sub-band. However, if the receiver is to be used to receive a signal that occupies only one sub-band at any one instant, such as a frequency hopping signal or a chirp signal, the analogue-to-digital conversion means need only digitise one sub-band at a time and a single ADC can be switched to each sub-band in turn, tracking the frequency of the received signal, thereby reducing the complexity of the analogue-to-digital conversion means.
The invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring to
If the signals in the sub-bands are to be sampled by the respective ADCs 41-45 without aliasing, the ADC sampling rates must be selected to satisfy the following inequality:
i=1 . . . N, where fs
In general, it is preferable that ADC sampling rates are selected such that aliasing is avoided; although for some types of received signal an amount of aliasing may be tolerable. In the following description it is assumed that aliasing is avoided.
Optionally ri may be selected such that a plurality of sub-bands share a common sample rate, which simplifies sample rate clock generation. For example, for a 5-sub-band embodiment as shown in
sub-band 1: 2W1≦fs
sub-band 2: 2(W1+W2)≦fs2≦∞ for r2=1, (3)
sub-band 3: (W1+W2+W3)≦fs3≦2(W1+W2) for r3=2, (4)
sub-band 4: (W1+W2+W3+W4)≦fs4≦2(W1+W2+W3) for r4=2, (5)
sub-band 5:
In this case, a common sample rate satisfying inequality (3) may be used for sub-bands 1 and 2.
Other possibilities of common sampling rates may be determined for specific values of ri and sub-band bandwidth Wi.
Sub-bands sharing a common sample rate may optionally have a common bandwidth. For example, if W1=W3=B, a common sampling rate can be used for sub-bands 1 and 3 provided that it satisfies the inequality 3B≦f3≦4B. As another example, if W2=W4=B, a common sampling rate can be used for sub-bands 2 and 4 provided that it satisfies the inequality 4B ≦f4≦6B.
Particularly advantageous sample rates can be derived by setting
and Wi=B for all values of i, i.e. a common bandwidth for all sub-bands. In this case only two different sample rates are required; a first common sample rate may be used for all the odd numbered sub-bands, provided that it satisfies the inequality (1) for the highest odd-numbered sub-band, and a second, different common sample rate may be used for all the even numbered sub-bands, provided that it satisfies the inequality (1) for the highest even-numbered sub-band. For the embodiment shown in
and so a value of 733 MHz would conveniently lie in the centre of the allowable range, and the second, different common sample rate must satisfy the inequality 4B ≦fs
Other possibilities of a first common sampling rate for the odd-numbered sub-bands and a different common sample rate for the even numbered sub-bands may be determined for specific values of sub-band bandwidth Wi where the sub-band bandwidths are unequal.
The acceptable range of values of the sample rate as expressed by the inequality (1) defines the acceptable limits of frequency error that each sample rate may have. It is preferable to select sample rates that lie approximately in the centre of their respective acceptable range. For the embodiment shown in
The digitised sub-band signals delivered by the ADCs 41-45 include copies of the sub-band spectrum replicated at integer multiples of the sample rate. Therefore, the FFT means 51-55 comprise filtering means for selecting a single sub-band spectrum.
Plot (b) illustrates the second sub-band spectrum at 200-400 MHz with a sample rate of fs
Plot (c) illustrates the third sub-band spectrum at 400-600 MHz sampled at a sample rate of 733 MHz. The sampling process generates a replica of the sub-band spectrum at 133-333 MHz, reversed such that the lower frequencies of the sub-band prior to sampling now appear as the upper frequencies of the replica at 133-333 MHz. In
Plot (d) illustrates the fourth sub-band spectrum at 600-800 MHz sampled at a sample rate of 1 GHz. The sampling process generates a replica of the sub-band spectrum at 200-400 MHz, reversed such that the lower frequencies of is the sub-band prior to sampling now appear as the upper frequencies of the replica at 200-400 MHz. The FFT means 54 comprises means for selecting the replica sub-band spectrum at 200-400 MHz and also reversing its spectrum to restore the order of its frequency components.
Plot (e) illustrates the fifth sub-band spectrum at 800-1000 MHz sampled at a sample rate of 733 MHz. The sampling process generates a replica of the spectrum at 67-267 MHz without any reversal. The FFT means 55 comprises means for selecting the replica sub-band spectrum at 133-333 MHz.
The frequency shifting means 61-65 are used to shift each selected sub-band spectrum to DC. For the example, as illustrated in
The received signal is reconstructed in the frequency domain by concatenating the frequency shifted sub-band signals in the storage means 70.
The process of concatenation shifts the ith sub-band signal, i=2, N, in the frequency domain to respective frequencies fl
Referring to
If the switching of the first and second commutating switch means 100, 101, the selection switch means 102, and the filtering and spectrum reversing of the FFT means 51 are not synchronised to the sub-band which the received signal occupies at any one instant, after one commutation cycle the storage means 70 will not contain a complete set of sub-band signals and so the received signal will not be fully reconstructed in the storage means 70 and the cross-correlation function provided at the output 95 will exhibit weak correlation. The output 95 is coupled to an input of the synchronisation means 99 which adjusts the phase of the commutating switch means 100, 101, the selection switch means 102, and the filtering and reversing of the FFT means 51 until a maximum correlation is exhibited at the output 95. Optionally, means for detecting the signal strength in each sub-band may be included to provide an indication to the synchronisation means 99 of the current frequency occupancy of the received signal, thereby assisting the synchronisation means 99 to synchronise the commutating cycle, the selection switch means 102 and the FFT means 51 with the received signal.
Although the invention has been described by means of an example of a wireless receiver, the invention is equally applicable to a receiver for receiving a signal via a different medium, for example via wire or optically.
Although the invention has been described by means of an example of a receiver suitable for receiving a wide-band or ultra-wideband signal, the invention can also be used for receiving signals having a narrower bandwidth.
Optionally a demodulation process different to that described herein may be applied to demodulate the digitised received signal.
Optionally the receiver may comprise a power saving scheme in which some or all of the receiver elements adopt a power saving mode and are activated at intervals to receive a signal. For example, if the receiver is to be used to receive a signal having a duty cycle less than one, then a bank of ADCs can also be operated with a duty cycle less than one, sampling only for periods in which the signal is expected to be present.
In the present specification and claims the word “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. Further, the word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of other elements or steps than those listed.
From reading the present disclosure, other modifications will be apparent to persons skilled in the art. Such modifications may involve other features which are already known in the design, manufacture and use of signal receivers, and which may be used instead of or in addition to features described herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0214621.5 | Jun 2002 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB03/02599 | 6/12/2003 | WO | 12/16/2004 |