The present invention relates to the field of UWB (Ultra Wide Band) receivers and more particularly to the synchronization of such receivers.
Pulsed type ultra-wide band or UWB telecommunication systems are well known in the state of the art. In such a system, a symbol emitted by a transmitter is transmitted using a sequence of ultra-short pulses, in the order of one nanosecond or about a hundred picoseconds.
The signal emitted by the transmitter, in the absence of a modulation by modulation symbols, can be expressed in the following form:
where p(t) is the form of the unit pulse in baseband, f0 is the carrier frequency, φ0, Ia the phase at the origin, and Tc the repetition period. The duration τ of the unit pulse p(t) is substantially lower than the duration of the period Tc.
This base signal can be amplitude and/or position modulated to transmit a symbol per symbol period, each symbol period consisting of a given number of repetition periods. The symbol period has a duration Tf=LTc where L is an integer. For example, if the modulation is a position modulation (PPM for Pulse Position Modulation), the modulated signal can be expressed in the form:
where ε is a modulation delay substantially lower than the period Tc and m=0, . . . , M−1 is the PPM M-ary position of the symbol.
In a similar way, a symbol can be transmitted by the UWB transmitter by means of an amplitude or phase modulation to which the modulated signal can therefore be expressed in the form:
where am is the symbol to be transmitted, for example a PAM (Pulse Amplitude Modulation) or (D)BPSK ((Differential) Binary Phase Shift Keying) symbol.
To separate the transmissions of different transmitters, it can be contemplated each transmitter can be provided associated with a given code ck, k=0, . . . , L−1, with the proviso that the codes relating to different transmitters are orthogonal. In this case, the signals transmitted in position modulation and amplitude position become respectively, for the same symbol to be transmitted:
and
Finally, for a series of successive symbols i=0, . . . , N, the signal transmitted can be written as:
and
where m(i) and am(i), i=0, . . . , N−1 are the PPM and PAM symbols respectively.
Whatever the modulation type, the receiver has to adjust in frequency and in time with the received signal. More precisely, the receiver operates a translation in baseband using a frequency f1, which can be slightly different from the carrier frequency f0. Then, he has to synchronize time windows for integrating the receiver on the time positions of the pulses of the signal translated in baseband. The time windows are spaced by a repetition period T1 which can slightly differ from the repetition period of the pulses, Tc. In the following, the deviation δf=f1−f0 will be referred to as frequency offset of the receiver and the deviation δT=T1−Tc will be referred to as the time offset of the receiver. The synchronization of the receiver on the received signal is particularly difficult to achieve as regards the very short duration of the base pulse.
The frequency regulation of the receiver is generally achieved thanks to a Phase Locked Loop (PLL) and the position regulation of the time windows thanks to a Delay Locked Loop (DLL). Application US2010/0142596 describes in particular a delay locked loop for a UWB receiver. This DLL loop uses three correlators in parallel, respectively correlating the signal received with a code sequence, in advance, synchronous and with a delay with respect to the received signal. The powers at the output of the different correlators enable the loop to temporally adjust with the received signal. However, such a time regulation is complex because it requires in the case described, on the one hand, a filtering suitable for the symbol, which has to be carried out in an analog way and, on the other hand, three distinct processing ways for the signal received. Further, such a system does not operate properly when the transmission channel is a multi-path one, since making a RAKE in an analog way is very delicate.
The purpose of the present invention is to provide a UWB receiver which allows a simple and robust synchronization on the received signal.
The present invention is defined by a receiver for receiving a pulsed UWB signal transmitting symbols with a first period (Tc,LTc), modulated by a carrier frequency (f0), said receiver comprising:
Advantageously, said receiver comprises upstream of the quadrature mixer an RF filter followed by a low noise amplifier.
The quadrature mixer can be followed by a low-pass filtering stage upstream of the integration stage.
According to a first embodiment, the pulsed signal comprises a pulse being repeated with the first period Tc and the integration windows are repeated with a second period Tw, substantially lower than Tc, the phase estimator estimating said phase shift, Δφ, between two samples of the integrated signal, which are separated by a time interval T1=qTw, where q is an integer, the deviation T1−Tc defining said time offset.
According to a first alternative, the control means apply to the integration windows a time offset −δt=(Δφ/2πQ)T1 where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity T1.
According to a second alternative, the control means accumulate the phase shifts provided by said phase estimator for a plurality nT of said successive time intervals, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ, and apply to the integration windows a time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)T1, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity nTT1.
According to a third alternative, the control means accumulate the phase shifts provided by said phase estimator for a plurality of said successive time intervals, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ, until the time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)T1 corresponds to a value equal to said second period, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, a time offset of this second period being then applied when this value is reached.
According to a second embodiment, the pulsed signal comprises a series of L pulses separated by a period Tc, said series being repeated with the first period LTc, each series of pulses being coded using a coding sequence (ck) and modulated by a modulation symbol (am(i)), and that the integration windows are repeated with a second period Tw, substantially lower than Tc, the phase estimator estimating said phase shift, Δφ, between two samples of the integrated signal, which are separated by a time interval T1=qLTw, where q is an integer, the deviation L(T1−Tc) defining said time offset.
According to a first alternative, the control means apply to the integration windows a time offset −δt=(Δφ/2πQ)LT1 where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity LT1.
According to a second alternative, the control means accumulate the phase shifts provided by said phase estimator for a plurality nT of said successive time intervals, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ and apply to the integration windows a time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)LT1, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity nTLT1.
According to a third alternative, the control means accumulate the phase shifts provided by said phase estimator for a plurality of said successive time intervals, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ, until the time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)LT1 corresponds to a value equal to said second period, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, a time offset of this second period being then applied when this value is reached.
The present invention is also defined by a method for receiving a pulsed UWB signal transmitting symbols with a first period (Tc,LTc), modulated by a carrier frequency (f0), said method comprising the following steps of:
According to a first embodiment, the pulsed signal comprises a pulse being repeated with the first period Tc and the integration windows are repeated with a second period Tw, substantially lower than Tc, the phase estimation estimating said phase shift, Δφ, between two samples of the integrated signal, which are separated by a time interval T1=qTw, where q is an integer, the deviation T1−Tc defining said time offset.
According to a first alternative, the time offset is obtained by −δt=(Δφ/2πQ)T1 where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity T1.
According to a second alternative, for a plurality nT of said successive time intervals, the phase shifts provided by said phase estimation are accumulated, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ, and to the integration windows is applied a time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)T1, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity nTT1.
According to a third alternative, for a plurality of said successive time intervals, the phase shifts provided by said phase estimation are accumulated, to obtain a cumulative phase shift ΔΦ, until the time offset −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)T1 corresponds to a value equal to said second period, where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, a time offset of this second period being then applied when this value is reached.
According to a second embodiment, the pulsed signal comprises a series of L pulses separated by a period Tc, said series being repeated with the first period LTc, each series of pulses being coded using a coding sequence (ck) and modulated by a modulation symbol (am(i)), and the integration windows being repeated with a second period Tw, substantially lower than Tc, the phase estimation estimating said phase shift, Δφ, between two samples of the integrated signal, which are separated by a time interval T1=qLTw, where q is an integer, the deviation L(T1−Tc) defining said time offset.
To the integration windows can then be applied a time offset −δt=(Δφ/2πQ)LT1 where Q is an integer equal to the product of the time interval T1 by the frequency (f1) of the local oscillator, the time offset being applied with a periodicity LT1.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading a preferential embodiment of the invention made in reference to the appended figures wherein:
In the following, a UWB receiver and more precisely a receiver for receiving a pulsed type UWB signal will be considered.
For the sake of simplification of the presentation and without loss of generality, it will be first considered that the pulsed UWB signal is not modulated. This signal is in baseband as a periodical sequence of ultra-short pulses (in the order of a fraction of one nanosecond to a few nanoseconds), separated by a repetition period Tc. It will be supposed, in the general case, that the signal in baseband is then frequency translated by modulation of a carrier at the frequency f0. No particular relationship is assumed between the repetition period and the carrier frequency. The signal transmitted by the transmitter is then given by the expression (1).
It will be assumed that the transmission channel is a multi-path one, in other words, that its pulsed response can be expressed in the form:
where P is the number of the channel paths, and hp, tp are the attenuation coefficient and the path delay p respectively, δ(·) is the Dirac symbol.
The signal received by the receiver, noted sRx, can then be expressed in the form:
where n(t) is the noise at the receiver.
The signal sRx received by the antenna 210 is filtered by an RF filter 220 and then amplified by a low noise amplifier (LNA), 230, before being translated in baseband by means of a quadrature mixer, 240.
The mixer uses a frequency f1, provided by the local oscillator 245, ideally equal to f0 but in practice shifted by an offset, due to the drift of the oscillator. The in-phase and phase quadrature signals are then filtered using low-pass (or bandpass) filters 250, and then integrated, by an integration stage 260, on successive time windows of width Tw. The time windows follow each other with a periodicity Tw. After integration, the in-phase and quadrature signals are sampled at the frequency 1/Tw by the sampling stage 270. According to an alternative not illustrated, the time windows follow each other with a periodicity Tw/K (K integrators in parallel are provided on each of the channels I and Q, each integrator output being sampled in turn), which results in an overlapping rate of (K−1)/K between successive windows. Without loss of generality, it will be assumed in the following that the windows are without overlapping (K=1). In practice, since the UWB signal is null almost everywhere, we could simply sample the in-phase and quadrature signals in time intervals centered on the time positions of the pulses.
The phase detector 280 receives the complex successive samples obtained (on the channels I and Q) and the phase offset is between two samples separated by q sampling periods, where qTw≅Tc, is deduced therefrom.
The receiver further comprises control means 290 receiving the phase shift provided by the detector 280 and controlling the position of the integration window as well as the sampling instant. The control means 290 operate as a delay locked loop (DLL) by delaying more or less the beginning of the integration window with respect to the received signal and, correlatively, the sampling instant.
The operation of the control means is explained hereinafter.
After quadrature mixing and bandpass filtering, the complex signal, before integration in 260, is given by:
where n1 (t) is the mixed and filtered noise, φ1 is the local oscillator phase, and by setting:
The signal r(t) is integrated during successive integration windows of duration Tw. In other words, the time is cut into successive windows Wn=[t0+nTw,t0+(n+1)Tw] where t0 is an instant giving the starting point of the integration. It will be understood that a t0 variation offsets the integration windows with respect to the received signal.
The complex signal after integration in the window Wn is noted rw[n] where
If we assume that the support of pr(t) is lower than Tc, in other words, that there is no inter-pulse interference due to the multiple paths (in the reverse case, the interference can be considered as a component of the noise), the value rw[n] is reduced to:
where kn is the integer such that pr (t−knTc) is not null everywhere on the integration window Wn (there is at least one integer kn respecting this property on the repetition period of the pulses). Given that the repetition period of the pulses, Tc, is in the order of a multiple of the duration of the integration window (Tc≅qTw), the integer kn respecting the previously condition is unique.
The synchronization of the receiver requires acknowledge of the integer q such that T1=qTw best approaches the period of the pulses, Tc. If there is T1≅Tc, the coverage configuration of the function pr(t) with the integration windows is repeated after q windows, in other words kn+q=kn+1 and:
where the noise term has been omitted.
The value rw[n+q] can be equivalently written as:
We assume that T1≅Tc, and more precisely that |T1−Tc|<<Tw, hence:
the equality being exact if T1=Tc or if the received signal is null at the edges of the integration window. Finally, there is:
rw[n+q]≅rw[n]exp(−j2πf1Tc) (16)
The relationship (16) expresses the phase shift between two integration results separated by q integration windows. The integration results are obtained at the output of the samplers 270 and the detector 280 determines the phase shift between samples separated by q sampling periods Tw:
Δφ=arg(rw[n+q]rw*[n])=−2πf1Tc (17)
represents the relative deviation between the period, Tc, of the pulses transmitted by the transmitter and the period, T1, used by the receiver and taking into account that f1T1 is generally an integer Q (the period T1 is obtained by dividing a clock frequency at the frequency f1), the phase shift Δφ can be expressed as a function of the abovementioned relative deviation modulo 2π:
It will be understood that the phase shift Δφ reflects a time sliding (−Δφ/2πQ)T1 of the integration windows with respect to the received signal, said time sliding being here determined by the detector with a periodicity T1. The time sliding can be unambiguously determined, without folding, if |Δφ|<π that is
The synchronization of the receiver consists in correcting this time sliding. To that end, the control means 290 vary the beginning of the integration windows as a function of the phase shift determined by the detector 280. If the time sliding is δt=(−Δφ/2πQ)T1, the beginning of the integration windows will be offset by −δt=(−Δφ/2πQ)T1. It will be noted that the correction of the time sliding by the control means is herein carried out with a periodicity T1. When necessary, the beginning of the integration windows can be advanced or delayed by a multiple of a time step δTw, the sampling instant being therefore advanced or delayed accordingly.
Advantageously, the control means, 290, carry out an accumulation of the phase shifts Δφ obtained on a plurality nT of successive periods T1:
The cumulative time offset (by vernier effect) on nT successive periods can be determined as previously by:
Δt=(−ΔΦ/2πQ)T1 (20)
With a periodicity nTT1, the control means 180 compute the cumulative time sliding and offset the beginning of the integration windows and the sampling instants by a time −Δt=(ΔΦ/2πQ)T1.
Alternatively, the time sliding could be cumulated until it reaches a sampling period Tw, the windows being then offset by this period.
It will be noted that the correction of the time sliding is carried out by the control means 290. If the offset is carried out by a multiple step of a time step δTw, the correction to be applied is
time steps where
designates the integer value of x.
It is understood that the receiver can thus constantly correct its time drift with respect to the received signal. The samples provided by the sampling stage 270 are then synchronous with the pulses of the received signal and can be processed by the receiver.
It has been assumed in the first embodiment that the signal transmitted by the transmitter was not modulated (expression (1)).
Now it is assumed, in a second embodiment, that the signal transmitted is modulated, for example by symbols belonging to a BPSK or DBPSK modulation (expression (7)):
where it is reminded that am(i), i=0, . . . , N−1 are the modulation symbols and ck=0, . . . , L−1 is the code used by the transmitter. This code can be part of a family of orthogonal codes enabling signals transmitted by different transmitters to be separated by the receiver, in a known manner per se.
Unlike the first embodiment, the unit period to be considered for estimating and correcting the time offset with the received signal is no longer the repetition period Tc but the symbol period LTc, a symbol being here transmitted on L repetition periods.
where it has been set
It will be understood that the first embodiment can be considered as a particular case of the second embodiment, with one pulse per symbol period.
Unlike the receiver of
In any case, if rw[n] represents again the nth sample at the input of the phase shift detector 280, there is the relationship:
rw[n+q]=am(i+1)·am(i)×rw[n]×exp(−j2πf1LTc) (24)
with the same notation conventions as previously and where am(i) and am(i+1) are two successive modulation symbols. It will be noted that the period at which the samples are provided to the phase shift detector is herein LT1 to take the correlation with the transmitter code into account.
It is assumed that the modulation symbols am(i) are BPSK or DBPSK symbols and thus that am(i)=±1. As a result, there is am(i+1)·am(i)=±1 and the phase shift can be estimated modulo π:
Δφ=−2πQLδ[π] (25)
It will be understood that if a modulation alphabet with a higher order is used, for example a modulation alphabet 4-PSK, the phase shift will be estimated modulo a fraction of π.
According to a first alternative, the control means correct the beginning of the integration windows, and optionally, the sampling instants, by a time (ΔΦ/2πQ)LT1, with a periodicity LT1.
According to a second alternative, the phase shifts can be accumulated on a plurality nT of periods of duration
The time sliding after a time nTLT1 is deduced therefrom as previously:
Δt=(−ΔΦ/2πQ)LT1 (26)
the time sliding being determined unambiguously if
As in the first alternative, the control means, 290, offset the beginning of the integration windows and, correlatively, of the sampling instants, as a function of the phase shift determined by the detector 280. The time offset is applied by said control means with a periodicity nTLT1.
Alternatively, as in the first embodiment, the time sliding can be cumulated until it reaches a sampling period Tw, the integration windows being then offset by this period.
The initial synchronization of the receiver can be achieved using a pilot sequence.
Once the receiver is synchronized using the pilot sequence, the receiver can go on correcting any time drift by readjusting all the intervals LT1, or nTLT1, as explained above.
It is understood that thus the receiver remains permanently adjusted on the symbol periods of the received signal, the samples at the output of the sampling stage, or when the same is followed by a correlation stage, the correlation results can then be processed to estimate the modulation symbols am(i).
According to an alternative of the second embodiment, the transmitted signal is modulated by means of symbols belonging to a PPM (Pulse Position Modulation) alphabet. If a transmitter coding is used, the transmitted signal is given by the expression (6) and to simplify the presentation, in the absence of such a coding:
If the modulation alphabet is 2-PPM,
and m∈{0,1} are preferably chosen. For example, a bit value equal to 0 will be coded by the position 0 and a bit value equal to 1 will be coded by the position
in other words, a bit equal to 0 will be reflected by a pulse in the first part of the period and a bit equal to 1 will be reflected by a pulse in the second part of the period.
The signal received by the receiver will then be, still assuming that the transmission channel is AWGN:
By detecting the energy of the received signal, it can be determined whether a pulse is present in the first or second part of the period, and m(i) can be estimated. The phase sliding between two consecutive samples can then be estimated within 2π:
where L* is:
The time offset of the integration time windows is then carried out as previously described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12 59864 | Oct 2012 | FR | national |
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PCT/EP2013/071126 | 10/10/2013 | WO | 00 |
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WO2014/060277 | 4/24/2014 | WO | A |
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