The present invention relates to the field of electronic circuits and more particularly, to a high resolution variable attenuation network.
In signal processing it is often required to vary the gain with which signals are amplified. Commonly, the signals to be amplified are input to a high gain amplifier, the gain of which may generally be larger than desired, thus the output of the high gain amplifier is attenuated to obtain a signal of desired amplitude.
Variable attenuation networks may include resistive voltage dividers, as depicted in
Because of the ever increasing precision levels required in electronic circuits, attenuation networks of high accuracy are needed. It would be desirable to find a simple expedient approach for enhancing the resolution of existing voltage dividers without the need of designing a new voltage divider when a higher resolution is required.
The present invention is directed to an architecture of a variable attenuation network based on a voltage divider that allows the modification of the design attenuation ratios of the voltage divider. This is achieved by connecting at least a resistor that may be shorted by a switch, in series to the voltage divider.
More precisely, the invention provides a variable attenuation network of an input voltage on an input node and producing an attenuated voltage on an output node of the network, comprising a voltage divider with multiple-taps that are selectable for producing the attenuated voltage from a voltage applied on the terminals of the voltage divider. The attenuation network produces an output voltage with an attenuation ratio that is determined with at least twice the resolution of the voltage divider, because it comprises at least a resistor that may be shorted by a low impedance by-pass line controlled by a switch and alternatively connected between the selected intermediate tap or any one of the two terminals of the voltage divider and the output node of the variable attenuation network, the input node of the attenuation network or a common ground node, respectively. By using more than one shortable resistor, multiple levels of resolution may be obtained.
The various features and advantages of the invention will become even more evident through the following detailed description of embodiments and by referring to the attached drawings, wherein:
The variable attenuation network of th invention is obtained by connecting at least a resistor that may be shorted by a switch to a voltage divider and a first embodiment is shown in
The embodiment of
By appropriately choosing the resistor that may be shorted RSERIES, a variable attenuation network with a resolution double that of the voltage divider per se is obtained. By indicating with OFFSET the desired variation in decibel of the attenuation ratio that is achieved by opening the switch that shorts the resistor RSERIES, and with RINPUT the input resistance of the voltage divider, the following equation holds:
The great advantage offered by the attenuation network of this invention is even more evident if one considers that for doubling the resolution of a voltage divider for a certain input resistance RINPUT, it is necessary to re-design the whole network, practically doubling the number of resistors composing the voltage divider.
According to a preferred embodiment of this invention, more resistances RSERIESi that may be equal to or even different from each other are connected in series upstream the voltage divider, as shown in
With M additional resistors RSERIESi, according to the following equation:
it is possible to realize an attenuation network the attenuation factor of which may be varied by intermediate attenuation steps equal to a fraction of the minimum step change that is allowed by the voltage divider. The resolution may reach M+1 times the maximum resolution of the resistive voltage divider.
It should be noted that with the attenuation network of this invention even relatively small inaccuracies in realizing the resistors RSERIES may negatively affect precision. The higher the resolution to be reached, the higher the accuracy with which these resistors must be realized. The attenuation is determined by a ratio of resistors, thus any rational attenuation value may be obtained by realizing the resistors of the attenuation network of this invention with appropriate resistance values by connecting in series or in parallel identical resistors of a single pre-defined value. For example, the attenuation network of
As stated hereinbefore, it is possible to add the resistor(s) RSERIES even between the node B and ground or between the node C and the output node OUT of the variable attenuation network. In the latter two cases the above discussed equations are no longer valid, but a skilled artisan will be recognize the appropriate equations (in lieu of equations (2) and (3)) for calculating the value of RSERIES with respect to any desired resolution OFFSET.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VA2004A000005 | Feb 2004 | IT | national |