1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to RF transmitter devices, to transceivers, to integrated circuits, portable devices having such transmitters, and to methods of producing signals using such transmitters.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
A number of known radio systems use transmissions at the same frequency or different frequencies in different time slots. Frequency domain/time-division-multiple-access (FDMA-TDMA) systems include Digital European Cordless Telecommunications (DECT), Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM), and Bluetooth. Bluetooth is a well known short-range radio link intended to replace the cable(s) connecting portable and/or fixed electronic devices. Full details are available from Bluetooth SIG which has its global headquarters in Overland Park, Kans., USA. Key features are robustness, low complexity, low power, and low cost. Bluetooth operates in the unlicensed ISM band at 2.4 GHz. A frequency hop transceiver is applied to combat interference and fading. A time slotted channel is applied with a nominal slot length of 625 μs. 79 channels are used, with 1 MHz per channel (2.402, 2.403, . . . , 2.480 GHz). On each channel, information is exchanged through packets. Each packet is transmitted on a different hop frequency. The Bluetooth protocol uses a combination of circuit and packet switching. Slots can be reserved for synchronous packets. The Bluetooth system can provide a point-to-point connection (only two Bluetooth units involved), or a point-to-multipoint connection. Bluetooth transmitters hop from one RF frequency to another many times a second and have a short time to settle at the new frequency.
Suitable RF transmitters can be integrated using a number of different topologies. These topologies can be distinguished based on the implementation of the main functionalities:
1) Generation of a modulated digital base-band signal, or modulation of a local oscillator signal with the base-band signal (e.g. direct VCO modulation or IQ modulation).
2) Generation of a local oscillator signal.
3) The type of power amplifier used.
For an IQ modulation topology and where the local oscillator is at the application's channel center frequency, the RF output component is near to the LO frequency, which can result in a frequency pulling of the local oscillator.
For this reason often an oscillator at double the channel frequency is used in combination with a divide-by-2 circuit. However, also in this topology, frequency pulling appears due to coupling of the second harmonic components of the RF signal to the oscillator. It is known to avoid this RF coupling from the transmitter to oscillator that causes the pulling of the oscillator, by choosing a different topology. For a simple frequency modulation, a direct modulation of the LO could be selected avoiding this pulling problem. For an IQ modulation topology, it is known in literature, that the pulling effect is reduced when the frequency difference between the oscillator frequency and the injected component (coupling from the transmitter output) is increased. Therefore, the pulling can be reduced by using an intermediate frequency topology.
Solutions based on an intermediate frequency and on using filters to eliminate image and other distortion components have a severe drawback for integration. These filters require expensive external components and are not suited for low-cost on-chip integration. An alternative exists in using an intermediate frequency at a low multiple of the channel bandwidth or at a multiple of half the channel bandwidth. In this case, any IF harmonic distortion components, carrier component (spurious components) are not filtered and degrade the adjacent channel power performance. The position of these components in the TX output spectrum depend on the choice of IF frequency.
An object of the invention is to provide improved apparatus or methods especially for RF transmitter devices, RF transceivers, integrated circuits for RF devices, portable devices having such transmitters, and methods of producing signals using such transmitters.
According to a first aspect, the invention provides an RF transmitter having an IF modulator for generating an IF modulated signal, and an RF modulator, the RF modulator being arranged to generate RF signals on a number of frequency channels, from the IF modulated signal, the IF modulator being arranged to use a Very-Low-IF-frequency fIF, smaller than half the channel bandwidth and larger than zero.
The use of a Very-Low-Intermediate-Frequency transmitter with a Very-Low-IF-frequency fIF smaller than half the channel bandwidth: 0<fIF<BW/2 can help enable a good margin on adjacent channel power and a reduced pulling effect on the local RF oscillator to be achieved. It can also enable more complex modulation schemes compared to direct modulation topologies.
An additional feature of the present invention is a fractional PLL circuit for generating the RF local oscillator signal for the RF modulation. For example, the LO frequency can be compensated for this fIF in the fractional PLL. If the IF is e.g. 420 kHz and the channel frequency is at e.g. 2402 MHz, the LO frequency is at 2402 MHz−430 kHz=2401.57 MHz. The oscillator is set to oscillate at this frequency or at twice this frequency for the double frequency+div-by-2 topology. This change in frequency is implemented by a different control input of a fractional PLL.
Another additional feature is the channel bandwidth being 1 MHz or less. Comparing Table 1 with
Another additional feature is the fIF being selected such that spurious components at frequencies based on integer multiples of a baseband frequency, in an RF output spectrum, are positioned in a frequency band of an adjacent channel. In particular, such spurious components (1LO·xBB with x: −3, −2, . . . , +3) in an RF output spectrum are positioned in a frequency band with less stringent specifications for adjacent channel power.
Another additional feature is the transmitter being a Bluetooth transmitter. Another additional feature is the transmitter being incorporated in a transceiver IC with digital baseband processing, digital baseband modulation and demodulation functions, an analog IF section and RF modulation and demodulation functions.
Another aspect of the invention is an integrated circuit for an RF transmitter. Another aspect is a portable wireless product having the transmitter. Another aspect of the invention is a method of producing signals using the transmitter. Another aspect provides an RF transmitter suitable for Bluetooth transmissions and having an IF modulator for generating an IF modulated signal, and having an RF modulator, the RF modulator being arranged to generate RF signals on a number of frequency channels, from the IF modulated signal, the IF modulator being arranged to use a very-low-IF-frequency fIF, such that main or significant spurious unwanted modulation components, e.g. at fLO·xfBB [x: −3 . . . 3], fall in channels having a channel number smaller than (i.e. within) three of a channel being transmitted, e.g. zero, one or two channel numbers away.
Embodiments of the invention can combine easier integration and reduction of the pulling effect with an increased margin on the adjacent channel power specification compared to using an intermediate frequency at a low multiple of the channel bandwidth or at a multiple of half the channel bandwidth. Particularly for the Bluetooth application, the choice of IF frequency in combination with the channel frequency plan can give the advantage that the main non-filtered spurious components (1LO·xBB with x: −3, −2, . . . , +3) in the TX output spectrum are positioned in the frequency bands with the least-stringent specifications for adjacent channel power.
To reduce the VCO pulling problem and to overcome the adjacent channel power degradation when using a (half-)channel BW multiple as IF frequency, the PLL's fractionality is used in order to optimize the adjacent power frequency plan by selecting the most appropriate IF frequency.
This can give significant improvement of the pulling compared to zero-IF (experiments showed a 10 to 15 dB improvement). Significant improvement of the margin on adjacent channel power for specific distortion components can arise because these components are located in a channel with 20 dB less stringent specifications. (So for same TX output power, 20 dB more margin).
Any of the additional features can be combined together and combined with any of the aspects. Other advantages will be apparent to those skilled in the art, especially over other prior art. Numerous variations and modifications can be made without departing from the claims of the present invention. Therefore, it should be clearly understood that the form of the present invention is illustrative only and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention.
How the present invention may be put into effect will now be described by way of example with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
The present invention will now be described with reference to certain embodiments and with reference to the above mentioned drawings. Such description is by way of example only and the invention is not limited thereto.
A first embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
With regard to frequency hopping, “slow frequency hopping” refers to the hopping frequency being slower than the modulation rate, “fast frequency hopping” referring to a hopping rate faster than the modulation rate. The present invention is not limited to either slow or fast hopping.
Returning to
The IF I and Q signals are converted to analog signals by DACs 130 and 140 respectively and optionally filtered. For example, these analog signals are first filtered at 145 to remove the DAC alias and other high frequency components thus preventing these from being modulated to RF frequency, and are then fed to the RF modulator 150 to produce RF signals. These are amplified by power amplifier 160 and fed via switch 15 and an external band filter filter 20 in the common Receive-Transmit signal path to antenna 10. The RF modulator uses a local oscillator signal LO which has a frequency which determines which channel is transmitted. The local oscillator generator (also called a synthesizer) typically has a fractional phase lock loop PLL 200. A fractional PLL is often preferred to a synthesizer having an integer-N type PLL, which switches frequencies by integer multiples of the internal reference frequency (FREF) 110. This FREF is usually generated by dividing down a crystal oscillator using a reference divider located prior to an analog phase detector. In the integer-N system, the analog phase detector of the PLL compares two inputs, FREF and an integer-N divider output, which is the divided down voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO 80) output frequency. The phase detector adjusts the voltage to the VCO until both inputs are equal in phase or phase-locked. In case of a VCO running at twice the LO frequency a divide-by-2 circuit 85 is used. To generate a desired VCO frequency, the integer-N divider divides the VCO frequency by a value (N). To generate an output frequency of 1000 MHz with a step size of 1 MHz, FREF is 1 MHz (FREF is equal to step size in an integer-N synthesizer) and N is 1,000. To achieve a finer step size without poor phase noise characteristics, a fractional PLL is used. Instead of having an integer-N divider, the frac-N PLL has a fractional-N divider. A loop filter 90 is also included to help make frequency changes more stable, when the channel is changed, controlled by a channel select signal from control circuitry (not shown). A useful reference for PLL's is the book by R. E. Best, “Phase-Locked Loops” Fifth Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2003.
An optional div/2 block 85 is provided after the VCO 80. The optional div2 block is in case a double frequency VCO is used.
On the receive side, the switch 15 sends received RF signals through a filter 20, a low noise amplifier 30, to an IQ demodulator 50. This uses the local oscillator signal LO, fed by switch 40. The demodulated outputs are fed via filter 60 to ADC 70. Optionally the digital signals from the ADC may be fed to further demodulation circuitry depending on the application, or to further processing stages. The transceiver can be integrated entirely in a single IC, or divided across multiple ICs as desired. It can be incorporated in wireless mobile devices such as battery powered mobile telephones or mobile computing or display or multimedia devices for example.
This table shows the amount of spurious power from adjacent channels which can be tolerated. When the channel number differs by 1, (M−N=1) then more spurious power can be tolerated. When the channel number differs by more than 2, there is less tolerance for spurious power. The embodiments described below exploit this insight by arranging the IF frequency so that unwanted artifacts in the spectrum fall into adjacent channels where M−N is 1 or 2 so that there is more tolerance for them, and less need to suppress such artifacts.
The nomenclature used is for the spurs is as follows:
The circuitry can be implemented in conventional hardware and use integrated circuit technology following established practice which need not be described here in more detail. Digital processing parts can be implemented using application specific logic or software running on processing circuitry, the software being written in a conventional language. Although described for wireless applications transmitting through air, RF transmitters can also be used for transmitting along waveguides.
As has been described above, an RF transmitter suitable for Bluetooth transmissions has an IF modulator (120) and an RF modulator (150), the IF modulator being arranged to use a very-low-IF-frequency fIF, smaller than half the channel bandwidth, such that spurious unwanted modulation components fall in other channels having a channel number within one or two of a channel being used for transmission. This can reduce the VCO pulling problem and reduce adjacent channel power degradation compared to using higher IF frequencies. The local oscillator PLL's fractionality is used in order to optimize the adjacent power frequency plan by selecting the most appropriate IF frequency. For the Bluetooth application, the IF frequency is <500 kHz, and the main non-filtered spurious components (1LO·xBB with x: −3, −2, . . . , +3) image, carrier, pulling, for both 0 and 1 FM signals, are positioned in frequency bands of adjacent channels.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04077551.2 | Sep 2004 | EP | regional |