Calibration of n-port receivers

Pulse or digital communications – Testing

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C702S085000, C702S120000, C702S121000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06377616

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a method for calibrating n-port receivers as well as to a receiving apparatus provided with means for supplying a signal to calibrate a n-port receivers comprised in the receiving apparatus. The present application is furthermore directed on a mobile communication device provided with such a receiving apparatus.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
When referencing to n-port receivers in the following description, n is an integer which can assume the value of four, five and six. As the case of n equal to six is known in the prior art, the following description is made with reference to a six-port receiver. However, the present invention is by no means limited on the case of n equal to six. The calibration of a n-port receiver is essentially independent of the fact whether n is four, five or six.
Recently it has been shown that a so-called six-port receiving circuit in conjunction with a digital signal processor is capable of performing digital demodulation directly at frequencies ranging from microwave to mm-wave bands. This new direct digital receiver promises reduced receiver complexity, low fabrication requirements and fair performance in providing a cost-effective alternative to the conventional heterodyne structure used in various digital terminals.
FIG. 3
b
shows schematically the application area of a direct six-port receiver as a partial or complete replacement of a conventional heterodyne receiver structure (
FIG. 3
a
).
FIG. 4
shows the structure of a six-port receiver known from Bossisio, Wu “A six-port direct digital millimeter wave receiver”, Digest of 1994 IEEE MTT Symposium, vol. 3, page 1659-1662, San Diego, May 1994.
The six-port technique has been known for its ability to accurately measure the scattering parameters, both amplitude and phase, of microwave networks. Instead of using heterodyne receivers a six-port receiver accomplishes direct measurements at microwave and mm-wave frequencies by extracting power levels at at least three and particularly four of the six ports. The imperfections of the hardware can be readily eliminated by an appropriate calibration procedure. Very accurate measurements can be made of a large dynamic range and wide frequency range. six-port junction receivers consist of passive microwave components such as directional couplers and power dividers as well as diode detectors. The circuit can be easily integrated as MHMIC or MMIC. The known receiver performs direct phase/amplitude demodulation at microwave and mm-wave frequencies. The traditional I-Q block in a receiver is replaced by a six-port phase/frequency discriminator which contains a six-port receiver and a digital signal processing (DSP) unit. The incoming digitally modulated RF-signal is compared with the output of a digital controlled local oscillator
18
. Carrier recovery is first performed. The DSP-unit
17
detects the frequency difference of the signals and then controls the local oscillator
18
to track the incoming signal. Once the carrier is recovered the instantaneous phase of the received signal is detected and decoded so as to recover the original modulated data. The maximum data transmission rate is determined mainly by the sampling rate of the A/D-converters
16
and the processing speed of the DSP-unit
17
.
Six-port receivers generally require a calibration. One major advantage of the six-port receiver is the ability to cope with non-perfect (non-ideal) RF sub-systems. Calibration procedures extract the imperfections of the six-port-hardware. The results of the calibration are in general complex coefficients. Those complex coefficients multiplied with the measured power levels at different ports are required to calculate the (relative) amplitude and (relative) phase of the incoming signal of the receiver. The relative magnitude and the relative phase are related to the coherent or non-coherent detection of the signal.
The calibration parameters are in general non-time dependent or very slowly changeable with time. Theoretically, the calculation of the correction calibration parameters is required to be performed only once. However, in practice they should be performed every time a very large time period has elapsed, which very large time period should be evaluated on case by case basis. The changing of the RF parameters depends on the environmental conditions as well as the manufacturing imperfections.
From the state of the art different calibration techniques for a six-port receiver structure have been proposed. They are generally applied for six-port structures for net work measurement issues and such as usage of hardware termination for calibration like known loads, shorts and sliding shorts.
Such calibration techniques are known from G F Engen, “Calibrating the six-port reflectometer by means of sliding termination”, IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Technique, vol. 26., pages 987-993, December 1978 and U. Stumper, “Finding initial estimates needed for the Engen method of calibrating single six-port reflectometers”, IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Technique, vol. 38, pages 951-957, July 1990 as well as F. Wiedmann, B. Huyert, E. Bergeault and L. J. Allet “A new robust method for six-port reflectometer calibration” which has been submitted to the IEEE transaction.
The disadvantage of all those known hardware calibrations is the inherently required cutting-off of the physical connections in order to assemble particular termination, which is in the case of receiver applications absolutely impractical.
Recently a calibration procedure for a six-port coherent direct receiver without physical disconnection of the system has been disclosed in J. Li, R. G. Bosisio and K. Wu “Dual-tone calibration of six-port direct digital millimetric receiver”, IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Technique, vol. 44, pages 93-99, January 1996. However, this known technique requires complicated monitoring of the outputs, large observation time and the alternation (change) of the local oscillator (see reference 18 in
FIG. 4
) level. In this document it is disclosed two use simply two different frequencies without any modulation and to supply them to the input ports of a six-port receiver.
There is a plurality of requirements for a calibration procedure for a direct receiver based on a six-port structure:
The calibration should be effected without physical disconnection of the system using the same programmed sampling rate as for the data transmission,
the time for calibration should be as short as possible and
the required computational effort for calibration coefficients should be minimized and adapted to fast hardware digital computation units.
Therefore it is an object of the present invention to provide a calibration procedure generally for n-port receivers, which calibration procedure satisfies the above-mentioned conditions.
The basic idea of the present invention is to use a calibration sequence for direct n-port receiver structures with coherent or non-coherent demodulation. Said pre-defined calibration sequence is fed to the input of the direct receiver. A carrier frequency is used and a pre-defined sequence is applied as the modulation sequence of the carrier frequency.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention therefore a method for calibrating a n-port receiver is proposed, said n-port receiver comprising a passive circuit with two inputs, at least one input being supplied with a high-frequency signal to be measured, and at least three outputs supplying power levels for a signal processing unit, which signal processing unit calculates a complex signal based on the at least two power levels and calibration coefficients. A predetermined calibration sequence with different symbols is fed to the at least one input for the signal to be measured and the calibration coefficients are calculated based on the calibration sequence.
When referencing to n-port receivers in the following description, n is an integer which can assume the value of four, five and six. As the case of n equal to six is known in the prior art, the fol

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Calibration of n-port receivers does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Calibration of n-port receivers, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Calibration of n-port receivers will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2871358

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.