Receiver architecture employing low intermediate frequency...

Pulse or digital communications – Transceivers – Modems

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C455S302000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06778594

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to digital communications systems and, more particularly, to a receiver architecture that is characterized by a relatively low intermediate frequency (IF) section, followed by polyphase filter that results in enhanced image rejection, and a digital I/Q demodulator.
2. Description of the Related Art
Digital modulation and demodulation techniques incorporating I/Q (In-phase/Quadrature) modulators and demodulators are widely used in communication systems. I/Q demodulators are abundantly discussed in the technical literature. See, for example, Behzad Razavi, RF
Microelectronics
, Prentice Hall (1998) and John G. Proakis,
Digital Communications
, McGraw-Hill (1995). There exists also patent art related to the technology of I/Q modulation and demodulation: U.S. Pat. No. 5,974,306, entitled “Time-Share I/Q Mixer System With Distribution Switch Feeding In-Phase and Quadrature Polarity Inverters” to Homak, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,469,126, entitled “I/Q Modulator and I/Q Demodulator” to Murtojarvi.
Examples of digital communications system applications that incorporate and standardize I/Q modulation and demodulation include the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications), IS-136 (TDMA), IS-95 (CDMA), and IEEE 802.11 (wireless LAN). I/Q modulation and demodulation have also been proposed for use in Bluetooth wireless communication systems.
Bluetooth devices are capable of interlinking to form piconets, each of which may have up to 256 units, with one master and seven slaves active while others idle in standby nodes. Piconets can overlap, and slaves can be shared. In addition, a form of scatternet may be established with piconets overlapping, thereby allowing data to migrate across the networks.
The Bluetooth system operates in the 2.4 GHz ISM (Industrial, Scientific, Medical) band, and devices equipped with Bluetooth technology are expected to be capable of exchanging data at speeds up to 720 Kbs at ranges up to 10 meters. This performance is achieved using a transmission power of 1 mw and the adoption of frequency hopping protocols to avoid interference. In the event that a Bluetooth-compatible receiving device detects a transmitting device within 10 meters, the receiving device will automatically modify its transmitting power to accommodate the range. The receiving device is also required to operate in a low-power mode as traffic volume abates, or ceases altogether.
Bluetooth devices are capable of interlinking to form piconets, each of which may have up to 256 units, with one master and seven slaves active while others idle in standby nodes. Piconets can overlap, and slaves can be shared. In addition, a form of scatternet may be established with piconets overlapping, thereby allowing date to migrate across the networks.
The invention addressed herein is driven by the long-standing requirement, applicable with equal force to Bluetooth designs, to eliminate, or least minimize, the need for external filters commonly encountered in the design of contemporary double-conversion communications receivers. An example of the typical double-conversion receiver architecture is illustrated in FIG.
1
. That architecture requires a first bandpass RF filter
21
disposed between antenna
10
and RF amplifier stage
20
. A second bandpass RF filter couples the output of RF amplifier
20
to a first input of mixer
30
. The primary function of RF bandpass filters
21
and
22
is to effect front-end selectivity, thereby enhancing the receiver's image response performance, as well as affording protection against spurious responses related to, for example, intermodulation and cross-modulation phenomena. However, because the selectivity provided by filters
21
and
22
, in general, varies inversely with the insertion loss thereby caused, the level of selectivity attainable is limited by system design constraints. Furthermore, RF bandpass filters are not conveniently realizable in integrated circuit form. Consequently, the necessity of coupling outboard RF filters at strategic points to otherwise integrated receiver circuitry increases the manufacturing complexity and cost, as well as the physical size of the receiver.
With continued reference to the receiver architecture depicted in
FIG. 1
, the RF carrier is first converted to IF in mixer
30
. The LO signal to mixer
30
is synthesized from a phase-locked oscillator that includes a VCO
50
and phase-locked loop (PLL)
40
. The output of mixer
30
is coupled to an IF bandpass filter
31
. The paramount functions of the IF bandpass filter are to establish channel selectivity and to define the noise bandwidth of the receiver. The output of IF bandpass filter
31
is coupled to the input of amplifier
60
. The output of amplifier
60
is coupled to one input of demodulator
70
. The second input to modulator
70
is derived by processing the output of amplifier
60
through quad tank
61
. The output of demodulator
70
is filtered by low-pass filter
71
, and NRZ data is recovered in a bit slicer
80
that operates synchronously with the SCLK signal.
What is notable with respect to the above receiver architecture, and underscored in
FIG. 1
, is the necessary inclusion of no fewer than four outboard filters, BPFs
21
,
22
and
31
, and quad tank
61
. These filter elements are not readily realizable with resort to contemporary integrated circuit technology. Bandpass RF filters
21
and
22
are frequently implemented with surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices, and the IF bandpass filter
31
often requires a crystal filter. Quad tank
61
may be predictably constructed from lumped passive circuit elements. It is readily appreciated that the necessary inclusion of these filter elements frustrate, or at least compromise, the objective of achieving a small, compact and easily transportable communications receiver. Accordingly, what is desired is a receiver architecture that satisfies system requirements such as selectivity, image rejection and noise figure, while limiting the dependence on non-integrable frequency-selective components.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The above and other objects, advantages and capabilities are achieved in one aspect of the invention by a communications receiver that comprises an amplifier for coupling to an input carrier signal; an I demodulator, coupled to the output of the amplifier; a Q demodulator, coupled to the output of the amplifier; a quadrature LO generator for coupling to an LO signal source, the quadrature LO generator providing an LO_I output to the I demodulator and providing an LO_Q output to the Q demodulator; a polyphase filter having a first input coupled to the output of the I demodulator and having a second input coupled to the output of the Q demodulator; a first A/D converter having an input coupled to a first output of the polyphase filter; a second A/D converter having an input coupled to a 'second output of the polyphase filter; and a digital I/Q demodulator having first and second inputs respectively coupled to the first and second outputs of the polyphase filter. In greater detail, a preferred embodiment of the communications receiver is designed to have a low IF, approximately 1 MHz; and the polyphase filter is constructed to have a first input node coupled to the output of the I demodulator; a second input node coupled to the output of the Q demodulator; a first output node coupled to the input of the first A/D converter; a second output node coupled to the input of the second A/D converter; a reference node; a plurality of interior nodes; a plurality of capacitive elements; and a plurality of gyrator elements, each having an associated input terminal and an associated output terminal; and wherein: (i) a respective capacitive element is coupled between each input node and the reference node, between each output node and the reference node, and between each interior node and the reference node, and (ii) a gyrator element is coupled between the input nodes, between the output nodes, between each input node and o

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