Patent classifications
H03G2201/106
Differential amplifier common-mode rejection ratio and gain trimming circuit
The present invention provides a common-mode rejection ratio and gain trimming circuit of differential amplifier, comprising: a first trimming unit and a second trimming unit coupled between an in-phase input voltage and a reference voltage, wherein the first trimming unit and the second trimming unit are coupled to a positive input terminal of the differential amplifier by means of tap switches; a third trimming unit and a fourth trimming unit coupled between tan inverting input voltage and an output terminal of the differential amplifier, wherein the third trimming unit and the fourth trimming unit are coupled to a negative input terminal of the differential amplifier by means of tap switches; wherein, the first trimming unit, the second trimming unit, the third trimming unit, and the fourth trimming unit comprise: a first trimming resistor string and a second trimming resistor string coupled in series; the first trimming resistor string is coupled in parallel with a first trimming auxiliary resistor string, and the second trimming resistor string is coupled in parallel with a second trimming auxiliary resistor string; wherein, the second trimming resistor string of the first trimming unit is coupled to the second trimming resistor string of the second trimming unit, and the second trimming resistor string of the third trimming unit is coupled to the second trimming resistor string of the fourth trimming unit.
Enhancing TX-TX isolation through digital pre-compensation
A TX-TX pre-compensation system that estimates unwanted coupling in a victim transmit chain caused by an aggressor transmit chain and injects a pre-compensation signal to cancel out the estimated coupling. In some embodiments, a signal measurement module estimates the amplitude, phase, and envelope delay of the coupling and an isolation pre-compensation module generates the pre-compensation signal based on the estimated amplitude, the estimated phase, the estimated envelope delay, and the difference between the carrier frequencies of the transmit chains. Since the phase of the coupling may be affected by the carrier frequency of the transmit chains, in some embodiments the phase of the pre-compensation signal is adjusted in response to a change in carrier frequency. Since the amplitude of the coupling may be affected by attenuator gain settings, in some embodiments the amplitude of the pre-compensation signal may be adjusted in response to a change in attenuator gain setting.
Method for dynamically adjusting adjustable gain value to equalize input signal to generate equalizer output signal and associated leveling equalizer
A leveling equalizer includes a graphic equalizer circuit, a first multiplication circuit, a second multiplication circuit, an addition circuit, and a gain control circuit. The graphic equalizer circuit processes a first input signal and output a first output signal and a second output signal. The first multiplication circuit multiplies the first output signal and one of an adjustable gain value and a fixed gain value to generate a first adjusted output signal. The second multiplication circuit multiplies the second output signal and another of the adjustable gain value and the fixed gain value to generate a second adjusted output signal. The addition circuit combines the first adjusted output signal and the second adjusted output signal to generate an equalizer output signal. The gain control circuit dynamically adjusts the adjustable gain value according to the equalizer output signal.
Reliability handling for wireless transceivers
Techniques maintaining receiver reliability, including determining a present attenuation level for an attenuator, wherein the attenuation level is set by a gain controller, determining a relative reliability threshold based on the present attenuation level, receiving a radio frequency (RF) signal, determining a voltage level of the received RF signal, comparing the voltage level of the received RF signal to the relative reliability threshold to determine that a reliability condition exists, and overriding, in response to the determination that the reliability condition exists, the present attenuation level set by the gain controller with an override attenuation level based on the present attenuation level.
GAIN ATTENUATION CIRCUIT AND POWER AMPLIFIER INCLUDING THE SAME
A gain attenuation circuit that attenuates an input RF signal and transmits the attenuated RF signal to a power transistor is provided. The gain attenuation circuit includes a first diode connected between a first node positioned between a port to which the input RF signal is input and a control terminal of the power transistor, and a ground; a first transistor and a second transistor stacked between a first power source and the ground, and each including a diode-connection structure; and a third transistor configured to receive an operating voltage set by the first transistor and the second transistor through a control terminal, and operate the first diode based on the received operating voltage.
Power Limiter Configuration for Audio Signals
Example embodiments provide a process that includes one or more of receiving an audio signal from a feedback path of a feedback compressor circuit, determining whether an auxiliary attenuation value applied to the feedback compressor circuit has changed since a last audio signal was received, responsive to determining the auxiliary value has changed, determining a current operational state value of the LPF needs to be modified based on the changed auxiliary attenuation value, modifying the operational state value of the LPF, and applying the audio signal to the modified LPF.
Power Limiter Configuration for Audio Signals
Example embodiments provide a process that includes one or more of receiving an audio signal at a feedback compressor circuit, multiplying the received audio signal with a power feedback signal to create a product audio signal, wherein the feedback signal comprises a low-pass filtered signal, applying a power amplifier to the product audio signal, and providing the amplified product audio signal as an output signal to a speaker.
Multi-mode broadband low noise amplifier
Multi-mode broadband low noise amplifiers (LNAs) are disclosed herein. In certain embodiments, an LNA includes a first amplification stage and a second amplification stage having a lower gain than the first amplification stage. The LNA is operable in a plurality of operating modes including a first mode in which the first amplification stage and the second amplification stage operate in a cascade to amplify a radio frequency (RF) receive signal, and a second mode in which the first amplification stage amplifies the RF receive signal and the second amplification stage is bypassed.
Power amplifier self-heating compensation circuit
Temperature compensation circuits and methods for adjusting one or more circuit parameters of a power amplifier (PA) to maintain approximately constant Gain versus time during pulsed operation sufficient to substantially offset self-heating of the PA. Some embodiments compensate for PA Gain “droop” due to self-heating using a Sample and Hold (S&H) circuit. The S&H circuit samples and holds an initial temperature of the PA at commencement of a pulse. Thereafter, the S&H circuit generates a continuous measurement that corresponds to the temperature of the PA during the remainder of the pulse. A Gain Control signal is generated that is a function of the difference between the initial temperature and the operating temperature of the PA as the PA self-heats for the duration of the pulse. The Gain Control signal is applied to one or more adjustable or tunable circuits within a PA to offset the Gain droop of the PA.
System and method for digital signal processing
The present invention provides methods and systems for digital processing of an input audio signal. Specifically, the present invention includes a high pass filter configured to filter the input audio signal to create a high pass signal. A first filter module then filters the high pass signal to create a first filtered signal. A first compressor modulates the first filtered signal to create a modulated signal. A second filter module then filters the modulated signal to create a second filtered signal. The second filtered signal is processed by a first processing module. A band splitter splits the processed signal into low band, mid band, and high band signals. The low band and high band signals are modulated by respective compressors. A second processing module further processes the modulated low band, mid band, and modulated high band signals to create an output signal.