High efficiency linearization power amplifier for wireless communication
09742446 ยท 2017-08-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03F2201/3233
ELECTRICITY
Y02D30/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H03F2200/57
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H03F1/26
ELECTRICITY
H03F1/32
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A predistortion system for linearizing the output of a power amplifier includes a first signal representative of an RF modulated signal and a feedback signal representative of nonlinear characteristics of a power amplifier. The system also includes a predistortion controller, comprising at least one lookup table, adapted to receive the first signal and the feedback signal and to generate a correction factor for correcting the nonlinear characteristics of the power amplifier and combining logic which combines the RF modulated signal with a signal corresponding to the correction factor and supplies it to the power amplifier to linearize the output of the power amplifier.
Claims
1. A predistortion system for linearizing an output of a power amplifier, the predistortion system comprising: a first input operable to receive a first input signal representative of an analog RF modulated signal; a digitized reference signal representative of an idealized reference signal; a digitized feedback signal representative of nonlinear characteristics of the power amplifier; a predistortion controller operable to square the digitized reference signal and the digitized feedback signal and to generate a predistortion correction signal; and combining logic operable to combine the first input signal and the predistortion correction signal and operable to produce a predistortion signal that is supplied to the power amplifier to linearize the output of the power amplifier.
2. The predistortion system of claim 1, wherein the combining logic comprises an analog multiplier.
3. The predistortion system of claim 1, further comprising error logic operable to determine an error between the digitized reference signal and the digitized feedback signal.
4. The predistortion system of claim 3, further comprising a multiplier operable to multiply the error by an adaptive factor.
5. The predistortion system of claim 1, wherein the predistortion controller includes a lookup table.
6. The predistortion system of claim 5, wherein the predistortion controller includes an address former responsive to the digitized reference signal and operable to generate an address that is supplied to the lookup table.
7. The predistortion system of claim 5, wherein the lookup table stores predistortion signals.
8. A method for linearizing the output of a power amplifier, the method comprising: receiving an analog RF modulated signal at an input of a predistortion system; generating a digitized reference signal from an idealized reference signal; generating a digitized feedback signal from a feedback signal; generating a predistortion correction signal, wherein generating the predistortion correction signal includes squaring the digitized reference signal and the digitized feedback signal; combining the analog RF modulated signal with the predistortion correction signal to provide a predistortion signal; and receiving the predistortion signal at an input of the power amplifier.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein combing the analog RF modulated signal with the predistortion correction signal includes using an analog multiplier.
10. The method of claim 8, further comprising determining an error between the digitized reference signal and the digitized feedback signal.
11. The method of claim 10, further comprising multiplying the error by an adaptive factor.
12. The method of claim 8, wherein generating the predistortion correction signal includes adding a scaled error and a previous value from a lookup table to provide an entry to the lookup table.
13. The method of claim 12, further comprising generating an address supplied to the lookup table using an address former responsive to the digitized reference signal.
14. A predistortion controller, comprising: a lookup table, wherein the lookup table stores predistortion signals; an address former, wherein the address former provides an address to the lookup table; and an error generator; wherein the predistortion controller is configured to: receive an ideal signal, wherein the ideal signal is received at the address data former to provide an address to the lookup table; receive a feedback signal; square the ideal signal to generate a squared ideal signal, wherein the squared ideal signal is provided to the error generator; square the feedback signal to generate a squared feedback signal, wherein the squared feedback signal is provided to the error generator; generate an error signal by comparing the squared ideal signal and the squared feedback signal; and provide the error signal to the lookup table, wherein the lookup table produces a compensation value that compensates for time delay and nonlinearities of a power amplifier.
15. The predistortion controller of claim 14, further comprising: adaptive factor, wherein the error signal is combined with the adaptive factor to produce a scaled error factor, and wherein the scaled error factor is provided to the lookup table.
16. The predistortion controller of claim 15, wherein the error signal is combined with the adaptive factor using a multiplier.
17. The predistortion controller of claim 15, wherein the scaled error factor is added to a previous value from the lookup table, and wherein the result of the addition is provided to the lookup table.
18. The predistortion controller of claim 14, wherein the ideal signal is a digitized idealized reference signal representative of an input to a power amplifier.
19. The predistortion controller of claim 14, wherein the feedback signal is a digitized feedback signal representative of an output of a power amplifier.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(5) The present invention relates generally to wireless communications systems, and more particularly relates to systems, apparatus and methods for correcting the nonlinearity of a Power Amplifier (PA) such as might be used in a wireless RF transmitter.
(6) The present invention provides a novel predistortion controller to linearize the power amplifier (PA) used in wireless base stations operating in wireless networks using a wide variety of signal types including CDMA, TDMA, GSM, GPRS, 3G systems (UMTS, W-CDMA, CDMA2000, TDS-CDMA, 3GPP and others), WLAN, WiFi, WiMax and the like, as well as other proposed and upcoming wireless systems (4G/5G) that transmit a complex modulated signal by using a high power amplifier. Because the high power amplifier in wireless RF transmitters typically distorts the RF output signal, the adaptive predistortion controller of the present invention is useful to correct that non-linearity. Embodiments of the present invention are suitable for use with ail wireless base stations, access points and other wireless communication systems such as microwave and satellite communications. The predistortion controller of the present invention offers the additional advantage that it can be added to existing wireless RF transmitters without otherwise changing or modifying the base station structure while at the same time yielding significant performance improvements. Included in these improvements is a substantial increase in the efficiency of the base station, which yields a significant reduction in power usage because, in current systems, significant power is wasted due to the nonlinear characteristics of typical PA's.
(7) From the following description, it will be appreciated that the high-efficiency linearization predistortion controller disclosed herein offers the following benefits to the wireless industry: 1. It significantly enhances the transmitted signal quality and increases wireless network capacity by improving the PA's transmission characteristics and decreasing the adjacent channel interference. 2. It can be implemented as an add-on module to the PA, which permits the aforementioned improvements to the performance of the PA without changing or modifying the existing RF and base band circuits in the base station. This differs from the traditional feedback and feed-forward predistortion approach, and therefore is a comparatively low cost, easy to install solution for the wireless network infrastructure whenever the operators desire to upgrade performance and reduce energy costs. 3. The predistortion control operation is fast and dynamic, which permits it to track and correct for nonlinearities of the PA in a wider, and makes it particularly suitable for use in base stations, repeaters and handsets. 4. It can be integrated into the design of the PA for convenient installation and replacement of aging PA's already installed in a wireless system.
(8) Referring first to
(9) Referring next to
(10) An input down-converter circuit 20 receives an idealized reference signal V.sub.RF from modulator in base station, and is biased by a local oscillator 40, such that it provides an output V.sub.ct to an analog-to-digital converter 21. The ADC 21 converts the signal V.sub.ct to digital form, whereupon it is provided as one input to a Digital Predistortion Processor 200.
(11) A feedback down-converter circuit 26, also biased by a local oscillator 40, receives a raw feedback signal V.sub.o(t) from the output of the PA, and provides a feedback signal V.sub.f to an feedback ADC 25. The digital output of the ADC 25 then provides a second input, i.e., feedback signal, to the Digital Predistortion Processor 200. The Digital Predistortion Processor 200, discussed in greater detail below, provides a digital output signal V.sub.r to a DAC 30, which converts the digit signal to an analog form, where it is combined with the modulated RF signal in the multiplier 11.
(12) As shown in
(13) The predistortion controller lookup tables 33I-33Q are designed memory units to store the predistortion signal for high power amplifier linearization. The predistortion signals in the tables are based on the error generated by a comparison of the ideal signal V.sub.d and the feedback signal V.sub.f and the presented adaptive algorithm. The data stored in the tables 331-Q can be updated by adaptive iteration as described hereinafter, and forms digitally indexed data reflecting the nonlinear characteristics of the power amplifier.
(14) By comparison of AM-AM and AM-PM information between the idealized signal V.sub.RF(t) and the feedback signal Vo(t), the Digital Predistortion Processor calculates the error in the amplitude and phase components of the output signal V.sub.o(t) caused by the non-linear transmission characteristics of the high power amplifier 12.
(15) Based on the error information obtained by the foregoing comparison, the predistortion processor, based on the lookup table algorithm disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,985,704, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference, calculates and generates adaptively a compensation signal that is of inverse characteristics with the transform function of the PA 12 to pre-distort the AM-AM and AM-PM distortion caused by the PA 12.
(16) The outputs V.sub.p of the predistortion lookup table 331-33Q are fed to multiplier 11, after an adder 31 and a digital-to-analog converter 30, to modify the modulated RF signal from modulator 10. The output of the multiplier is the required predistortion signal V.sub.in(k) that is of an inverse non-linearity with that of the power amplifier 12 to yield a pre-compensation to the input of high power amplifier.
(17) It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that there can be a signal difference between two signals, ideal signal V.sub.RF and feedback signal, V.sub.o(t), when they arrive at predistortion controller 5 [
(18) The use of the look-up tables 33 permits a memory function to be introduced into at least some embodiments of the present invention. The lookup table of the predistortion controller is based on a stored compensation principle that maps a set of input data into a digital output, and updated adaptively. Based on the stored function, each output signal of lookup table is actually related to both the current and the previously transmitted signal, and therefore has a memory function which compensate not only for the non-linearity of the PA, but also avoids the need for a special time-delay compensation circuit such as typically used in the prior art. See particularly U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/898,312, filed Jan. 29, 10 2007, entitled Power Amplifier Time-delay Invariant Predistortion Methods and Apparatus.
(19) The architecture of an embodiment of a lookup table which can implement the compensation principle discussed above is shown in
(20) Due to introducing the memorized lookup table processing, there is unnecessary to build another special time-delay circuit for the signal delay processing. Therefore, the memorized lookup table in this patent shows two functions, the nonlinear predistortion of high power amplifier and adaptive signal time-delay adjusting.
(21) The lookup table of predistortion controller is based on a stored compensation principle that maps a set of input data into a digital output, and are updated adaptively. Based on the stored function, each output signal of lookup table is actually related to both the current and previous transmitted signal, and therefore has a memory function when compensate the non-linearity of PA [1]. The architecture of lookup table based on the compensation principle is shown in
(22) It will be appreciated further that the performance of the predistortion controller is, in some respects, related to the number of bits in the analog-to-digital converters in the original and feedback channels, whereby the bigger the number of bits in the ADC, the better the performance or the predistortion controller is. Similarly, the memory function of the predistortion controller is also related to the number of bits in the address-shifting register, such that, within reasonable sizes, the performance of the predistortion controller improves as the number of bits in the register increases. It will further be appreciated that the PA may be operated in any region, such that, for example, its bias or static operation point can be set either in the saturation region or the cut-off region, with appropriate adjustments for operation in each region. It will further be appreciated that the output signal of predistortion controller is a stochastic control signal rather than a modulated high-frequency signal, and the signal is of the inverse characteristic with the AM-AM and AM-PM distortion component of power amplifier. Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that the output signal of the predistortion controller is not a high-frequency signal, and its frequency typically match the bandwidth of the signal to be transmitted by a power amplifier in a wireless transmitter.
(23) The combination of both memory and store function performed by the lookup table extends the ability of the present system to compensate for the PA's non-linear characteristics to time-independent aspects. The time-independent feature of the lookup table's adaptive processing is a key benefit of the addressing arrangement of the lookup table. In an embodiment, the addressing of the lookup table is implemented by a set of N-bit vector data that contains the current input signal and previous N input signal as well. Therefore, the address of the lookup table is a combination of series of input sequences with the length of N. The longer the address of the lookup table, the wider the time-delay information range that the system can accommodate (i.e. the longer duration of time-delay effects that the system can tolerate).
(24) Having described the invention in detail, including several embodiments and alternatives, those skilled in the art will appreciate that numerous other alternatives and equivalents exist which are within the scope of the present invention. Therefore the invention is intended not to be limited by the above description, but rather only by the appended claims.