BIAS CIRCUIT AND POWER AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT
20220123697 · 2022-04-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03F2203/45292
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45112
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45228
ELECTRICITY
H03F3/45179
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45541
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45244
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/21131
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45508
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45621
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/21
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/18
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45398
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45172
ELECTRICITY
H03F2203/45154
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A bias circuit for a PA. A first transistor has its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to a first circuit node and its source terminal connected to a first supply terminal, a first current source connected to the first circuit node, and a first resistor connected between the first and second circuit nodes. A second transistor receives a first component of a differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, has its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal, and a third transistor receives a second component of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal. The gates terminals of the second and the third transistors are biased by a first voltage.
Claims
1. A bias circuit for a power amplifier, PA, the bias circuit comprising: a first transistor having its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to a first circuit node and its source terminal connected to a first supply terminal; a first current source connected to the first circuit node; a first resistor connected between the first circuit node and a second circuit node; a second transistor configured to receive a first component of a differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; and a third transistor configured to receive a second component of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; the gate terminals of the second transistor and the third transistor being configured to be biased by a first voltage; and the bias circuit being configured to generate a bias voltage for the PA at the second circuit node.
2. The bias circuit of claim 1, wherein the bias voltage for the PA is a bias voltage for gate terminals of input transistors of the PA.
3. The bias circuit of claim 1, wherein the first voltage is digitally controllable.
4. The bias circuit of claim 1, wherein a resistance of the first resistor is digitally controllable.
5. The bias circuit of claim 1, comprising a first capacitor connected between the first circuit node and the first supply terminal.
6. The bias circuit of claim 1, comprising a fourth transistor having its gate terminal connected to a third circuit node, its drain terminal connected to the first circuit node, and its source terminal connected to the first supply terminal.
7. The bias circuit of claim 6, comprising: a fifth transistor having its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to the third circuit node and its source terminal connected to the first supply terminal; a sixth transistor configured to receive the first component of a differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the third circuit node and its source terminal connected to the second supply terminal; and a seventh transistor configured to receive the second component of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the third circuit node and its source terminal connected to the second supply terminal.
8. The bias circuit of claim 7, wherein the gate terminals of the sixth transistor and the seventh transistor are configured to be biased by the first voltage.
9. The bias circuit of claim 1, wherein the second supply terminal is configured to be supplied with a higher electrical potential than the first supply terminal; the first transistor is an NMOS transistor; and the second transistor and the third transistor are PMOS transistors.
10. The bias circuit of claim 1, wherein the second supply terminal is configured to be supplied with a lower electrical potential than the first supply terminal; the first transistor is a PMOS transistor; and the second transistor and the third transistor are NMOS transistors.
11. A PA circuit comprising: a bias circuit, the bias circuit comprising: a first transistor having its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to a first circuit node and its source terminal connected to a first supply terminal; a first current source connected to the first circuit node; a first resistor connected between the first circuit node and a second circuit node; a second transistor configured to receive a first component of a differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; and a third transistor configured to receive a second component of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; the gate terminals of the second transistor and the third transistor being configured to be biased by a first voltage; and the bias circuit being configured to generate a bias voltage for the PA at the second circuit node; and a PA configured to be biased with the bias voltage.
12. The PA circuit of claim 11, wherein the PA comprises: an input stage of common source type, wherein input transistors of the input stage are configured to be biased with the bias voltage at their gate terminals.
13. The PA circuit of claim 12, wherein the PA comprises a first transformer configured to receive the input signal of the PA across a primary winding, having a secondary winding connected between the gate terminals of the input transistors of the input stage, and configured to receive the bias voltage at a center tap of the secondary winding.
14. The PA circuit of claim 11, wherein the PA circuit is comprised in an integrated circuit.
15. An electronic apparatus comprising a PA circuit, the PA circuit comprising: a bias circuit, the bias circuit comprising: a first transistor having its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to a first circuit node and its source terminal connected to a first supply terminal; a first current source connected to the first circuit node; a first resistor connected between the first circuit node and a second circuit node; a second transistor configured to receive a first component of a differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; and a third transistor configured to receive a second component of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the second circuit node and its source terminal connected to a second supply terminal; the gate terminals of the second transistor and the third transistor being configured to be biased by a first voltage; and the bias circuit being configured to generate a bias voltage for the PA at the second circuit node; and a PA configured to be biased with the bias voltage.
16. The electronic apparatus of claim 15, wherein the electronic apparatus is a communication apparatus.
17. The electronic apparatus of claim 16, wherein the communication apparatus is a wireless communication device for a cellular communications system.
18. The electronic apparatus of claim 16, wherein the communication apparatus is a base station for a cellular communications system.
19. The bias circuit of claim 2, wherein the first voltage is digitally controllable.
20. The bias circuit of claim 2, wherein a resistance of the first resistor is digitally controllable.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] It should be emphasized that the term “comprises/comprising” when used in this disclosure is taken to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, or components, but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components, or groups thereof.
[0027] Adaptive bias is used in embodiments of the present disclosure to adjust the bias level when the input signal amplitude changes. In a class-A/AB Power amplifier (PA) this may for instance mean to increase the bias current as the input signal amplitude goes up.
[0028] Adaptive bias can reduce amplitude to amplitude (AM−AM) distortion, which effectively means an increase in output referred 1 dB compression point (OP1dB) and saturated output power (Psat). It can also be a way to reduce the power consumption when delivering low output power.
[0029]
[0030] The radio base station 2 and wireless device 1 are examples of what in this disclosure is generically referred to as communication apparatuses. Embodiments are described below in the context of a communication apparatus in the form of the radio base station 2 or wireless device 1. However, other types of communication apparatuses can be considered as well, such as a WiFi access point or WiFi enabled device.
[0031]
[0032] Furthermore, in the embodiment illustrated in
[0033] Moreover, in the embodiment illustrated in
[0034]
[0035] According to the embodiment illustrated in
[0036] As illustrated in
[0037] As illustrated in
[0038] Furthermore, In
[0039] As illustrated in
[0040]
[0041] According to the embodiment illustrated in
[0042] According to the embodiment illustrated in
[0043] Let RFin denote the differential signal whose components are RFinn and RFinp. RFin may be the same signal as PAin (
[0044] As indicated in
[0045] Furthermore, as indicated in
[0046] As mentioned above, Vbias may be a bias voltage for gate terminals of input transistors, such as MCS1 and MCS2 (
[0047] As illustrated with measurement results below, the bias circuit 100 has a “knee-shaped” characteristic. Qualitatively speaking, for input magnitudes below a “knee”, or threshold level, Vbias is approximately constant. For input magnitudes above the threshold level, Vbias increases approximately linearly with increasing input magnitude. For input magnitudes around the threshold level, there is a gradual increase of the slope of Vbias vs. input magnitude.
[0048] The location of the “knee”, i.e. the threshold level, depends on the value of V1. According to some embodiments, V1 is digitally controllable. For instance, V1 may be generated by a DAC (not shown). This enables controlling the above-mentioned threshold level.
[0049] The slope of Vbias vs the input magnitude depends on the resistance of R1. In some embodiments, the resistance of the R1 is digitally controllable. This enables controlling said slope of Vbias vs the input magnitude.
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
[0054] When adjusting the two tuning parameters, i.e. the V1 and the resistance of R1, it may be desirable to control the threshold level and the slope of Vbias relatively independently. It may also be also desirable that the output impedance of the bias circuit 200 is relatively independent on the input magnitude, and that the voltage across the transistor M1 remains relatively constant at all input magnitudes to minimize the risk for memory effects.
[0055] According to some embodiments, the bias circuit 200 thus comprises (in said replica rectifier circuit 250) a fifth transistor M5 having its drain terminal and its gate terminal connected to the node z and its source terminal connected to the first supply terminal (“GND”). M5 is the input side of the above-mentioned current mirror. Furthermore, the bias circuit 200 comprises (in said replica rectifier circuit 250) a sixth transistor M6 configured to receive the first component RFinp of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the node z and its source terminal connected to the second supply terminal (“VDD”). Moreover, the bias circuit 200 comprises (in said replica rectifier circuit 250) a seventh transistor M7 configured to receive the second component RFinn of the differential input signal to the PA at its gate terminal, having its drain terminal connected to the node z and its source terminal connected to the second supply terminal (“VDD”). M6 and M7 mimics the operation of M2 and M3.
[0056] The gate terminals of M6 and M7 may be configured to be biased with V1, e.g. via resistors R6 and R7, respectively, as illustrated in
[0057] In the embodiments illustrated in the drawings, the second supply terminal (“VDD”) is configured to be supplied with a higher electrical potential than the first supply terminal (“GND”). For instance, GND may correspond to an electrical potential of 0V, and VDD may correspond to a positive supply voltage level. Furthermore, M1, M4, and M5 are NMOS transistors. Moreover, M2, M3, M6, and M7 are PMOS transistors. These embodiments are suitable to generate the bias voltage Vbias for the PA 100 when the input transistors of the PA 100 (such as MCS1 and MCS2 in
[0058] In other embodiments, a complementary implementation can be used, where connections to GND and VDD are interchanged, and PMOS transistors are replaced with NMOS transistors, and vice versa. In such an embodiment, the second supply terminal would be configured to be supplied with a lower electrical potential than the first supply terminal. For instance, GND may still correspond to an electrical potential of 0V, and VDD may still correspond to a positive supply voltage level, but GND may be connected to the second supply terminal and VDD to the first supply terminal. Furthermore, in such embodiments M1, and where applicable, M4 and M5, would be PMOS transistors. Moreover, M2 and M3, and where applicable, M6 and M7 would be NMOS transistors. Such embodiments would be suitable to generate the bias voltage Vbias for the PA 100 in embodiments where the input transistors of the PA 100 are PMOS transistors. Such an embodiment of the PA 100 can e.g. be obtained as a complementary implementation of that in
[0059] According to some embodiments, there is provided a PA circuit comprising an embodiment of the bias circuit 200 and a PA, such as an embodiment of the PA 100, configured to be biased with said bias voltage Vbias.
[0060] Embodiments of the PA circuit, including the bias circuit 200 and the PA, are suitable for integration (either fully or in part) on an integrated circuit. Thus, according to some embodiments, there is provided an integrated circuit comprising the PA circuit.
[0061] The PA circuit may be comprised in an electronic apparatus. The electronic apparatus may e.g. be a communication apparatus, such as the wireless communication device 1 or base station 2 (
[0062] Embodiments of the adaptive bias circuit 200 are designed to track an envelope of the input signal to the PA. This is advantageous compared with tracking the output signal amplitude. One reason is that tracking the output signal would result in a loop, with potential instability. The loop is formed since the output signal amplitude depends on the bias, which is controlled by the output signal amplitude. Tracking the input amplitude avoids that issue. Another problem of tracking the output signal is that when the amplifier starts to saturate, and the bias voltage needs to increase more rapidly to compensate, the output signal amplitude increases more slowly with input, so in contrast to what is needed, a less effective bias voltage steepness may be obtained.
[0063] The disclosure above refers to specific embodiments. However, other embodiments than the above described are possible. For example, the PA circuit may be used in other types of electronic apparatuses than communication apparatuses. The different features of the embodiments may be combined in other combinations than those described.