COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
20220224367 · 2022-07-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B1/1009
ELECTRICITY
H04B1/18
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
The disclosure relates to a communications system having a transmitter and receiver connected via a transmission line. An example communications receiver (202) comprises: a pair of input connections (211, 212) for connecting to a transmission line (203); a termination resistance (213) equal to a characteristic impedance (Zc) of the transmission line (203); an air core transformer (205) having an input coil (206) connected to the pair of input connections (211, 212) via the termination resistance (213); and a comparator circuit (208) connected to an output coil (207) of the air core transformer (205), the comparator circuit (208) configured to provide an output signal (504) responsive to detection of voltage pulses across the output coil (207).
Claims
1. A communications receiver comprising: a pair of input connections for connecting to a transmission line; a termination resistance equal to a characteristic impedance (Zc) of the transmission line; an air core transformer having an input coil connected to the pair of input connections via the termination resistance; and a comparator circuit connected to an output coil of the air core transformer, the comparator circuit configured to provide an output signal responsive to detection of voltage pulses across the output coil.
2. The communications receiver of claim 1, wherein the comparator circuit is configured to switch the output signal between a first level and a second level upon reception of a voltage pulse across the output coil.
3. The communications receiver of claim 2 wherein the comparator circuit is configured to switch the output signal from a first voltage level to a second voltage level upon reception of a positive voltage pulse across the output coil and to switch the output signal from the second voltage level to the first voltage level upon reception of a negative voltage pulse across the output coil.
4. The communications receiver of claim 1, wherein the air core transformer has a coil ratio of n:1, where n is the number of turns of the input coil.
5. A communications transmitter comprising: a pair of output connections for connecting to a transmission line; a termination resistance equal to a characteristic impedance (Zc) of the transmission line; an air core transformer having an output coil connected to the pair of output connections via the termination resistance; and a driver circuit connected to an input coil of the air core transformer, the driver circuit configured to drive a current through the input coil to provide a voltage pulse across the input coil in response to a change of state of an input signal provided to an input of the driver circuit.
6. The communications transmitter of claim 5, wherein the driver circuit is configured to provide the voltage pulse having a quadratic shaped rising edge.
7. The communications transmitter of claim 5, wherein the air core transformer has a coil ratio of n:1, where n is the number of turns of the output coil.
8. The communications receiver of claim 4, wherein n is between around 1 and around 5.
9. The communications receiver of claim 1 wherein n is between around 2 and 3.
10. The communications receiver of claim 1, wherein the air core transformer is formed from parallel wire loops within a PCB.
11. (canceled)
12. The communications receiver claim 1, wherein a parasitic capacitance of the air core transformer is less than 0.5 pF.
13. The communications receiver of claim 1, wherein each turn of the input or output coil has an inductance of less than 50 nH.
14. (canceled)
15. The communications transmitter of claim 7, wherein n is between around 1 and around 5.
16. The communications transmitter of claim 7 wherein n is between around 2 and 3.
17. The communications transmitter of claim 7, wherein the air core transformer is formed from parallel wire loops within a PCB.
18. The communications transmitter of claim 7, wherein a parasitic capacitance of the air core transformer is less than 0.5 pF.
19. The communications transmitter of claim 7, wherein each turn of the input or output coil has an inductance of less than 50 nH.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0029] Embodiments will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings, in which:
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[0038] It should be noted that the Figures are diagrammatic and not drawn to scale. Relative dimensions and proportions of parts of these Figures have been shown exaggerated or reduced in size, for the sake of clarity and convenience in the drawings. The same reference signs are generally used to refer to corresponding or similar feature in modified and different embodiments.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0039]
[0040] The receiver 202, which is shown in more detail in
[0041] The receiver 202 has an air core transformer 205 with an input coil 206 connected to the input connections 211, 212 via the termination resistance 213 and an output coil 207. The term air core transformer as used herein may encompass a transformer have a core with a relative permeability of around 1, i.e. similar to that of air. Materials other than air may therefore form the core, such as FR epoxy commonly used for PCB insulating layers. Unlike conventional transformers, the termination resistance 213 is connected in series rather than in parallel with the input coil 206 because the coil 206 is in effect configured to measure current rather than voltage due to its low impedance. The output coil 207 is connected to a comparator circuit 208 that is configured to provide an output signal RX dependent on changes in the differential signal received at the input connections 211, 212. The transformer 205 has parasitic capacitances C between the input and output coils 206, 207. The comparator circuit 208 in the illustrated example is configured to provide the output signal RX responsive to detection of voltage pulses across the output coil 208 of the transformer 205. The comparator circuit 208 in
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[0044]
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[0047] In a specific example, the transmission line 203 is a twisted pair cable having a length of up to around 20 m. This results in the transmission line acting as a low pass filter above around 50 MHz with a time constant of 3.2 ns. A suitable pulse duration for the transmission signal may therefore be around 6 ns. If the maximum coil current for a 30 nH coil is set to be 130 mA, the maximum magnetic flux will be nearly 4 nWb. To stay within this maximum magnetic flux, a 2V pulse on the transmission line may be generated by different forms of input signal, for example a square pulse, a linear ramp or a quadratic shaped ramp. A square pulse will generate a 2 ns pulse, a linear ramp a 4 ns pulse and a quadratic ramp a 6 ns pulse for the same magnetic flux. The input signal TX 506 provided to the transmitter driver 401 may therefore be of differing forms to that shown in
[0048] Because each transformer is connected to the transmission line via a terminal resistance which is equal to the characteristic impedance of the transmission line, the transmitter and receiver are both adapted closely to the transmission line.
[0049] For simplification each of the transformers 205, 404 may be considered to have a transformer ratio of 1:1, with the input and output coils both having only one turn. Increasing the number of turns of the transformer side connected to the twisted pair transmission line, i.e. the input coil 206 of the receiver transformer 205 and the output coil 403 of the transmitter transformer 404, increases the receiver level. In an ideal case, the receiver level is proportional to n.sup.2, resulting in for example 100 mV for n=1 and 400 mV for n=2. By symmetry, the n turns of each transformer is always connected with the transmission line via the terminal resistance. The receiver transformer 205 therefore multiplies the input signal by n, while the transmitter transformer 404 by symmetry will multiply the signal by ½. The receiver amplitude should therefore be the same. This does not, however, apply in this case because the amplitude of ViR at the receiver is a function of the inductance value. If the input coil has n turns, the inductance will be multiplied by n.sup.2. The maximum receiver signal amplitude is therefore roughly proportional instead to n.sup.2. As a result, changing the value of n for the transformers 205, 404 can help to increase the receiver level for the same input current. In practice, due to the way the air core transformer may be implemented by layering conductors in a PCB, the number chosen for n may be a small integer, for example between 1 and 5.
[0050] An air core transformer may provide up to around a 50% leakage inductance, meaning that the secondary coil will ‘see’ only around 50% of the input signal for a 1:1 coil ratio. A higher value of n therefore assists in compensating to some extent for this lack of signal. With n=2 the line voltage is partly compensated for a 50% leakage transformer, while with n=3 the line voltage is over-compensated. In some examples therefore the value for n may be between around 2 and 3.
[0051] Because the transmitter output and receiver input both have a low impedance, the transmission line may be considered to be practically shorted at both ends due to the low inductance of the air core transformers. This has an advantage of reducing the magnitude of line reflections. In an example where the characteristic impedance is 100Ω and a line delay is 100 ns (corresponding to a line length of around 20 m), simulations show that a received signal reflected back and forth from the transmitter side is reduced by around 20 times compared to the initial received signal. In a general aspect, the impedance of the output coil of the transmitter air core transformer and the input coil of the receiver air core transformer, which will generally have the same number of turns, will have an impedance at a frequency of operation that is smaller than, and may for example be less than half that of, the terminal resistance and the impedance of the transmission line. In a specific example, given a frequency of operation of 100 MHz and a coil impedance of 30 nH, the impedance of the transmission line and the terminal resistance may be both 100 Ω while the impedance of the coil will be around 19Ω.
[0052] In a specific example, each coil of the air core transformer of the transmitter and/or receiver may be formed as a conductive trace within a PCB. A coil having a diameter of 10 mm from a wire 0.45 mm wide results in an inductance of around 20 nH with a parasitic capacitance of 0.2 pF, while a wire 0.1 mm wide results in an inductance of 30 nH and a parasitic capacitance of around 0.06 pF. A coil of such dimensions can therefore be provided in a PCB implementation of transmitter and receiver of small size, requiring few additional components, resulting in considerable savings in cost and complexity compared to existing systems.
[0053] Applications for the communications system disclosed herein may be for example in battery management systems, in which communication of voltage and charging levels is required between multiple battery units while ensuring galvanic isolation. The size and cost of the communication systems in such applications is of increased significance due to the restricted space and cost requirements involved. In one aspect therefore there may be provided a battery management system comprising first and second battery units and a communications system as disclosed herein providing communication between the first and second battery units.
[0054] From reading the present disclosure, other variations and modifications will be apparent to the skilled person. Such variations and modifications may involve equivalent and other features which are already known in the art of wired communications systems, and which may be used instead of, or in addition to, features already described herein.
[0055] Although the appended claims are directed to particular combinations of features, it should be understood that the scope of the disclosure of the present invention also includes any novel feature or any novel combination of features disclosed herein either explicitly or implicitly or any generalisation thereof, whether or not it relates to the same invention as presently claimed in any claim and whether or not it mitigates any or all of the same technical problems as does the present invention.
[0056] Features which are described in the context of separate embodiments may also be provided in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features which are, for brevity, described in the context of a single embodiment, may also be provided separately or in any suitable sub-combination. The applicant hereby gives notice that new claims may be formulated to such features and/or combinations of such features during the prosecution of the present application or of any further application derived therefrom.
[0057] For the sake of completeness it is also stated that the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, the term “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality, a single processor or other unit may fulfil the functions of several means recited in the claims and reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.