RADIO FREQUENCY (RF) TO DIGITAL POLAR DATA CONVERTER AND TIME-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER BASED TIME DOMAIN SIGNAL PROCESSING RECEIVER
20210250213 · 2021-08-12
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B1/00
ELECTRICITY
H03D3/006
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B1/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The present disclosure includes a time-to-digital converter (TDC) based RF-to-digital (RDC) data converter for time domain signal processing polar receivers. Polar data conversion achieves better SNR tolerance owing to its phase convergence near the origin in a polar coordinate. The proposed RDC consists of a TDC for phase detection and an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for amplitude conversion. Unlike the conversional data converter, the proposed ADC's sampling position is guided by the detected phase result from the TDC's output. This TDC assisted data-converter architecture reduces the number of bits required for the ADC. In addition, oversampling is no longer needed. With precisely controlled tunable delay cells and gain compensator, this hybrid data convertor is capable to directly convert Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) waveforms and Amplitude Phase Shift Keying (APSK) waveforms directly from the RF signal without down-conversion. Thus, the proposed RDC architecture achieves lower power consumption and better performance comparing with conventional I/Q receivers.
Claims
1.-16. (canceled)
17. A time-to-digital converter-based hybrid polar data converter (converter) for a polar receiver, comprising: a time-to-digital converter (TDC) with a reconfigurable temporal resolution and a variable number of bits input, wherein the TDC detects phase information of a received signal; an analog-to-digital converter (ADC), wherein the ADC detects an amplitude information of the received signal; a first tunable temporal delay cell configured in an ADC path and a plural path of fixed temporal delay cells located in the ADC path, wherein the first tunable temporal delay cell is controlled by the TDC's output to precisely set the ADC sample position at a maximum of a symbol period; and a digital domain one cycle delay coupled to the output of the TDC to align the TDC's output with the ADC's output.
18. The converter of claim 17 further comprising a hysteresis buffer copied to an input of the TDC, wherein the hysteresis buffer eliminates signal amplitude information.
19. The converter of claim 17 further comprising a clock synthesis module with a multi-phase output, wherein the module is controlled by a feedback signal, the feedback signal is used to synchronize a local clock phase with the received signal.
20. The converter of claim 19 further comprising a multiphase selection multiplexer coupled to an output of the baseband clock synthesis module, wherein the multiplexer is controlled by the digital baseband and selects a closest phase generated by the synthesis module for an approximate local clock synchronization.
21. The converter of claim 20 further comprising a second tunable temporal delay cell coupled to an output of the multi-phase selection multiplexer, wherein the second tunable temporal delay cell further controls the local clock phase for fine local clock synchronization.
22. The converter of claim 17, wherein the received signal is a modulated signal on an RF signal.
23. The converter of claim 17, wherein an ADC sampling position for detecting the amplitude information is determined by the received phase information.
24. The converter of claim 17, such that the outputs include digitalized phase and amplitude data.
25. The converter of claim 17, wherein the first tunable temporal delay cell is controlled by the output of the TDC to precisely set the ADC sample position at a maximum of a symbol period.
26. A polar analog-to-digital conversion method utilizing a time-to-digital based hybrid polar data converter (converter), comprising: approximately aligning a local clock phase by selecting a closest phase generated from a multi-phase local clock synthesis block; finely aligning a local clock phase by adjusting a tunable temporal delay cell for the fine alignment; adjusting a tunable delay in an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) path based on an upper and lower threshold value settings of a hysteresis buffer; detecting a time from a local clock rising edge using a time-to-digital converter (TDC) block obtained in the aligning steps to a rising zero-crossing point and a falling zero-crossing point of a received signal, and converting the time interval information into corresponding digital codes; adjusting an ADC sample position by adjusting the tunable delay based on an output of the TDC and selecting one signal delay path based on a position of the received signal's rising and falling zero-crossing points.
27. The conversion method according to claim 26, comprising: adjusting a sampling clock of the ADC to the desired sampling position based on the TDC's output with a tunable temporal delay cell.
28. The conversion method according to claim 27, further comprising selecting with a multiplexer one of two signals passing through two delay paths based on a choice of rising or falling zero-crossing point, wherein the two paths of signal delay are in the ADC path, one including a one and ¼ cycle temporal delay corresponding to the falling zero crossing point detection of the TDC, and the other one including ¾ cycle temporal delay corresponding to the rising zero-crossing point detection of the TDC.
29. The conversion method according to claim 28 further comparing, calculating a compensation gain based on the ADC sample position in a symbol period and the pulse shape filter profile parameters to restore the nonfiltered signal with time domain signal processing.
30. A time-to-digital converter-based hybrid polar data converter (converter) for a polar receiver, comprising: a time-to-digital converter (TDC) with a reconfigurable temporal resolution and a variable number of control bits input, wherein the TDC detects a phase information of a received signal, wherein the received signal is an analog signal on an RF signal; an analog-to-digital converter (ADC), wherein the ADC detects an amplitude information of the received signal, wherein an ADC sampling position for detecting the amplitude information is determined by the received phase information; a hysteresis buffer copied to an input of the TDC, wherein the hysteresis buffer eliminates signal amplitude information; a baseband clock synthesis module with a multi-phase output, wherein the module is controlled by a feedback signal, the feedback signal received from a digital baseband and the feedback signal is used to synchronize a local clock phase with the received signal; a multi-phase selection multiplexer coupled to an output of the clock synthesis module, wherein the multiplexer selects a closest phase generated by the synthesis module for an approximate local clock synchronization; a first tunable temporal delay cell configured in an ADC path and a plural path of fixed temporal delay cells located in the ADC path, wherein the first tunable temporal delay cell is controlled by the TDC's output to precisely set the ADC sample position at a maximum of a symbol period; a second tunable temporal delay cell coupled to an output of the multi-phase selection multiplexer, wherein the second tunable temporal delay cell further controls the local clock phase for fine local clock synchronization; and a digital domain one cycle delay coupled to the output of the TDC to align the TDC's output with the ADC's output, such that the outputs include digitalized phase and amplitude data.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING(S)
[0011] The above and further advantages of this invention can be better understood by referring to the following description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING(S)
[0025] In the present description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clearness and understanding. No unnecessary limitations are to be applied therefrom beyond the requirement of the prior art because such terms are used for descriptive purposes only and are intended to be broadly construed. The different systems and methods described herein may be used alone or in combination with other systems and methods. Various equivalents, alternatives and modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims. Each limitation in the appended claims is intended to invoke interpretation under 35 U.S.C. § 112, sixth paragraph, only if the terms “means for” or “step for” are explicitly recited in the respective limitation.
[0026] The present application includes a novel wireless receiver architecture, which uses both TDCs and ADCs to form a polar data conversion topology. A block diagram of an exemplary architecture of a TDC based hybrid polar data converter 40 is shown in
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[0028] By examining the constellation of the 16-QAM signal 78 in
[0029] The baseband waveform 78 of a 16-QAM signal shown in
[0030] Different from conventional receivers, these two data converters are sampling the signal at baseband signal frequency without oversampling, which is around 10 to 20 MHz for 802.11-a/b/g/n wireless protocols. In a traditional polar transmitter, there is significant bandwidth expansion through I/Q to polar conversion. Conventional ADCs blindly convert the received waveform to digital data, thus needing oversampling. The present time-processing based receiver samples the signal's phase and amplitude information once every symbol period for demodulation. Thus, there is no need to do oversampling.
[0031] Normally, multiple filters are applied to the upconverted signal limiting its bandwidth to fit transmitter's requirements.
[0032] There is another issue during the ADC sampling position adjustment. Referencing back to
[0033] Together with existing polar transmitters, a completed wireless direct-RF polar transceiver system 90 is formed as shown in
[0034] The next generation wireless standards call for highly complexed modulations in order to achieve high data throughput. Complex modulations such as 256-QAM and 1024-QAM put stringent requirements on the phase noise of the PLL, the linearity of the PA and the sample rate as well as the dynamic range of the ADC. Even with the best effort, the state-of-the-art PLLs and PAs can barely support the high-density modulations such as 1024-QAM, leaving no margin for tolerance of other system impairments such as IQ and gain mismatches encountered in conventional Cartesian I/Q transceivers. However, these requirements are much relaxed with the constellations arranged in polar coordinates. A polar based 64 amplitude and phase shift keying (64-APSK) modulation is presented in
[0035] Simulations and Measurements were taken to compare the performances between Cartesian QAM modulations and APSK modulations using the proposed direct RF-sampling polar direct-RF receiver in presence of commonly seen impairments such as phase noise and nonlinear distortion.
[0036] Measurement results are presented in
[0037] The embodiments of the invention described above are intended to be exemplary only. The scope of the invention is therefore intended to be limited by the scope of the appended claims.
[0038] In the foregoing description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clearness, and understanding. No unnecessary limitations are to be inferred therefrom beyond the requirement of the prior art because such terms are used for descriptive purposes and are intended to be broadly construed. The different configurations, systems, and method steps described herein may be used alone or in combination with other configurations, systems and method steps. It is to be expected that various equivalents, alternatives and modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims.