Technique for single antenna full duplex
10644763 ยท 2020-05-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B1/50
ELECTRICITY
H04B1/525
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/14
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B1/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A full duplex system comprising a combiner with a first port connected to an antenna, a second port connectable to a source of a signal to be transmitted via the antenna, a third port for outputting a signal received via the antenna and a fourth port connected to a variable impedance. The variable impedance comprises a power splitter with an input connected to the fourth port and at least two outputs, wherein at least two outputs are connected to each other via variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry.
Claims
1. A full duplex system comprising: a baseband circuitry configured to modulate a transmission signal, and to demodulate a reception signal, wherein the transmission signal is to be transmitted via an antenna, and the reception signal is to be received via the antenna, and the transmission signal and the reception signal are subject to a full duplex scheme; a combiner including a first port electrically coupled to the antenna, a second port configured to receive, from the baseband circuitry, the transmission signal to be transmitted via both the first port and the antenna, a third port configured to transmit, to the baseband circuitry, a reception signal received via both the first port and the antenna, and a fourth port electrically coupled to a variable impedance; wherein the variable impedance comprises a loop structure via a power splitter, and variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry, wherein a signal output from the fourth port is split by the power splitter, signals propagated along the loop structure between the outputs of the power splitter are re-combined in the power splitter, and the signal re-combined by the power splitter is input to the fourth port.
2. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises at least one of a variable attenuator or a variable phase shifter.
3. The full duplex system of claim 2, wherein at least one of the variable attenuator and the variable phase shifter comprises series connected discrete switching elements.
4. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a variable attenuator comprising a plurality of series connected attenuation circuits, wherein each attenuation circuit can be switched between a first state and a second state, wherein attenuation in the first state is different from attenuation in the second state.
5. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a variable phase shifter comprising a plurality of series connected phase shifting circuits, wherein each phase shifting circuit can be switched between a first state and a second state, wherein a phase shift introduced in the first state is different from a phase shift introduced in the second state.
6. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a quadrature splitter connected, via two signal paths, to a quadrature mixer, the two signal paths configured to be individually attenuatable.
7. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises an amplifier.
8. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the power splitter is a Wilkinson type power splitter or a resistive power splitter.
9. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the combiner is a Hybrid Coupler or a rat-race combiner.
10. The full duplex system of claim 1, further comprising control circuitry coupled to the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry.
11. The full duplex system of claim 1, further comprising a controller configured to control the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry.
12. A full duplex MIMO system comprising two or more full duplex systems as claimed in claim 1, wherein the power splitters of at least one of the two or more full duplex systems comprises an output coupled, via further variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry, to a corresponding output of a power splitter of another one of the two or more full duplex systems.
13. The full duplex system of claim 1, wherein the system is a mobile phone, a WiFi router, a mobile phone base station, a wireless power transfers system or a mmWave wireless backhaul.
14. A full duplex system comprising: a baseband circuitry configured to modulate a transmission signal, and to demodulate a reception signal, wherein the transmission signal is to be transmitted via an antenna, and the reception signal is to be received via the antenna, and the transmission signal and the reception signal are subject to a full duplex scheme; a combiner including a first port electrically coupled to the antenna, a second port configured to receive, from the baseband circuitry, the transmission signal to be transmitted via both the first port and the antenna, a third port configured to transmit, to the baseband circuitry, the reception signal received via both the first port and the antenna, and a fourth port; and variable impedance circuitry comprising a loop structure via a power splitter, a variable phase shifter, and a variable attenuator, the power splitter including an input electrically coupled to the fourth port and at least two outputs, two of at least two outputs electrically coupled to the variable phase shifter and the variable attenuator, respectively, the variable phase shifter and the variable attenuator being coupled to each other.
15. A full duplex system comprising: a baseband circuitry configured to modulate a transmission signal, and to demodulate a reception signal, wherein the transmission signal is to be transmitted via an antenna, and the reception signal is to be received via the antenna, and the transmission signal and the reception signal are subject to a full duplex scheme a combiner including a first port electrically coupled to the antenna, a second port configured to receive, from the baseband circuitry, the transmission signal to be transmitted via both the first port and the antenna, a third port configured to transmit, to the baseband circuitry, the reception signal received via both the first port and the antenna, and a fourth port; and variable impedance circuitry comprising a loop structure via a power splitter, a quadrature power splitter configured to generate two signals that are 90 degrees out of phase, and a quadrature mixer, the power splitter including an input electrically coupled to the fourth port and at least two outputs, one of at least two outputs coupled to an input of the quadrature power splitter, another of the at least two outputs electrically coupled to an output of the quadrature mixer, the two output signals being individually multiplied with control signals, the multiplied two output signals being input to the quadrature mixer.
Description
(1) In the following, embodiments will be described with reference to the drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) According to an embodiment there is provided a full duplex system comprising a combiner with a first port connected to an antenna, a second port connectable to a source of a signal to be transmitted via the antenna, a third port for outputting a signal received via the antenna and a fourth port connected to a variable impedance. The variable impedance comprises a power splitter with an input connected to the fourth port and at least two outputs, wherein two of the at least two outputs are connected to each other via variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry.
(14) In an embodiment the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises at least one of a variable attenuator or a variable phase shifter.
(15) In an embodiment at least one of the variable attenuator and the variable phase shifter comprises series connected discrete switching elements.
(16) In an embodiment the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a variable attenuator comprising a plurality of series connected attenuation circuits, wherein each attenuation circuit can be switched between a first state and a second state, wherein attenuation in the first state is different from attenuation in the second state.
(17) The attenuation in the first state may be zero, while the attenuation in the second state may be non-zero.
(18) The second states of respective attenuation circuits may provide different levels of attenuation or the same level of attenuation.
(19) In an embodiment the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a variable phase shifter comprising a plurality of series connected phase shifting circuits, wherein each phase shifting circuit can be switched between a first state and a second state, wherein a phase shift introduced in the first state is different from a phase shift introduced in the second state.
(20) The second states of respective phase shifting circuits may provide different amounts of phase shift or the same amounts of phase shift.
(21) Individual phase shifting circuits may comprise two discrete transmission lines that can be switched between and that introduce different phase shifts or delays.
(22) In an embodiment the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises a quadrature splitter connected, via two signal paths, to a quadrature mixer, the two signal paths configured to be individually attenuatable.
(23) In an embodiment the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry comprises an amplifier.
(24) In an embodiment the power splitter is a Wilkinson type power splitter or a resistive power splitter.
(25) In an embodiment the combiner is a Hybrid Coupler or a rat-race combiner.
(26) An embodiment further comprises control circuitry connected to the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry.
(27) The control circuitry may be configured to switch the variable attenuator between the first and second states so that a desired attenuation value is achieved through the series connection of the attenuation circuits.
(28) The control circuitry may be configured to switch the variable attenuator between the first and second states so that a desired attenuation value is achieved through the series connection of the attenuation circuits.
(29) The control circuit may be configured to vary the attenuation and phase delay such that the signals propagated along the loop between the outputs of the power splitter, re-combined in the power splitter, injected into the fourth port and propagated by the combiner to the third port in a manner that minimises self-interference.
(30) According to an embodiment there is provided a full duplex system as described above. The system further comprises a controller configured to control the variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry. The controller may be part of a digital base band that is responsible for modulating and demodulating the transmitted and received signals respectively. In an embodiment the controller runs an algorithm to adapt the attenuator and phase shifter to minimise the power of the transmitted signal in the receive path.
(31) According to an embodiment there is provided a full duplex MIMO system comprising two or more of any of the above described full duplex systems. The power splitters of at least one of the two or more full duplex systems comprises an output connected, via further variable phase shifting and attenuation circuitry, to a corresponding output of a power splitter of another one of the two or more full duplex systems.
(32) In an embodiment any of the above discussed systems is a mobile phone, a WiFi router, a mobile phone basestataion, a wireless power transfers system or a mmWave wireless backhaul.
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(34) Antennas have a finite return-loss due to their mismatch, causing a portion of the transmit signal (VANT) to be reflected back into the combining network, as shown in
(35) An embodiment is shown in
(36) The challenge with any FD systems where a high RF self-interference cancellation (SiC) is required, is to be able to cancel V.sub.ANT to a sufficiently large degree at the LNA input. Assuming a perfect hybrid coupler V.sub.ZV desirably has the same magnitude as V.sub.ANT but is in anti-phase. The magnitude and phase errors between V.sub.ANT and V.sub.Z should be minimised. This requires a high resolution of the phase shifter and the attenuator as well as the controller. Similarly, V.sub.ZV should be tuneable over the range of magnitude and phases likely to be produced by V.sub.ANT, given the operating conditions and frequency of the system.
(37) It was realised that the architecture of
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(40) The attenuator A and phase shifter shown in
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(43) In an alternative embodiment the variable attenuator and delay elements shown in
(44) The injection loop can be extended for MIMO use as shown in
(45) Cross coupling between MIMO transmitters is well known and methods for quantifying its magnitude and phase are well known in the art and need not be discussed in detail herein. The digital control hardware is configured to, based on knowledge of cross coupling coefficients between the two FD systems, adjust the variable attenuator and the variable phase shifter connecting the two FD systems so that the transmit signal coupled from one FD system into the receiver chain of the other FD system is, as accurately as possible, equal to but opposite in phase to the transmit signal cross-coupled from the transmitting FD system to the other FD system via the antennae.
(46) It will be appreciated that the FD systems do not need to use the Hybrid Couplers shown in
(47) It will moreover be appreciated that the MIMO system is not limited to comprising two FD systems only. In other embodiments more than two FD systems may be used, with cross-coupling compensation, such as that shown in
(48) It was realised that a core issue with any FD architecture is that it needs to be tuneable to maximise the SiC for a given environment and operating frequency. Architectures based on hybrid combiners, as shown in
(49) As shown in
(50) A variation on
(51) A and can be implemented in various ways using either linear or switched techniques. Linear techniques involve variable elements like varactor diodes or PIN diodes. Embodiments propose to use switched techniques like those shown in
(52) The invention disclosed in
(53) Some known FD systems include transformers and need a balanced input low noise amplifiers (LNA). Transformer realisation becomes hard at microwave frequencies due to the small physical dimensions and stray parasitic components. Balanced LNAs can be realised in silicon for communications applications, but harder in the discrete form needed for radar or back-haul purposes. Embodiments described herein can be integrated into silicon, but it could also be realised with coaxial components.
(54) In present embodiments a cancellation system is used to suppress any self-interference presented to the input of the LNA. This is done by generating a cancellation signal which is the inverse of the self-interfering transmitted signal. Embodiments enable V.sub.ZV to be tuned over a large part range. This is shown in
(55) Using the configurations disclosed in
(56) The operation of an injection loop of
(57) Some results are shown for an FD injection loop in
(58) Whilst certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel devices, and methods described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the devices, methods and products described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.