CARRIER RECOVERY ANALOG SYSTEM FOR A RECEIVER OF A N-PSK SIGNAL
20200044900 ยท 2020-02-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Alexandre Siligaris (Grenoble, FR)
- Cedric Dehos (Douarnenez, FR)
- Jose-Luis GONZALEZ JIMENEZ (Voreppe, FR)
- Clement Jany (Grenoble, FR)
- Baudoin MARTINEAU (Grenoble, FR)
Cpc classification
H03J2200/11
ELECTRICITY
H03L7/099
ELECTRICITY
H04L27/2271
ELECTRICITY
H03B19/00
ELECTRICITY
H04L27/2273
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A carrier recovery system for a receiver of a phase-modulated signal N-PSK, the system including a first pre-conditioning circuit of the signal received (S(t)), with the pre-conditioned signal (SP(t)) having a component, non-modulated in phase, at the frequency N.sub.c where .sub.c is the carrier used for the modulation N-PSK, and a carrier regeneration circuit to regenerate two sinusoidal signals in quadrature at the frequency .sub.c, with these signals being phase locked with respect to said non-modulated component in phase of the pre-conditioned signal.
Claims
1: A carrier recovery system for coherent receiver intended to receive a phase-modulated signal S(t) by means of a N-PSK modulation of said carrier where N is an even number, the carrier recovery system comprising: a signal pre-conditioning circuit for supplying a pre-conditioned signal having a non-modulated component with a harmonic N.sub.c of the carrier frequency .sub.c, said non-modulated component at N.sub.c being obtained by multiplication of the phase-modulated signal and of
2: The carrier recovery system according to claim 1, wherein the signal pre-conditioning circuit obtains the pre-conditioned signal by means of
3: The carrier recovery system according to claim 2, wherein the signal pre-conditioning circuit comprises a plurality K of stages, with each stage (k) comprising a delay (420.sub.k) of value
4: The carrier recovery system according to claim 2, wherein the signal pre-conditioning circuit comprises a plurality K of stages, with each stage (k) comprising a delay (520.sub.k) of value
5: The carrier recovery system according to claim 2, wherein each mixer of a current stage (k) comprises a first pair of transistors and a second pair of transistors, with the gates of the transistors of the first pair and the gates of transistors of the second pair receiving in differential the output signal of the mixer of the preceding stage (k1), with the drains of the transistors of the first pair and the drains of the transistors of the second pair receiving in differential the signal at the output of the delay (520.sub.k) of the current stage (k), the output signal of the current stage (520.sub.k) being supplied in differential by the signal on the first common terminal of the sources of the transistors of the first pair and the signal on the second common terminal of the sources of the transistors of the second pair.
6: The carrier recovery system according to claim 2, wherein each mixer of a current stage k=1, . . . , K comprises a first oscillating circuit between the first common terminal and the mass and a second oscillating circuit between the second commune and the mass, with the first oscillating circuit and the oscillating circuit allowing to pass only the harmonic at the frequency k.sub.c.
7: The carrier recovery system according to claim 1, wherein the carrier regeneration circuit is a frequency divider by a factor N.
8: The carrier recovery system according to claim 7, further comprising an injection locked frequency divider followed by at least one frequency divider using a current switching logic CML and/or at least one frequency divider with a base of CMOS flip-flops, with the product of the frequency division factors of these dividers being equal to N.
9: The carrier recovery system according to claim 1, wherein the carrier regeneration circuit comprises an injection locked oscillator operating at the frequency N.sub.c, followed by a frequency divider by a factor N, the oscillator phase locking onto said non-modulated component at N.sub.c of the pre-conditioned signal and supplying a purely sinusoidal signal at the frequency N.sub.c, with the frequency divider dividing the frequency of this purely sinusoidal signal by a factor N in order to regenerate the carrier.
10: The carrier recovery, system according to claim 1, wherein the carrier regeneration circuit comprises an injection locked oscillator operating at the frequency
11: The carrier recovery system according to claim 10, wherein the phase-modulated signal is a QPSK signal, with the injection locked oscillator being a differential cross-pair oscillator comprising a resonant circuit LC, of which the resonance frequency is close to 2.sub.c, with the injection of the pre-conditioned signal being carried out in common mode, the frequency divider divides the frequency of the differential signal at the output of the oscillator by a factor 2.
12: The carrier recovery system according to claim 1, wherein the carrier regeneration circuit comprises an injection locked oscillator operating at the frequency .sub.c, with the oscillator locking in frequency and in phase on said non-modulated component at N.sub.c of the pre-conditioned signal and supplying a sinusoidal signal at the frequency .sub.c in order to regenerate the carrier.
13: The carrier recovery system according to claim 12, wherein the frequency regeneration circuit comprises two quadrature differential cross-pair oscillators, that use resonant circuits LC, of which the resonance frequency is close to .sub.c, with the quadrature oscillators injection locking in common mode, said injection in common mode being carried out by the pre-conditioning circuit, comprising a transistor polarised in such a way that its point of polarisation belongs to a non-linear portion of its characteristic drain-source current according to its gate-source voltage, said transistor receiving on its gate, through a connecting capacitor, the phase-modulated signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] Other characteristics and advantages of the invention shall appear when reading the preferred embodiment of the invention, described in reference to the accompanying figures among which:
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DETAILED EXPOSURE OF PARTICULAR EMBODIMENTS
[0027] We shall consider in what follows an N-PSK signal receiver, in other words a carrier modulated by symbols that belong to a phase modulation alphabet PSK (Phase Shift Keying) of order N. The modulation alphabet is comprised by the complex symbols
[0028] The general idea of the invention is to recover the carrier by means of a first step of obtaining a non-modulated harmonic of this carrier and of a second step of the injection locking of an oscillator of this harmonic. Indeed, as was seen hereinabove, the direct injection of the modulated signal (here N-PSK) leads to an unstable oscillation frequency and therefore cannot be used in practice. The invention can be used for a modulation alphabet QPSK and is particularly advantageous for high modulation orders, in particular for N8.
[0029]
[0030] The signal N-PSK received by the antenna 110 is conventionally amplified by a low-noise amplifier 120 before being demodulated into baseband by two quadrature mixers 130.sub.1, 130.sub.2, with the baseband signals on the channels I and Q then being converted into digital data by the ADC converters 140.sub.1, 140.sub.2. Optionally, a phase error detector (and where applicable an amplitude error detector), 150, determines the phase difference error between the two channels in relation to the quadrature (where applicable also the gain error) and corrects this error by means of a phase shifter (where applicable, the gain error by means of an amplifier) 160, in order to provide two sinusoids in quadrature (and of the same amplitude) to the mixers. Many phase and gain correction devices for quadrature demodulator are known from prior art, for example U.S. Pat. No. 6,891,440. The object of the invention does not however relate to such a device.
[0031] The receiver, 100, further comprises a carrier recovery system 170 constituted on the one hand, by a pre-conditioning circuit, 180, intended to generate a non-modulated signal at a higher harmonic N.sub.c of the carrier frequency, .sub.c, using the N-PSK signal received, and on the other hand, by a carrier frequency regeneration, 190, in order to generate using this harmonic two quadrature signals, at the carrier frequency .sub.c.
[0032] The structure of the pre-conditioning circuit of the carrier recovery system shall be considered first.
[0033] It is assumed in a first example that the signal received, S(t) is a QPSK signal, in other words N=4, with the corresponding pre-conditioning circuit being shown in
[0034] The signal S(t) is mixed (in other words multiplied) in the mixer 210 with a version of S(t), phase shifted 90, at the carrier frequency .sub.c. In an equivalent manner, the signal S(t) is delayed by a quarter period of the carrier frequency, or
in the delay line 220 before being mixed with itself. The signal at the output of the mixer is given by:
[0035] This signal is then rectified by a rectifier 230, that supplies the module SP(t)=|S(t)| at the output of the pre-conditioning circuit.
[0036] As the signal received S(t) is a modulated QPSK signal, the latter can be expressed in the form:
S(t)=A.sub.I cos(2.sub.ct)+A.sub.Q sin(2.sub.ct)(2)
where A.sub.I=1 and A.sub.Q=1 are the amplitudes of the QPSK symbols (to the nearest multiplication coefficient) and therefore (A.sub.I).sup.2=(A.sub.Q).sup.2=1.
[0037] This results in that the pre-conditioned signal at the output of the rectifier is none other than:
[0038] This pre-conditioned signal is therefore a rectified sinusoidal signal, of a period
(due to the presence of the absolute value).
[0039] Note that the delay line 220 can in general introduce a delay of
where p is a positive or null integer, with the change in polarity introduced when p is odd being neutralised in the rectifier.
[0040] A second embodiment of the pre-conditioning circuit, still for a QPSK signal, is shown in
[0041] In this example, the received signal S(t) is delayed in the delay line 320 by
or more generally by
where p is a positive odd integer. In other words, the spectral component of the signal at .sub.c is phase shifted by
[0042] The signal thus delayed is mixed with itself in the mixer 310 and the result at the output of the mixer is supplied to a frequency doubler, 330, followed by band-pass filter, 340, around the frequency 4.sub.c. This filter preferably has a high quality factor in such a way as to allow to pass substantially only the component at 4.sub.c.
[0043] This pre-conditioning circuit can be implemented in differential mode as shown in
[0044] The signal S(t) is supplied in differential on the gates of a first pair of mixing transistors, 351, 352, and of a second pair of mixing transistors 353, 354. These transistors all have the same characteristics and consequently the pairs of transistors are balanced.
[0045] The delayed signal,
supplies in differential the drains of the first pair of mixing transistors and of the second pair of the mixing transistor.
[0046] A first oscillating circuit, 361, at the double harmonic frequency, 2.sub.c, is mounted between a first common terminal that connects the sources of the transistors 351, 352 and the mass. Similarly, a second oscillating circuit, 362, at the double harmonic frequency, 2.sub.c, is mounted between a second common terminal that connects the sources of the transistors 353, 354 and the mass. The transistors 351-354 play the role of the mixer 310 in
[0047] The mixing signals present at the first common terminal and at the second common terminal drive in differential, via the decoupling capacitors C3, the gates of a third pair of balanced transistors, 381,382 of which the drains are connected to a third common terminal. A third oscillating circuit, 370, at the harmonic frequency 4.sub.c is mounted between this third common terminal and the power supply. The third pair of transistors plays the role of a frequency doubler, 330 and the third oscillating circuit plays the role of a band-pass filter with a high quality factor, 340, of
[0048] The output signal present at the third common terminal is the pre-conditioned signal, SP(t), at the harmonic frequency, 4.sub.c, with the QPSK modulation removed.
[0049] More generally,
[0050] The pre-conditioning circuit comprises a battery of
(where N is an even value) mixers in cascade, 410.sub.1, . . . , 410.sub.K, and a series of K associated delay lines, 420.sub.1, . . . , 420.sub.K, each delay line, 420.sub.k, introducing an elementary delay of
that represents a fraction
of the period of the carrier. In other terms, each delay line, 420.sub.k, can be considered as a phase shifter introducing an elementary phase shift of
at the frequency .sub.c. The output signal of a delay line is supplied on the one hand to the input of the following delay line in the series and on the other hand to an input of the associated mixture, 410.sub.k, of the same stage k.
[0051] The first delay line 420.sub.1 directly receives the signal S(t) as input of the pre-conditioning circuit.
[0052] Each mixer 410.sub.k carries out a multiplication between the output of the preceding mixer 410.sub.k-1 and the output of the k.sup.th delay line of the series, 420.sub.k.
[0053] The output of the last mixer, 410.sub.K, is connected to the input of the rectifier, 430.
[0054] The pre-conditioned signal SP(t) at the output of the circuit of the rectifier is expressed ultimately in the form:
[0055] It should be noted, as hereinabove, that each delay line can introduce more generally a delay of
where p is a positive or null integer number, when the possible change in polarity at the output of the last mixer is neutralised by the rectifier.
[0056]
[0057] The pre-conditioning circuit comprises a battery of
(where N is an even value) mixers in cascade, 510.sub.1, . . . , 510.sub.K, and a series of K associated delay lines, 520.sub.1, . . . , 520.sub.K, with each delay line, 520.sub.k, k=1, . . . , K introducing the same elementary delay of
The signal at the output of a delay line 520.sub.k, k=1, . . . , K is supplied on the one hand to the input of the following delay line in the series and on the other hand to an input o the associated mixer, 510.sub.k, of the same stage k.
[0058] The signal at the output of the last stage, i.e. of the mixer 510.sub.K, is supplied to the frequency doubler 530 then to the band-pass filter with a high quality factor, 540, centred on the frequency N.sub.c.
[0059] As indicated hereinabove, the various elementary delays are defined to the nearest odd multiple of
[0060] The structure of the mixers 510.sub.1, . . . , 510.sub.K can be similar to the mixing stage shown in the top portion in
[0061] As described hereinabove in relation with
[0062] The carrier regeneration circuit shall now be described hereinafter.
[0063] According to a first alternative, shown in
[0064] According to a second alternative, shown in the example in
[0065] In the example of
[0066] In the example of
[0067] Finally, in the example of
[0068]
[0069] This circuit is compliant with the first alternative described hereinabove in relation with
[0070] The pre-conditioned signal SP(t) is used in differential mode as a clock signal (CKM, CKP) of the first flip-flop, 711, of the first divide-by-2 frequency divider and the signal at the carrier frequency is supplied by the second flip-flop (not shown) of the second divide-by-2 frequency divider, 720. In practice, in order to generate the two quadrature signals, two second divide-by-2 frequency dividers will be used, receiving the outputs SM, SP of the first divide-by-2 divider, with the inputs of the two second dividers being crossed between them.
[0071]
[0072] This circuit is compliant with the second alternative described hereinabove, in relation with
[0073]
[0074]
[0075] This circuit is compliant with the second alternative described hereinabove, in relation with
[0076] The ILO oscillator oscillates at the frequency 2.sub.c and is phase locked onto the component at 4.sub.c of the signal SP(t), shown in
[0077]
[0078] This circuit is compliant with the second alternative described hereinabove, in relation with
[0079] The oscillating circuit further comprises a carrier regeneration circuit formed by two quadrature differential cross-pair oscillators, 1011, 1012, that use resonant circuits LC (LC-tank), of which the resonance frequency is close to .sub.c. The quadrature oscillators are current injection locked in common mode (in 4-push mode, i.e. injection is done 4 times per period of the oscillator ILO), on the line with the most power at 4.sub.c, present in the pre-conditioned signal SP(t). The output signals Out.sub.0,Out.sub.180, on the one hand, and Out.sub.90,Out.sub.270 on the other hand, are provided in differential to the quadrature mixers of the baseband demodulator.
[0080]
[0081] Those skilled in the art will understand that the example of implementation of the carrier recovery system shown in
[0082] Note that the carrier recovery system according to the present invention is carried out entirely in analogue and therefore makes it possible to advantageously do without digital processing devices of the signal.
[0083] The carrier recovery system according to the invention has application in particular in the context of high-speed and short-range communications that require only a low energy consumption. It makes it possible for example to effectively replace the cables and connectors between fixed or mobile devices (for example in the industrial environment). It also makes it possible to produce smartphones, tablets, phablets, entirely hermetic by totally suppressing the conventional USB connectors and by carrying out the recharging via induction. Finally, it can be applied to communication connections over a longer distance, for which the reduction in consumption on the receiver is essential, such as for example in the field of the Internet of Things (IoT).