FILTER ARRANGEMENT WITH COMPENSATION OF POOR ELECTRICAL GROUND
20180123552 · 2018-05-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03H7/1708
ELECTRICITY
H03H7/46
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H03H7/46
ELECTRICITY
H03H9/70
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
In a filter arrangement comprising a frequency filter (F) that has a bad or non-ideal ground connection (GC1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7), the defects arising from bad ground are compensated by a capacitance (CC) coupled in parallel to the frequency filter. The value of the capacitance is chosen between 1 and 50 fF. The filter arrangement may be a receiving filter (RF) in a duplexer (DU).
Claims
1. A filter arrangement, comprising a frequency filter (F) connected between a first and a second terminal T1,T2) the frequency filter being coupled to a non-ideal ground a capacitance (CC) coupled in parallel to the frequency filter (F) the value of the capacitance being chosen between 1 and 50 fF.
2. The filter arrangement of claim 1 the frequency filter (F) thereof showing a behavior different to an ideal behavior, the block diagram of the filter arrangement being disturbed relative to the ideal behavior by at least one inductance (L) greater than 0.1 nH coupled to a ground connection (GC) of the frequency filter.
3. The filter arrangement of claim 1 or 2, wherein the filter arrangement comprises a duplexer (DU).
4. The filter arrangement of one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the frequency filter (F) is a receiving filter (RF) and the capacitance (CC) is coupled between input and output of the receiving filter.
5. The filter arrangement of one of claims 2 to 4, wherein the capacitance (CC) and the disturbing inductance (L) together form a filter resonator, the resonance frequency thereof being set to a stop band of the frequency filter by proper selecting a value of the capacitance (CC).
6. The filter arrangement of claim 5, wherein the frequency filter is a receiving filter (RF) of a duplexer (DU), the duplexer comprising the receiving filter and a transmission filter (TF), and the resonance circuit is set to a resonance frequency within the passband of the transmission filter.
7. The filter arrangement of one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the first and second terminals (T1,T2) are input and output terminals of the frequency filter (F), one of the terminals being an antenna terminal.
Description
[0020] In the following, the invention is explained in more detail by embodiments and the respective
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033] For compensating this disturbing inductance, a compensating capacitor CC is coupled in parallel to the first filter F1. Hence, the compensating capacitor CC bridges first and second terminals T1 and T2. In a preferred embodiment, the second terminal T2 is assigned to an antenna terminal of the duplexer DU and the first terminal T1 is assigned to a receiving input (RX section). By selecting a proper capacitance value of the compensating capacitor CC, a compensation of the disturbing effect of the bad ground connection of the duplexer can be compensated at least partly.
[0034]
[0035] The two-in-one filter comprises six ground connections GC1 to GC6 that are in an ideal case without any intrinsic inductance. But in a real environment when the two-in-one filter is mounted to a substrate having a bad ground, the ground connections GC are disturbed which can be simulated by an inductance each coupled to each of the ground connections GC. For a simulation of the performance of this two-in-one filter, it is assumed that each of the disturbing inductances has an inductance value of about 0.6 nH each. To compensate for this bad ground connection, a compensating capacitor CC is coupled in parallel to the first filter that is between first and second terminal T1, T2.
[0036] When performing a simulation with two different capacitance values of the compensating capacitors GC the result thereof is different for the different capacitance values.
[0037]
[0038] The first curve 1 is assigned to an ideal filter F with a good ground connection that has no intrinsic disturbing inductance. Hence, no compensating capacitor has to be simulated. Curve 2 shows the transfer function of the first filter of
[0039] The third curve 3 shows the transfer function between first and second terminal T1, T2 for a filter according to
[0040] It can be shown that both set values of the compensating capacitors CC can improve the attenuation of the filter in the stop band. But in this embodiment, the higher capacitance value of 20 fF for the compensating capacitor CC shows the best result. This may be true only for this example where the disturbance of the ground connections are assumed to be about 0.6 nH. For other examples, an optimal compensating capacitance may be found at higher or lower values.
[0041]
[0042]
[0043] For compensating the disturbing inductances at the ground connections GC3 to GC7, a compensating capacitor CC is coupled in parallel to the receiving filter RF that is between first and second terminal T1, T2. A matching coil AC is coupled to the signal line near the second terminal T2 that is near the antenna terminal to compensate for the capacitive behavior of the filters.
[0044]
[0045] Curve 1 is the transfer function of the receiving filter RF with an optimized and undisturbed ground connection. Curve 2 belongs to the transfer function of the receiving filter RF where the ground connections are disturbed by said inductance values of 0.2 nH each.
[0046]
[0047]
[0048] Curve 3 accords to the transfer function of the receiving filter according to an inventive duplexer according to
[0049] Curve 4 accords to an embodiment where the compensating capacitor value is set to 30 fF.
[0050] The diagram shows that in this embodiment too, the higher value of the compensating capacitance achieves the better result with respect to attenuation in the upper and lower stop band. But this may be true only for this embodiment with the assumed disturbance values of 0.2 nH at each ground connection.
[0051]
[0052] As the invention has been explained by means of a few embodiments only, the scope of the invention shall not be restricted to these embodiments. The invention can be used in any filter which is part of a filter arrangement comprising an arbitrary number of further filters that may be connected therewith or not. The invention is useful for all filters that have bad ground connections that are degrading the filter properties which may be compensated by the inventive capacitor connected in parallel to one of the filters.
LIST OF REFERENCE CHARACTERS
[0053] F, F1, F2 frequency filter [0054] T1, T2 first and a second terminal [0055] CC capacitance [0056] L disturbing inductance [0057] DU duplexer [0058] RF receiving filter [0059] CP Parallel inductance at antenna terminal [0060] GC Ground connection