SIGNAL ISOLATION CONTROL APPARATUS AND METHOD OF CONTROLLING A HYBRID JUNCTION
20180026672 ยท 2018-01-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B1/525
ELECTRICITY
H04B1/005
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A signal isolation control apparatus for controlling duplexing of signals to be transmitted through and received from an antenna. The apparatus includes a transmitter chain tap input for coupling to a transmitter chain. An auxiliary transmitter chain is operably coupled to the transmitter chain tap input for processing a transitory signal tapped from the transmitter chain, the auxiliary transmitter chain including an adaptive filter unit and a balance node output for operably coupling to a balance node of a hybrid junction. The adaptive filter unit has a signal leakage monitoring input for operably coupling to an output node of the hybrid junction. The auxiliary transmitter chain is arranged to process the tapped transitory signal in order to generate and apply an isolation signal at the balance node output for maximising isolation of an output node of the hybrid junction from an input node of the hybrid junction.
Claims
1. A signal isolation control apparatus for controlling duplexing of signals to be transmitted through and received from an antenna, the apparatus comprising: a transmitter chain tap input for coupling to a transmitter chain; and an auxiliary transmitter chain operably coupled to the transmitter chain tap input for processing a transitory signal tapped from the transmitter chain, the auxiliary transmitter chain comprising an adaptive filter unit and a balance node output for operably coupling to a balance node of a hybrid junction; wherein the adaptive filter unit has a signal leakage monitoring input for operably coupling to an output node of the hybrid junction; and the auxiliary transmitter chain is arranged to process the tapped transitory signal in order to generate and apply an isolation signal at the balance node output for maximising isolation of an output node of the hybrid junction from an input node of the hybrid junction.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising: a signal leakage monitoring tap operably coupled to the signal leakage monitoring input; wherein the auxiliary transmitter chain is arranged to receive, when in use, a receiver-processed leaked signal via the signal leakage monitoring input.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2, further comprising: a receiver operably coupled to the signal leakage monitoring input for receiver-processing a leaked signal at the output node of the hybrid junction.
4. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the auxiliary transmitter chain comprises transmitter chain processing stage units having an input operably coupled to an output of the adaptive filter unit and an output operably coupled to the balance node output, the transmitter chain processing stage units being arranged to complete processing of the tapped transitory signal in accordance with a desired modulation scheme for the transmitter chain.
5. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the isolation signal is a substantially antiphase signal for cancelling a transmission signal generated by the transmitter chain.
6. The apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the transmitter chain processing stage units comprises a non-linearity generator unit arranged to modify the transitory signal being processed by the auxiliary transmitter chain so that the isolation signal generated by the auxiliary transmitter chain comprises intentional non-linear signal components.
7. The apparatus according to claim 6, wherein the transmitter chain processing stage units comprises an amplifier succeeding the non-linearity generator unit, and processing by the amplifier of a pre-amplification isolation signal generated in the auxiliary transmitter chain and as modified by the non-linearity generator unit results in the isolation signal comprising the non-linear signal components.
8. The apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the transmitter chain processing stage units comprises a non-linearity generator unit arranged to modify the transitory signal being processed by the auxiliary transmitter chain so that the isolation signal generated by the auxiliary transmitter chain comprises intentional non-linear signal components, and wherein the leaked signal at the output node comprises a spectral component outside of a transmit frequency band, the non-linear signal components of the isolation signal comprising spectral components that are in antiphase with and spectrally coincident with the spectral components of the leaked signal are outside of the transmit frequency band.
9. An apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising: an impedance operably coupled to the balance node output and constituting a sink for power output at the balance node output.
10. A duplexer apparatus comprising: the signal isolation control apparatus according to claim 1; and a hybrid junction having the input node for receiving a transmission signal, the antenna node for coupling to the antenna, the output node for outputting a received signal from the antenna, and the balance node; wherein the balance node output of the auxiliary transmitter chain is operably coupled to the balance node of the hybrid junction; and the signal leakage monitoring input is operably coupled to the output node of the hybrid junction.
11. The apparatus according to claim 10, wherein the adaptive filter unit comprises an adaptive filter having a transfer function arranged to approximate an estimate of the amplitude and phase of signal leakage between the input node and the output nodes of the hybrid junction, the approximation generated being in antiphase to the signal leakage.
12. The apparatus according to claim 11, wherein the adaptive filter unit is arranged to modify, when in use, the coefficients of the adaptive filter in response to a receive feedback signal.
13. The apparatus according to claim 12, wherein the transmission signal, when applied to the input node of the hybrid junction, is leaked to the output node of the hybrid junction via a notional self-interference channel and the isolation signal, when applied to the input node of the hybrid junction, is leaked to the output node of the hybrid junction via a notional cancellation channel.
14. The apparatus according to claim 13, wherein the adaptive filter unit is arranged to modify the tapped transitory signal so that the modified transitory signal when completely processed by the auxiliary transmitter chain results in the isolation signal received at the output node via the cancellation channel cancelling the leaked transmission signal received at the output node via the self-interference channel.
15. The apparatus according to claim 12, wherein the adaptive filter unit comprises a coefficient processor operably coupled to the signal leakage monitoring input and the adaptive filter, the coefficient processor being arranged to modify, when in use, the coefficients of the adaptive filter in response to the receive feedback signal.
16. A wireless transceiver apparatus comprising: a duplexer apparatus according to claim 10; and a transmitter chain operably coupled to the input node of the hybrid junction and arranged to generate and apply the transmission signal at the input node of the hybrid junction.
17. The apparatus according to claim 16, wherein the transmitter chain is arranged to generate and apply a test signal to the input node of the hybrid junction during which time the auxiliary transmitter chain is arranged to apply the isolation signal at the balance node; the receiver is arranged to receive a first leaked signal, S.sub.RX1(); the transmitter chain is arranged not to apply the test signal at the input node of the hybrid junction after measurement of the first leaked signal, S.sub.RX1(), during which time the auxiliary transmitter chain is arranged to process the transitory signal corresponding to the test signal and apply the isolation signal generated from the test signal at the balance node of the hybrid junction; the receiver is arranged to receive a second leaked signal, S.sub.RX2(); and the adaptive filter unit is arranged to calculate the coefficients of the adaptive filter using the first and second leaked signals, S.sub.RX1(), S.sub.RX2().
18. The apparatus according to claim 17, wherein the isolation signal is arranged so as to interfere destructively with the transmission signal leaked to the output node of the hybrid junction over a frequency range of interest.
19. The apparatus according to claim 16, wherein the transmission signal comprises unwanted non-linear signal components, the intentional non-linear signal components being in antiphase with the unwanted non-linear signal components.
20. The apparatus according to claim 16, wherein the transmitter chain comprises an up-converter and the auxiliary transmitter chain comprises another up-converter; and the up-converter and the another up-converter are arranged to ensure phase coherence such that local oscillator noise components cancel out.
21. A communications device comprising the signal isolation control apparatus according to claim 1.
22. A method of controlling a hybrid junction for duplexing signals to be transmitted through and received from an antenna, the hybrid junction comprising an input node for receiving a transmission signal, an antenna node for coupling to the antenna, an output node for outputting a received signal from the antenna and a balance node, the method comprising: tapping a transitory transmit signal off a transmitter chain; providing an auxiliary transmitter chain; the auxiliary transmitter chain receiving the transitory transmit signal and generating a feedforward isolation signal to maximize isolation of the output node of the hybrid junction from the input node of the hybrid junction; and applying the feedforward isolation signal to the balance node.
23. A communications device comprising the duplexer apparatus according to claim 10.
24. A communications device comprising the transceiver apparatus according to claim 16.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0061] At least one embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0073] Throughout the following description identical reference numerals will be used to identify like parts.
[0074] Referring to
[0075] The UE device 100 also possesses a volatile memory, for example a RAM 112, and a non-volatile memory, for example a ROM 114, each coupled to the processing resource 102. The processing resource 102 is also coupled to a microphone 116, a speaker unit 118, a keypad 120 and a display 122. The skilled person should appreciate that the architecture of the UE device 100 described above comprises other elements, but such additional elements have not been described herein for the sake of preserving conciseness and clarity of description.
[0076] Turning to
[0077] The duplexing apparatus 108 depicted in
[0078] The signal isolation control apparatus 216 comprises an adaptive filter unit 218, a controllable current source 220, an impedance 222 and a signal monitoring unit 224. A signal input of the adaptive filter unit 218 is operably coupled to the output of the transmit modulator unit 200 and the input of the power amplifier 202. A leaked signal monitoring input of the adaptive filter unit 218 is operably coupled to a monitoring output of the signal monitoring unit 224. In this example, the signal monitoring unit 224 is a measuring receiver operating at the transmit frequency and comprising a complex down-converter (not shown). The measuring receiver is capable of operating over the full bandwidth of the transmitted and received signals and receiver-processes any signal received by the measuring receiver, because any signal leakage from the input node 208 to the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204 needs to be characterised in order to derive the response in terms of signal leakage of the hybrid junction 204. A control output of the adaptive filter unit 218 is operably coupled to a control input of the controllable current source 220.
[0079] A first terminal of the controllable current source 220 is coupled to the balance node 212 of the hybrid junction 204 and a second terminal of the controllable current source 220 is coupled to a common rail 226 at, for example, ground potential. In this example, the controllable current source 220 is a transconductance amplifier. However, the controllable current source 220 can be implemented using any suitable known circuit to provide an isolation signal of the kind to be described later herein. The impedance 222 also has a first terminal operably coupled to the balance node 212 and a second terminal coupled to the common rail 226. An input of the signal monitoring unit 224 is operably coupled to a tapping point 228 between the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204 and the input of the low-noise amplifier 214, via a signal leakage monitoring input (not shown) of the apparatus 216.
[0080] In order to better understand operation of the duplexer apparatus 108, the principle of operation of an ideal and then a non-ideal hybrid junction will now be described. For an ideal hybrid junction, it can be shown mathematically that when a reflection coefficient connected to the balance node 212 is equal or matched to a reflection coefficient connected to the antenna node 210, signal isolation between the output node 206 and the input node 208 can be achieved, namely a transmission signal, .sub.TX, at the input node 208 is divided equally between the antenna node 210 and the balance node 212 and none of the transmission signal, .sub.TX, reaches the output node 206 and hence the low-noise amplifier 214. In the system shown, the impedance 222 would ideally meet this condition if it equalled the antenna impedance. In practical cases, however, the antenna impedance will be frequency varying and not equal to its ideal characteristic impedance so a given impedance 222 will not meet this condition.
[0081] In order to make the reflection coefficients at the antenna node 210 and at the balance node 212 equal, a signal, hereinafter referred to as an isolation signal, needs to be injected into the balance node 212 from the signal isolation control apparatus 216. It will be appreciated that the controllable current source 220 does not of itself affect the impedance 222 as it has infinite parallel impedance, but the effective impedance may be changed by injecting current signals which are derived from the transmit signal such that the aggregate signal at the balance port 212 is equivalent to the signal reflected back into the hybrid junction 204 from the antenna node 210.
[0082] It should be appreciated that in some examples, the design of the hybrid junction 204 can be such that balance of the hybrid junction 204 is attained by the isolation signal being a proportion of or a multiple of the signal reflected back into the hybrid junction 204 from the antenna node 210 by introducing a deliberate skew into the hybrid design. This has the advantage that the proportion of the transmit signal diverted to the balance node 212 can be reduced and more power made available to the transmit node 210. Also, the amount of power needed to be generated by the isolation control apparatus 216 can be reduced.
[0083] The transfer function for such a matched hybrid junction can be derived by assuming that the antenna node 210 has an antenna node reflection coefficient .sub.a associated with it and the balance node 212 has a balance node reflection coefficient .sub.b associated with it. The antenna reflection coefficient .sub.a is frequency dependent. The balance node is deemed matched, but the load is active and can generate an incident wave, a.sub.b. For simplicity, it is also assumed that the input and output nodes 208, 206, respectively are also matched.
[0084] The reflected wave amplitudes are then given by the following product of the incident wave amplitudes with a scattering matrix:
[0085] where a.sub.o is an incident wave at the input node 208, a.sub.b is an incident wave at the balance node 212, b.sub.o is a reflected wave at the input node 208, b.sub.a is a reflected wave at the antenna node 210, b.sub.i is a reflected wave at the output node 206, b.sub.b is a reflected wave at the balance node, and k and k are coupling coefficients. Since the hybrid junction 204 is assumed lossless, k.sup.2+k.sup.2=1. For equal power division,
[0086] Interchanging the third and fourth columns of the scattering matrix, then the third and fourth rows of the scattering matrix, and changing the order of the components of the column vectors accordingly, yields:
[0087] From this:
[0088] For isolation, we want b.sub.i to be zero, for which:
k.sub.aka.sub.o=ka.sub.b, and from which
a.sub.b=k.sub.aa.sub.o
[0089] Thus, the transfer function required is simply k.sub.a.
[0090] However, the skilled person will appreciate that, in practice, the performance of the hybrid junction 204 is not ideal. As such, the hybrid junction 204 is subject to other coupling mechanisms resulting in signal leakage from the input node 208 to the output node 206, additional to the signal reflected at the antenna node 210 and the balance node 212.
[0091] Referring to
[0092] Referring back to
[0093] In another example, the impedance 222 can be adaptive, for example by using a bank of switched resistors controlled by, for example, a controller (not shown) of the adaptive filter unit 218. Of course, this is just one example and any suitable means of impedance tuning can be contemplated using, for example switchably selectable fixed capacitors and/or inductors in addition to resistors to control the impedance. However, by making the impedance seen at the balance node 212 closer to the impedance seen at the antenna node 210, it is possible to increase the inherent isolation between the input node 208 and the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204, thereby reducing the required power of the isolation signal to be injected into the balance node 212 and can also increase the overall isolation between the input node 208 and the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204. For example, the impedance 222 can be 25, 50 and 100 ohm resistors to minimise drive requirements up to a 2:1 Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR).
[0094] In operation (
[0095] The above example relates to a processing implementation in the frequency domain, but it should be appreciated that for some applications the adaptive filtering can alternatively be performed in the time domain. However, in order to mitigate further the leakage signal attributable to the other, non-balance related, coupling mechanisms.
[0096] Referring to
[0097] In this example, a signal in the transmitter chain is, when in use, tapped by way of copying. In this respect, a tapping point 312 is located at the output of the digital Fourier transform unit 304 and is coupled to an auxiliary transmitter chain 314 of the apparatus 216, the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 comprising transmitter chain processing stage units, for example a Frequency Domain Equaliser (FDE) 316 having an input thereof coupled to the tapping point 312 and an output operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary subcarrier mapping unit 318. In the examples set forth herein, the input of the frequency domain equalizer 316 constitutes a transmitter chain tap input of the apparatus 216 and is a set of M Fourier components representing the symbol signal being transmitted. A leakage channel between the input node 208 and the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204, and a cancellation channel between the balance node 212 and the output node 206, are estimated by an adaptation signal processor 326 in a manner described later herein. These channel estimates are used to determine coefficients for the FDE 316 in a manner described later herein. The FDE 316 can be implemented as a complex coefficient vector representing a frequency domain transfer function, for example a set of M complex coefficients that encode the amplitude and phase of the frequency domain transfer function at each of the M frequencies of the Fourier components of the tapped transitory signal. The frequency domain equaliser 316 serves to perform, when in use, a point-by-point multiplication of each Fourier component of the tapped transitory signal with the corresponding complex FDE coefficient mentioned above in order to generate M modified Fourier components that can be input to the auxiliary subcarrier mapping unit 318.
[0098] An output of the auxiliary subcarrier mapping unit 318 is operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary N-point inverse fast Fourier transform unit 320, an output of which is operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary up-converter 322. An output of the auxiliary up-converter 322 is operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary power amplifier 324, constituting a current source. An output of the auxiliary power amplifier 324 is coupled to the balance node 212 of the hybrid junction 204. In this example, an adaptation signal processor 326 constituting a coefficient processor is operably coupled to the frequency domain equaliser 316 and together they serve as the adaptive filter unit 218. The adaptation signal processor 326 is also operably coupled to the monitoring output of the signal monitoring unit 224, and can also be operably coupled to the tapping point 312 depending upon whether the adaptation signal processor 326 is relying upon a mathematical methodology requiring the tapped transient signal. A local oscillator 328 is operably coupled to the up-converter 310, the auxiliary up-converter 322 and the signal monitoring unit 224. As can be seen, the transmitter chain processing stage units serve to complete processing of the tapped transitory signal in accordance with a desired modulation scheme, for example OFDM.
[0099] In operation, (
[0100] The transmitter chain processing stage units of the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 reproduces the processing of at least part of the transmit modulator unit 200 and the power amplifier 202. The amount of processing replicated depends upon the stage in the processing performed by the transmit modulator unit 200 where a transitory signal is tapped off from a tapping point in the transmit modulator unit 200 and hence the transmitter chain 200, 202 (104). In this example, the tapped transitory signal constitutes processing by the transmit modulator unit 200 up to and including the execution of the discrete Fourier transform performed by the digital Fourier transform unit 304.
[0101] The auxiliary transmitter chain 314 replicates the processing performed by the subcarrier mapping unit 306, the N-point inverse fast Fourier transform unit 308, and the up-converter 310. In this respect, the modulation scheme is being adapted to generate the isolation signal, the auxiliary transmit chain 314 providing, in this example, at least the same remaining processing stages as the transmitter chain 104. In order to generate the isolation signal, the transmit modulator unit 200 of the user equipment 100 initially generates (Step 650,
[0102] In this respect, the leakage of the hybrid junction is considered as the notional self-interference channel and the effect of this channel needs to be measured and this is achieved by initially transmitting the sounding signal, S.sub.TX1(), using the transmitter chain 104, a first leaked signal, S.sub.RX1(), being present at the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204 in response to the application of the sounding signal, S.sub.TX1().
[0103] The first leaked signal, S.sub.RX1(), is the result of the influence of the self-interference channel on the transmitted sounding signal, S.sub.TX1(), characterised by an input/output transfer function, L.sub.IO(), defining the response of the self-interference channel in respect of the input node 208 receiving the sounding signal, S.sub.TX1(), as a stimulus and the output node 206 providing the leaked signal, S.sub.RX1(), in response thereto. This can be expressed as follows.
S.sub.RX1()=L.sub.IO()S.sub.TX1()
[0104] Thus, by re-arranging this expression, an expression for the transfer function, L.sub.IO(), is obtained.
[0105] It is also necessary to estimate the effect of the cancellation channel of the hybrid junction 204 on a stimulus applied to the balance node 212. In this respect, the notional cancellation channel between the balance node 212 and the output node 206 is measured by applying the sounding signal, S.sub.TX2(), at the balance node 212 via the auxiliary transmitter chain 314, whilst the transmitter chain 104 is set so as not to apply any signal at the input node 208. In this respect, where the sounding signal, S.sub.TX2(), is applied through the auxiliary transmitter chain 314, the cancellation channel can be characterised by a cancellation transfer function, L.sub.BO(), defining the response of the cancellation channel in respect of the balance node 208 receiving the isolation signal as a stimulus and the output node 206 providing a second leaked signal, S.sub.RX2(), in response thereto. This can be expressed as follows.
S.sub.RX2()=L.sub.BO()S.sub.TX2()
[0106] Thus, by re-arranging this expression, an expression for the transfer function, L.sub.BO(), of the cancellation channel, is obtained.
[0107] For a leaked transmission signal, S.sub.TX3(), i.e. a transmission signal that will be leaked by the hybrid junction 204 between the input and output nodes thereof, to be cancelled by the isolation signal, I.sub.TX(), at the output node 206, the sum of the two signals must be zero:
S.sub.TX3()L.sub.IO()+I.sub.TX()L.sub.BO()=0(1)
[0108] The isolation signal, I.sub.TX(), is generated by multiplying the transmission signal, S.sub.TX3(), by the transfer function, FDE(), of the frequency domain equalizer 316.
I.sub.TX()=FDE()S.sub.TX3()
[0109] Substituting this expression into equation (1) above:
S.sub.TX3()L.sub.IO()+FDE()S.sub.TX3()L.sub.BO()=0
[0110] This equation can be rearranged in order to obtain an expression for the transfer function of the frequency domain equalizer 316.
[0111] Where the same sounding signal is used to measure both the self-interference channel and the cancellation channel, i.e., when S.sub.TX1()=S.sub.TX2(), then calculation of the transfer function of the frequency domain equalizer 316 can be further simplified:
[0112] The above expressions relate to a continuous frequency case. For the subcarrier equivalent case, the general expression is simply discretised:
[0113] Similarly, in the special case where the same sounding signal is used in respect of estimation of both the self-interference channel and the cancellation channel, i.e., when S.sub.TX1()=S.sub.TX2(), the corresponding expression can simply be discretised:
[0114] where k=1, 2, . . . , N, and N is the number of subcarriers, and .sub.k is the frequency of the k.sup.th subcarrier.
[0115] As such, the set of M subcarriers generated by the digital Fourier transform unit 304, and constituting the tapped transitory signal, is processed (Step 614) in the frequency domain equaliser 316, where essentially a vector corresponding to the subcarriers is multiplied by a complex coefficient vector constituting the transfer function FDE(.sub.k) of the frequency domain equaliser 316 determined in the manner described above using the signals received at the output node 206 in response to the stimuli applied to the input node 208 and the balance node 212. In this respect, the monitoring unit 224 generates a monitoring signal, which is generated by receiver-processing a portion of the leaked signal tapped out from the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204. The monitoring signal is used in the manner described above by the adaptation signal processor 326 to guide processing of the tapped portion of the transitory signal by the frequency domain equaliser 316.
[0116] After processing by the frequency domain equaliser 316, the processed set of M scaled subcarriers are mapped (Step 616) by the auxiliary subcarrier mapping unit 318 and then the mapped subcarriers are subjected to an inverse fast Fourier transform (Step 618) by the auxiliary inverse fast Fourier transform unit 320 before being up-converted (Step 620) into the RF domain by the auxiliary up-converter 322, the processing stages of mapping, inverse Fourier transforming and up-converting being the same as the corresponding processing stages of the transmitter chain 104. The up-converted tapped signal is then received (as an analogue signal) and amplified (Step 622) by the auxiliary power amplifier 324 and the amplified RF signal (the isolation signal) generated by the auxiliary power amplifier 324 is applied (Step 624) to the balance node 212 of the hybrid junction 204. Thus, the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 (and the frequency domain equalizer 316) modifies the tapped portion of the transitory signal.
[0117] Referring to
[0118] The receiver-processed signal generated (Step 654) by the monitoring unit 224 is then analysed (Step 656) by the adaptation signal processor 326 along with the tapped portion of the transitory signal (associated with the original sounding signal) in order to compute (Step 658) the above-mentioned initial set of frequency domain equalisation coefficients to be applied by the frequency domain equaliser 316.
[0119] Further sounding signals can then be generated and/or real data symbols used (Step 660) to improve performance of the frequency domain equaliser 316 further and/or maintain its performance (to adapt to dynamic environmental conditions). The monitoring signals generated by the signal monitoring unit 224 in response to these further signals can be correlated with the portion of the transitory signal based upon these further signals (tapped off the transmitter chain 104) in order to derive corrected frequency domain equalisation coefficients. A standard least mean squares (LMS) type of algorithm can be employed on a per subcarrier basis by the adaptation signal processor 326 to correct the frequency domain equalisation coefficients (Steps 654 to 658). As such, the adapted version of the transmission signal at the balance node 212 converges towards an optimum signal, constituting the isolation signal.
[0120] The isolation signal, applied to the balance node 212, generated using frequency domain equalizer coefficients calculated above and the improvements to the filter coefficients, serves to cause the hybrid junction 204 to isolate the input node 208 from the output node 206, when the main transmission signal is applied to the input node 208 and so the main transmission signal is coupled to the antenna node 210 of the hybrid junction 204 for transmission by the antenna 110. The determination and generation of the isolation signal continues, in this example, as long as the transitory signal is present at the tapping point 312.
[0121] Hence, it can be seen that a sounding signal can be employed to generate an initial, start-up, isolation signal and the isolation signal can be adjusted using real transmission signals, i.e. non-test transmission signals, to be applied to (and transmitted through) the hybrid junction 204.
[0122] Referring to
[0123] In operation, the signal isolation control apparatus therefore operates in a similar manner to the signal isolation control apparatus of
[0124] It can be seen that the apparatus 216 estimates the response of the antenna 110 and the hybrid junction 204.
[0125] The above-described signal isolation control apparatus operates in respect of signal bandwidths no greater than the bandwidth of the intentionally transmitted signal, and so serves only to minimise the signal leakage power in the frequency band of the transmit signal. Consequently, Out-Of-Band (00B) signal power in the transmitter chain 104 as a result of higher order effects, for example aliasing, local oscillator noise and power amplifier non-linearity, can leak across the hybrid junction 204 to the output node 206 thereof, such power residing inter alia in the receive frequency bands.
[0126] In order to mitigate the leakage of OOB signal power, the above-described examples can be modified so as deliberately to use the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 in order cancel OOB signal components in the receive frequency band as well as the transmit frequency band.
[0127] In particular, intermodulation in the power amplifier 202 between Fourier components of a signal to be transmitted results in frequency components outside the transmit frequency band. In order to mitigate such intermodulation distortions, a non-linearity is applied to the signal being processed by the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 before the auxiliary power amplifier 324; the non-linearity being applied being adaptively controlled in order to ensure generation of additional non-linear components in antiphase to the non-linear components generated by the power amplifiers 202, 324. When the introduced pre-distortions are amplified by the auxiliary power amplifier 324 to yield anti-phase non-linear components, which are spectrally coincident with corresponding non-linear components generated by the power amplifier, the principle of destructive interference can be used to cancel out the corresponding non-linear components generated in the power amplifier 202.
[0128] Referring to
[0129] A portion of a signal in the transmitter chain is to be tapped off when the apparatus is in use. In this respect, a tapping point 312 is located at the output of the subcarrier mapping unit 306 and is coupled to a noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350, the noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350 comprising a frequency domain equaliser 316 having an input thereof coupled to the tapping point 312 and an output operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary N-point inverse fast Fourier transform unit 320, where N is also greater than M. A predetermined model of signal leakage of the hybrid junction 204 between the input node 208 and the output node 206 is again devised and integrated into the functionality of the frequency domain equaliser 316. The predetermined model can be implemented as a complex coefficient vector representing a transfer function.
[0130] An output of the auxiliary N-point inverse fast Fourier transform unit 320 is operably coupled to an up-sampler 352, and an output of the up-sampler 352 is operably coupled to an input of a non-linear filter 354, constituting a non-linearity generator unit. An output of the non-linear filter 354 is operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary up-converter 322, an output of the auxiliary up-converter 322 being operably coupled to an input of an auxiliary power amplifier 324. An output of the auxiliary power amplifier 324 is coupled to the balance node 212 of the hybrid junction 204. In this example, an adaptation signal processor 326 is operably coupled to the frequency domain equaliser 316, the non-linear filter 354 and the monitoring output of the signal monitoring unit 224, the adaptation signal processor 326 and the frequency domain equalizer 316, an example of an adaptive filter, serve as the adaptive filter unit 218. A local oscillator 328 is operably coupled to the up-converter 310, the auxiliary up-converter 322 and the signal monitoring unit 224.
[0131] In this example, the transmit modulator unit 200 is used to support a Single Carrier-Frequency Division Multiple Access scheme (SC-FDMA) for an uplink of an LTE communications system in which the user equipment device 100 is used.
[0132] In operation, (
[0133] The noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350 reproduces the processing of at least part of the transmit modulator unit 200 and the power amplifier 202, but also introduces non-linear signal components in order to mitigate the OOB effects caused by non-linearities of the power amplifier 202. The amount of processing replicated depends upon the stage in the processing performed by the transmit modulator unit 200 where a portion of a transitory signal is tapped off from a tapping point in the transmit modulator unit 200 and hence the transmitter chain 200, 202 (104). In this example, the portion of the transitory signal constitutes processing by the transmit modulator unit 200 up to and including the execution of the subcarrier mapping performed by the subcarrier mapping unit 306. In order to generate the isolation signal, a modem (not shown) of the user equipment 100 initially generates (Step 700,
[0134] In addition to introducing the pre-distortions, the noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350 replicates the processing performed by the N-point inverse fast Fourier transform unit 308 and the up-converter 310. In this respect, the modulation scheme is being adapted to generate the isolation signal, the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 providing, in this example, at least the same remaining processing stages as the transmitter chain 104. The set of M mapped subcarriers output by the subcarrier mapping unit 306, and constituting the tapped portion of the transitory signal, is processed (Step 714) in the frequency domain equaliser 316, where essentially a vector corresponding to the subcarriers is multiplied by the complex coefficient vector constituting the transfer function FDE() of the frequency domain equaliser 316 determined in the manner described above using the signals received at the output node 206 in response to the stimuli applied to the input node 208 and the balance node 212. In this respect, the monitoring unit 224 generates a monitoring signal, constituting a receive feedback signal, which is generated by receiver-processing a portion of the leaked signal tapped out from the output node 206 of the hybrid junction 204. The monitoring signal is used in the manner described above by the adaptation signal processor 326 in order to guide processing of the tapped portion of the transitory signal by the frequency domain equaliser 316 and the non-linear filter 354.
[0135] After processing by the frequency domain equaliser 316, the processed mapped subcarriers are subjected to an inverse fast Fourier transform (Step 716) by the auxiliary inverse fast Fourier transform unit 320 before being up-sampled (Step 718) by the up-sampler 352 by an appropriate factor which depends on the order of the non-linearities being cancelled, for example 3, 5, or 7. In this respect, the up-sampler increases the sampling rate of the tapped transitory signal. The non-linear intermodulation products being generated in the power amplifier 202 extend over a frequency range that is significantly broader than the transmit frequency band, for example 3rd-order intermodulation products, generated by cubic non-linearities occupy three times more bandwidth than the transmit frequency band and 5th-order products generated by fifth power non-linearities occupy five times more bandwidth than the transmit frequency band. Consequently, the digital sampling rate of the tapped transitory signal being processed by the noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350 therefore has to be increased by a corresponding factor to ensure that appropriate (antiphase) cancellation signals of a sufficiently wide bandwidth can be generated. The up-sampler 352 employs an interpolation technique, for example in the context of 5 up-sampling, 4 additional samples are interpolated according to a suitable filtering function, typically a sinc function. The required bandwidth of the balance signal will depend on the duplex separation.
[0136] The up-sampled signal is applied to the non-linear filter 354 and a non-linear function is applied (Step 720) to the signal received. For simple benign non-linearities, the non-linear function can be a memoryless polynomial. However, for systems with memory effects, i.e. where an instantaneous value of the output of the filter depends upon non-linearity of previous output value, the non-linear filter 354 can be, for example, a Volterra filter. In order to control the generation of the anti-phase intermodulation products, the adaptation signal processor 326 adjusts the coefficients of the non-linear filter 354 in response to the monitoring signal received from the signal monitoring unit 224. When the filter coefficients are correctly adapted, the signals appearing at the output node 206, respectively received from the input node 208 and the balance node 212 via the self-interference channel and the cancellation channel should have the same amplitude, but be in antiphase to, including in respect of the non-linear intermodulation products.
[0137] The signal output by the non-linear filter 354 comprises distortions and is then up-converted (Step 722), the processing stages of inverse Fourier transforming and up-converting being the same as the corresponding processing stages of the transmitter chain 104. The up-converted tapped signal is then received (as an analogue signal) and amplified (Step 724) by the auxiliary power amplifier 324 and the amplified RF signal (the isolation signal) generated by the auxiliary power amplifier 324 containing anti-phase intermodulation products is applied (Step 726) to the balance node 212 of the hybrid junction 204. As can be seen, the transmitter chain processing stage units serve to complete processing of the tapped transitory signal in accordance with a desired modulation scheme.
[0138] Referring to
[0139] Further sounding signals can then be generated and/or real data symbols used (Step 760) to improve performance of the frequency domain equaliser 316 further and the non-linear filter 354. The coefficients of the frequency domain equalizer 316 and the non-linear filter 354 can be updated (Steps 752 to 758) using information about the monitoring signals generated by the signal monitoring unit 224 in response to these further signals. A standard least mean squares (LMS) type of algorithm can be employed on a per subcarrier basis by the adaptation signal processor 326 to correct the frequency domain equalisation coefficients. As such, the adapted version of the transmission at the input node 208 converges towards an optimum signal, constituting the isolation signal.
[0140] The isolation signal, applied to the balance node 212, with the benefit of application of the predetermined model of the leakage performance of the hybrid junction 204 between the input node 208 and the output node 206 and the improvements to the filter coefficients, serves to cause the hybrid junction 204 to isolate the input node 208 from the output node 206 as well as cancel out OOB signal components over a frequency band of interest (cancel or substantially attenuate the OOB signal components of the transmission signal), when the main transmission signal is applied to the input node 208 and so the main transmission signal is coupled to the antenna node 210 of the hybrid junction 204 for transmission by the antenna 110. The determination and generation of the isolation signal continues, in this example, as long as the transitory signal is present at the tapping point 312.
[0141] Hence, it can be seen that a sounding signal can be employed to generate an initial, start-up, isolation signal and the isolation signal can be adjusted using real transmission signals, i.e. non-test transmission signals, to be applied to (and transmitted through) the hybrid junction 204.
[0142] Although, in the above example, pre-distortion is introduced by the noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350 in the digital domain, the skilled person will appreciate that other pre-distortion schemes can be employed, particularly in the analogue domain, providing the benefit of improved power consumption, but at the expense of reduced precision. For analogue implementations, the up-sampler 352 can be omitted, because the necessary bandwidth to generate higher-order intermodulation products required can be more readily achieved.
[0143] In the above-described examples, the transmitter chain 104 and the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 comprise the up-converter 310 and the auxiliary up-converter 322 to perform respective up-conversion using the same local oscillator 328. As such, the up-converters 310, 322 should share the same local oscillator phase noise spectrum characteristics. In order to mitigate local oscillator phase noise, the mixers of the transmitter chain 104 and the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 are configured to ensure phase coherence between the transmitter chain 104 and the auxiliary transmitter chain 314 in order that they both enjoy the same local oscillator phase noise spectrum, thereby correctly cancelling the local oscillator phase noise as much as possible. This also applies to the noise-cancelling auxiliary transmitter chain 350.
[0144] In relation to the hybrid junction, the skilled person should appreciate that any suitable construction can be employed. For example, in the above embodiment a transformer hybrid junction has been described. In another embodiment, a quadrature hybrid junction has been employed, although other variants, for example a 180 transformer hybrid junction, could be used. Other suitable kinds of hybrid junction can also be employed, for example a waveguide hybrid junction.
[0145] The skilled person should appreciate that the above-described implementations are merely examples of the various implementations that are conceivable within the scope of the appended claims. Indeed, throughout the above description, reference has been made to a transitory signal that has been tapped off from a tapping point in the transmitter chain 104. In this regard, the skilled person should understand that the transitory signal is the signal propagating through the transmitter chain 104 at any chosen point where a portion thereof is extracted and can be any precursor to a transmission signal generated by the power amplifier or any analogous stage of processing the transitory signal.
[0146] The systems and methods of the above embodiments may be implemented in a computer system (in particular in computer hardware or in computer software) or in specifically manufactured or adapted integrated circuits, in addition to the structural components and user interactions described.
[0147] The methods of the above embodiments may be provided as computer programs or as computer program products or computer readable media carrying a computer program which is arranged, when run on a computer or other processor, to perform the method(s) described above.
[0148] The term computer readable media includes, without limitation, any medium or media which can be read and accessed directly by a computer or computer system. The media can include, but are not limited to, magnetic storage media such as floppy discs, hard disc storage media and magnetic tape; optical storage media such as optical discs or CD-ROMs; electrical storage media such as memory, including RAM, ROM and flash memory; and hybrids and combinations of the above such as magnetic/optical storage media.
[0149] While specific examples of the invention have been described above, the skilled person will appreciate that many equivalent modifications and variations are possible. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention set forth above are considered to be illustrative and not limiting. Various changes to the described embodiments may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.