System for Mitigating Unwanted Emissions in a Multi-RF Processing Chain System
20220345229 · 2022-10-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B15/04
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a system for mitigating unwanted emissions in an integrated antenna in which the uplink and downlink RF processing chains are located in close proximity and shielding is impractical. The system involves orienting the uplink and downlink processing chains and physically locating them relative to each other so that applying selective phase biases to their local oscillators results in local oscillator leakage from adjacent RF processing chains to have an out of phase relationship relative to each other. This mitigates unwanted emission from local oscillator signals leakage from the RF processing chains' mixers by angularly dispersing the unwanted emissions and attenuating the unwanted emissions through destructive interference.
Claims
1. A wireless base station, comprising: a first plurality of RF processing chains, each of the first plurality of RF processing chains having a first local oscillator input phase and a first mixer output phase; and a second plurality of RF processing chains, each of the second plurality of RF processing chains having a second local oscillator input phase and a second mixer output phase, wherein the first plurality of RF processing chains and second plurality of RF processing chains are physically arranged, and the first local oscillator input phase and second local oscillator input phases are selected, so that the first mixer output phase of a given first RF processing chain has an out-of-phase relationship with the second mixer output phase of an adjacent second RF processing chain.
2. The wireless base station of claim 1, where in the first and second plurality of RF processing chains comprise downlink RF processing chains.
3. The wireless base station of claim 1, where in the first and second plurality of RF processing chains comprise uplink RF processing chains.
4. The wireless base station of claim 1, wherein the first plurality of RF processing chains comprise downlink RF processing chains, and wherein the second plurality of RF processing chains comprise uplink RF processing chains.
5. A wireless base station, comprising: a phase selector means; a first plurality of RF processing means, each of the first plurality of RF processing means coupled to the phase selector means; and a second plurality of RF processing means, each of the second plurality of RF processing means coupled to the phase selector means; wherein the phase selector means provides a first input phase bias to each of the first plurality of RF processing means and a second input phase bias to each of the second plurality of RF processing means, and wherein the first plurality of RF processing means and the second plurality of RF processing means are arranged so that a first unwanted emission corresponding to each of the first plurality of RF processing means has an out-of-phase relationship with a second unwanted emission corresponding to each of the second plurality of RF processing means.
6. The wireless base station of claim 5, wherein the first plurality of RF processing means and the second plurality of RF means are interleaved.
7. The wireless base station of claim 5, wherein the first plurality of RF processing means and the second plurality of RF means are oriented in opposite directions.
8. A wireless base station, comprising: a first plurality of RF processing chains each having a first local oscillator; a second plurality of RF processing chains each having a second local oscillator; a phase selector configured to provide a first input phase bias to the first local oscillators and a second input phase bias to the second local oscillators, wherein the first plurality of RF processing chains and the second plurality of RF processing chains are arranged so that a first unwanted emission corresponding to each of the first plurality of RF processing chains has an out-of-phase relationship with a second unwanted emission corresponding to each of the second plurality of RF processing chains.
9. The wireless base station of claim 8, wherein the first and second input phase biases selectively rotate the phases of the respective first and second plurality of local oscillators so that the arrangement of the first and second plurality of RF processing chains provides for a destructive interference between the first and second unwanted emissions.
10. The wireless base station of claim 8, where in the first and second plurality of RF processing chains comprise downlink RF processing chains.
11. The wireless base station of claim 8, where in the first and second plurality of RF processing chains comprise uplink RF processing chains.
12. The wireless base station of claim 8, wherein the first plurality of RF processing chains comprise downlink RF processing chains, and wherein the second plurality of RF processing chains comprise uplink RF processing chains.
13. The wireless base station of claim 8, wherein the first plurality of RF processing chains and the second plurality of RF processing chains are interleaved.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
[0013]
[0014] Phase selector module 115, downlink PHY layer 105, and uplink PHY layer 110 may comprise machine readable instructions that are encoded within one or more non-transitory memory devices and executed on one or more processors that perform their respective described functions. As used herein, “non-transitory memory” may refer to any tangible storage medium (as opposed to an electromagnetic or optical signal) and refer to the medium itself, and not to a limitation on data storage (e.g., RAM vs. ROM). For example, non-transitory medium may refer to an embedded volatile memory encoded with instructions whereby the memory may have to be re-loaded with the appropriate machine-readable instructions after being power cycled. Further, each of these components may be deployed within its compute environment using container technology. Alternatively, or in combination, one or more of the components of system 100 (apart from antennas 130) may be implemented in Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs), dedicated circuitry, and/or software stored as machine readable instructions that are executed on one or more processors. Further, phase selector module 115 may be a configuration whereby the phase bias inputs 117 are hardcoded in each FPGA implementation of uplink RF chain 120 and downlink RF chain 125. It will be understood that such variations are possible and within the scope of the disclosure.
[0015]
[0016] Downlink RF chain 125 has a hybrid splitter 210, which spits the incoming Intermediate Frequency (IF) signal into In-phase and Quadrature signals, each of which is upconverted to RF by mixers 215a and 215b and combined in adder 220. The combined RF signal is amplified by variable gain amplifier 230, driver amplifier 235, applied to filter 240, and boosted by power amplifier 245. The conversion from RF to IF of the downlink I/Q signal is performed with a phase bias provided by phase bias input 117.
[0017] The addition of the phase bias input 117 provides a selected phase rotation to the Local Oscillators within mixers 215a and 215b within uplink RF chain 120 and downlink RF chain 125, as described below.
[0018]
[0019] As illustrated in
[0020]
[0021] The combination of local oscillator phase inputs 117, physical placement of the RF chains 120/125, and the respective orientations of the RF chains 120/125, collectively provide for destructive interference between the unwanted emissions from the mixers 215a/b caused by leakage from their respective local oscillators. This may have the effect of angularly dispersing the aggregate unwanted emissions of the local oscillators of the RF chains 120/125.
[0022] The effect of each configuration and each option within each configuration is that the unwanted emissions caused by local oscillator signal leakage from the respective mixers 215a/b of adjacent RF chains 120/125 are in an out-of-phase relationship. The phase selector module 115 may provide arbitrary phase bias inputs 117 to impart the desired out-of-phase relationship. An example of an out-of-phase relationship may include being reversed in phase by 180 degrees. Other examples include 0/90/180/270 degrees and 0/180/45/135 degrees. Having the unwanted emissions from adjacent RF processing chains 120/125 in an out-of-phase relationship causes destructive interference that mitigates overall unwanted emissions from system 100.
[0023] In a further exemplary variation, system 100 may be configured to create out-of-phase relationships between an uplink RF chain 120 and a corresponding adjacent downlink RF processing chain 125. It will be understood that such variations are possible and within the scope of the disclosure.
[0024]
[0025] The addition of system 100 to the 5G protocol stack implementation of
[0026] It will be understood that the phase biases introduced to the local oscillators according to the disclosure may affect the digital beamforming performed further up protocol stacks 405 and 420. However, the processors may compensate for these added phase biases by retrieving channel state information from the UEs (now shown) connected to the base station, which will have the phase biases provided by phase selector 115 embedded therein. Accordingly, having identified the phase biases measured by the UEs, the processors may automatically back out those phase biases in the precoding performed within PHY layers of protocol stack 405/420.
[0027] In an example, the uplink RF processing chains 120 and downlink RF processing chains 125 are configured to operate in mmWave frequencies, and the local oscillators of mixers 215a/b are configured to operate at 24 GHz. However, it will be understood that the disclosure may also apply to other frequency bands. Further, although the disclosure discusses a 5G exemplary implementation, it will be understood that the disclosure may also apply to other telecommunications protocols and radio systems, such as radar. And although the above discussion pertains to a 5G base station, it will be understood that it may equally apply to radio systems in which multiple RF processing chains are located in close proximity, such as in an integrated antenna, in which extensive shielding is not a viable option
[0028] Variations to system 100 are possible and within the scope of the disclosure. For example, the uplink/downlink pairs 120/125 illustrated in