DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERTER WITH PASSIVE RECONSTRUCTION FILTER
20170207795 ยท 2017-07-20
Inventors
- Diptendu Ghosh (Kolkata, IN)
- Petteri Matti Litmanen (Richardson, TX, US)
- Siraj Akhtar (Richardson, TX)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A DAC design uses a passive reconstruction filter. The reconstruction filter includes a notch filter and series peaking filter (low pass filter with peaking in the signal passband). The notch filter provides notch filtering at the DAC clock frequency. The peaking filter increases signal bandwidth while attenuating frequency contents at harmonics of the DAC clock frequency. The notch filter can be an LC notch filter with at least one notch inductor Ln and at least one notch capacitor Cn. The peaking filter can be a series peaking inductor Ls (shunted with a filter capacitor Cp). In a differential configuration, the passive reconstruction filter can be configured with LC notch filters (with Ln notch inductors), and the peaking filter can be Ls peaking inductors coupled in series to the LC notch filters. The Ln notch inductors, Ls peaking inductors can be mutually wound as single inductors. For an example direct conversion RF transmit chain, IQ signal paths are implemented with differential DAC designs including passive reconstruction filters.
Claims
1. A circuit suitable for analog to digital signal conversion, comprising a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) coupled to receive input digital data, and configured to convert the digital data to a DAC output; a reconstruction filter constructed with passive components to provide a converted signal at an output, including at least one notch filter to provide notch filtering, and a series peaking filter coupled to the notch filter to increase signal bandwidth for the converted signal.
2. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the notch filter comprises an LC notch filter with at least one notch inductor Ln and at least one notch capacitor Cn components.
3. The circuit of claim 2, wherein the converted signal is a differential converted signal, and the DAC comprises a differential DAC configured to convert the input digital data into differential DAC outputs +DAC and DAC; the notch filter comprises a +LC notch filter coupled between the +DAC output and a circuit common, and a LC notch filter coupled between the DAC output and the circuit common; and the peaking circuit comprises a peaking inductor +Ls coupled to the +LC notch filter, and a peaking inductor Ls coupled to the LC notch filter.
4. The circuit of claim 3, wherein the LC notch filters respectively include a Ln inductors, and the peaking inductors Ls; and wherein the Ln notch inductors and the Ls peaking inductors are respectively mutually wound as single inductors.
5. The circuit of claim 3, adapted for use in a direct conversion RF transmit chain including an IQ signal paths: wherein the I-Path includes an I-Path DAC and I-Path reconstruction filter providing a converted I-Path signal with I signal outputs; and wherein the Q-Path includes a Q-Path DAC and Q-Path reconstruction filter providing a converted Q-Path signal with Q signal outputs.
6. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the DAC and the reconstruction filter are integrated into a single integrated circuit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] This Description and the Drawings constitute a Disclosure for [XXXX], including describing example embodiments, and illustrating various technical features and advantages.
[0015] In brief overview a DAC design uses a passive reconstruction filter. The reconstruction filter includes a notch filter and series peaking filter (low pass filter with peaking in the signal passband). The notch filter provides notch filtering at the DAC clock frequency. The peaking filter increases signal bandwidth while attenuating frequency contents at harmonics of the DAC clock frequency. The notch filter can be an LC notch filter with at least one notch inductor Ln and at least one notch capacitor Cn. The peaking filter can be a series peaking inductor Ls (shunted with a filter capacitor Cp). In a differential configuration, the passive reconstruction filter can be configured with LC notch filters (with Ln notch inductors), and the peaking filter can be Ls peaking inductors coupled in series to the LC notch filters. The Ln notch inductors, Ls peaking inductors can be mutually wound as single inductors. For an example direct conversion RF transmit chain, IQ signal paths are implemented with differential DAC designs including passive reconstruction filters.
[0016]
[0017] The passive reconstruction filter is configured with a notch filter 14 and series peaking filter 16 (low pass filter with peaking in the signal passband). The order of the notch filter and the peaking filter is a design choice. The use of multiple successive notch filters is a design choice. For the example differential DAC design, the reconstruction filter includes LnCn notch filters, and series Ls peaking inductors, with a shunt filter capacitor Cp referred to a circuit common.
[0018] The notch filter suppresses DAC output images. The peaking filter provides bandwidth enhancement using inductive peaking while attenuating frequency contents at harmonics of the DAC clock frequency. That is, the passive reconstruction filter (notch filter with peaking circuit) is able to suppress DAC images while maximizing signal bandwidth.
[0019]
[0020] The RF transmitter design includes upconversion mixers 220 driven by LO (local oscillator) signals LO IQ, and TX PPAs (pre-power amplifiers) 231/232, driving out IQ TX RF signals through an external match circuit 240.
[0021] For the example RF application, the passive reconstruction filter design takes advantage of the use of oversampling to bring down quantization noise, so that the DAC images are at a frequency significantly higher than baseband, facilitating the use of integrated inductors. The LC notch filter is used to suppress these images, but they impact band droop. The peaking inductor is used to counter the band-droop effects of the LC notch filter, enhancing bandwidth.
[0022] For the example differential DAC design, in which the passive reconstruction filter is constructed with LnCn notch filters and Ls peaking inductors), takes advantage of mutual coupling for the configuration of the inductors. The four inductors for the differential implementation (two for notching and two for peaking) are implemented using two mutually wound inductors. This configuration reduces filter size, and can enhance filter performance.
[0023] That is, the example embodiment of a DAC design with passive reconstruction filter is able to take advantage of mutual inductance so that the four inductors (Ln and Ls) become two. The notch inductors Ln are inter-wound to have positive mutual coupling, providing signal cancellation, enhancing the notch filtering and providing more rejection at the notch frequency. The peeking inductors and Ls are inter-wound to have negative mutual coupling, enhancing the signal (V positiveV negative) by enhancing peeking filtering. So the net transfer function is such that the droop of the in-band signal is reduced, and rejection of the unwanted signal (in this case DAC image that is at the DAC clock frequency) is increased.
[0024] The use of a passive reconstruction filter according to this Disclosure: (a) allows for a narrower transition band (signal bandwidth and DAC images can be much closer) compared to traditional active filter implementations; (b) since only passive elements are used, DC power consumption is eliminated; and (c) passive elements exhibit high linearity while contributing minimum noise and minimum in band insertion loss.
[0025] The Disclosure provided by this Description and the Figures sets forth example embodiments and applications illustrating aspects and features of the invention, and does not limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the claims. Known circuits, connections, functions and operations are not described in detail to avoid obscuring the principles and features of the invention. These example embodiments and applications, including design examples, can be used by ordinarily skilled artisans as a basis for modifications, substitutions and alternatives to construct other embodiments, including adaptations for other applications.