US20110201292A1 - Methods and apparatus for calibrating received signal strength indicators - Google Patents
Methods and apparatus for calibrating received signal strength indicators Download PDFInfo
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- US20110201292A1 US20110201292A1 US13/092,946 US201113092946A US2011201292A1 US 20110201292 A1 US20110201292 A1 US 20110201292A1 US 201113092946 A US201113092946 A US 201113092946A US 2011201292 A1 US2011201292 A1 US 2011201292A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B17/00—Monitoring; Testing
- H04B17/30—Monitoring; Testing of propagation channels
- H04B17/309—Measuring or estimating channel quality parameters
- H04B17/318—Received signal strength
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B17/00—Monitoring; Testing
- H04B17/20—Monitoring; Testing of receivers
- H04B17/21—Monitoring; Testing of receivers for calibration; for correcting measurements
Definitions
- the present disclosure is related to methods and apparatus for calibrating received signal strength indicators in wireless devices.
- a received signal strength indicator provides information regarding the received power level of a radio frequency (RF) signal at a wireless device (e.g., a cellular phone, a wireless phone, a wireless network card, etc.) Based on the RSSI, the wireless device can then determine whether to continue or terminate operation and can adjust amplifier gains and/or frequency bandwidth of various internal components.
- RF radio frequency
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating a rectifier 10 for measuring RSSI in accordance with the prior art.
- the rectifier 10 includes a capacitor 14 coupled to a bias resistor 16 , a diode 18 , and a low pass filter 20 .
- the capacitor 14 , the diode 18 , and the low pass filter 20 together convert the received radio frequency signal 12 into a low frequency signal.
- the envelope power level of the low frequency signal then provides the measured RSSI 22 .
- the measurement of RSSI can be susceptible to environmental and/or process influence. Operating temperatures, inherent silicon mismatch of internal components, and/or other factors may cause the measured RSSI to be inaccurate. For example, the measured RSSI may falsely indicate insufficient signal levels even when the received signal has sufficient strength. Such inaccuracy may cause the wireless device to malfunction.
- a conventional technique for addressing the inaccuracy includes trimming the rectifier with resistors by, e.g., adjusting the resistance of the bias resistor 16 .
- trimming with resistors is laborious and costly because different resistors must be individually formed or attached to each chip. Trimming with resistors can also be inefficient because the trimming only affects the measured RSSI at a particular operating state. As a result, an efficient technique for addressing the inaccuracy in RSSI measurement is desired.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating a rectifier for measuring RSSI in accordance with the prior art.
- FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating a calibration circuit useable for the RSSI measuring device in FIG. 2 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 4 is an RSSI versus signal power diagram in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a method of calibrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating the RSSI detector 100 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating a calibration circuit 110 useable for the RSSI detector 100 .
- FIG. 4 is an RSSI versus signal power diagram 200 schematically illustrating a calibration process suitable for the RSSI detector 100 in FIGS. 2 and 3 .
- the RSSI detector 100 can be incorporated into a cellular phone, a wireless phone, a wireless network card, and/or other suitable wireless communication devices.
- the RSSI detector 100 can include a plurality of amplifier and rectifier stages 102 (identified individually as a first stage 102 a , a second stage 102 b , and a third stage 102 c ).
- Individual stages 102 can include amplifiers 104 (identified individually as a first amplifier 104 a , a second amplifier 104 b , and a third amplifier 104 c ) coupled to corresponding rectifiers 106 (identified individually as a first rectifier 106 a , a second rectifier 106 b , and a third rectifier 106 c ).
- the amplifiers 104 can include transistor-type amplifiers with suitable gains and operational bandwidth.
- the rectifiers 106 can include components generally similar to that described above in FIG. 1 . Even though three stages 102 are illustrated in FIG. 2 , in other embodiments, the RSSI detector 100 can include one, two, or any desired number of stages.
- the RSSI detector 100 can include a summing device 108 configured to combine output from the first, second, and third rectifiers 106 a - c .
- the combined output is hereinafter referred to as the Raw RSSI.
- the various signals e.g., the Raw RSSI
- the Raw RSSI can be represented by a current; however, in other embodiments, the Raw RSSI can also be represented by a voltage or other suitable quantities.
- the RSSI detector 100 can further include a low pass filter 116 coupled to the output of the summing device 108 and a bias output 114 .
- the low pass filter 116 is configured to reject high frequency signals and allow low frequency signals to pass through as the calibrated RSSI.
- the low pass filter 116 includes an RC circuit having a resistor 113 coupled to a capacitor 115 .
- the low pass filter 116 can also include an LC circuit and/or other suitable circuit.
- the RSSI detector 100 can additionally include the calibration circuit 110 coupled to the output of the summing device 108 .
- the calibration circuit 110 includes a calibration input 112 configured to receive the Raw RSSI and the bias output 114 configured to inject a biasing signal (e.g., a biasing current) into the output from the summing device 108 before the low pass filter 116 .
- a biasing signal e.g., a biasing current
- the calibration circuit 110 includes a comparison module 120 , a calculation module 122 , and an adjustable current source 128 connected in series.
- the comparison module 120 and/or the calculation module 122 can be implemented as an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), as a software module, and/or as other suitable hardware and/or software logic components.
- the adjustable current source 128 can include a current mirror circuit and/or other suitable current amplifier circuit.
- the comparison module 120 includes the calibration input 112 carrying an input signal (V input ) and a reference input 118 carrying a reference signal (V ref ).
- the calibration input 112 can be coupled to the calibration input 112 carrying the Raw RSSI and/or other desired signal.
- the reference signal is the maximum desired power level for the RSSI detector 100 . In other embodiments, the reference signal may include other desired values.
- the comparison module 120 can be configured to derive a differential signal (V diff ) based on the input signal and the reference signal as follows:
- V diff V ref ⁇ V input
- the differential signal at least partially reflects any environmental and/or process influence upon the RSSI detector 100 .
- the comparison module 120 can also include a comparison output 121 coupled to the calculation module 122 . During operation, the comparison module 120 provides the differential signal to the calculation module 122 .
- the calculation module 122 can be configured to perform analog or digital calculations and/or logic operations based at least partially on the differential signal from the comparison module 120 to at least partially compensate for the environmental and/or process influence. Certain embodiments of the calculation module 122 can include analog circuits, digital circuits, or a combination of analog and digital circuits. For example, the calculation module 122 can be implemented using digital dividers, multipliers, counters, and/or other digital logic components. In other examples, the calculation module 122 can also be implemented with operational amplifiers, transistors, and/or other analog components.
- the calculation module 122 includes a threshold input 124 carrying a threshold signal (V threshold ) and a range input 126 carrying a range signal (V range ).
- the threshold signal includes a power threshold value at which the RSSI detector 100 indicates sufficient power
- the range signal includes a desired power range of the RSSI detector 100 .
- the threshold signal and/or the range signal can include other desired values. Even though the power threshold signal and the power range signal are shown as input to the calculation module 122 , in other embodiments, the calculation module 122 can include internal memory (not shown) in which the threshold signal and/or the range signal can be stored.
- the calculation module 122 can be configured to calculate a control signal (V control ) carried by an output 123 for controlling the adjustable current source 128 as described in more detailed below.
- V control a control signal
- the calculation module 122 calculates the control signal based on the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal.
- the control signal can also be calculated based on any combination of the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal.
- the control signal may be calculated based on other parameters.
- the calculation module 122 and the adjustable current source 128 are first reset. As a result, the adjustable current source 128 does not output a biasing signal to the bias output 114 . Subsequently, a maximum radio frequency signal is applied to the RSSI detector 100 . The amplifiers 104 and the rectifiers 106 then convert the radio frequency signal into a low frequency signal and measure the envelope power of the low frequency signal. The summing device 108 then sums all the measured the envelope power signals from the rectifiers 106 to derive the Raw RSSI. As a result, the Raw RSSI represents a measured maximum power level for the RSSI detector 100 without biasing.
- the comparison module 120 then compares the input signal with the reference signal to derive the differential signal. Because the biasing signal is reset, the input signal is equal to the Raw RSSI. As described above, in certain embodiments, the reference signal is the maximum desired power level for the RSSI detector 100 . As a result, the differential signal represents a difference between the maximum desired power level and the maximum measured power level of the RSSI detector 100 .
- the calculation module 122 After receiving the differential signal, in one embodiment, the calculation module 122 then calculates the control signal based on the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal as follows:
- V control V threshold V range ⁇ V diff
- the calculation module 122 can also calculate the control signal with additional and/or different parameters.
- the adjustable current source 128 uses the control signal to adjust its output and provide the biasing signal based on the control signal.
- the biasing signal is a biasing current (I bias ) set equal to a value calculated as follows:
- the biasing signal can influence the output loading of the summing device 108 and, as a result, provide a more accurate RSSI indication than conventional devices.
- the calibration circuit 122 can be configured to monitor the input signal at the calibration input 112 and modify the biasing signal from the adjustable current source 128 until the differential signal is within a desired threshold from a desired value.
- the calibration process can be repeated based on a predetermined number of times, not based on the current value of the input signal. In other embodiments, the calibration process can be repeated and/or terminated based on other conditions.
- FIG. 4 schematically illustrates the calibration process discussed above with reference to FIGS. 2 and 3 .
- a first plot 202 represents a desired RSSI versus signal power relationship
- a second plot 204 represents an RSSI versus signal power relationship without biasing.
- the second plot 204 indicates a second RSSI level 210 (RSSI 2 ) that is less than a first RSSI 208 (RSSI 1 ) indicated by the first plot 202 .
- the RSSI detector 100 FIG. 2
- the adjustable current source 128 biases the output loading of the summing device 108 ( FIG. 2 ) such that the second plot 204 is shifted toward the first plot 202 (e.g., upwardly) as represented by a third plot 206 .
- the shift toward the first plot 202 can have an offset generally equal to the control signal.
- the RSSI signals indicated by the third plot 206 more closely approximate those indicated by the first plot 202 than those indicated by the second plot 204 , and thus provide a more accurate representation of the received power level.
- the slope of the measured RSSI versus power plot can also be modified.
- individual rectifiers 106 a - c FIG. 2
- both the slope and the offset of the RSSI versus power plot can be modified.
- FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a method 300 of calibrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. Even though the description below may use the RSSI detector 100 in FIG. 2 as an example, the method 300 may also be applied in other RSSI measuring devices.
- An early stage 302 of the method 300 includes measuring a maximum RSSI (V measured — RSSI ) when the RSSI detector 100 is exposed to a maximum radio frequency signal.
- the maximum RSSI can be measured in the analog domain using one or more stages of amplifiers 104 and rectifiers 106 ( FIG. 2 ).
- the resulting maximum RSSI can be represented by a DC signal.
- the maximum RSSI can be measured in the digital domain with an analog-to-digital converter, and the resulting maximum RSSI can be represented by a code with certain bit size (e.g., 8 bits).
- the maximum RSSI can be measured using other techniques and represented in any desired fashion.
- Another stage 304 of the method 300 includes calculating a bias factor based on the measured maximum RSSI.
- calculating the bias factor can include calculating an offset factor (Offset_Factor) based on the measured maximum RSSI, a desired maximum RSSI (V desired — RSSI ), a desired threshold (V threshold ), and a desired power range (V range ) for the RSSI detector 100 as follows:
- Offset_Factor V threshold V range ⁇ ( V desired_RSSI - V measured_RSSI )
- the scaling factor can also be adjusted with a constant and/or other parameters.
- calculating the bias factor can include calculating a slope factor (Slope_Factor) based on the measured maximum RSSI, the desired maximum RSSI (V designed — RSSI ), and a maximum desired power level (V max — power ) of the RSSI detector 100 as follows:
- a further stage 306 of the method 300 includes biasing an output of the RSSI detector 100 with a loading based on the calculated bias factor.
- the output of the RSSI detector 100 (V calibrated — RSSI ) is increased by an amount at least approximately equivalent to the offset factor over the entire power range as follows:
- V calibrated — RSSI V Raw — RSSI +Offset_Factor
- the output of the RSSI detector 100 is decreased by an amount at least approximately equivalent to the offset factor over the entire power range as follows:
- V calibrated — RSSI V Raw — RSSI ⁇ Offset_Factor
- the output of the RSSI detector 100 is biased by the slope factor such that the slope of the measured RSSI versus power plot substantially coincides with that of the desired RSSI versus power plot as follows:
- V calibrated — RSSI V Raw — RSSI ⁇ Slope_Factor
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Abstract
Description
- This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/257,209 filed Oct. 23, 2008, which claims priority to Chinese Patent Application No. 200810043593.4, filed Jul. 4, 2008, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
- The present disclosure is related to methods and apparatus for calibrating received signal strength indicators in wireless devices.
- A received signal strength indicator (RSSI) provides information regarding the received power level of a radio frequency (RF) signal at a wireless device (e.g., a cellular phone, a wireless phone, a wireless network card, etc.) Based on the RSSI, the wireless device can then determine whether to continue or terminate operation and can adjust amplifier gains and/or frequency bandwidth of various internal components.
-
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating arectifier 10 for measuring RSSI in accordance with the prior art. As shown inFIG. 1 , therectifier 10 includes acapacitor 14 coupled to abias resistor 16, adiode 18, and alow pass filter 20. Thecapacitor 14, thediode 18, and thelow pass filter 20 together convert the receivedradio frequency signal 12 into a low frequency signal. The envelope power level of the low frequency signal then provides the measured RSSI 22. - The measurement of RSSI, however, can be susceptible to environmental and/or process influence. Operating temperatures, inherent silicon mismatch of internal components, and/or other factors may cause the measured RSSI to be inaccurate. For example, the measured RSSI may falsely indicate insufficient signal levels even when the received signal has sufficient strength. Such inaccuracy may cause the wireless device to malfunction.
- A conventional technique for addressing the inaccuracy includes trimming the rectifier with resistors by, e.g., adjusting the resistance of the
bias resistor 16. However, trimming with resistors is laborious and costly because different resistors must be individually formed or attached to each chip. Trimming with resistors can also be inefficient because the trimming only affects the measured RSSI at a particular operating state. As a result, an efficient technique for addressing the inaccuracy in RSSI measurement is desired. -
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating a rectifier for measuring RSSI in accordance with the prior art. -
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. -
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating a calibration circuit useable for the RSSI measuring device inFIG. 2 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. -
FIG. 4 is an RSSI versus signal power diagram in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. -
FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a method of calibrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. - The following disclosure describes several embodiments of methods and apparatus for calibrating RSSI measuring devices. Several details describing well-known structures or processes often associated with radio frequency (RF) communication systems are not set forth in the following description for purposes of brevity and clarity. Also, several other embodiments of the invention can have different configurations, components, or procedures than those described in this section. A person of ordinary skill in the art, therefore, will accordingly understand that the invention may have other embodiments with additional elements, or the invention may have other embodiments without several of the elements shown and described below with reference to
FIGS. 2-5 . - Several embodiments of an
RSSI detector 100 are described below with reference toFIGS. 2-4 . In particular,FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating theRSSI detector 100 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating acalibration circuit 110 useable for theRSSI detector 100.FIG. 4 is an RSSI versus signal power diagram 200 schematically illustrating a calibration process suitable for theRSSI detector 100 inFIGS. 2 and 3 . The RSSIdetector 100 can be incorporated into a cellular phone, a wireless phone, a wireless network card, and/or other suitable wireless communication devices. - As shown in
FIG. 2 , theRSSI detector 100 can include a plurality of amplifier and rectifier stages 102 (identified individually as afirst stage 102 a, asecond stage 102 b, and athird stage 102 c). Individual stages 102 can include amplifiers 104 (identified individually as afirst amplifier 104 a, asecond amplifier 104 b, and athird amplifier 104 c) coupled to corresponding rectifiers 106 (identified individually as afirst rectifier 106 a, asecond rectifier 106 b, and athird rectifier 106 c). The amplifiers 104 can include transistor-type amplifiers with suitable gains and operational bandwidth. The rectifiers 106 can include components generally similar to that described above inFIG. 1 . Even though three stages 102 are illustrated inFIG. 2 , in other embodiments, theRSSI detector 100 can include one, two, or any desired number of stages. - The
RSSI detector 100 can include asumming device 108 configured to combine output from the first, second, and third rectifiers 106 a-c. The combined output is hereinafter referred to as the Raw RSSI. In certain embodiments, the various signals (e.g., the Raw RSSI) can be represented by a current; however, in other embodiments, the Raw RSSI can also be represented by a voltage or other suitable quantities. - The
RSSI detector 100 can further include alow pass filter 116 coupled to the output of thesumming device 108 and abias output 114. Thelow pass filter 116 is configured to reject high frequency signals and allow low frequency signals to pass through as the calibrated RSSI. In the illustrated embodiment, thelow pass filter 116 includes an RC circuit having aresistor 113 coupled to acapacitor 115. In other embodiments, thelow pass filter 116 can also include an LC circuit and/or other suitable circuit. - The
RSSI detector 100 can additionally include thecalibration circuit 110 coupled to the output of thesumming device 108. In particular, thecalibration circuit 110 includes acalibration input 112 configured to receive the Raw RSSI and thebias output 114 configured to inject a biasing signal (e.g., a biasing current) into the output from thesumming device 108 before thelow pass filter 116. - In one embodiment, as shown in
FIG. 3 , thecalibration circuit 110 includes acomparison module 120, acalculation module 122, and an adjustablecurrent source 128 connected in series. Thecomparison module 120 and/or thecalculation module 122 can be implemented as an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), as a software module, and/or as other suitable hardware and/or software logic components. The adjustablecurrent source 128 can include a current mirror circuit and/or other suitable current amplifier circuit. - The
comparison module 120 includes thecalibration input 112 carrying an input signal (Vinput) and areference input 118 carrying a reference signal (Vref). Thecalibration input 112 can be coupled to thecalibration input 112 carrying the Raw RSSI and/or other desired signal. In certain embodiments, the reference signal is the maximum desired power level for theRSSI detector 100. In other embodiments, the reference signal may include other desired values. - The
comparison module 120 can be configured to derive a differential signal (Vdiff) based on the input signal and the reference signal as follows: -
V diff =V ref −V input - The differential signal at least partially reflects any environmental and/or process influence upon the
RSSI detector 100. Thecomparison module 120 can also include acomparison output 121 coupled to thecalculation module 122. During operation, thecomparison module 120 provides the differential signal to thecalculation module 122. - The
calculation module 122 can be configured to perform analog or digital calculations and/or logic operations based at least partially on the differential signal from thecomparison module 120 to at least partially compensate for the environmental and/or process influence. Certain embodiments of thecalculation module 122 can include analog circuits, digital circuits, or a combination of analog and digital circuits. For example, thecalculation module 122 can be implemented using digital dividers, multipliers, counters, and/or other digital logic components. In other examples, thecalculation module 122 can also be implemented with operational amplifiers, transistors, and/or other analog components. - As shown in
FIG. 3 , thecalculation module 122 includes athreshold input 124 carrying a threshold signal (Vthreshold) and arange input 126 carrying a range signal (Vrange). In one embodiment, the threshold signal includes a power threshold value at which theRSSI detector 100 indicates sufficient power, and the range signal includes a desired power range of theRSSI detector 100. In other embodiments, the threshold signal and/or the range signal can include other desired values. Even though the power threshold signal and the power range signal are shown as input to thecalculation module 122, in other embodiments, thecalculation module 122 can include internal memory (not shown) in which the threshold signal and/or the range signal can be stored. - The
calculation module 122 can be configured to calculate a control signal (Vcontrol) carried by anoutput 123 for controlling the adjustablecurrent source 128 as described in more detailed below. In one embodiment, thecalculation module 122 calculates the control signal based on the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal. In other embodiments, the control signal can also be calculated based on any combination of the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal. In further embodiments, the control signal may be calculated based on other parameters. - Referring to
FIGS. 2 and 3 together, during calibration, thecalculation module 122 and the adjustablecurrent source 128 are first reset. As a result, the adjustablecurrent source 128 does not output a biasing signal to thebias output 114. Subsequently, a maximum radio frequency signal is applied to theRSSI detector 100. The amplifiers 104 and the rectifiers 106 then convert the radio frequency signal into a low frequency signal and measure the envelope power of the low frequency signal. The summingdevice 108 then sums all the measured the envelope power signals from the rectifiers 106 to derive the Raw RSSI. As a result, the Raw RSSI represents a measured maximum power level for theRSSI detector 100 without biasing. - The
comparison module 120 then compares the input signal with the reference signal to derive the differential signal. Because the biasing signal is reset, the input signal is equal to the Raw RSSI. As described above, in certain embodiments, the reference signal is the maximum desired power level for theRSSI detector 100. As a result, the differential signal represents a difference between the maximum desired power level and the maximum measured power level of theRSSI detector 100. - After receiving the differential signal, in one embodiment, the
calculation module 122 then calculates the control signal based on the differential signal, the threshold signal, and the range signal as follows: -
- In other embodiments, the
calculation module 122 can also calculate the control signal with additional and/or different parameters. - The adjustable
current source 128 then uses the control signal to adjust its output and provide the biasing signal based on the control signal. In one embodiment, the biasing signal is a biasing current (Ibias) set equal to a value calculated as follows: -
- where R is the resistance of the
resistor 113 in thelow pass filter 116. As discussed in more detail below with reference toFIG. 4 , the biasing signal can influence the output loading of the summingdevice 108 and, as a result, provide a more accurate RSSI indication than conventional devices. - Optionally, in one embodiment, the
calibration circuit 122 can be configured to monitor the input signal at thecalibration input 112 and modify the biasing signal from the adjustablecurrent source 128 until the differential signal is within a desired threshold from a desired value. In another embodiment, the calibration process can be repeated based on a predetermined number of times, not based on the current value of the input signal. In other embodiments, the calibration process can be repeated and/or terminated based on other conditions. -
FIG. 4 schematically illustrates the calibration process discussed above with reference toFIGS. 2 and 3 . As shown inFIG. 4 , afirst plot 202 represents a desired RSSI versus signal power relationship, and asecond plot 204 represents an RSSI versus signal power relationship without biasing. As can be seen fromFIG. 4 , at a desired power threshold, thesecond plot 204 indicates a second RSSI level 210 (RSSI2) that is less than a first RSSI 208 (RSSI1) indicated by thefirst plot 202. As a result, the RSSI detector 100 (FIG. 2 ) may falsely indicate that the signal power level is inadequate when it is adequate. - To at least partially remedy the above operational difficulty, the adjustable current source 128 (
FIG. 3 ) biases the output loading of the summing device 108 (FIG. 2 ) such that thesecond plot 204 is shifted toward the first plot 202 (e.g., upwardly) as represented by athird plot 206. The shift toward thefirst plot 202 can have an offset generally equal to the control signal. As a result, at least in the vicinity of thefirst RSSI 208, the RSSI signals indicated by thethird plot 206 more closely approximate those indicated by thefirst plot 202 than those indicated by thesecond plot 204, and thus provide a more accurate representation of the received power level. - Even though the
RSSI detector 100 described above is configured to modify the offset of the RSSI versus power plot, in other embodiments, the slope of the measured RSSI versus power plot can also be modified. For example, individual rectifiers 106 a-c (FIG. 2 ) can be coupled to one calibration circuit 110 (FIG. 2 ) before output from the rectifiers 106 a-c is summed at the summingdevice 108. In further embodiments, both the slope and the offset of the RSSI versus power plot can be modified. -
FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a method 300 of calibrating an RSSI measuring device in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. Even though the description below may use theRSSI detector 100 inFIG. 2 as an example, the method 300 may also be applied in other RSSI measuring devices. - An early stage 302 of the method 300 includes measuring a maximum RSSI (Vmeasured
— RSSI) when theRSSI detector 100 is exposed to a maximum radio frequency signal. In one embodiment, the maximum RSSI can be measured in the analog domain using one or more stages of amplifiers 104 and rectifiers 106 (FIG. 2 ). The resulting maximum RSSI can be represented by a DC signal. In other embodiments, the maximum RSSI can be measured in the digital domain with an analog-to-digital converter, and the resulting maximum RSSI can be represented by a code with certain bit size (e.g., 8 bits). In further embodiments, the maximum RSSI can be measured using other techniques and represented in any desired fashion. - Another stage 304 of the method 300 includes calculating a bias factor based on the measured maximum RSSI. In one embodiment, calculating the bias factor can include calculating an offset factor (Offset_Factor) based on the measured maximum RSSI, a desired maximum RSSI (Vdesired
— RSSI), a desired threshold (Vthreshold), and a desired power range (Vrange) for theRSSI detector 100 as follows: -
- In certain embodiments, the scaling factor can also be adjusted with a constant and/or other parameters.
- In other embodiments, calculating the bias factor can include calculating a slope factor (Slope_Factor) based on the measured maximum RSSI, the desired maximum RSSI (Vdesigned
— RSSI), and a maximum desired power level (Vmax— power) of theRSSI detector 100 as follows: -
- A further stage 306 of the method 300 includes biasing an output of the
RSSI detector 100 with a loading based on the calculated bias factor. In one embodiment, the output of the RSSI detector 100 (Vcalibrated— RSSI) is increased by an amount at least approximately equivalent to the offset factor over the entire power range as follows: -
V calibrated— RSSI =V Raw— RSSI+Offset_Factor - In another embodiment, the output of the
RSSI detector 100 is decreased by an amount at least approximately equivalent to the offset factor over the entire power range as follows: -
V calibrated— RSSI =V Raw— RSSI−Offset_Factor - In further embodiments, the output of the
RSSI detector 100 is biased by the slope factor such that the slope of the measured RSSI versus power plot substantially coincides with that of the desired RSSI versus power plot as follows: -
V calibrated— RSSI =V Raw— RSSI×Slope_Factor - While the above description describes certain embodiments of the invention, and describes the best mode contemplated, no matter how detailed the above appears in text, the invention can be practiced in many ways. Details of the system may vary in implementation, while still being encompassed by the invention disclosed herein. As noted above, particular terminology used when describing certain features or aspects of the invention should not be taken to imply that the terminology is being redefined herein to be restricted to any specific characteristics, features, or aspects of the invention with which that terminology is associated. In general, the terms used in the following claims should not be construed to limit the invention to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification, unless the above Detailed Description section explicitly defines such terms. Accordingly, the actual scope of the invention encompasses not only the disclosed embodiments, but also all equivalent ways of practicing or implementing the invention under the claims.
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CN200810043593.4A CN101621810B (en) | 2008-07-04 | 2008-07-04 | Received signal strength indication detector and method for calibrating received signal strength indication |
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US12/257,209 US7974598B2 (en) | 2008-07-04 | 2008-10-23 | Methods and apparatus for calibrating received signal strength indicators |
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