USRE42799E1 - Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture - Google Patents
Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- USRE42799E1 USRE42799E1 US12/147,975 US14797508A USRE42799E US RE42799 E1 USRE42799 E1 US RE42799E1 US 14797508 A US14797508 A US 14797508A US RE42799 E USRE42799 E US RE42799E
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- gain
- feedback control
- control loop
- signal
- level
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired - Lifetime, expires
Links
- 238000004891 communication Methods 0.000 title claims description 49
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 127
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 31
- 238000012545 processing Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 14
- 238000002360 preparation method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 6
- 238000012544 monitoring process Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 3
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 claims description 50
- 238000012937 correction Methods 0.000 claims description 13
- 230000004044 response Effects 0.000 claims description 7
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 claims description 6
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 claims description 4
- 229920006395 saturated elastomer Polymers 0.000 claims description 4
- 238000005070 sampling Methods 0.000 claims description 2
- 229920005994 diacetyl cellulose Polymers 0.000 description 135
- XAUDJQYHKZQPEU-KVQBGUIXSA-N 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine Chemical compound O=C1N=C(N)N=CN1[C@@H]1O[C@H](CO)[C@@H](O)C1 XAUDJQYHKZQPEU-KVQBGUIXSA-N 0.000 description 73
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 51
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 23
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 description 20
- 238000005516 engineering process Methods 0.000 description 18
- WRADPCFZZWXOTI-BMRADRMJSA-N (9E)-10-nitrooctadecenoic acid Chemical compound CCCCCCCC\C([N+]([O-])=O)=C/CCCCCCCC(O)=O WRADPCFZZWXOTI-BMRADRMJSA-N 0.000 description 15
- 238000004364 calculation method Methods 0.000 description 12
- 230000006870 function Effects 0.000 description 12
- 230000007480 spreading Effects 0.000 description 8
- 101000868045 Homo sapiens Uncharacterized protein C1orf87 Proteins 0.000 description 5
- 102100032994 Uncharacterized protein C1orf87 Human genes 0.000 description 5
- 238000004422 calculation algorithm Methods 0.000 description 5
- 230000000295 complement effect Effects 0.000 description 4
- 230000008878 coupling Effects 0.000 description 4
- 238000010168 coupling process Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000005859 coupling reaction Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000013461 design Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000009825 accumulation Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000003321 amplification Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000013459 approach Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000009118 appropriate response Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000010438 heat treatment Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000003199 nucleic acid amplification method Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000002093 peripheral effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000004913 activation Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000003466 anti-cipated effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000001816 cooling Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000003247 decreasing effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000007613 environmental effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000011156 evaluation Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000001914 filtration Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000007639 printing Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000012546 transfer Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000000654 additive Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000000996 additive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000003990 capacitor Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000010267 cellular communication Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001413 cellular effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 244000145845 chattering Species 0.000 description 1
- 238000004590 computer program Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000013078 crystal Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000006735 deficit Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001934 delay Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000011161 development Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000007667 floating Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000003993 interaction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012423 maintenance Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910044991 metal oxide Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 150000004706 metal oxides Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 238000004806 packaging method and process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000737 periodic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000010845 search algorithm Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000004065 semiconductor Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000035945 sensitivity Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001228 spectrum Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000012360 testing method Methods 0.000 description 1
Images
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03D—DEMODULATION OR TRANSFERENCE OF MODULATION FROM ONE CARRIER TO ANOTHER
- H03D3/00—Demodulation of angle-, frequency- or phase- modulated oscillations
- H03D3/007—Demodulation of angle-, frequency- or phase- modulated oscillations by converting the oscillations into two quadrature related signals
- H03D3/008—Compensating DC offsets
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03L—AUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
- H03L7/00—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
- H03L7/06—Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
- H03L7/08—Details of the phase-locked loop
- H03L7/085—Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the frequency- or phase-detection arrangement including the filtering or amplification of its output signal
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B1/00—Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
- H04B1/06—Receivers
- H04B1/16—Circuits
- H04B1/30—Circuits for homodyne or synchrodyne receivers
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L25/00—Baseband systems
- H04L25/02—Details ; arrangements for supplying electrical power along data transmission lines
- H04L25/06—Dc level restoring means; Bias distortion correction ; Decision circuits providing symbol by symbol detection
- H04L25/061—Dc level restoring means; Bias distortion correction ; Decision circuits providing symbol by symbol detection providing hard decisions only; arrangements for tracking or suppressing unwanted low frequency components, e.g. removal of dc offset
Definitions
- the present application is based on U.S. Provisional Patent Application entitled “Packet Acquisition and Channel Tracking For A Wireless Communication Device Configured In A Zero Intermediate Frequency Architecture”, Ser. No. 60/259,731, filed Jan. 4, 2001, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
- the present application is also a continuation-in-part (CIP) of U.S. Patent Application entitled “A Calibrated DC Compensation System For A Wireless Communication Device Configured In A Zero Intermediate Frequency Architecture”, Ser. No. 09/677,975, filed Oct. 2, 2000, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
- the present invention relates to wireless communications, and more particularly to packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency (ZIF) architecture that utilizes a DC control loop to enable direct conversion of radio frequency signals to baseband frequency and a calibration procedure that more accurately determines and controls DC voltage levels.
- ZIF zero intermediate frequency
- Network communication is a growing area of technology both for business and home applications.
- a network system enhances communication and provides a suitable environment for enhanced productivity and capabilities both at home and in the workplace.
- the Internet for example, is a global, mostly wired, communication network that couples devices together on a world-wide basis that enables world-wide communication between any devices coupled to the Internet.
- the Internet enables access to a plurality of services, such as file sharing, faxing, chat, email and information access via websites to files, libraries, databases, computer programs, etc.
- Extranets or Intranets provide enhanced yet protected or secure communication to a selected group of people on the Internet.
- Many small businesses and homes are coupled to the Internet via some variation of local area network (LAN) or the like.
- LAN local area network
- Many such small networks are connected through a set of wires. For example, a network may be established in a small office or home through standard phone wires.
- Phone wires are already available in each office of a business and in several rooms of a typical home. Technology also exists to establish network communications via power lines which are typically available in every room of a house. Many small offices and homes may alternatively be wired with network wires, such as a twisted-pair telephone wires with corresponding RJ-45 connectors utilized by various Ethernet embodiments.
- Wired networks provide a certain level of convenience but have many limitations. Each device coupled to the network must be attached to a corresponding wire through which the network is established. The location of each device, therefore, is limited to enable access to the network wires. Cable management is also a significant issue, since devices must be placed to enable proper routing of wires. It is desired that the wires be conveniently placed and for aesthetic reasons, out of sight. Wires should be located in such a manner as to reduce or eliminate any chance of accidental interference or disconnect or hazards such as tripping. Once wired devices are properly placed, movement of the devices is very limited or otherwise not practical without substantial re-configuration or re-routing of the wires. Maintenance of wired network devices can be inconvenient and often requires that the wires be removed during service and then reconnected properly.
- Infrared technology works well for certain applications, such as remote control systems or the like.
- infrared technology is a relatively inexpensive option but has certain limitations, including limited bandwidth, range limitations, and line-of-sight issues.
- Infrared technology has been utilized in certain applications, such as access points (APs) and point to point relay nodes to extend a network down hallways and the like.
- APs access points
- point to point relay nodes to extend a network down hallways and the like.
- the APs or nodes are usually fixed and located in such a manner, such as on the ceiling, to avoid potential interference with physical objects. Due to line of sight issues, infrared technology is not particularly convenient for network communications at the end points of the network where human interaction is necessary.
- Radio frequency (RF) technology appears to be the technology of choice for establishing a viable wireless local area network (WLAN).
- WLAN wireless local area network
- RF technology for LAN systems is not particularly optimized for small office or home use.
- Wireless technology is established for industrial and commercial uses and applications such as courier services, vehicle rentals, warehouse operations and inventories, etc.
- the wireless embodiments for commercial and industrial applications are too expensive or otherwise specialized and thus are not suited for direct use in the small office or home environment.
- Bluetooth technology is being developed for application in the home or office.
- Bluetooth technology offers relatively limited bandwidth at very low cost to enable connectivity and network communications between certain communication devices, such as cellular phones, computer systems including notebook, laptop and desktop computers and further including other hand-held devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs) or the like.
- PDAs personal digital assistants
- the Bluetooth technology however, has limited bandwidth and therefore relatively low data throughput capability. The consumer market demands higher data throughput and reliability such as is necessary for DVD and other multimedia applications.
- the typical environment for a WLAN is very noisy and not optimal for wireless communications.
- most homes include many electronic devices resulting in an electronically noisy environment that may interfere with WLAN communications, such as microwave ovens, garage door openers, radios, television sets, computer systems, etc.
- WLAN communications such as microwave ovens, garage door openers, radios, television sets, computer systems, etc.
- the communication medium between wireless devices constantly changes.
- most environments or rooms include multiple reflective surfaces creating multipath noise in the wireless environment.
- movement of items or devices or the like such as hands, bodies, jewelry, mouse pointers, etc. or activation of electronic devices, such as cooling fans or the like, affects the overall wireless communication path and potentially degrades wireless communication performance.
- Low cost and low power wireless communication devices for enabling a WLAN system or the like for use at home or in the small business is desirable. It is further desired to provide low cost and low power wireless communication devices for any type of wireless system for any type of application.
- the system must be relatively robust with significant performance and be capable of significant data throughput.
- a method of controlling operation of a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency (ZIF) architecture including a DC feedback control loop and a gain feedback control loop includes processing energy in a wireless medium to generate a corresponding receive signal, monitoring the receive signal via a predetermined measurement window, detecting a changed condition in the wireless medium, holding the gain feedback control loop at a constant gain level after detecting the changed condition, and operating the DC feedback control loop in an attempt to search a stable DC value for the receive signal while the gain loop is held constant.
- ZIF zero intermediate frequency
- the processing of energy may involve processing the noise energy in the wireless medium while no packets are being transmitted.
- the changed condition may include detecting DC saturation of the measurement window, which typically indicates or is otherwise caused by operation during onset of a new packet.
- DC saturation is detected when the sampled receive signal “rails” to one side of a digital measurement window.
- the DC feedback control loop is operated in an attempt control the DC level of the receive signal to within a predetermined maximum DC threshold level so that the gain loop may lock on the signal.
- DC saturation calls for a different procedure to quickly change the DC level of the receive signal so that the incoming signal is not obscured and is observable in the limited measurement window.
- the gain feedback control loop Upon DC saturation, the gain feedback control loop is held and the DC feedback control loop is operated to add opposite polarity DC to the receive signal to remove the DC saturated condition. When the DC saturation condition is removed, the gain feedback control loop is released to control the power level of the receive signal to a predetermined target power level.
- the method may further include detecting gain saturation in which the measurement window is clipped at both of predetermined minimum and maximum values above a predetermined clip rate and in which clipping is relatively balanced between the predetermined minimum and maximum values.
- the method may further include operating the gain feedback control loop to perform a clip-step procedure to reduce the gain of the receive signal.
- the clip-step procedure includes using a graduated clip gain adjustment in which gain is adjusted based on an amount of clipping of the receive signal.
- the method may further include processing noise energy in the wireless medium while no packets are being transmitted, operating the gain feedback control loop until a noise floor gain value is determined, and storing the noise floor gain value.
- the method may further include detecting an end of transmission of a packet in the wireless medium (such as by indication of a local MAC), retrieving and applying the stored noise floor gain value in the gain feedback control loop, holding the gain at the retrieved noise floor gain value during a predetermined quiet period, and releasing the gain feedback control loop to operate in normal mode after expiration of the quiet period.
- the method may further include determining a DC noise value of the DC feedback control loop prior to transmission of the packet (while tracking the noise floor of the wireless medium), storing the DC noise value, and retrieving and applying the DC noise value to the DC feedback control loop after detecting the end of transmission of the packet.
- the gain of the DC loop is also restored to the same level it was prior to packet transmission in order to facilitate re-establishing control the DC loop as soon as possible after packet transmission.
- the method may further include detecting an end of transmission of a packet being transmitted in the wireless medium, retrieving and applying the stored noise floor gain value in the gain feedback control loop for a predetermined period of time, and determining whether the DC feedback control loop converges to a stable DC level within the predetermined period of time. In this case, it may be determined that the wireless medium is busy if the DC feedback control loop does not converge to a stable DC level within the predetermined period of time. This may occur if another device is transmitting a packet, such as an ACK packet in response to the original packet detected in the channel, or if some other channel phenomenon is preventing convergence of the DC loop. In either case, the wireless device backs off and does not attempt packet transmission until after CCA is determined.
- RF radio frequency
- the method may include sampling the receive signal with an analog to digital converter (ADC) to generate corresponding digital samples, where the ADC has a sufficient range to maintain signal integrity without covering a total potential signal range of the receive signal.
- ADC analog to digital converter
- DC saturation is determined when a DC threshold condition is exceeded.
- the digital samples may range between a minimum value and a maximum value, where the DC threshold condition is exceeded when a percentage of digital samples at the minimum value or a percentage of digital samples at the maximum value exceeds a predetermined threshold percentage of a total number of digital samples. For example, this may occur when the number of clipped signals at one rail exceeds a predetermined clipping rate.
- the predetermined clipping rate is arbitrarily determined depending upon the particular configuration, but is typically a relatively high percentage, such as 90% or the like.
- the method includes operating the DC feedback control loop by adding DC to the receive signal.
- Several methods are contemplated, including conducting a step search procedure by repeatedly adding a predetermined DC amount until the DC threshold condition is met.
- the predetermined DC amount may be any arbitrary value, but should be selected to avoid overshooting the gain window and thus may be related to the relative size of the measurement window.
- the method includes performing a successive approximation DC search procedure until the DC threshold condition is met. In this case, a binary search or the like is performed to converge on the applicable DC level.
- the step search procedure may take longer than the successive approximation technique in many cases, but is sufficient, simple, and relatively easy to implement.
- the method may further include detecting a gain saturation state in which clipped digital samples occur at both of the minimum and maximum levels at a rate greater than a predetermined clip ratio threshold and in which a number of digital samples at the minimum level is relatively balanced with a number of digital samples at the maximum level.
- the balance may be as rough or accurate as desired, such as 3:1, 2:1 or as close to 1:1 as desired.
- the method includes operating the gain feedback control loop in a clipping mode while in the gain saturation state.
- the clipping mode may involve adjusting the gain level of the gain feedback control loop based on an amount of clipping using a graduated clip gain adjustment.
- the graduated clip gain adjustment may include a corresponding one of a predetermined plurality of gain level adjustments for each of a plurality of predetermined clip ratio ranges.
- the graduated clip gain adjustment may be graduated between a high gain adjustment for a high clip ratio and a low gain adjustment for a low clip ratio.
- a method of operating a wireless transceiver device in preparation for an expected ACK packet includes holding a gain level of the gain feedback control loop constant after a packet is transmitted and during a predetermined quiet period, operating the DC feedback control loop during the predetermined quiet period in an attempt to resolve DC level while the gain feedback control loop is held, and releasing the gain feedback control loop to operate in a normal packet acquisition mode after the quiet period.
- the method may include storing a gain level value of the gain feedback loop before the packet was transmitted and retrieving the stored gain level value and holding the gain feedback control loop at the retrieved gain level value during the predetermined quiet period after transmission of the packet.
- the method may include storing a DC value of the DC feedback control loop before transmission of the packet and applying the stored DC value after packet transmission.
- the wireless transceiver device may be the device that transmits the packet and expects to receive the ACK packet, or the wireless transceiver device may be a different device operating in ACK priority mode, such as network monitor or analyzer operating in a “sniffer” mode or the like to analyze protocol.
- a method of operating a wireless communication device to determine CCA of a wireless medium includes storing a gain level value of the gain feedback control loop, detecting a packet being transmitted, retrieving the stored gain level value and holding the gain feedback control loop at the retrieved gain level value after transmission of the packet is completed, operating the DC feedback control loop to search a stable DC level, and determining whether the DC loop converges to a stable DC level.
- the gain level value may be determined and stored while tracking the wireless medium with no packets being transmitted.
- the method may include storing a DC value of the DC feedback control loop before detecting a packet being transmitted, and applying the stored DC gain setting after packet transmission.
- the method may include holding the gain level of the gain feedback control loop constant during a predetermined quiet period, and releasing the gain feedback control loop after the predetermined quiet period to operate in a normal mode.
- the method may include determining if the DC feedback control loop converges to a stable DC level within a predetermined period, and if so, operating the DC feedback control loop and the gain feedback control loop in a normal mode.
- the wireless medium is determined to be busy if the DC feedback control loop does not converge to a stable DC level within a predetermined period of time.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of one or more wireless LANs generally illustrating operation of wireless devices implemented according to one or more embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 is a simplified schematic and block diagram of a wireless transceiver in a Zero Intermediate Frequency (ZIF) architecture and implemented according to an embodiment of the present invention that may be incorporated within any of the devices or access points of FIG. 1 .
- ZIF Zero Intermediate Frequency
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a compensation system utilized to control the gain of the received signal and to reduce or eliminate DC offsets in the wireless transceiver of FIG. 2 .
- FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a calibrated DC compensation system similar to the compensation system of FIG. 3 that further includes a calibrator that periodically performs a calibration procedure and a programmable adjust memory provided in the gain interface between the gain loop and the DC loop to more accurately determine and control DC.
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system similar to the compensation system of FIG. 4 that uses a lookup table as the gain interface between the gain loop and the DC loop.
- FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system similar to the compensation system of FIG. 5 with the inclusion of a limit block in the gain loop to limit gain change.
- FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system similar to the compensation system of FIG. 5 with the inclusion of an additional lookup table that stores and provides one or more DC adjust values to further adjust the DC loop.
- FIGS. 8A-8C are flowchart diagrams illustrating a calibration procedure that determines gain, DC offset and derivative data.
- FIG. 9 is a timeline diagram illustrating gain and DC loop timing for normal packet onset of a short preamble packet, indicative of timing necessary for all packets.
- FIG. 10 is a timeline diagram illustrating timing of ACK packet priority acquisition at end of packet transmission.
- FIG. 11 is a timeline diagram illustrating CCA priority acquisition end of packet timing for the wireless transceiver of FIG. 2 .
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of one or more WLANs generally illustrating operation of wireless devices implemented according to one or more embodiments of the present invention.
- a first area 101 and a second area 103 represent separate compartments or divisions of a location such as offices within an office building or rooms within a house.
- the areas 101 and 103 may each include wireless access points (APs) 121 and 123 for controlling communications within the respective areas 101 and 103 .
- the APs 121 , 123 are coupled to a wired network such as a LAN 125 , which is further coupled to a common server computer 127 .
- wireless devices 111 and 113 are able to communicate with each other via the AP 121
- wireless devices 115 and 117 are able to communicate with each other via the AP 123
- the AP 121 enables the devices 111 and 113 to communicate to the server 127 via the LAN 125
- the AP 123 also enables the devices 115 and 117 to communicate to the server 127 via the LAN 125
- the LAN 125 enables the devices 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 to communicate with each other and with any other device coupled thereto.
- APs are usually connected to a wired LAN, such as the LAN 125 , although they need not be.
- the number and location of APs usually depends on the particular configuration and needs, such as the number of users served, range of coverage, and/or adjacent channel interference. It is noted that a single AP can serve a whole floor of rooms subject to user density and interference. Multiple APs are used much like cells in cellular communication. Adjacent APs may operate on adjacent channels to prevent interference. Roaming capability may be enabled to allow devices to move from one area to another, such as from area 101 to 103 and vice versa. Generally, each AP has additional software and has access to house or building main power.
- area 105 including devices 131 , 133 and 135 .
- the devices 131 , 133 and 135 communicate directly with one another rather than via any APs. Networks without APs are ad hoc in nature and typically contain fewer clients.
- the primary difference between the devices 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 from the devices 131 , 133 and 135 is the mode of operation.
- Each of the wireless devices 111 , 113 , 115 , 117 and 131 , 133 , 135 includes a wireless transceiver that may be implemented according to an embodiment of the present invention for enabling wireless communications.
- the devices 111 , 113 , 115 , 117 , 131 , 133 , and 135 maybe anytype of device that includes wireless communication capabilities.
- the devices may each comprise any one or more personal computers, laptop computers, desktop computers, etc., printing devices including any type of printer technology, personal digital assistants (PDAs) or the like, scanners, fax machines, etc.
- PDAs personal digital assistants
- the use of wireless technology enables any of the devices to be located anywhere within a given area to communicate with, and transfer data and information between, other devices within the same communication area.
- the device 111 may be a computer that wirelessly communicates to the device 113 which may be a printer.
- the device 111 may send and receive files to the server 127 .
- the device 111 may be moved to the area 103 from area 101 and still maintain communication with the LAN 125 and the server 127 via the AP 121 .
- the LAN 125 may comprise any type of wire technology, such as telephone wires, power wires, twisted-pair, coaxial cables, etc., and may be implemented according to any type of suitable architecture, such as any type of Ethernet configuration or the like. It is further noted that a wireless LAN 125 is contemplated, where the APs 121 , 123 is include corresponding wireless transceivers and are mobile or portable devices. Within the area 105 , the devices 131 - 135 themselves establish a wireless LAN (WLAN) for communicating to each other in a similar fashion.
- WLAN wireless LAN
- FIG. 2 is a simplified schematic and block diagram of a wireless transceiver 200 implemented according to an embodiment of the present invention that may be incorporated within any of the devices 111 , 113 , 115 , 117 , 131 - 135 and in either or both of the APs 121 , 123 . It is understood, however, that the wireless transceiver 200 is not limited to WLAN configurations, which are exemplary only, but instead may be employed in other types of radio or wireless communications for other types of applications.
- the wireless transceiver 200 is implemented as a zero intermediate frequency (ZIF) architecture including a ZIF transceiver 201 and a baseband processor 203 .
- ZIF zero intermediate frequency
- the ZIF architecture enables a simplified configuration by entirely eliminating intermediate frequency (IF) logic and associated circuitry.
- IF intermediate frequency
- only two primary modules, chips, or ICs are utilized in the ZIF architecture to enable wireless communications. This, in turn, significantly reduces the number of components, reduces cost and further reduces power consumption of the wireless transceiver 200 as compared to similar transceivers including IF circuitry and logic.
- the wireless transceiver 200 is configured with an automatic gain control (AGC) loop 345 ( FIG. 3 ) combined with a DC loop 347 to measure and reduce or otherwise eliminate undesired DC in the receiver.
- AGC automatic gain control
- the AGC loop 345 includes gain control logic that receives an amplified input signal, that estimates input signal power and that asserts a gain adjust signal in an attempt to keep the input signal power at a target power level.
- the DC loop 347 includes DC control logic that estimates an amount of DC in the amplified input signal and that provides a DC offset in an attempt to reduce DC in the amplified input signal.
- a gain interface is provided that converts gain levels between the gain control logic and the DC control logic.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may utilize any desired carrier frequency and modulation technique to achieve any of several corresponding data throughputs.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be configured to operate according to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.11b with a carrier frequency of approximately 2.4 gigahertz (GHz) and with data throughputs of 1, 2, 5.5 or 11 Megabits per second (Mbps).
- IEEE 802.11b with a carrier frequency of approximately 2.4 gigahertz (GHz) and with data throughputs of 1, 2, 5.5 or 11 Megabits per second (Mbps).
- IEEE 802.11a with a carrier frequency of approximately 5 GHz for data throughputs of 6, 12, 18, 24, 36 or 54 Mbps.
- the wireless transceiver 200 operates in accordance with IEEE 802.11b at a carrier frequency of 2.4 GHz with data throughput rates of 1, 2, 5.5 or 11 Mbps.
- the direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) modulation technique is used in the embodiment shown, although it is understood that the present invention is not limited to any particular communication or modulation technique or standard.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be configured as a plug-in peripheral or expansion card that plugs into an appropriate slot or interface of a computer system.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be implemented as a Personal Computer Memory Card International Association (PCMCIA) card or PC Card that plugs into a PC Card slot of the computer.
- PCMCIA Personal Computer Memory Card International Association
- the antenna may be incorporated on the PC Card itself, or provided externally or on the computer and interfaced to the PC Card in any appropriate manner.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be implemented according to any type of expansion or peripheral standard, such as according to the peripheral component interconnect (PCI), the Industry Standard Architecture (ISA), the Extended-ISA (EISA) standard, etc.
- PCI peripheral component interconnect
- ISA Industry Standard Architecture
- EISA Extended-ISA
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be implemented on a PCI card that plugs into a PCI slot.
- the antenna may be integrated or coupled externally.
- Mini PCI cards with antennas embedded in displays are also contemplated.
- Self-contained or standalone packaging with appropriate communication interface(s) is also contemplated, which is particularly advantageous for APs.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may be implemented as a separate unit with serial or parallel connections, such as a Universal Serial Bus (USB) connection or an Ethernet interface (twisted-pair, coaxial cable, etc.), or any other suitable interface to the device.
- USB Universal Serial Bus
- Ethernet interface twisted-pair, coaxial cable, etc.
- Digital data sent from or received by the wireless transceiver 200 is processed through a medium access control (MAC) device 205 .
- the MAC device 205 asserts digital data signals to a packet encoder 207 , which formulates the data into packets for transmission.
- packet encoder 207 a packet is formed by the concatenation of three serial bit streams.
- the first serial bit stream, referred to as the preamble is a 1 Mbps stream of ones or zeroes followed by a synchronization (sync) pattern.
- the second serial bit stream, referred to as the header is a 1 or 2 Mbps stream of packet information, such as packet length and the data rate of the data portion of the packet.
- the third serial bit stream, referred to as the data portion or payload is any selected one of 1, 2, 5.5, or 11 Mbps streams of data.
- the packet encoder 207 provides baseband encoded packets to a spreading encoder (SPREAD) 209 .
- SPREAD spreading encoder
- the 1 and 2 Mbps bit rates are encoded according to Barker word encoding spreading
- the 5.5 and 11 Mbps bit rates are encoded according to Complementary Code Keying (CCK) encoding.
- the spreading encoder 209 uses a quadrature generation technique and provides in phase (I) and quadrature (Q) signals on respective I and Q channels. For 1 Mbps, every bit in 11 chips of a Barker word are output identically on the I and Q channels. If the input bit is zero, then the sense of the 11 chips is inverted, and if the input bit is one, the sense of the 11 chips is not inverted.
- the data is thus spread by the Barker code.
- 11 chips are output on each of the I and Q channels.
- One bit is used to invert or not the I channel and the other bit is used for the Q channel.
- 4 bits are mapped to 8 complex (I and Q channel) chips.
- 8 chip complex code words are chosen and then rotated according to specific rules defined in the standard.
- 11 Mbps is similar to 5.5 Mbps, except that 8 bits are mapped to 8 complex chips.
- the I channel signal is provided to an I digital-to-analog converter (I DAC) 211 and the Q channel signal is provided to a Q DAC 213 , where the I DAC 211 and the Q DAC 213 also receive a clock signal CREF from a clock source 257 .
- the CREF signal is 44 MHz based on the 22 MHz fundamental for IEEE 802.11b.
- the I DAC 211 and the Q DAC 213 up-sample and digitally filter the I and Q channel signals, respectively. For 11 Mbps, the I and Q DACs convert each chip to four samples.
- the I DAC 211 asserts an I channel analog output signal to an anti-aliasing low-pass filter (AA LPF) 215 , which provides an I channel transmit signal TX 1 to an LPF 219 within the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- the Q DAC 213 asserts a Q channel analog output signal to another AA LPF 217 , which provides a Q channel transmit signal TXQ to the input of another LPF 221 within the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- An external voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 229 provides an output local oscillator (LO) signal at approximately 4.8 GHz to a phase lock loop (PLL) 231 and an input of an I/Q LO generator 227 .
- LO local oscillator
- PLL phase lock loop
- I/Q LO generator 227 an input of an I/Q LO generator 227 .
- a reference crystal is used to tune the VCO 229 by a voltage control to generate the 4.8 GHz LO signal.
- the PLL 231 receives the CREF clock signal which is divided down to an appropriate low frequency signal.
- the PLL 231 also divides down the VCO 4.8 GHz signal to the same appropriate low frequency signal.
- a phase detector circuit within the PLL 231 compares these two low frequency signals—one being the CREF signal and the other from the VCO 229 , and generates a correction (C) signal which after filtering is input to the VCO 229 .
- This phase locked loop system reduces jitter on the VCO output LO signal.
- the I/Q LO 227 divides the 4.8 GHz carrier signal from the PLL 231 by two and generates two separate 2.4 GHz carrier signals, including an in-phase (I) carrier signal, and a quadrature (Q) carrier signal.
- the I and Q carrier signals are 90 degrees out of phase with respect to each other.
- the I carrier signal is provided to one input of an I channel mixer 223
- the Q carrier signal is provided to one input of a Q channel mixer 225 .
- the other input of the I channel mixer 223 receives the output of the LPF 219 and the other input of the Q channel mixer 225 receives the output of the LPF 221 .
- the I channel mixer 223 combines the I carrier signal with the I channel transmit signal to up-convery the I channel from baseband to 2.4 GHz radio frequency (RF).
- the Q channel mixer 225 combines the Q carrier signal with the Q channel transmit signal to up-convert the Q channel from baseband to 2.4 GHz RF.
- VGA variable gain amplifier
- RFPA radio frequency power amplifier
- T/R transmit/receive
- the T/R switch 241 For transmission, the T/R switch 241 provides the RF output of the LPF 239 to a bi-directional band pass filter (BPF) 243 , which provides a filtered RF output to a diversity switch 245 .
- BPF band pass filter
- the diversity switch 245 asserts the RF transmit signal on a selected one of two antennas 247 , 249 .
- the RFPA 237 asserts a transmit detect (TX DET) signal back to a transmit analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 251 within the baseband processor 203 , which provides a corresponding digital feedback signal to the MAC 205 .
- the MAC 205 includes a power control algorithm that detects the transmitted output signal via the ADC 251 and provides a feed forward signal to the input of a transmit (TX) DAC 253 , which asserts a transmit automatic gain control (TX AGC) signal to control the gain of the VGA 233 .
- the ZIF transceiver 201 includes a voltage reference source 255 to provide a voltage reference (VREF) signal for the ZIF transceiver 201 and for the baseband processor 203 .
- the VRFF signal may be any convenient voltage, such as 1.2 volts or the like.
- the clock source 257 provides the CREF signal to the PLL 231 within the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- the T/R switch 241 is selected to receive signals from either of the antennas 247 , 249 and provides a filtered signal (through BPF 243 ) to the input of a balanced/unbalanced (BALUN) impedance matching network 259 .
- the BALUN 259 provides a received RF input signal R RF to the input of a variable LNA 261 .
- the LNA 261 asserts its output to the input of a fixed-gain LNA 263 .
- the LNA 263 asserts the amplified RF receive signal to respective inputs of an I channel mixer 265 and a Q channel mixer 267 .
- the I/Q LO 227 asserts the I carrier signal to another input of the I channel mixer 265 and the Q carrier signal to another input of the Q channel mixer 267 .
- the I channel mixer 265 splits the I carrier frequency from the I channel output signal in the RF receive signal and provides the I channel output signal to an LPF 269 .
- the Q channel mixer 267 splits the Q carrier frequency from the Q channel output signal in the RF receive signal and provides the Q channel output signal to an LPF 271 .
- the output of the LPF 269 is provided to the input of a variable baseband automatic gain control (BB AGC) amplifier 273 .
- the LPF 271 asserts its output to the input of another BB AGC amplifier 275 .
- the BB AGC amplifier 273 asserts an amplified I channel analog receive signal (RXI) to the input of an I channel receiver AA LPF 277 , which asserts its output to the input of an I channel ADC (I ADC) 281 within the baseband processor 203 .
- RXI amplified I channel analog receive signal
- the BB AGC amplifier 275 asserts an amplified Q channel analog receive signal (RXQ) to the input of a Q channel AA LPF 279 , which provides its output to an input of a Q channel ADC (Q ADC) 283 within the baseband processor 203 .
- the I ADC 281 and the Q ADC 283 assert respective I and Q channel digital receive signals R DI , R DQ to a spreading decoder (DE-SPREAD) 285 , which performs the opposite process as the spreading encoder 209 to retrieve received baseband encoded packets.
- the spreading decoder 285 provides the received baseband packets to a packet decoder 287 , which, among other functions, retrieves the packet payloads and generates a stream of received data signals.
- the R DI and R DQ signals are also provided to compensation logic 284 , further described below.
- the data signals from the packet decoder 287 are provided to a receive input of the MAC device 205 , which provides received signals to the corresponding device across the implemented interface.
- the MAC interface may be incorporated internally within a device, such as on a PC CARD or the like, or may be external with appropriate external connectors, such as according to USB or the like.
- An overload detector (OD) 289 within the ZIF transceiver 201 has first and second inputs coupled to the respective outputs of the LPF 269 and LPF 271 to detect an overload in the received input signal.
- the overload detector 289 asserts a baseband overload (BB OVLD) signal to an OVLD ADC 291 within the baseband processor 203 , which provides a corresponding digital overload signal OVLD to the compensation logic 284 .
- the compensation logic 284 detects an overload of the received signal and asserts a HI/LO signal to control the variable LNA 261 of the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- variable LNA 261 has an approximate 33 decibel (dB) step differential between a high gain (HI) and a low gain (LO).
- the gain is initially set high to detect weak signals and is switched to low gain upon certain conditions if the receive signal causes an overload condition as detected by the overload detector 289 .
- the compensation logic 284 controls the gain of the received signal to a target power level by asserting a gain adjust signal G ADJ to a gain DAC referred to as the AGC DAC 297 .
- the AGC DAC 297 asserts a corresponding analog feedback gain control signal GAIN ADJUST to control the gain of both of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 .
- GAIN ADJUST a gain adjust signal
- a single gain control signal is provided to both of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 so that the gain of the I and Q channels of the receive signal appropriately track one another.
- the compensation logic 284 further asserts respective digital I and Q channel DC offset signals IDC OFF , QDC OFF to an I channel offset (I OFF) DAC 293 and a Q channel offset (Q OFF) DAC 295 , respectively.
- the I OFF DAC 293 asserts an I channel DC offset analog signal (I OFFSET) to the LPF 269 and the Q OFF DAC 295 asserts a Q channel DC offset analog signal (Q OFFSET) to the LPF 271 .
- the compensation logic 284 attempts to measure and reduce or otherwise eliminate DC offsets in both the I and Q channels of the receive signal within the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- a ZIF architecture is utilized to obtain sufficient performance and higher data throughput at lower cost and power consumption. This is particularly advantageous to the consumer market which demands multimedia and DVD applications requiring relatively good performance. The consumer market also demands a lower cost.
- the ZIF architecture is one way to achieve lower cost with sufficient performance by eliminating IF components and external filters.
- the target carrier frequencies are in the GHz range such as 2-5 GHz ranges and higher, although the present invention is not limited to any particular frequency range.
- the 2-5 GHz bands are relatively noisy with significant amounts of interference.
- the ZIF architecture is utilized to maintain a level of performance in a noisy environment.
- a particular problem with the ZIF architecture is the development of DC offsets at baseband that degrade signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio, which is directly related to performance of the system.
- the IF stage which may be utilized to combat a significant level of DC offset, is not provided in the ZIF architecture.
- a number of sources of DC offset are due to temperature change, such as die self-heating of integrated circuits.
- the receive mixers 265 , 267 internally inject DC offset from the carrier frequencies generated by the I/Q LO 227 . This LO DC offset varies with RF frequency or channel selection as well as a selected level of gain of the variable LNA 261 . This change occurs very quickly with changes of channel or gain. A slow DC drift with temperature also occurs.
- the LO carrier frequencies from the I/Q LO 227 leaks to the antenna input port causing DC offset.
- This external DC offset varies with changes in the external environment, such as movement of hands, bodies, jewelry, mouse pointers, activation of electronic devices such as cooling fans or the like and re-radiation from nearby reflectors around the antenna. Movement of the wireless devices or changes in antenna direction also causes significant changes of the propagation characteristics of the channel or area. Such environmental changes induce impedance changes that dynamically change LO leakage magnitude and phase.
- the receive mixers 265 , 267 also exhibit DC offsets at their outputs.
- This DC offset is primarily a function of circuit matching, such as bipolar and Metal Oxide Semiconductor (MOS) device matching and resistor matching. This DC offset also drifts due to temperature variations and self-heating.
- the I and Q channel LPFs 269 , 271 also exhibit offset at their outputs. This DC offset is also primarily a function of circuit matching.
- the I and Q channel baseband AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 also exhibit DC offset at their inputs. This DC offset is also primarily a function of circuit matching.
- All of the sources of DC offsets are referenced to the inputs of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 .
- the gain range of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 must be sufficient to guarantee acceptable performance in a variety of environments.
- the gain range of each of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 is approximately ⁇ 6 dB to 60 dB, or 0.5 V/V to 1000 V/V to obtain the desired operation range of approximately 0.7 V/V to 800 V/V. It has been determined that the DC offset range can be on the order of ⁇ 50-100 millivolts (mV). It is desired that the DC correction occur before the baseband amplifiers 273 , 275 because of its significant gain range.
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a compensation system 300 utilized to control the gain of the received signal and to reduce or eliminate DC offsets in the ZIF architecture.
- the compensation system 300 illustrates operation of the receive portion of the wireless transceiver 200 for purposes of gain and DC compensation.
- the compensation system 300 includes various blocks representative of the elements within the wireless transceiver 200 , including circuitry from the ZIF transceiver 201 and the baseband processor 203 , with a focus on the operations of the compensation logic 284 .
- the block diagram of the compensation system 300 is simplified in that the separate I and Q channel signals are illustrated by single communication path, which represents operation of both I and Q channels. Thus, it is noted that the same techniques are applied for both the I and Q channels and thus are applicable for use in the wireless transceiver 200 .
- the received RF input signal R RF from the antennas 247 , 249 through the BALUN 259 is provided to an RF mixer circuit referred to as the LNA/mixer 301 , which represents the LNAs 261 , 263 and the receive mixers 265 , 267 .
- the LNA/mixer 301 provides a baseband receive input signal R BB to one input of a combiner 303 , which provides a DC-adjusted receive input signal R ADJ to the input of a baseband BB LPF 305 representing the LPFs 269 , 271 .
- the other input of the combiner 303 receives a DC OFFSET signal.
- the combiner 303 operates as a combiner that combines the DC OFFSET signal with the R BB receive signal to provide the DC-adjusted R ADJ signal.
- the combiner 303 is a summing junction that subtracts the DC OFFSET signal from the R BB receive signal to provide the DC-adjusted R ADJ signal. It is noted that the combiner 303 may alternatively operate as a summing junction that adds an inverted DC OFFSET signal.
- the invention is not limited to any particular implementation or design configuration.
- the output of the BB LPF 305 is provided to the input of a baseband gain amplifier BB AGC amplifier 307 , representing operation of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 .
- the output of the BB LPF 305 is also provided to the overload detector 289 , which asserts the baseband overload signal BB OVLD to the OVLD ADC 291 within the baseband processor 203 , which provides the OVLD signal to an overload (OV) detect block 309 of the compensation logic 284 .
- the OV detect block 309 asserts the HI/LO signal to the LNA/mixer 301 to switch the variable LNA 261 between high and low gains.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 asserts the amplified input signal R to the input of an AA LPF 311 representing the AA LPFs 277 , 279 .
- the output of the AA LPF 311 is provided to an ADC 313 representing the ADCs 281 , 283 .
- the ADC 313 provides a digital version R D of the amplified receive input signal R at its output, where the R D signal represents the I and Q digital receive signals R DI and R DQ .
- the R D signal from the ADC 313 is provided to the spreading decoder 285 .
- the R D signal is provided to a signal power estimate block 315 and a DC estimate block 319 of the compensation logic 284 .
- the signal power estimate block 315 provides a input signal power estimate signal R EST to one input of a combiner 321 .
- the combiner 321 receives a target power (TP) signal from a target power block 323 and combines the TP signal with the R EST signal to provide a receive error signal R E , which is provided to an input of another combiner 325 .
- the combiner 321 operates as a summing junction that subtracts the TP signal from the R EST signal to provide a receive error signal R E to an input of the combiner 325 .
- the combiner 325 combines the R E signal with a gain accumulation signal G ACC from an accumulator 329 to provide the gain adjust signal G ADJ at its output.
- the combiner 325 also operates as a summing junction that subtracts the R E signal from the gain accumulation signal G ACC from an accumulator 329 to provide the gain adjust signal G ADJ at its output.
- the G ADJ signal is provided to the respective inputs of the AGC DAC 297 , the accumulator 329 and a gain converter 331 .
- the AGC DAC 297 converts the digital G ADJ signal to the analog GAIN ADJUST signal, which controls the gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the accumulator 329 continuously or periodically adjusts the G ACC signal to track changes of the G ADJ signal.
- the DC estimate block 319 provides an output DC estimate digital signal ODC EST to the input of a DC amplifier 333 , which is adjusted by a gain conversion signal G CON from an output of the converter 331 .
- the DC amplifier 333 amplifies or attenuates (1/G) the ODC EST signal by an amount determined by the G CON signal from the converter 331 , and provides an input DC estimate signal IDC EST to one input of a combiner 335 , which receives a DC offset accumulation signal D ACC from an accumulator 339 at its other input.
- the combiner 335 combines the IDC EST signal with the D ACC signal to provide a DC offset signal DC ADJ , which is provided to the input of a DC DAC 337 and to the input of the DC accumulator 339 .
- the combiner 335 operates as a summing junction that adds the IDC EST signal to the D ACC signal to provide the DC offset signal DC ADJ .
- the accumulator 339 continuously adjusts the D ACC signal to the level of the DC ADJ signal to maintain an accumulated DC value.
- the DC DAC 337 converts the digital DC ADJ signal to the analog DC OFFSET signal provided to the combiner 303 .
- the DC ADJ signal represents operation of the IDC OFF and QDC OFF signals and the DC OFFSET signal represents operation of the I OFFSET and Q OFFSET signals.
- the combiner 303 may be implemented as a simple summing junction, where the DC amplifier 333 or the DC DAC 337 performs negation or inversion to generate a negative DC OFFSET signal, which is then added to the R BB signal by the combiner 303 .
- Control logic 343 is coupled to the OV detect block 309 , the target power block 323 and the DC estimate block 319 for controlling operations, setting parameters, etc.
- the control block 343 may be used to enable a manufacturer or user to set a target power level used by the target power block 323 to control the TP signal.
- the R RF signal from the antennas 247 , 249 is converted to the R BB signal at baseband frequency by the LNA/mixer 301 .
- the OV detect block 309 initially sets the gain of the LNA portion of the LNA/mixer 301 high by asserting the HI/LO signal to HI in order to ensure detection of a valid but weak RF signal received by either of the antennas 247 , 249 .
- the R BB signal is DC adjusted by the combiner 303 , which combines or otherwise subtracts the DC OFFSET signal and provides the R ADJ signal to the BB LPF 305 .
- the BB LPF 305 provides a filtered version of the R ADJ signal to the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the DC OFFSET signal is based on an estimate of the amount of undesired DC at the input of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the overload detector 289 detects whether an overload condition of the received input signal at the output of the BB LPF 305 exists, and if so, asserts the BB OVLD signal. If an overload condition is detected, the OV detect block 309 asserts the HI/LO signal to LO to reduce the input gain of the LNA/mixer 301 to bring the received input signal R BB closer to a target power level.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 amplifies the R ADJ signal to provide the R signal to the AA LPF 311 and then to the ADC 313 of the baseband processor 203 .
- the ADC 313 converts the analog R signal to the digital receive signal R D , which is provided to the spreading decoder 285 (as the R DI and R DQ signals).
- the AGC loop 345 includes gain control logic that receives the amplified input signal, that estimates input signal power and that asserts the gain adjust signal in an attempt to keep the input signal power at a target power level.
- the signal power estimate block 315 estimates the power of the baseband input signal within the R D signal and asserts the R EST signal indicative thereof.
- this power estimate excludes any DC level of the R D signal.
- the combiner 321 compares the R EST signal with the TP signal to generate the R E signal, which identifies an amount of power error of the R D signal relative to the target power level represented by the TP signal.
- the combiner 325 adjusts the present value of the G ADJ signal in an attempt to compensate for any power error that exists.
- the AGC DAC 297 converts the G ADJ signal to the analog GAIN ADJUST signal, which is provided to the gain control input of the BB AGC amplifier 307 to control the power level of baseband input signal within the R D signal.
- the AGC loop 345 attempts to maintain or otherwise regulate the power level of the input baseband signal within the R D signal to the target power level.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 representing either of the BB AGC amplifiers 273 , 275 , uses a logarithmic gain scale, such as measured in dB, that ranges between ⁇ 6 and 60 dB.
- the R D signal is in digital format, so the signal power estimate block 315 , the target power block 323 , the accumulator 329 and the combiners 321 , 325 are digital devices and the R EST , TP, R E , G ACC and G ADJ signals are digital signals.
- the AGC DAC 297 is a 7-bit DAC with 128 steps that outputs an analog current signal with a control current range of approximately ⁇ 1 mA to achieve the desired gain range for the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the current output of the AGC DAC 297 is converted to a voltage signal, such as by a resistive network or the like (not shown), to obtain the GAIN ADJUST signal.
- the DC loop 347 includes DC control logic that estimates an amount of DC in the amplified input signal and provides a DC offset in an attempt to reduce DC in the amplified input signal.
- the DC estimate block 319 estimates the DC offset of the R D signal, and provides the ODC EST signal indicative of the amount of DC at the output of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the DC amplifier 333 Since the DC OFFSET signal is applied at the combiner 303 at the input of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , and since any remaining DC of the R ADJ signal is effectively amplified by the BB AGC amplifier 307 , the DC amplifier 333 operates to compensate for the gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the gain converter 331 receiving the G ADJ signal and generating the G CON signal that controls the gain of the DC amplifier 333 , operates as a gain interface that converts gain levels between the gain control logic and the DC control logic. In one embodiment, the gain converter 331 inverts the gain (1/G). The gain converter 331 may further compensate for different gain ranges and/or different gain scales between the BB AGC amplifier 307 and the DC amplifier 333 .
- the IDC EST signal asserted by the DC amplifier 333 , represents an error of the DC OFFSET signal.
- the combiner 335 adjusts the DC ADJ signal, maintained by the accumulator 339 as the D ACC signal, by the IDC EST signal to compensate for errors in the DC OFFSET signal.
- the R D signal is in digital format, so the DC estimate block 319 , the DC amplifier 333 , the accumulator 339 and the combiner 335 are digital devices and the ODC EST , IDC EST , D ACC and DC ADJ signals are digital.
- the DC DAC 337 representing either of the I, Q OFF DACs 293 , 295 , is a 12-bit, current-based DAC operated in 2's-complement format that outputs an analog current with an approximate range of ⁇ 5 milliamps (mA). The DAC output current is converted to the DC OFFSET voltage signal having a range of approximately ⁇ 75 mV to compensate for an expected DC offset range of approximately ⁇ 64 mV.
- the gain converter 331 may operate entirely as a digital device to convert the digital G ADJ signal to a digital G CON signal.
- the G CON signal may be an analog signal depending upon the configuration of the DC amplifier 333 .
- the DC amplifier 333 is a linear gain amplifier.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 amplifies the input signal including any DC, so that the DC amplifier 333 operates as an amplifier that amplifies the ODC EST signal to maintain control of the DC loop 347 .
- the amount of amplification by the DC amplifier 333 is controlled by the gain converter 331 via the G CON signal.
- the gain converter 331 receives the G ADJ signal and adjusts the G CON signal accordingly.
- the gain converter 331 operates as a gain interface that converts gain levels between the gain control logic and the DC control logic.
- the gain converter 331 inverts the gain between the BB AGC amplifier 307 and the DC amplifier 333 .
- the gain converter 331 may further convert between the corresponding ranges or units along with any bit weighting of the G ADJ and G CON signals so that the amplification of the ODC EST signal corresponds to the gain of the R ADJ signal.
- the gain converter 331 further converts between gain scales, such as between logarithmic and linear scales.
- the gain converter 331 converts from the G ADJ signal in dBs to the linear gain G CON signal.
- the gain converter 331 converts between the corresponding ranges or units along with any bit weighting of the G ADJ and G CON signals without need of logarithmic conversion.
- FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a calibrated DC compensation system 400 similar to the compensation 300 except utilizing calibration to more accurately determine and control DC.
- a calibration block 401 includes calibration logic that receives the R D signal and provides one or more calibration programming signals, collectively referred to as PGM signals, to the gain converter 331 .
- the gain converter 331 includes an optional adjust memory 405 for storing adjust values as further described below.
- the PGM signals may be implemented in any suitable manner, such as multiple bus signals or the like to program the adjust memory 405 .
- the control block 343 may also be used to control a calibration procedure or calibration function or to control if and when a calibration procedure is performed by the calibration block 401 .
- control logic 343 optionally includes timing logic 403 or the like that determines a time interval for performing a calibration procedure, as further described below.
- the time interval between consecutive calibration operations depends upon the particular configuration or implementation. In the embodiment shown, the calibration time interval is on the order of seconds or minutes, such as approximately 30 seconds or 1 minute or the like.
- the calibration block 401 is a digital device that operates as a calibrator, which monitors the digital R D signal, makes appropriate measurements and calculations, and programs the adjust memory 405 accordingly.
- the converter 331 receives the G ADJ signal, determines a corresponding initial value for the G CON signal, and makes any necessary adjustments utilizing adjust values in the adjust memory 405 if provided.
- the adjust value may be incorporated in any one of several manners.
- the adjust value is a multiplier value which is multiplied by the initial conversion value determined by the gain converter 331 and the result is used as the G CON signal to control the DC amplifier 333 .
- the adjust value is an offset or additive value that is added to or subtracted from the initial conversion value determined by the gain converter 331 and the sum is used as the G CON signal to control the DC amplifier 333 .
- the calibration block 401 may simply assert a calibration signal that is used for adjusting the G CON signal. The calibration signal is maintained at a current adjust level as controlled by the calibration block 401 , and utilized by the gain converter 331 in a similar manner as a single adjust value. It is noted, however, that due to the unpredictable and often non-linear nature of DC voltage in ZIF architecture embodiments in many environments, a single-valued calibration signal may not be sufficient to compensate for DC.
- any suitable number of adjust values are contemplated to achieve any desired level of accuracy.
- a low gain adjust value and a high gain adjust value are used.
- the particular G ADJ value that is used as the threshold to switch between the low and high adjust values may be determined arbitrarily or experimentally.
- a half-way point is contemplated, although any suitable threshold point is contemplated depending upon the particular configuration and design.
- any number of adjust values could be used for each of a corresponding number of gain steps or levels of the G ADJ signal. If the AGC DAC 297 is a 7-bit DAC with 128 corresponding discrete gain steps, for example, then the number gain adjust values programmed into the adjust memory 405 may range from 2 to 128 different adjust values.
- the embodiment of a different adjust value for each discrete gain step of the G ADJ signal provides relatively high accuracy.
- the control logic 343 determines whether the wireless transceiver 200 is performing any communication functions, such as sending or receiving any packets of information. If not busy, or after the wireless transceiver 200 has performed its functions and becomes idle, the control logic 343 indicates to the calibration block 401 to conduct a calibration procedure.
- the calibration block 401 is coupled to control certain functions of the wireless transceiver 200 , as indicated by dotted line 351 , to conduct calibration. During calibration, the calibration block 401 may control the LNA/mixer 301 and/or the combiner 303 to temporarily remove the input signal R BB from the compensation system 300 .
- the input of the combiner 303 that receives the R BB signal is temporarily disconnected from the LNA/mixer 301 and grounded or otherwise left floating. It is noted, however, that control of the LNA/mixer 301 and/or the combiner 303 may require a more complicated interface between the ZIF transceiver 201 and the baseband amplifier 203 .
- the calibration procedure and functions may be wholly contained within the baseband processor 203 . In either case, the calibration block 401 controls the DC DAC 337 and the AGC DAC 297 to temporarily disable the AGC loop 345 and the DC loop 347 to conduct the calibration procedure.
- the calibration block 401 controls the DC DAC 337 to inject a predetermined or arbitrary DC level or setting into the compensation system 300 , such as a DC value of zero volts or any other predetermined or suitable voltage.
- the calibration block 401 controls the AGC DAC 297 to a predetermined gain step or level, or otherwise to consecutively step through one or more gain steps.
- the calibration block 401 samples the R D signal one or more times for each gain step. From this data, the calibration block determines one or more gain values or otherwise determines one or more DC offset values corresponding DC levels of the R D signal.
- the calibration block 401 makes any necessary calculations based on measured parameters, such as DC levels of the R D signal and/or gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , and programs the adjust memory 405 with one or more adjust values accordingly.
- the calibration block 401 controls the DC DAC 337 to assert an arbitrary and known DC voltage to the combiner 303 and controls the AGC DAC 297 to a particular gain level.
- the calibration block 401 samples the R D signal.
- the calibration block 401 may use an assumed or theoretical gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , calculate the theoretical value of the R D signal based on the gain level, and compare with the actual value of measured R D signal. The difference between the theoretical gain value and the measured value is a DC differential value that is utilized to determine the necessary DC offset at that gain level.
- the calibration block 401 determines one or more gain values representing measured gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 in any appropriate manner, and uses the determined gain values rather than theoretical gain in the calculation.
- the calibration block 401 may determine first and second DC offset values programmed into the DC DAC 337 that result in the R D signal reaching corresponding first and second range values, such as 75% upper and lower range values, respectively. As described further below, the first and second DC offset values are utilized to calculate a gain value of the BB AGC amplifier 307 at the particular gain step of the AGC DAC 297 .
- the calibration block 401 repeats the process for one or more gain steps of the AGC DAC 297 resulting in a plurality of gain values and DC differential values that are used to determine the adjust values programmed into the adjust memory 405 .
- the calibration block 401 may incorporate any differences in gain ranges or gain scales between the BB AGC amplifier 307 and the DC amplifier 333 to convert each DC differential value to the appropriate adjust value. For example, conversion from logarithmic to linear scales is contemplated.
- the adjust memory 405 is programmed with the DC differential values, where the gain converter 331 performs any necessary conversions during operation.
- the calibration block 401 and the adjust memory 405 are additional components that further complicate the circuitry and logic, the DC loop 347 converges and eliminates the DC offset more quickly. The calibration procedure is repeated on a periodic basis since the operating environment is dynamic and unpredictable.
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system 500 similar to the compensation system 400 , except that the gain converter 331 is replaced by a lookup table (LUT) 501 as the gain interface between the AGC loop 345 and the DC loop 347 .
- the LUT 501 is a memory device that operates in a similar manner as the gain converter 331 and adjust memory 403 , except that gain conversion values programmed in the LUT 501 are asserted directly as the G CON signal to control the gain of the DC amplifier 333 .
- the G ADJ signal is used as an address to access a gain conversion value within the LUT 501 , which is then asserted as the G CON signal to the DC amplifier 333 .
- the calibration block 401 performs the calibration procedure in a similar manner as previously described to determine one or more gain values or DC offset values via the R D signal.
- the calibration block 401 performs any necessary calculations on the measured gain values and/or DC offset values to convert between the AGC loop 345 and the DC loop 347 to program the gain conversion values within the LUT 501 .
- the calibration block 401 converts between corresponding ranges or units along with any bit weighting of the G ADJ and G CON signals as previously described.
- the calibration block 401 further converts between different scales, if any, between the BB AGC amplifier 307 and the DC amplifier 333 , such as between logarithmic and linear scales as previously described.
- the calibration block 401 programs a separate gain conversion value within the LUT 501 that corresponds to at least one gain level or step of the AGC DAC 297 .
- a separate gain conversion value for each gain step is contemplated, which provides an advantage during operation in that no conversion is necessary so that the LUT 501 supplies an appropriate G CON value for every G ADJ value.
- FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system 600 , which is similar to the compensation system 500 , but that further includes a limit block 601 that operates as a gain adjust limiter to limit change of the G ADJ signal during operation.
- the R E signal from the combiner 321 is provided to the limit block 601 , which also receives the G ACC signal from the accumulator 329 .
- the limit block 601 asserts a limited receive error signal, referred to as R LE , to the accumulator 325 rather than the R E signal.
- the R LE signal is a limited version of the R E signal as determined by the limit block 601 using the R E signal and the G ACC signal.
- the G ACC signal is the current gain level of the AGC DAC 297 (via the G ADJ signal) and the R E signal is the desired error differential or change to determine a new level of the G ADJ signal.
- the accumulator 329 updates the G ACC signal with the new value of the G ADJ signal after being changed.
- the limit block 601 provides a way of limiting the amount of change of the G ADJ signal to prevent loss of loop control, as further described below.
- the limit block 601 is preprogrammed with a predetermined gain change limit that always applies, such as a 90% factor applied to the R E signal or the like, or a constant maximum gain change limit that is not exceeded during operation of the wireless transceiver 200 .
- the limit block 601 is programmed by the calibration block 401 via one or more G LIM signals or the like, in a similar manner described above for the LUT 501 .
- the ADC 313 include as many bits as necessary to capture most, substantially all, or all possible ranges of the receive signal R asserted by the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 has a gain range of approximately 66 dB ( ⁇ 6 dB to 60 dB) to provide a sufficient dynamic gain range to enable appropriate operation in the anticipated environments.
- the AGC DAC 297 includes a sufficient number of bits to achieve the desired accuracy over the entire gain range of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the AGC DAC 297 is 7 bits.
- Such configuration would require that the ADC 313 has a significantly large number of bits to track the receive signal R regardless of the gain level of the BB AGC amplifier 307 . It is further noted that the ADG 313 could further include additional bits to further incorporate the entire range of DC offsets incorporated within the receive signal that might not yet be completely compensated for by the DC loop 347 . Again, this is a substantially large number of bits that would require a large ADC 313 . Further, the baseband processor 203 could be designed to appropriately handle the significantly large number of bits of the ADC 313 .
- the ADC 313 includes only as many bits as necessary to maintain signal integrity with sufficient head and foot room (collectively, head room).
- the ADC 313 is a 6-bit converter with a 36 dB of range resulting in approximately 6 dB per bit. In this manner, the ADC 313 does not attempt to handle the entire operating range of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , but instead is sufficient to maintain signal integrity with sufficient head room.
- the target power block 323 asserts the TP signal at the appropriate target power in an attempt to maintain the receive signal R with reduced or eliminated DC offset to within the operating range of the ADC 313 . It is noted that the target power is less than the full scale of the ADC 313 and in one embodiment is set to approximately ⁇ 75 percent of the full scale power observable with the ADC 313 .
- the ZIF transceiver 201 may provide a received R signal that is beyond the range of the ADC 313 of the baseband processor 203 . This may be particularly true during initial packet acquisition. For example, an excessive DC level may cause the ADC 313 to rail to either its maximum or minimum limits. An overpowered input receive signal may cause clipping at either or both rails depending upon corresponding DC level.
- the AGC loop 297 and the DC loop 347 are provided to compensate for signal power and DC level to control the level of the R D signal to within the desired target power and operating range of the baseband processor 203 . Furthermore, even after the R D signal converges to the desired operating range, the environmental conditions may suddenly change causing a change of signal power and/or DC level.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 Since the BB AGC amplifier 307 has unpredictable DC at its input that may change significantly with gain level changes, significant gain changes requested by the signal power estimate block 315 may otherwise cause a substantial change of the DC level of the R D signal causing a rail condition of the ADC 313 and/or loss of DC loop 347 control. This is particularly problematic at high gain levels, since any new DC level is substantially amplified at high gain by the BB AGC amplifier 307 potentially causing quick loss of loop control.
- the limit block 601 is provided in the compensation system 600 to reduce or eliminate over-correction by the signal power estimate block 315 .
- a certain level of the R EST signal may correspond to a significant amount of differential of the G ADJ signal and the AGC DAC 297 , which could introduce too much DC offset for control by the DC loop 347 .
- a significant change in the G ADJ signal may substantially reduce DC offset otherwise supplied by the BB AGC amplifier 307 , such that the accumulated DC offset signal itself over-compensates and thus introduces too much DC voltage that may not be controllable.
- the limit block 601 reduces the amount of correction of the R E signal at higher gain steps.
- the limit block 601 compares the R E signal with the G ACC signal and determines the level of the R LE signal to maintain a controllable modification of the G ADJ signal to maintain proper control loop operation.
- the limit block 601 is pre-programmed with a single maximum gain differential value that is applicable for all operating gain levels.
- the limit block 601 is programmed by the calibration block 401 via the G LIM signals during calibration with one or more gain limit values.
- a single maximum gain change limit G M is contemplated as determined and programmed by the calibration block 401 .
- One or more gain change limits may also be determined and programmed depending upon particular gain steps.
- the limit block 601 may be programmed with a different gain change limit for each gain step of the G ADJ signal, operable in a similar manner as the LUT 501 .
- the limit block 601 may be programmed with gain change limit values only at higher gain levels, such as the higher 30 dB gain levels.
- the limit block 601 may be implemented with any combination of gain limitations, including a maximum gain change limit operative across the entire gain range and particular gain change limits at particular gain levels, such as the higher gain levels.
- the calibration block 401 measures or otherwise determines a gain value representing the gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 for each gain step of the G ADJ signal (or gain step of the AGC DAC 297 ) during each calibration procedure.
- the calibration block 401 may then use an upper bound method that further utilizes an assumed DC offset model or characteristic of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the rate of change of DC offset with respect to voltage gain is the constant value “k”. Although this may not be true for particular configurations of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , this model is sufficiently accurate from an upper bounding perspective.
- the linear DC offset change model when converted to the decibel range (dV/dG dB ), is no longer linear and changes more rapidly with increasing gain dB. However, over small ranges of gain, the linear approximation is a relatively accurate estimation of the change of DC offset at any given gain point.
- the rate of change is relatively small at lower gain points but begins to increase rapidly at the mid range point of approximately 30 dB. Thus, correction may be applied over the entire gain range or at the higher gain levels.
- a separate dV i is measured for each gain level or gain step (i) of the BB AGC amplifier 307 , or each gain step of the G ADJ signal.
- a corresponding MaxGainStep i value is then determined for each gain step (i).
- all of the MaxGainStep i values are stored within the limit block 601 by the calibration block 401 .
- 128 different MaxGainStep i values are calculated and stored.
- a subset of MaxGainStep i values are calculated and stored, such as the gain steps corresponding to the upper 30 dB gain range of the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the current gain as determined by the G ACC signal is used to access the corresponding MaxGainStep i value, if any, stored within the limit block 601 in a similar manner as a lookup table embodiment.
- the R LE signal is asserted by the limit block 601 as the lesser of the current R E signal and the corresponding MaxGainStep i value.
- each dV i is calculated, but only the maximum value is stored, or dV M .
- a maximum gain change limit, or G M is calculated using dV M , and stored in the limit block 601 and used over the entire gain range.
- the linear model is not used in favor of actual DC offset measurements.
- dV/dG mA (i) for each gain step (i) is determined according to the following equation (1):
- dV / dG d ⁇ ⁇ B ⁇ ( i ) 2 * ( dV / dG m ⁇ ⁇ A ⁇ ( i ) ) max ⁇ ⁇ G d ⁇ ⁇ B ⁇ ( i ) - m ⁇ ⁇ i ⁇ ⁇ nG d ⁇ ⁇ B ⁇ ( i ) ( 2 )
- maxG db (i) and minG db (i) are the maximum and minimum measured gain values in decibels, respectively.
- dV/dG dB (i) is determined according to the following equation (3):
- FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a calibrated compensation system 700 that is similar to the compensation system 500 with the inclusion of an additional lookup table (LUT) 701 .
- the LUT 701 is another memory device that stores and asserts measured DC adjust values on a signal DC ADJ to another input of the combiner 335 .
- the G ADJ signal is provided to an input of the LUT 701 , which is programmed by the calibration block 401 with the DC adjust values via the PGM signals.
- the DC adjust values represent measured DC offsets for corresponding gain steps (i) of the G ADJ signal.
- the IDC EST signal asserted by the DC amplifier 333 is a gain compensated DC signal that does not account for measured DC levels.
- the LUT 701 provides additional correction based on measured DC levels. For example, gain changes by the G ADJ signal are handled by the LUT 501 and measured DC offsets at the gain steps are handled by the LUT 701 . Although an additional combiner could be added, the LUT 701 conveniently provides direct DC offset correction to the combiner 335 for more directly controlling the DC ADJ signal and the DC OFFSET signal via the DC DAC 337 . The limit block 601 could also be added, but is deemed unnecessary since measured DC offsets are compensated via the LUT 701 in the compensation system 700 .
- FIGS. 8A-8C are flowchart diagrams illustrating a calibration procedure according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- This particular calibration procedure measures both the gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 at each of the gain steps (i) of the AGC DAC 297 and further measures the corresponding DC offset of the R D signal. Further, the change in DC offsets and/or DC offset derivatives are determined for use by the limit block 601 , if desired.
- the calibration block 401 controls the AGC DAC 297 and the DC DAC 337 to perform measurements while the wireless transceiver 200 is idle and not communicating.
- a successive approximation algorithm is utilized to establish a voltage difference at the BB AGC amplifier 307 input that corresponds to a desired voltage difference of the R D signal.
- the AGC DAC 297 is stepped through each gain step (i) beginning from lowest to highest. Then, for each gain step, the DC DAC 337 is adjusted to obtain a target level of the R D signal output by the ADC 313 .
- high and low values of the R D signal are determined by successive approximation and stored for each gain step of the AGC DAC 297 .
- the use of two separate target levels of the R D signal enables calculation of the gain using differences in which the DC offsets are common mode and cancel out. Also, utilizing summation in conjunction with the previously calculated gain, the actual DC offset voltage may be calculated.
- the value of the DC DAC 337 is initially started low and successively increased until the R D signal is sampled at a predetermined high value. Then, the DC DAC 337 is initially started high and successively decreased until the low value of the R D signal is sampled at a predetermined low value.
- a successive approximation or binary search method is used in order to converge on the desired value very quickly. In particular, each bit beginning with the most significant bit (MSB) to the least significant bit (LSB) is flipped and examined independently until the R D signal is less than or equal to the high value or greater than or equal to the low value.
- a binary variable ADC_HiLo is used to distinguish between the high and low target values. It is initially set equal to 1.
- a Next_Bit variable is utilized to step through each bit of the DC DAC 337 in the successive approximation algorithm. The Next_Bit variable is initially set equal to MSB_BIT to point to the most significant bit of the DC DAC 337 .
- the DC DAC 337 is 12 bits so that MSB_BIT is set equal to 12.
- a GainStep variable is utilized to track each gain step of the AGC DAC 297 for controlling the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- the GainStep variable is initially set equal to GS_MIN or the lowest setting of the AGC DAC 297 .
- GS_MIN is ⁇ 64 and is incremented to the highest gain step or GS_MAX, which is 63 in the embodiment shown.
- the index variable “i” is used as an index for storing variables for calculations performed after each calibration procedure and tracks the GainStep variable.
- a DC_DAC variable is utilized to track the value programmed into the DC DAC 337 for successive iterations.
- DC_DAC is a 12-bit variable represented in signed 2's complement form that ranges from 100000000000b to 011111111111b, where “b” represents a binary value. The binary range represents a decimal range of ⁇ 2048 to +2047.
- DC_DAC is initially set equal to ALL_ZERO which means that all 12 bits of DC_DAC are set equal to binary zero. In signed 2's complement form, this also represents a binary and a decimal value of zero (0).
- the DC DAC 337 is increased from the lowest value of ⁇ 2048 and successively increased until the R D signal becomes equal to a ADC_HI_RANGE constant, which in the embodiment shown is +24. If the DC DAC 337 is to increase from ⁇ 2048 towards the maximum value of +2047 in the successive approximation, then it is first set approximately equal to the mid-range value of zero.
- the GainStep variable is written to the AGC DAC 297 to set the gain of the BB AGC amplifier 307 at its lowest level.
- the DC_DAC variable is written to the DC DAC 337 . In this manner, in the first iteration, the AGC DAC 297 is at the lowest gain step and the DC DAC 337 is set equal to zero or at its mid-range level.
- the R D signal is sampled one or more times by the calibration block 401 .
- the arithmetic mean value of valid samples taken at block 807 is stored in a variable ADC_Mean. In the embodiment shown, 48 samples are taken at block 807 and the first 16 are discarded, so that the last 32 samples are considered valid. Thus, the mean value of the last 32 samples is determined and ADC_Mean is set equal to the determined mean value.
- next block 811 it is queried whether ADC_HiLo is equal to 1. Since ADC_HiLo was set equal to one at block 801 during the first iteration, operation proceeds to next block 813 , in which it is queried whether the ADC_Mean variable is greater than the ADC_HI_RANGE constant. As described previously, each bit of the DC DAC 337 using the DC_DAC variable is successively tested for each gain step, which in the first iteration is the minimum gain step of GS_MIN, until the R D signal reaches the ADC_HI_RANGE constant.
- next block 817 in which the Next_Bit of the DC_DAC variable is discarded.
- Next_Bit of the DC_DAC variable is discarded.
- the bit is discarded if the mean value has overshot the target value of ADC_HI_RANGE constant.
- Next_Bit is equal to 12 in the embodiment shown and initially set to 0.
- ADC_Mean is greater than the ADC_HI_RANGE constant (+24)
- the 12 th or most significant bit of the DC_DAC variable is flipped “back” to 1 to discard the bit. If this occurs, then DC_DAC becomes equal to 100000000000b or the minimum value of ⁇ 2048. Otherwise, if the ADC_Mean value is not greater than the ADC_HI_RANGE constant, then block 817 is skipped so that the Next_Bit or bit 12 remains at 0.
- next block 821 in which Next_Bit is decremented. In the first iteration, Next_Bit is decremented to 11 to test the next bit of DC_DAC in the successive approximation. In this manner, each bit of the DC DAC 337 is tested until the Next_Bit becomes equal to 0 as determined at block 819 .
- Next_Bit of DC_DAC is flipped for evaluation.
- the Next_Bit or bit 11 of DC_DAC is set equal to 1 so that the DC_DAC variable is increased in value according to the successive approximation algorithm.
- DC_DAC is set equal to 110000000000b or ⁇ 1024 at block 823 .
- DC_DAC is set equal to 010000000000b or +1024 at block 823 .
- ADC_HiLo is still 1 in the first iteration, operation proceeds to next block 827 in which an indexed variable DC_DAC_HI i is set equal to the DC_DAC variable for storage and/or calculation. Also at block 827 , a mean value variable ADC_HI i is set equal to the current value of ADC_Mean. It is noted that although ADC_Mean should be equal to the ADC_HI_RANGE constant, it may vary somewhat and any variation is stored for use in calculations.
- Operation proceeds to block 829 from block 827 to reset variables for the second half of the first iteration of the successive approximation for the current gain step (i).
- Next_Bit is set back equal to MSD_BIT
- ADC_HiLo is set equal to 0
- the DC_DAC variable is set equal to a binary variable ALL_ONE meaning that all bits of DC_DAC are set equal to one.
- DC_DAC is effectively set equal to ⁇ 1 since 111111111111b in sign 2's complement form represents ⁇ 1which is approximately half way between the maximum DAC value of +2047 and the minimum DAC value of ⁇ 2048.
- operation proceeds back to block 805 where the new DC_DAC value is written into the DC DAC 337 . Again, one or more samples of the R D signal are taken at block 807 and the mean value of valid samples are determined and stored into the ADC_Mean variable at block 809 .
- ADC_HiLo is equal to 0
- operation proceeds to block 815 in which it is determined whether ADC_Mean is less than the ADC_LO_RANGE constant. If not, operation proceeds directly to 819 and if so, operation proceeds to next block 817 where the Next_Bit is discarded in a similar manner as previously described.
- next_Bit is not discarded during the first iteration, then operation proceeds with a DC_DAC value of ⁇ 1 or 111111111111b. If the Next_Bit is discarded at block 817 , then the DC_DAC value is set equal to +2047 or 0111111111111b, which is the maximum DAC value.
- Next_Bit is decremented and the corresponding bit of the DC_DAC variable is flipped for evaluation.
- DC_DAC is next set equal to ⁇ 1025 or 0111111111111b.
- DC_DAC was +2047 or 011111111111b
- DC_DAC is set equal to +1023 or 001111111111b.
- Operation loops in a similar manner for the low to high successive approximation between blocks 805 - 823 via block 815 until Next_Bit is decremented to zero as determined at block 819 .
- the ADC_Mean should be close to, and greater than or equal to, the ADC_LO_RANGE constant as determined at block 815 .
- operation proceeds to next block 825 in which the value of ADC_HiLo is queried. Since this is the second half of the first iteration at the current gain step, where ADC_HiLo is 0, operation proceeds to next block 831 where the DC_DAC variable is stored into an index variable DC_DAC_LO i for the current gain step.
- the current value of ADC_Mean is stored into an index value ADC_LO i at block 831 .
- the variables are initialized for the first half of the next iteration of the successive approximation procedure, as tracked by the GainStep variable.
- Next_Bit is set equal to 12
- ADC_HiLo is set back equal to 1
- DC_DAC is set back equal to ALL_ZERO.
- GainStep and the index “i” are both incremented.
- GainStep is initially set to GS_MIN or ⁇ 64 in the embodiment shown.
- GainStep is set equal to ⁇ 63 and “i” is incremented to 2.
- GainStep has become greater than the GS_MAX constant to determine if calculations have been completed for all gain steps.
- operation proceeds back to block 803 where the new GainStep value is written into AGC DAC 297 .
- the entire first and second halves of the successive approximation utilizing the DC_DAC variable is repeated for the next GainStep.
- the indexed variables DC_DAC_HI i , ADC_HI i , DC_DAC_LO i and ADC_LO i are determined and locally stored if necessary.
- G(i) the gain data, referred to as G(i), is determined for each gain step (i).
- “i” is the index value varying from 1 to 128 representing GainStep values of ⁇ 64 to +63, respectively.
- the following equation (4) is used at block 837 to calculate the gain data G(i):
- G ⁇ ( i ) ( ADC_lsb ) ( DC_DAC ⁇ _lsb ) * ( ADC_HI i - ADC_LO i ) ( DC_DAC ⁇ _HI i - DC_DAC ⁇ _LO i ) ( 4 )
- ADC_lsb is the step value conversion of the ADC 313
- DC_DAC_lsb is the step value conversion of the DC DAC 337
- ADC_HI i , ADC_LO i , DC_DAC_HI i and DC_DAC_LO i are the indexed variables previously determined at block 827 and 831 .
- ADC_lsb is approximately equal to 1 Vpp/64 or 15.625 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 03 volts per step and DC_DAC_lsb is approximately equal to 150 mV/4096 or 36.62 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 03 mV per step.
- 128 gain data values G(i) are determined in the embodiment shown.
- a filter is applied to smooth the gain data G(i).
- a five-wide moving average filter is applied across the gain data G(i) to smooth out the curve.
- a three-wide filter is used at the end points for the second and second to last values and the end point values are not changed. In particular, the first three values are averaged and the second value is set equal to the average.
- the first five values are averaged and the third value is set equal to the average.
- the second through fifth values are averaged and the fourth value is set equal to the average.
- Operation of the five-wide moving average continues in this manner until the last five values are averaged and the third to the last value is set equal to the average.
- the last three values are averaged and the second to last value is set equal to the average, and the filter operation is completed.
- a filter is utilized since the measured gain values may be calculated in a very noisy environment where substantial variations and inaccuracies would otherwise result.
- Voffset(i) S a calculated DC offset value for each gain step (i), where Voffset refers to the calculated DC offset at the input to the BB AGC amplifier 307 .
- Voffset(i) S A simplified version of the DC offset value, denoted Voffset(i) S , is determined according to the following equation (5):
- Voffset ⁇ ( i ) s - DC_DAC ⁇ _lsb * DC_DAC ⁇ _LO i + DC_DAC ⁇ _HI i - 4096 2 ( 5 )
- the simplified version assumes that the ADC_HI i and ADC_LO i variables are set to the ADC_HI_RANGE and ADC_LO_RANGE constants, respectively. In operation, however, the ADC_HI i and ADC_LO i variables may vary by a step or two, so that an adjust value ADJ i is calculated for each gain step (i) according to the following equation (6):
- ADJ i ( ADC_HI i + ADC_LO i ) * ( DC_DAC ⁇ _HI i - DC_DAC ⁇ _LO i ) 2 * ( ADC_HI i - ADC_LO i ) ( 6 )
- the adjust value is utilized to calculate more accurate DC offset values Vo(i) according to the following equation (7):
- Voffset ⁇ ( i ) s DC_DAC ⁇ _lsb * [ ADJ i - DC_DAC ⁇ _LO i + DC_DAC ⁇ _HI i - 4096 2 ] ( 7 ) It is noted that for each case in which ADC_HI i is equal to ADC_HI_RANGE and where ADC_LO i is equal to ADC_LO_RANGE, that the adjust value ADJ i cancels and becomes zero. Otherwise, the adjust value is utilized to improve accuracy. Operation proceeds to block 843 to smooth out the DC offset data Voffset(i) in a similar manner as described above for block 839 , such as the five-wide moving average filter with the three-wide filter at both ends.
- the DC offset derivative data dV/dG dB (i) is smoothed in a similar manner as previously described, such as with the five-wide moving average filter with a three-wide filter used at either end points.
- the measured and/or calculated data is converted and/or otherwise stored depending upon the particular configuration.
- the gain data G(i) is stored in the LUT 501
- the DC offset data Vo(i) is stored in the LUT 701
- the derivative data dV/dG dB (i) is used to determine the maximum gain change limit G M or one or more gain change limits for one or more gain steps.
- the determined gain change limit value(s) are stored in the limit block 601 .
- a ZIF design in accordance with embodiments of the present invention provides high sensitivity and allows for fast settling of the gain and DC offset loops. Fast settling is desirable because of the bursty and packetized nature of communications. The design also contends well with large amounts of inherent noise which is averaged out or otherwise eliminated in order to compensate for DC offsets.
- a calibration procedure is initially conducted upon power up to measure and store parameters to prepare the wireless transceiver 200 for packet acquisition. Changes in the wireless medium may result in the need for gain changes. Although DC is not transmitted over the wireless medium, changes in the receive radio front end may result in the need for both gain and DC changes. Because the wireless medium is dynamic and unpredictable and because changes may occur in the receive radio front end, the calibration procedure is repeated periodically.
- the wireless transceiver 200 Even though the calibration procedure, if employed, facilitates stability, the conditions of the wireless medium are constantly changing and the wireless transceiver 200 must detect the changes and operate the AGC loop 345 (gain feedback control loop) and the DC loop 347 (DC feedback control loop) to track the changing conditions of the wireless medium.
- the wireless transceiver 200 detects several contemplated condition changes and performs procedures, such as by the control logic 343 , the signal estimate power block 315 , the DC estimate block 319 and other control logic, to identify the changed condition and take the appropriate response.
- the contemplated changed conditions include onset of a new packet in the wireless medium causing DC saturation of the ADC measurement window, completion of transmission of a packet in which the wireless device 200 must perform clear channel assessment (CCA), and completion of transmission of a packet by the wireless device 200 itself, in which case the wireless transceiver 200 must prepare to acquire an acknowledgement (ACK) packet if transmitted by the receiving device.
- CCA clear channel assessment
- ACK acknowledgement
- the wireless transceiver 200 has a limited amount of time to detect each condition change, to determine whether an appropriate response is necessary, and to take the appropriate response.
- the wireless transceiver 200 holds the gain feedback control loop at a constant gain level and operates the DC feedback control loop in an attempt to search a stable DC value for the receive signal.
- the ZIF transceiver 201 continuously processes energy in the wireless medium to generate and provide a receive signal to the baseband processor 203 . Such processing is performed even when there are no packets being transmitted on the wireless medium, so that the gain and DC feedback control loops effectively track the noise floor of the wireless medium. Onset of a new packet usually cases the gain loop to make gain adjustments in an attempt to achieve the target power level for packet acquisition, which could lead to gain saturation. Several gain iterations may be required since the range of the ADC 313 is limited as compared to the total possible signal range.
- the AGC loop 345 is held constant and the DC level is searched during initial packet onset. Since the noise floor level is not expected to change appreciably after transmission of the packet, the noise floor gain setting, and optionally the DC noise setting, are stored prior to onset of the packet. As soon as packet transmission is completed, the noise gain setting is retrieved and applied to the gain loop and the gain loop is once again held while DC is searched. Optionally, the DC noise setting, if stored, may also be retrieved and applied to the DC loop as a starting point.
- FIG. 9 is a timeline diagram illustrating gain and DC loop timing for normal packet onset of short preamble packets.
- a time T 1 indicates the start of a new slot for transmission of a packet, which begins an on air contention period of time that lasts for about 20 microseconds ( ⁇ s) and ends at a time T 3 while one or more devices are contending for the slot.
- a first portion of the contention period is an onset uncertainty time that ends at a time T 2 upon transmission of a new packet 901 in the slot.
- the new packet 901 starts with a known preamble 903 , which initiates a packet acquisition time period that begins at time T 2 .
- the preamble 903 has a duration of approximately 56 ⁇ s followed by a start frame delimiter (SFD) 905 having a duration of approximately 16 ⁇ s beginning at a time T 5 and ending at a time T 6 .
- the packet acquisition time is between times T 2 and T 6 , during which time the wireless transceiver 200 must stabilize and lock the DC and gain feedback control loops 345 , 347 on the incoming signal, perform frequency, channel and timing estimation, perform descrambler synchronization, and search and identify the SFD 905 to determine whether the packet is intended for the wireless transceiver 200 .
- the AGC/DC acquisition time begins at time T 2 at the onset of the packet 901 and must be completed approximately 20 ⁇ s later at a time T 4 .
- a packet may be transmitted by any one of multiple devices, so that acquisition conditions may be different even if the wireless medium is relatively stable. For example, one device may send a weak signal whereas the next may send a very strong signal and vice-versa.
- the gain of the variable LNA 261 is initially set high to detect weak signals and is switched to low gain upon certain conditions if the received signal causes an overload condition as detected by the overload detector 289 , for example. If an overload condition is detected and the LNA 261 is “tripped” and switched to low gain, this low gain condition is initially held until it is determined whether a packet is being transmitted. If a packet is not detected, a noise spike or the like may have caused the overload condition and the LNA 261 is allowed to switch back to high gain mode if and when the noise condition disappears. If a packet is detected, the state of the LNA 261 may be allowed to change during the preamble of the packet.
- the LNA 261 may not trip initially upon detection of a packet, but is allowed to trip during the preamble in the event of a strong packet signal. After the preamble portion of the packet is completed, the state of the LNA 261 is held and not allowed to change during the payload portion of the incoming packet.
- the ADC 313 includes only as many bits as necessary to maintain signal integrity with sufficient head room.
- the ADC 313 may be only a 6-bit converter with a 36 dB of range resulting in approximately 6 dB per bit.
- the BB AGC amplifier 307 has a significantly greater gain range (e.g., ⁇ 6 dB to 60 dB) to provide a sufficient dynamic gain range to enable appropriate operation in anticipated environments. In this manner, regardless of the actual signal strength at the receiving device, the existence of DC may cause the signal to initially appear outside the limited 36 dB ADC measurement window range.
- the signal power estimate block 315 and the DC estimate block 319 monitor the R D signal output from the ADC 313 to determine whether conditions have changed and/or a packet is being received.
- the signal power estimate block 315 controls the LNA 261 and the AGC loop 345 to bring the signal within target power level.
- the DC estimate block 319 remains operative to control any DC level changes. Regardless of signal strength, a substantial change in DC level, for whatever reason, may saturate the ADC 313 .
- DC saturation by itself, does not necessarily cause on overload condition to trip the LNA 261 to low gain since the AC power of the signal itself may be weak. The DC saturation causes a rail condition of the ADC 313 , which completely obscures the incoming signal.
- a DC saturation or rail condition means that all or substantially all of the digital samples are at one “rail” or the other, although not at both rails (which may indicate a gain saturation condition, described below).
- Two rails are defined including a maximum digital value and minimum digital value at either end of the ADC measurement window. It is desired to reduce or otherwise eliminate DC and set gain so that the signal is at a target power level in which all or substantially all of the digital samples occur within the rails with sufficient headroom to enable correction for signal fluctuations.
- a DC threshold condition is defined in which a percentage of digital samples that occur at one rail is at or below a predetermined threshold percentage. In one embodiment, the threshold percentage is 90%, so that the DC threshold condition is exceeded when more than 90% of the samples occur at one rail and met when 90% or less of the samples occur at one rail.
- the AGC loop 345 is initially held at the existing gain setting while the DC loop 347 compensates for DC during the rail condition.
- the DC saturation or rail condition is corrected by adding a sufficient level of DC offset of the opposite polarity. For example, if the ADC 313 rails positive (or negative), then a sufficient level of negative (or positive) DC offset is applied at the combiner 303 to substantially center the R D signal within the range of the ADC 313 .
- a first method is a step search procedure in which a predetermined DC step amount is repeatedly added until the DC threshold condition is met, or when the percentage of clipped samples drops below the threshold percentage, such as 90% or any other arbitrarily determined threshold percentage.
- the predetermined DC step amount may also be arbitrarily determined, but should be selected in such a manner to avoid the possibility of overstepping or completely bypassing the ADC measurement window, causing an opposite rail condition.
- the predetermined DC step amount is related to the size of the ADC measurement window, so that the added DC does not move the signal by more than the relative size of the ADC measurement window.
- the DC step amount is chosen to move the signal by an amount approximately equal to the size of the ADC measurement window, then if the signal is just above an upper rail of the ADC measurement window, the added DC step moves the signal to just above the lower rail of the ADC measurement window.
- the DC step amount corresponds to any other portion of the ADC measurement window size, such as half size or quarter size, etc.
- the step search procedure is advantageous in that it is relatively simple to implement, is relatively well-behaved and converges on the incoming signal in a reasonably sufficient amount of time.
- Another technique is successive approximation or a binary search method in which the DC range between the existing ADC measurement window and the maximum level range is searched in a binary fashion.
- the rail condition indicates a positive or negative direction
- the successive approximation approach determines the maximum possible signal range in that direction and then tries full range, half range, quarter range, etc.
- the direction of each successive binary step is indicated by the rail condition until the signal is detected within the ADC measurement window.
- the successive approximation approach is bounded in that no more than a predetermined maximum amount of time is consumed no matter how much error exists upon packet onset.
- the step search method may be faster than successive approximation in certain instances, such as for small signal onset cases with a modest DC change resulting from a small gain change.
- the step search method may also take significantly longer for large signal onsets with large gain changes that may produce larger DC offsets.
- the binary search algorithm of the successive approximation approach is bounded and will converge to a specified limit within a known uncertainty.
- the use of one method over the other depends on the expected nature of the input conditions and the consequences when the input is not as expected.
- it may be preferable to use the step search because the critical small packets are acquired faster, which leaves more time for post AGC/DC processing. Since there is adequate time to ensure convergence, the consequence for large packet onsets is acceptable. For the end of packet scenarios, less time is available and bounded convergence time is most important. Trading longer acquisition times to gain rapid acquisition of smaller packets may not be desired.
- the rail condition of the R D signal is removed by DC compensation and the signal is either within range or changes to a clipping condition that meets the DC threshold condition previously described, such as clipping at one end or both ends but still less than or equal to the threshold percentage (e.g., 90%). If an unbalanced clip condition still remains in which clipping at one rail is still present at or below the specified DC threshold condition, then the gain feedback control loop is released and both the DC and gain loops are operated in a normal mode using the unbalanced clipped signal to eventually lock onto the incoming signal.
- the DC estimate block 319 controlling the DC loop 347 remains operative to control DC as before.
- the clipped signal may not be an accurate representation of the actual signal
- the estimated gain and DC are close enough so that the actual signal should be acquired sufficiently fast enough with normal loop operations. If the power level of the incoming signal is high or otherwise if the peak-to-peak levels are beyond the range of the ADC 313 , then the clipping condition may be reduced but may not be resolved solely by operation of the DC loop 347 . As long as the percentage of clipped digital signals (at both ends of the gain range) is at or below a predetermined clip rate threshold, then the gain feedback control loop is released and both loops operate in a normal mode to acquire the incoming signal.
- the clip rate threshold is any suitable arbitrary value, such as 50% or the like.
- the AGC loop 345 is unlocked when the clipping condition is substantially balanced when the DC condition has been corrected or when the ratio of clipping between the positive and negative rails of the ADC 313 is below or within the predetermined clip rate threshold.
- the percentage of clipped digital signals (at both ends of the ADC measurement window range) is above the predetermined clip rate threshold and if clipped samples at both rails is relatively balanced (e.g., if the number of digital samples at the maximum level is roughly equivalent with the number of digital samples at the minimum level), then a gain saturation state or condition is detected and the signal power estimate block 315 enters a clipping mode employing a clip-step procedure to reduce the power level of the received signal to eliminate clipping.
- the gain saturation condition indicates a significantly high amount of clipping occurring at both rails.
- the balance condition is any suitable and arbitrary ratio between the minimum and maximum clipped samples, such as 3:1 or 2:1 or the like.
- the signal power estimate block 315 samples the R D signal and determines the amount of clipping present. In one embodiment, the signal power estimate block 315 determines the number of values or samples at maximum range (positive or negative rail) compared to the number of samples less than maximum range for a given total number of samples to estimate the power level based on the clipping information. The signal power estimate block 315 then adjusts gain to reduce the power level. Thus, the signal power estimate block 315 determines the number of rail (or clip) samples for a total number of samples to estimate power level.
- a graduated set of thresholds may be employed during the gain saturation condition. If the relative number of clip samples is high, then a higher gain adjustment is used whereas if the relative number of clip samples is low, then a lower gain adjustment is used to resolve the power level of the received signal.
- a graduated clip gain adjustment may be employed based on clip sample ratios, such as 7/8 (high clipping, high gain adjust), 3/4, 5/8, 1/2, 3/8, 1/8 (low clipping, low gain adjust), etc. Any number of thresholds or break points may be defined or utilized.
- the amount of clip gain adjust values may depend upon the particular configuration. For example, larger gain adjustments may be used for the calibrated compensation system 700 as compared to other calibrated compensation embodiments since the compensation system 700 more accurately compensates DC in response to gain changes.
- the DC estimate block 319 and the DC loop 347 remain operative to control the DC level.
- the AGC loop 345 and the DC loop 347 are both operated as normal to obtain and maintain the R D signal at the target power level.
- the wireless transceiver 200 may remain in the clipping mode until the clipping condition is substantially removed even after one or more of the gain saturation conditions are no longer true.
- a next mode of operation is end of packet re-acquisition (of the wireless medium) which includes two sub-modes including clear channel assessment (CCA) and receive (RX) priority for reception of an expected acknowledge (ACK) packet.
- An ACK packet is often transmitted by a “receiving device” that has just received a packet from a “transmitting device”. ACK packets are highly recommended for most types of information transfer in wireless systems but are not always necessary or even desired. If an ACK packet is expected to be sent, the receiving device, after successfully receiving a packet, transmits the ACK packet. If an ACK packet is expected by the original transmitting device, it attempts to acquire the ACK packet if sent. The transmitting device may resend the packet if an ACK packet is expected but not received from the receiving device. Thus, a transmitting device expecting an ACK packet must detect and acquire the ACK packet if sent. The other devices in the network, if any, need only detect the presence of, but do not need to acquire, the ACK packet in the wireless medium.
- FIG. 10 is a timeline diagram illustrating timing of ACK packet priority acquisition at end of packet transmission.
- a packet 1001 transmitted by the wireless device 200 , is illustrated ending at a time T 1 at the MAC 205 .
- the same packet is shown at 1003 while being transmitted in the wireless medium after a delay through the transmitter portion of the ZIF transceiver 201 .
- the transmitted packet 1003 ends at a time T 2 defining a Master On Air Timing Reference for all wireless devices communicating in the wireless medium (ignoring minor RF delays during transmission).
- the transmit delay through the ZIF transceiver 201 or T 2 ⁇ T 1 , is approximately 2 ⁇ s in the embodiment shown.
- the MAC 205 has a 2 ⁇ s head start to shut down the transmitter and activate the receiver portion of the wireless transceiver 200 to receive an expected ACK packet from the receiving device.
- the MAC 205 indicates the start of baseband processor 203 receive at a time T 3 , which, in the embodiment shown, is approximately 5 ⁇ s from the time T 1 when the packet originally left the baseband processor 203 .
- the time T 3 represents a change condition upon which the wireless transceiver 200 must respond and enter the ACK receive priority mode in an attempt to acquire an ACK packet if sent.
- ACK packets are given preferential treatment in that there is a predetermined reserved period of time for ACK transmission immediately after a packet has been sent.
- the receiving device is provided a certain amount of time to send the ACK packet.
- the device transmitting the ACK packet need not perform CCA but simply transmits the ACK packet as soon as possible and within the reserved period of time for ACK transmission.
- a device expecting the ACK packet such as the wireless transceiver 200 , enters the ACK receive priority mode as soon as possible after transmitting a packet. As shown in FIG. 10 , this occurs at time T 3 , which is approximately 5 ⁇ s after the time TI when the packet 1001 left the baseband processor.
- the receiving device transmits an ACK packet 1005 in the wireless medium in response to the transmitted packet 1003 . It is assumed that the receiving device experiences a certain amount of “on air delay” and transmits the ACK packet 1005 in the wireless medium beginning at a time T 4 . In the embodiment shown, the on air delay is assumed to be no less than approximately 9 ⁇ s from the Master On Air Timing Reference time T 2 .
- An RF delay occurs through the receiver portion of the ZIF transceiver 201 , so that the ACK packet 1005 arrives at the baseband processor 203 , shown as ACK packet 1007 , at a time T 5 . In the embodiment shown, the RF delay through the receiver portion of the ZIF transceiver 201 is approximately 1 ⁇ s. In this manner, the baseband processor 203 of the wireless transceiver 200 has a time from T 3 to T 5 to prepare for the onset of the ACK packet, which is approximately 7 ⁇ s in the embodiment shown.
- the expecting device holds its noise floor gain setting during the quiet period between indication of the end of the original packet 1003 , occurring at time T 5 , and the detected onset of the ACK packet 1007 at the baseband processor, occurring at time T 5 .
- this period is approximately 7-9 ⁇ s at a minimum.
- the gain and DC settings prior to transmission of the original packet are stored by the transmitting device.
- the wireless transceiver 200 tracks the noise floor of the wireless medium while no packets are being transmitted and determines and stores a noise floor gain setting, and optionally a DC noise setting.
- the transmitting device To enter the ACK receive priority mode after transmission of the packet, the transmitting device immediately retrieves and resets the stored gain and DC settings, such as the noise floor gain and DC noise settings. While the gain setting is frozen and held constant, the ACK-expecting device searches the DC level until the quiet period is over. Much of the DC uncertainty can be determined during the quiet period. In other words, the stored gain is retrieved and applied to the AGC loop 345 , which is held at the retrieved gain value during interim period while DC is searched. Then, when the quiet period is over, the AGC loop 345 is released and both loops are operated in the normal packet acquisition mode, described previously, to acquire the ACK packet. It is noted that the DC loop 347 may or may not converge during the quiet period.
- both loops are operated together after the quiet period in normal mode so that the ACK-expecting device can receive and acquire the expected ACK packet if it has been sent.
- the ACK packet should be initiated within a 20 ⁇ s period. If the ACK packet is not received, the device may or may not re-send the original packet depending upon higher-level operations. It is noted that a receiver of a device other than the device that transmitted the packet may also desire to operate in ACK priority mode, such as a network monitor the operates in “sniffer” mode or the like used to analyze protocol.
- FIG. 11 is a timeline diagram illustrating CCA priority acquisition end of packet timing for the wireless transceiver 200 .
- a packet 1101 transmitted by another device is shown in the wireless medium and ending at a Master On Air Timing Reference at a time T 1 .
- a receiver delay is incurred through the ZIF transceiver 201 and the baseband processor 203 until the MAC 205 is able to identify and indicate the end of packet at a time T 2 , which defines a Master Receive Timing Reference for the wireless transceiver 200 .
- the receiver delay is approximately 6 ⁇ s.
- the wireless transceiver 200 has a predetermined time allocated to conduct CCA and determine whether the channel is clear, and if so, to declare that the channel is clear, which ends at a time T 5 .
- a quiet period of approximately 20 ⁇ s is allocated for this purpose.
- the wireless transceiver 200 also experiences a slight delay to declare CCA to begin preparation of transmitting a packet, which delay begins at a time T 4 prior to the time T 5 .
- this CCA declaration time is approximately 1 ⁇ s, so that the time from T 2 to T 4 is approximately 19 ⁇ s.
- the gain and DC loops of the wireless transceiver 200 must lock onto the energy in the wireless medium at a time T 3 in order to have sufficient time to complete the CCA determination by the time T 4 .
- the time T 3 is placed at approximately 10 ⁇ s before the time T 4 in order to complete the CCA assessment, so that the wireless transceiver 200 has approximately 9 ⁇ s between times T 2 and T 3 to lock.
- the wireless transceiver 200 determines and stores a noise floor gain setting prior to transmission of the packet 1101 . In the CCA mode, the noise floor gain setting is retrieved and applied in the gain feedback control loop as soon as possible following transmission of the packet 1101 , such as at time T 2 after the receiver delay.
- the noise power level of the medium may change somewhat, but is not expected to change appreciably after only one packet.
- the retrieved noise floor gain setting is then held, and the DC level is searched by the DC feedback control loop.
- the AGC loop 345 is jammed and held, while a step procedure or binary search or successive approximation or the like is conducted by the DC loop 347 during the CCA mode.
- the channel is clear and the DC loop should converge to a stable value by the time T 3 . If, however, the DC loop does not converge by the time T 3 , then there is either a packet and channel is not clear or the wireless transceiver 200 is otherwise unable to make the CCA assessment and declaration in time. If a signal is not present, the DC loop 347 typically converges relatively quickly. In one embodiment, the AGC loop 345 is unlocked after approximately 9 ⁇ s and packet acquisition is conducted normally. Although an ACK packet, if present, may not be acquired by a third party device, it is of no consequence since third party devices need not acquire the ACK packet. If the DC loop 347 does not converge at the time T 3 , even after the AGC loop 345 is released, then the channel is deemed to be busy.
- a tracking mode is also contemplated, which is a slower, higher level and longer term mode as compared to the modes described above.
- the tracking mode is a steady state operation and is employed to track the channel over time. A significant amount of data is reviewed over a substantial amount of time and finer, more precise adjustments are made in the operation.
- steady state conditions are monitored and longer term trends are tracked and adjustments made to follow the channel conditions. Updates to the steady state operating conditions are made more slowly at longer time intervals, such as 10 ⁇ s or the like. Short-term trends may be tracked, but adjustments are made more slowly to avoid over-compensation.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Power Engineering (AREA)
- Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
- Circuits Of Receivers In General (AREA)
- Control Of Amplification And Gain Control (AREA)
Abstract
Description
where the quantity Vo(i+1)−Vo(i−1) is a local DC offset change over two gain steps as would be observed after the
where maxGdb(i) and minGdb(i) are the maximum and minimum measured gain values in decibels, respectively. Then dV/dGdB(i) is determined according to the following equation (3):
where ADC_lsb is the step value conversion of the
The simplified version assumes that the ADC_HIi and ADC_LOi variables are set to the ADC_HI_RANGE and ADC_LO_RANGE constants, respectively. In operation, however, the ADC_HIi and ADC_LOi variables may vary by a step or two, so that an adjust value ADJi is calculated for each gain step (i) according to the following equation (6):
The adjust value is utilized to calculate more accurate DC offset values Vo(i) according to the following equation (7):
It is noted that for each case in which ADC_HIi is equal to ADC_HI_RANGE and where ADC_LOi is equal to ADC_LO_RANGE, that the adjust value ADJi cancels and becomes zero. Otherwise, the adjust value is utilized to improve accuracy. Operation proceeds to block 843 to smooth out the DC offset data Voffset(i) in a similar manner as described above for
Claims (60)
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US12/147,975 USRE42799E1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2008-06-27 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US09/677,975 US6735422B1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2000-10-02 | Calibrated DC compensation system for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US25973101P | 2001-01-04 | 2001-01-04 | |
US09/918,409 US7068987B2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2001-07-30 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US12/147,975 USRE42799E1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2008-06-27 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
Related Parent Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US09/918,409 Reissue US7068987B2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2001-07-30 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
USRE42799E1 true USRE42799E1 (en) | 2011-10-04 |
Family
ID=26947507
Family Applications (2)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US09/918,409 Ceased US7068987B2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2001-07-30 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US12/147,975 Expired - Lifetime USRE42799E1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2008-06-27 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
Family Applications Before (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US09/918,409 Ceased US7068987B2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2001-07-30 | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
Country Status (8)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (2) | US7068987B2 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2004536478A (en) |
KR (1) | KR20030065590A (en) |
CN (1) | CN1504015A (en) |
AU (1) | AU2002241708A1 (en) |
DE (1) | DE10197148T1 (en) |
TW (1) | TW529274B (en) |
WO (1) | WO2002054606A2 (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US9608587B2 (en) | 2015-06-25 | 2017-03-28 | Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. | Systems and methods to dynamically calibrate and adjust gains in a direct conversion receiver |
US10079647B2 (en) | 2014-12-10 | 2018-09-18 | Nxp Usa, Inc. | DC offset calibration of wireless receivers |
Families Citing this family (115)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US8014724B2 (en) * | 1999-10-21 | 2011-09-06 | Broadcom Corporation | System and method for signal limiting |
US6748200B1 (en) * | 2000-10-02 | 2004-06-08 | Mark A. Webster | Automatic gain control system and method for a ZIF architecture |
US7068987B2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2006-06-27 | Conexant, Inc. | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
WO2002031967A2 (en) | 2000-10-10 | 2002-04-18 | California Institute Of Technology | Distributed circular geometry power amplifier architecture |
US6856199B2 (en) * | 2000-10-10 | 2005-02-15 | California Institute Of Technology | Reconfigurable distributed active transformers |
DE60027898D1 (en) * | 2000-10-19 | 2006-06-14 | Norspace As Horten | frequency converter |
US7076225B2 (en) * | 2001-02-16 | 2006-07-11 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Variable gain selection in direct conversion receiver |
JP3599001B2 (en) * | 2001-06-25 | 2004-12-08 | ソニー株式会社 | Automatic gain control circuit and method, and demodulation device using them |
FI113832B (en) * | 2001-11-13 | 2004-06-15 | Nokia Corp | A method of performing synchronization to a signal in a wireless terminal and a wireless terminal |
GB2382242B (en) * | 2001-11-15 | 2005-08-03 | Hitachi Ltd | Direct-conversion transmitting circuit and integrated transmitting/receiving circuit |
US6801761B2 (en) * | 2002-02-15 | 2004-10-05 | Broadcom Corp. | Programmable mixer and radio applications thereof |
GB0204108D0 (en) * | 2002-02-21 | 2002-04-10 | Analog Devices Inc | 3G radio |
US20030162518A1 (en) * | 2002-02-22 | 2003-08-28 | Baldwin Keith R. | Rapid acquisition and tracking system for a wireless packet-based communication device |
TWI326967B (en) * | 2002-03-11 | 2010-07-01 | California Inst Of Techn | Differential amplifier |
US20040198261A1 (en) * | 2002-06-28 | 2004-10-07 | Wei Xiong | Method of self-calibration in a wireless transmitter |
US7369485B2 (en) * | 2002-08-19 | 2008-05-06 | Conexant, Inc. | Wireless receiver for sorting packets |
US20040131127A1 (en) * | 2002-08-27 | 2004-07-08 | Zivi Nadiri | Rfic transceiver architecture and method for its use |
US7715836B2 (en) * | 2002-09-03 | 2010-05-11 | Broadcom Corporation | Direct-conversion transceiver enabling digital calibration |
US7054607B2 (en) * | 2002-09-30 | 2006-05-30 | Intel Corporation | Method and apparatus for reducing DC offset in a wireless receiver |
US7200164B2 (en) * | 2002-11-07 | 2007-04-03 | Winbond Electronics Corp. | Packet-based multiplication-free CCK demodulator with a fast multipath interference cipher |
US7027793B2 (en) * | 2002-11-15 | 2006-04-11 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Direct conversion with variable amplitude LO signals |
US7471941B2 (en) * | 2002-12-02 | 2008-12-30 | Broadcom Corporation | Amplifier assembly including variable gain amplifier, parallel programmable amplifiers, and AGC |
US7260377B2 (en) * | 2002-12-02 | 2007-08-21 | Broadcom Corporation | Variable-gain low noise amplifier for digital terrestrial applications |
US8437720B2 (en) | 2002-12-02 | 2013-05-07 | Broadcom Corporation | Variable-gain low noise amplifier for digital terrestrial applications |
US6798286B2 (en) * | 2002-12-02 | 2004-09-28 | Broadcom Corporation | Gain control methods and systems in an amplifier assembly |
US20040176056A1 (en) * | 2003-03-07 | 2004-09-09 | Shen Feng | Single-tone detection and adaptive gain control for direct-conversion receivers |
US20040179485A1 (en) * | 2003-03-12 | 2004-09-16 | Terrier Carl M. | Method of transmitting and receiving two-way serial digital signals in a wireless network utilizing a simplified baseband processor |
KR100694787B1 (en) * | 2003-03-14 | 2007-03-14 | 인터디지탈 테크날러지 코포레이션 | Enhanced automatic gain control mechanism for timeslotted data transmission |
US6842133B2 (en) * | 2003-04-30 | 2005-01-11 | Intel Corporation | Strobe through differential signaling |
US7251570B2 (en) * | 2003-07-18 | 2007-07-31 | Power Measurement Ltd. | Data integrity in a mesh network |
CN1592245A (en) * | 2003-09-02 | 2005-03-09 | 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 | Power controlling method and apparatus for use in WLAN |
US7403760B1 (en) * | 2003-12-31 | 2008-07-22 | Conexant Systems, Inc. | DC offset correction for direct-conversion receiver |
JP2005210261A (en) * | 2004-01-21 | 2005-08-04 | Renesas Technology Corp | Wireless communication system and high frequency ic |
TWI345369B (en) * | 2004-01-28 | 2011-07-11 | Mediatek Inc | High dynamic range time-varying integrated receiver for elimination of off-chip filters |
DE602004009034T2 (en) * | 2004-04-08 | 2008-06-19 | Stmicroelectronics N.V. | Method for controlling the power of the output signal of an amplifier system, and corresponding system |
DE602005016387D1 (en) * | 2004-04-13 | 2009-10-15 | Maxlinear Inc | DOUBLE TRANSMIT RECEIVER WITH PROGRAMMABLE INTERMEDIATE FREQUENCY AND CHANNEL SELECTION |
US7372925B2 (en) * | 2004-06-09 | 2008-05-13 | Theta Microelectronics, Inc. | Wireless LAN receiver with I and Q RF and baseband AGC loops and DC offset cancellation |
US7769107B2 (en) * | 2004-06-10 | 2010-08-03 | Intel Corporation | Semi-blind analog beamforming for multiple-antenna systems |
JP2006033108A (en) * | 2004-07-13 | 2006-02-02 | Renesas Technology Corp | Semiconductor integrated circuit incorporating pll circuit |
GB2416437B (en) * | 2004-07-19 | 2007-12-27 | Renesas Tech Corp | A communication semiconductor integrated circuit device and a wireless communication system |
US7596355B2 (en) * | 2004-11-29 | 2009-09-29 | Intel Corporation | System and method capable of closed loop MIMO calibration |
DE102005004105B4 (en) * | 2005-01-28 | 2013-05-08 | Intel Mobile Communications GmbH | Signal processing device and method for operating a signal processing device |
US7275597B2 (en) * | 2005-03-01 | 2007-10-02 | Intelliserv, Inc. | Remote power management method and system in a downhole network |
WO2006109296A2 (en) * | 2005-04-13 | 2006-10-19 | Siano Mobile Silicon Ltd. | A method for tuning an rf base-band circuit of a receiver |
US7558537B2 (en) * | 2005-06-07 | 2009-07-07 | Broadcom Corporation | Modified preamble for programmable transmitter |
US7440730B2 (en) * | 2005-06-30 | 2008-10-21 | Intel Corporation | Device, system and method of multiple transceivers control |
KR100811798B1 (en) * | 2005-07-26 | 2008-03-10 | 인티그런트 테크놀로지즈(주) | Diversity DMBDigital Multimedia Broadcasting Receiving One-Chip With a Single Voltage controlled Oscillator |
US8036622B2 (en) | 2005-09-28 | 2011-10-11 | Qualcomm, Incorporated | DC offset cancellation circuit for a receiver |
US7606498B1 (en) * | 2005-10-21 | 2009-10-20 | Nortel Networks Limited | Carrier recovery in a coherent optical receiver |
JP2009516462A (en) * | 2005-11-18 | 2009-04-16 | コーニンクレッカ フィリップス エレクトロニクス エヌ ヴィ | DC offset estimation |
KR100653199B1 (en) * | 2005-11-18 | 2006-12-05 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Rf receiving apparatus and method for removing leakage component of received signal using local signal |
US20070169307A1 (en) * | 2006-01-26 | 2007-07-26 | Xerox Corporation | Adjustable castor assembly |
US20070190948A1 (en) * | 2006-02-14 | 2007-08-16 | Accton Technology Corporation | Radio frequency module |
US7702046B2 (en) * | 2006-04-03 | 2010-04-20 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and system for automatic gain control during signal acquisition |
US7933361B2 (en) * | 2006-04-05 | 2011-04-26 | Integrated System Solution Corp. | Hybrid DC-offset reduction method and system for direct conversion receiver |
US20090117859A1 (en) * | 2006-04-07 | 2009-05-07 | Belair Networks Inc. | System and method for frequency offsetting of information communicated in mimo based wireless networks |
US8254865B2 (en) | 2006-04-07 | 2012-08-28 | Belair Networks | System and method for frequency offsetting of information communicated in MIMO-based wireless networks |
US7881690B2 (en) * | 2006-04-07 | 2011-02-01 | Belair Networks Inc. | System and method for zero intermediate frequency filtering of information communicated in wireless networks |
US8781426B2 (en) * | 2006-05-15 | 2014-07-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Techniques for controlling operation of control loops in a receiver |
US7792548B2 (en) * | 2006-09-28 | 2010-09-07 | Broadcom Corporation | Multiple frequency antenna array for use with an RF transmitter or transceiver |
US9083299B2 (en) * | 2006-10-26 | 2015-07-14 | Realtek Semiconductor Corp. | Filter of adjustable frequency response and method thereof |
GB0703883D0 (en) * | 2007-02-28 | 2007-04-11 | Cambridge Silicon Radio Ltd | Receiver gain control |
US20090042527A1 (en) * | 2007-06-12 | 2009-02-12 | Hmicro Inc. | Dynamic low power receiver |
US20090040107A1 (en) * | 2007-06-12 | 2009-02-12 | Hmicro, Inc. | Smart antenna subsystem |
US7710197B2 (en) * | 2007-07-11 | 2010-05-04 | Axiom Microdevices, Inc. | Low offset envelope detector and method of use |
US8229381B2 (en) * | 2007-10-03 | 2012-07-24 | Maxlinear, Inc. | Method and apparatus for efficient DC calibration in a direct-conversion system with variable DC gain |
US7541952B1 (en) * | 2007-10-10 | 2009-06-02 | Atheros Communications, Inc. | Method and apparatus for offset and gain compensation for analog-to-digital converters |
EP2210352B1 (en) * | 2007-10-24 | 2020-05-06 | LifeSignals, Inc. | Systems and networks for half and full duplex wireless communication using multiple radios |
US8626079B2 (en) * | 2007-12-12 | 2014-01-07 | Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute | Link adaptation method and apparatus in wireless communication system |
CN101202561B (en) * | 2007-12-18 | 2011-04-20 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | System and method for searching signal |
GB2490834B (en) | 2008-02-06 | 2013-05-29 | Hmicro Inc | Wireless communications systems using multiple radios |
JP5084543B2 (en) * | 2008-02-12 | 2012-11-28 | キヤノン株式会社 | Image processing apparatus and image processing method |
US8255009B2 (en) * | 2008-04-25 | 2012-08-28 | Apple Inc. | Radio frequency communications circuitry with power supply voltage and gain control |
TWI473452B (en) * | 2008-05-07 | 2015-02-11 | Mediatek Inc | Rf transmitting device of a wlan device |
US20100057475A1 (en) * | 2008-08-26 | 2010-03-04 | Nelson Sollenberger | Method and system for digital gain control in an audio codec |
US8331883B2 (en) * | 2008-10-30 | 2012-12-11 | Apple Inc. | Electronic devices with calibrated radio frequency communications circuitry |
WO2010129022A2 (en) * | 2009-04-27 | 2010-11-11 | Ikanos Technology Ltd. | Method and apparatus for optimizing dynamic range in dmt modems |
US8165642B2 (en) * | 2009-05-13 | 2012-04-24 | Apple Inc. | Electronic device with data-rate-dependent power amplifier bias |
US7978113B2 (en) * | 2009-09-10 | 2011-07-12 | National Semiconductor Corporation | Analog-to-digital converter having output data with reduced bit-width and related system and method |
US8457261B1 (en) * | 2010-02-17 | 2013-06-04 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Automatic gain control techniques for detecting RF saturation |
US8780768B2 (en) * | 2010-04-02 | 2014-07-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Automatic gain control acquisition in time division duplex systems |
US20110265284A1 (en) * | 2010-04-30 | 2011-11-03 | Morgan Charles J | Method and system of detecting a blockage in a vacuum cleaner |
TWI413362B (en) * | 2010-07-16 | 2013-10-21 | Novatek Microelectronics Corp | Circuit and method for automatic gain control and amplification apparatus |
US8791767B2 (en) * | 2010-10-29 | 2014-07-29 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Package inductance compensating tunable capacitor circuit |
DE102010052046A1 (en) * | 2010-11-23 | 2012-05-24 | Hirschmann Automation And Control Gmbh | WLAN radio module for industrial applications |
TWI459769B (en) * | 2010-12-30 | 2014-11-01 | Phison Electronics Corp | Adaptive equalizer and adaptive equalizing method |
US9432951B2 (en) * | 2011-04-29 | 2016-08-30 | Smsc Holdings S.A.R.L. | Transmit power control algorithms for sources and sinks in a multi-link session |
US9118403B2 (en) * | 2011-11-14 | 2015-08-25 | Aci Communications, Inc. | Thermally compensated CATV gain control apparatus and firmware |
JP2013120957A (en) * | 2011-12-06 | 2013-06-17 | Toshiba Corp | Semiconductor integrated circuit and receiver |
US8990864B2 (en) * | 2012-06-12 | 2015-03-24 | Maxlinear, Inc. | Method and system for receiver configuration based on a priori knowledge of noise |
US8787851B2 (en) * | 2012-07-10 | 2014-07-22 | Huawei Device Co., Ltd. | System and method for quickly power amplifier control |
CN103795433B (en) * | 2012-11-01 | 2017-05-31 | 联芯科技有限公司 | FCB signal search method and its device |
TWI533645B (en) * | 2013-01-07 | 2016-05-11 | 晨星半導體股份有限公司 | Signal receiving apparatus and signal receiving method |
CN103944595B (en) * | 2013-01-23 | 2016-08-03 | 晨星半导体股份有限公司 | Signal receiving device and signal acceptance method |
US8989328B2 (en) * | 2013-03-14 | 2015-03-24 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Systems and methods for serial communication |
US9397955B2 (en) | 2013-04-04 | 2016-07-19 | Maxlinear, Inc. | Method and system for an analog crossbar architecture |
CN104125183B (en) * | 2013-04-26 | 2017-10-03 | 瑞昱半导体股份有限公司 | Analog front circuit transmission end |
KR102219849B1 (en) * | 2014-01-03 | 2021-02-24 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Apparatus and method for calibration of a direct current offset in a direct conversion receiver |
CN105874719A (en) | 2014-04-24 | 2016-08-17 | 华为技术有限公司 | Signal processing device, method and system |
US9391578B2 (en) * | 2014-06-11 | 2016-07-12 | Analog Devices Global | Low intermediate frequency receiver |
US9813265B2 (en) * | 2015-04-14 | 2017-11-07 | Gainspan Corporation | Receiver DC offset calibration with antenna connected |
US9742572B2 (en) * | 2015-12-30 | 2017-08-22 | Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc | Upstream RF input level scaling |
US10462063B2 (en) | 2016-01-22 | 2019-10-29 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Method and apparatus for detecting packet |
FR3049794B1 (en) * | 2016-04-04 | 2019-04-12 | Thales | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR DYNAMICALLY CALIBRATING ONE OR MORE RADIOFREQUENCY CHANNELS FOR TRANSMITTING A SATELLITE PAYLOAD |
CN106339287A (en) * | 2016-08-29 | 2017-01-18 | 成都科鸿达科技有限公司 | IO efficient detection method of large-scale system loop |
US10687361B2 (en) * | 2016-11-04 | 2020-06-16 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Flexible time masks for listen-before-talk based channel access |
US10422846B2 (en) * | 2017-01-30 | 2019-09-24 | Rohde & Schwarz Gmbh & Co. Kg | Method for calibrating a radio frequency test instrument and radio frequency test instrument |
US10211863B1 (en) * | 2017-08-15 | 2019-02-19 | Bae Systems Information And Electronic Systems Integration Inc. | Complementary automatic gain control for anti-jam communications |
US11533767B2 (en) * | 2018-02-19 | 2022-12-20 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Activation of secondary cells for carrier aggregation and dual connectivity |
US11669446B2 (en) | 2018-06-18 | 2023-06-06 | The Trustees Of Princeton University | Configurable in memory computing engine, platform, bit cells and layouts therefore |
US10708266B2 (en) * | 2018-08-22 | 2020-07-07 | Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development Lp | Wireless network device fingerprinting and identification using packet reception success probabilities |
CN109814525B (en) * | 2018-12-29 | 2022-03-22 | 惠州市德赛西威汽车电子股份有限公司 | Automatic test method for detecting communication voltage range of automobile ECU CAN bus |
US11868171B2 (en) * | 2020-11-20 | 2024-01-09 | T-Mobile Usa, Inc. | External wireless device converter |
US12022437B2 (en) | 2021-07-23 | 2024-06-25 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Direct current location sharing between unicast user equipments in sidelink |
US12107673B2 (en) * | 2021-09-07 | 2024-10-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Jammer detection system |
Citations (81)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3828249A (en) | 1972-02-18 | 1974-08-06 | Philips Corp | Self-correcting phase measuring bridge |
US3953805A (en) | 1974-11-07 | 1976-04-27 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | DC component suppression in zero CF IF systems |
US4028626A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1977-06-07 | Hycom Incorporated | Digital data receiver with automatic timing recovery and control |
US4101841A (en) | 1976-09-03 | 1978-07-18 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Gain control circuit |
US4134078A (en) | 1976-08-11 | 1979-01-09 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Gain control circuit |
US4164036A (en) | 1977-12-07 | 1979-08-07 | Honeywell Inc. | Quadrature correlation phase reversal pulse detector |
US4458210A (en) | 1980-06-27 | 1984-07-03 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Distortion compensated cross-coupled differential amplifier circuit |
US4502021A (en) | 1983-03-31 | 1985-02-26 | Storage Technology Corporation | Constant bandwidth automatic gain control system |
US4514702A (en) | 1982-02-08 | 1985-04-30 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Logarithmic electronic gain control circuit |
US4823129A (en) | 1987-02-24 | 1989-04-18 | Bison Instruments, Inc. | Analog-to-digital converter |
US4951000A (en) | 1987-01-20 | 1990-08-21 | U. S. Philips Corporation | Wide-band phase shifter |
US5009126A (en) | 1987-10-13 | 1991-04-23 | Zahnfabrik Friedrichshafen Ag | Hydrostatic-mechanical drive system |
US5077541A (en) | 1990-08-14 | 1991-12-31 | Analog Devices, Inc. | Variable-gain amplifier controlled by an analog signal and having a large dynamic range |
WO1992011704A1 (en) | 1990-12-21 | 1992-07-09 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method for generating quadrature signals |
US5157350A (en) | 1991-10-31 | 1992-10-20 | Harvey Rubens | Analog multipliers |
US5175749A (en) | 1991-01-25 | 1992-12-29 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method for dc offset correction in a receiver |
US5212826A (en) | 1990-12-20 | 1993-05-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method of dc offset correction for a receiver |
US5212827A (en) | 1991-02-04 | 1993-05-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Zero intermediate frequency noise blanker |
US5241702A (en) | 1990-09-06 | 1993-08-31 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson | D.c. offset compensation in a radio receiver |
US5264798A (en) | 1991-10-29 | 1993-11-23 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Autonulling AC bridge using differential and integration feedback |
US5400366A (en) | 1992-07-09 | 1995-03-21 | Fujitsu Limited | Quasi-synchronous detection and demodulation circuit and frequency discriminator used for the same |
WO1995030275A1 (en) | 1994-04-28 | 1995-11-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for automatic gain control and dc offset cancellation in quadrature receiver |
US5471665A (en) * | 1994-10-18 | 1995-11-28 | Motorola, Inc. | Differential DC offset compensation circuit |
US5483691A (en) | 1992-06-08 | 1996-01-09 | Motorola, Inc. | Zero intermediate frequency receiver having an automatic gain control circuit |
EP0719013A2 (en) | 1994-12-20 | 1996-06-26 | AT&T Corp. | DC offset correction circuit |
EP0729230A1 (en) | 1995-02-21 | 1996-08-28 | Tait Electronics Limited | Zero intermediate frequency receiver |
US5573001A (en) | 1995-09-08 | 1996-11-12 | Acuson Corporation | Ultrasonic receive beamformer with phased sub-arrays |
US5574755A (en) | 1994-01-25 | 1996-11-12 | Philips Electronics North America Corporation | I/Q quadraphase modulator circuit |
US5575001A (en) | 1995-06-07 | 1996-11-12 | Hwa Lin Electronic Co., Ltd. | Direct broadcasting satellite tuner with a negative feedback and image compression circuit |
WO1997006604A1 (en) | 1995-08-04 | 1997-02-20 | Numa Technologies, Inc. | Universal rf receiver |
US5608796A (en) | 1995-02-10 | 1997-03-04 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Balanced phase splitting circuit |
EP0767544A2 (en) | 1995-10-04 | 1997-04-09 | Interuniversitair Micro-Elektronica Centrum Vzw | Programmable modem using spread spectrum communication |
US5644308A (en) | 1995-01-17 | 1997-07-01 | Crystal Semiconductor Corporation | Algorithmic analog-to-digital converter having redundancy and digital calibration |
US5659263A (en) | 1996-03-25 | 1997-08-19 | Motorola, Inc. | Circuit and method for correcting phase error in a multiplier circuit |
US5684431A (en) | 1995-12-13 | 1997-11-04 | Analog Devices | Differential-input single-supply variable gain amplifier having linear-in-dB gain control |
US5712203A (en) | 1995-12-11 | 1998-01-27 | United Microelectronics Corporation | Process for fabricating read-only memory cells using removable barrier strips |
US5712594A (en) | 1995-05-31 | 1998-01-27 | Nec Corporation | Operational transconductance amplifier operable at low supply voltage |
US5732341A (en) * | 1994-12-16 | 1998-03-24 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for increasing receiver immunity to interference |
US5742622A (en) | 1996-03-12 | 1998-04-21 | Discovision Associates | Error detection and correction system for a stream of encoded data |
US5742203A (en) | 1994-10-28 | 1998-04-21 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Gain-controllable amplifier, receiver |
WO1998038799A1 (en) | 1997-02-28 | 1998-09-03 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | Direct-conversion tuner integrated circuit for direct broadcast satellite television |
US5872810A (en) | 1996-01-26 | 1999-02-16 | Imec Co. | Programmable modem apparatus for transmitting and receiving digital data, design method and use method for said modem |
US5880631A (en) | 1996-02-28 | 1999-03-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | High dynamic range variable gain amplifier |
US5896053A (en) | 1995-07-28 | 1999-04-20 | Harris Corporation | Single ended to differential converter and 50% duty cycle signal generator and method |
US5901347A (en) | 1996-01-17 | 1999-05-04 | Motorola, Inc. | Fast automatic gain control circuit and method for zero intermediate frequency receivers and radiotelephone using same |
EP0948128A1 (en) | 1998-04-03 | 1999-10-06 | Motorola Semiconducteurs S.A. | DC offset cancellation in a quadrature receiver |
EP0964557A1 (en) | 1998-06-12 | 1999-12-15 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Receiver DC offset compensation |
US6009126A (en) | 1996-09-06 | 1999-12-28 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Zero-IF receiver |
US6016422A (en) | 1997-10-31 | 2000-01-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Method of and apparatus for generating radio frequency quadrature LO signals for direct conversion transceivers |
US6029059A (en) | 1997-06-30 | 2000-02-22 | Lucent Technologies, Inc. | Quadrature mixer method and apparatus |
US6078219A (en) | 1998-10-28 | 2000-06-20 | Ericsson Inc. | Wide range single stage variable gain amplifier |
US6108529A (en) | 1998-02-01 | 2000-08-22 | Bae Systems Aerospace Electronics Inc. | Radio system including FET mixer device and square-wave drive switching circuit and method therefor |
US6111592A (en) | 1996-11-26 | 2000-08-29 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | DMA data transfer apparatus, motion picture decoding apparatus using the same, and DMA data transfer method |
US6111529A (en) | 1998-09-30 | 2000-08-29 | Cirrus Logic, Inc. | Accurate gain calibration of analog to digital converters |
US6141169A (en) | 1997-10-23 | 2000-10-31 | Cirrus Logic, Inc. | System and method for control of low frequency input levels to an amplifier and compensation of input offsets of the amplifier |
US6157235A (en) | 1999-06-01 | 2000-12-05 | Motorola, Inc. | Quadrature signal generator and method therefor |
US6172543B1 (en) | 1998-06-22 | 2001-01-09 | Nec Corporation | 90° phase shift circuit |
US6321073B1 (en) * | 2000-01-31 | 2001-11-20 | Motorola, Inc. | Radiotelephone receiver and method with improved dynamic range and DC offset correction |
US6324389B1 (en) | 1996-02-08 | 2001-11-27 | Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. | Method and circuit arrangement for processing a received signal |
US6327313B1 (en) | 1999-12-29 | 2001-12-04 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for DC offset correction |
EP1172928A2 (en) | 2000-07-14 | 2002-01-16 | Intracom S.A. Hellenic Telecommunications & Electronics Industry | DC offset correction circuit and AGC in zero-if wireless receivers |
US6356131B1 (en) | 1999-10-19 | 2002-03-12 | Nec Corporation | 90-degree phase shifter |
US6370205B1 (en) | 1999-07-02 | 2002-04-09 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Method and apparatus for performing DC-offset compensation in a radio receiver |
WO2002029985A2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2002-04-11 | Intersil Americas Inc. | A calibrated dc compensation system for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US20020042256A1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2002-04-11 | Baldwin Keith R | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US6442380B1 (en) | 1999-12-22 | 2002-08-27 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Automatic gain control in a zero intermediate frequency radio device |
US20020123319A1 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2002-09-05 | Peterzell Paul E. | Direct conversion digital domain control |
US6459889B1 (en) | 2000-02-29 | 2002-10-01 | Motorola, Inc. | DC offset correction loop for radio receiver |
US6473471B2 (en) | 1995-03-09 | 2002-10-29 | Ericsson Inc | Slope drift and offset compensation in zero-if receivers |
US6498929B1 (en) | 1996-06-21 | 2002-12-24 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Receiver having DC offset decreasing function and communication system using the same |
US6498927B2 (en) | 2001-03-28 | 2002-12-24 | Gct Semiconductor, Inc. | Automatic gain control method for highly integrated communication receiver |
US6504498B1 (en) | 1999-09-27 | 2003-01-07 | Parthus Ireland Limited | Method and apparatus for offset cancellation in a wireless receiver |
US6504884B1 (en) | 1999-05-12 | 2003-01-07 | Analog Devices, Inc. | Method for correcting DC offsets in a receiver |
US6507241B1 (en) | 2000-10-03 | 2003-01-14 | International Business Machines Corporation | Method and circuit for automatically correcting offset voltage |
US6507732B1 (en) | 1999-09-14 | 2003-01-14 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Dynamic path gain compensation for radios in wireless communication systems |
US6509777B2 (en) | 2001-01-23 | 2003-01-21 | Resonext Communications, Inc. | Method and apparatus for reducing DC offset |
US6516185B1 (en) | 1999-05-24 | 2003-02-04 | Level One Communications, Inc. | Automatic gain control and offset correction |
US6516187B1 (en) | 1998-03-13 | 2003-02-04 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | DC offset correction for direct conversion tuner IC |
US6516183B1 (en) | 1999-09-10 | 2003-02-04 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Method and apparatus for disturbance compensation of a direct conversion receiver in a full duplex transceiver |
US20040071238A1 (en) * | 2000-08-04 | 2004-04-15 | Nadim Khlat | Apparatus for reducing dc offset in a receiver |
US6766153B2 (en) * | 2001-04-02 | 2004-07-20 | Itran Communications Ltd. | Dynamic automatic gain control circuit employing kalman filtering |
Family Cites Families (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3952805A (en) * | 1975-02-27 | 1976-04-27 | Calgon Corporation | Well cementing method using a composition having improved flow properties, containing sulfonated copolymers of styrene-maleic anhydride |
-
2001
- 2001-07-30 US US09/918,409 patent/US7068987B2/en not_active Ceased
- 2001-12-11 TW TW090130645A patent/TW529274B/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2001-12-21 KR KR10-2003-7009059A patent/KR20030065590A/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 2001-12-21 JP JP2002554982A patent/JP2004536478A/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2001-12-21 WO PCT/US2001/050268 patent/WO2002054606A2/en active Application Filing
- 2001-12-21 AU AU2002241708A patent/AU2002241708A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2001-12-21 CN CNA01821763XA patent/CN1504015A/en active Pending
- 2001-12-21 DE DE10197148T patent/DE10197148T1/en not_active Withdrawn
-
2008
- 2008-06-27 US US12/147,975 patent/USRE42799E1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (85)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3828249A (en) | 1972-02-18 | 1974-08-06 | Philips Corp | Self-correcting phase measuring bridge |
US4028626A (en) | 1973-01-18 | 1977-06-07 | Hycom Incorporated | Digital data receiver with automatic timing recovery and control |
US3953805A (en) | 1974-11-07 | 1976-04-27 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | DC component suppression in zero CF IF systems |
US4134078A (en) | 1976-08-11 | 1979-01-09 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Gain control circuit |
US4101841A (en) | 1976-09-03 | 1978-07-18 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Gain control circuit |
US4164036A (en) | 1977-12-07 | 1979-08-07 | Honeywell Inc. | Quadrature correlation phase reversal pulse detector |
US4458210A (en) | 1980-06-27 | 1984-07-03 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Distortion compensated cross-coupled differential amplifier circuit |
US4514702A (en) | 1982-02-08 | 1985-04-30 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Logarithmic electronic gain control circuit |
US4502021A (en) | 1983-03-31 | 1985-02-26 | Storage Technology Corporation | Constant bandwidth automatic gain control system |
US4951000A (en) | 1987-01-20 | 1990-08-21 | U. S. Philips Corporation | Wide-band phase shifter |
US4823129A (en) | 1987-02-24 | 1989-04-18 | Bison Instruments, Inc. | Analog-to-digital converter |
US5009126A (en) | 1987-10-13 | 1991-04-23 | Zahnfabrik Friedrichshafen Ag | Hydrostatic-mechanical drive system |
US5077541A (en) | 1990-08-14 | 1991-12-31 | Analog Devices, Inc. | Variable-gain amplifier controlled by an analog signal and having a large dynamic range |
US5241702A (en) | 1990-09-06 | 1993-08-31 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson | D.c. offset compensation in a radio receiver |
US5212826A (en) | 1990-12-20 | 1993-05-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method of dc offset correction for a receiver |
WO1992011704A1 (en) | 1990-12-21 | 1992-07-09 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method for generating quadrature signals |
US5175749A (en) | 1991-01-25 | 1992-12-29 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method for dc offset correction in a receiver |
US5212827A (en) | 1991-02-04 | 1993-05-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Zero intermediate frequency noise blanker |
US5264798A (en) | 1991-10-29 | 1993-11-23 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Autonulling AC bridge using differential and integration feedback |
US5157350A (en) | 1991-10-31 | 1992-10-20 | Harvey Rubens | Analog multipliers |
US5483691A (en) | 1992-06-08 | 1996-01-09 | Motorola, Inc. | Zero intermediate frequency receiver having an automatic gain control circuit |
US5400366A (en) | 1992-07-09 | 1995-03-21 | Fujitsu Limited | Quasi-synchronous detection and demodulation circuit and frequency discriminator used for the same |
US5661761A (en) | 1992-07-09 | 1997-08-26 | Fujitsu Limited | Quasi-synchronous detection and demodulation circuit and frequency discriminator used for the same |
US5574755A (en) | 1994-01-25 | 1996-11-12 | Philips Electronics North America Corporation | I/Q quadraphase modulator circuit |
WO1995030275A1 (en) | 1994-04-28 | 1995-11-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for automatic gain control and dc offset cancellation in quadrature receiver |
US5617060A (en) * | 1994-04-28 | 1997-04-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for automatic gain control and DC offset cancellation in quadrature receiver |
US5471665A (en) * | 1994-10-18 | 1995-11-28 | Motorola, Inc. | Differential DC offset compensation circuit |
US5742203A (en) | 1994-10-28 | 1998-04-21 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Gain-controllable amplifier, receiver |
US5732341A (en) * | 1994-12-16 | 1998-03-24 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for increasing receiver immunity to interference |
EP0719013A2 (en) | 1994-12-20 | 1996-06-26 | AT&T Corp. | DC offset correction circuit |
US5724653A (en) | 1994-12-20 | 1998-03-03 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Radio receiver with DC offset correction circuit |
US5644308A (en) | 1995-01-17 | 1997-07-01 | Crystal Semiconductor Corporation | Algorithmic analog-to-digital converter having redundancy and digital calibration |
US5608796A (en) | 1995-02-10 | 1997-03-04 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Balanced phase splitting circuit |
EP0729230A1 (en) | 1995-02-21 | 1996-08-28 | Tait Electronics Limited | Zero intermediate frequency receiver |
US5715281A (en) | 1995-02-21 | 1998-02-03 | Tait Electronics Limited | Zero intermediate frequency receiver |
US6473471B2 (en) | 1995-03-09 | 2002-10-29 | Ericsson Inc | Slope drift and offset compensation in zero-if receivers |
US5712594A (en) | 1995-05-31 | 1998-01-27 | Nec Corporation | Operational transconductance amplifier operable at low supply voltage |
US5575001A (en) | 1995-06-07 | 1996-11-12 | Hwa Lin Electronic Co., Ltd. | Direct broadcasting satellite tuner with a negative feedback and image compression circuit |
US5896053A (en) | 1995-07-28 | 1999-04-20 | Harris Corporation | Single ended to differential converter and 50% duty cycle signal generator and method |
WO1997006604A1 (en) | 1995-08-04 | 1997-02-20 | Numa Technologies, Inc. | Universal rf receiver |
US5573001A (en) | 1995-09-08 | 1996-11-12 | Acuson Corporation | Ultrasonic receive beamformer with phased sub-arrays |
EP0767544A2 (en) | 1995-10-04 | 1997-04-09 | Interuniversitair Micro-Elektronica Centrum Vzw | Programmable modem using spread spectrum communication |
US5712203A (en) | 1995-12-11 | 1998-01-27 | United Microelectronics Corporation | Process for fabricating read-only memory cells using removable barrier strips |
US5684431A (en) | 1995-12-13 | 1997-11-04 | Analog Devices | Differential-input single-supply variable gain amplifier having linear-in-dB gain control |
US5901347A (en) | 1996-01-17 | 1999-05-04 | Motorola, Inc. | Fast automatic gain control circuit and method for zero intermediate frequency receivers and radiotelephone using same |
US5872810A (en) | 1996-01-26 | 1999-02-16 | Imec Co. | Programmable modem apparatus for transmitting and receiving digital data, design method and use method for said modem |
US6324389B1 (en) | 1996-02-08 | 2001-11-27 | Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. | Method and circuit arrangement for processing a received signal |
US5880631A (en) | 1996-02-28 | 1999-03-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | High dynamic range variable gain amplifier |
US5742622A (en) | 1996-03-12 | 1998-04-21 | Discovision Associates | Error detection and correction system for a stream of encoded data |
US5659263A (en) | 1996-03-25 | 1997-08-19 | Motorola, Inc. | Circuit and method for correcting phase error in a multiplier circuit |
US6498929B1 (en) | 1996-06-21 | 2002-12-24 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Receiver having DC offset decreasing function and communication system using the same |
US6009126A (en) | 1996-09-06 | 1999-12-28 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Zero-IF receiver |
US6111592A (en) | 1996-11-26 | 2000-08-29 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | DMA data transfer apparatus, motion picture decoding apparatus using the same, and DMA data transfer method |
WO1998038799A1 (en) | 1997-02-28 | 1998-09-03 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | Direct-conversion tuner integrated circuit for direct broadcast satellite television |
US6029059A (en) | 1997-06-30 | 2000-02-22 | Lucent Technologies, Inc. | Quadrature mixer method and apparatus |
US6141169A (en) | 1997-10-23 | 2000-10-31 | Cirrus Logic, Inc. | System and method for control of low frequency input levels to an amplifier and compensation of input offsets of the amplifier |
US6016422A (en) | 1997-10-31 | 2000-01-18 | Motorola, Inc. | Method of and apparatus for generating radio frequency quadrature LO signals for direct conversion transceivers |
US6108529A (en) | 1998-02-01 | 2000-08-22 | Bae Systems Aerospace Electronics Inc. | Radio system including FET mixer device and square-wave drive switching circuit and method therefor |
US6516187B1 (en) | 1998-03-13 | 2003-02-04 | Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | DC offset correction for direct conversion tuner IC |
EP0948128A1 (en) | 1998-04-03 | 1999-10-06 | Motorola Semiconducteurs S.A. | DC offset cancellation in a quadrature receiver |
EP0964557A1 (en) | 1998-06-12 | 1999-12-15 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Receiver DC offset compensation |
US6172543B1 (en) | 1998-06-22 | 2001-01-09 | Nec Corporation | 90° phase shift circuit |
US6111529A (en) | 1998-09-30 | 2000-08-29 | Cirrus Logic, Inc. | Accurate gain calibration of analog to digital converters |
US6078219A (en) | 1998-10-28 | 2000-06-20 | Ericsson Inc. | Wide range single stage variable gain amplifier |
US6504884B1 (en) | 1999-05-12 | 2003-01-07 | Analog Devices, Inc. | Method for correcting DC offsets in a receiver |
US6516185B1 (en) | 1999-05-24 | 2003-02-04 | Level One Communications, Inc. | Automatic gain control and offset correction |
US6157235A (en) | 1999-06-01 | 2000-12-05 | Motorola, Inc. | Quadrature signal generator and method therefor |
US6370205B1 (en) | 1999-07-02 | 2002-04-09 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Method and apparatus for performing DC-offset compensation in a radio receiver |
US6516183B1 (en) | 1999-09-10 | 2003-02-04 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Method and apparatus for disturbance compensation of a direct conversion receiver in a full duplex transceiver |
US6507732B1 (en) | 1999-09-14 | 2003-01-14 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Dynamic path gain compensation for radios in wireless communication systems |
US6504498B1 (en) | 1999-09-27 | 2003-01-07 | Parthus Ireland Limited | Method and apparatus for offset cancellation in a wireless receiver |
US6356131B1 (en) | 1999-10-19 | 2002-03-12 | Nec Corporation | 90-degree phase shifter |
US6442380B1 (en) | 1999-12-22 | 2002-08-27 | U.S. Philips Corporation | Automatic gain control in a zero intermediate frequency radio device |
US6327313B1 (en) | 1999-12-29 | 2001-12-04 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for DC offset correction |
US6321073B1 (en) * | 2000-01-31 | 2001-11-20 | Motorola, Inc. | Radiotelephone receiver and method with improved dynamic range and DC offset correction |
US6459889B1 (en) | 2000-02-29 | 2002-10-01 | Motorola, Inc. | DC offset correction loop for radio receiver |
EP1172928A2 (en) | 2000-07-14 | 2002-01-16 | Intracom S.A. Hellenic Telecommunications & Electronics Industry | DC offset correction circuit and AGC in zero-if wireless receivers |
US20040071238A1 (en) * | 2000-08-04 | 2004-04-15 | Nadim Khlat | Apparatus for reducing dc offset in a receiver |
US20020042256A1 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2002-04-11 | Baldwin Keith R | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
WO2002029985A2 (en) | 2000-10-02 | 2002-04-11 | Intersil Americas Inc. | A calibrated dc compensation system for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture |
US6507241B1 (en) | 2000-10-03 | 2003-01-14 | International Business Machines Corporation | Method and circuit for automatically correcting offset voltage |
US6509777B2 (en) | 2001-01-23 | 2003-01-21 | Resonext Communications, Inc. | Method and apparatus for reducing DC offset |
US20020123319A1 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2002-09-05 | Peterzell Paul E. | Direct conversion digital domain control |
US6498927B2 (en) | 2001-03-28 | 2002-12-24 | Gct Semiconductor, Inc. | Automatic gain control method for highly integrated communication receiver |
US6766153B2 (en) * | 2001-04-02 | 2004-07-20 | Itran Communications Ltd. | Dynamic automatic gain control circuit employing kalman filtering |
Non-Patent Citations (17)
Title |
---|
Abidi A., "Direct-Conversion Radio Transceivers for Digital Communications," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 30, No. 12, Dec. 1995, pp. 1399-1410. |
Bateman A., et al., "Direct Conversion Transceiver Design for Compact Low-Cost Portable Mobile Radio Terminals," IEEE Veh. Tech. Conf., 1989, pp. 57-62. |
Cavers J., et al., "Adaptive Compensation for Imbalance and Offset Losses in Direct Conversion Transceivers," IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, vol. 42, No. 4, Nov. 1993, pp. 581-588. |
International Preliminary Examination Report on PCT/US01/49748, completed Jan. 14, 2003. |
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/US2004/007408, issued Sep. 16, 2005. |
International Search Report for PCT/US01/49748, mailed Aug. 5, 2002. |
International Search Report for PCT/US01/49751, mailed May 7, 2002. |
International Search Report for PCT/US01/50599, mailed Mar. 17, 2003. |
International Search Report on PCT/US2004/007408, mailed Aug. 12, 2004. |
PCT Notification of Transmittal of the International Preliminary Examination Report dated May 5, 2003, 6 pages. |
PCT Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report or the Declaration for PCT/US2001/050268 dated Apr. 2, 2002, 7 pages. |
PCT Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report or the Declaration for PCT/US2001/050268, dated Apr. 2, 2003, 5 pages. |
PCT Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report or the Delcaration for PCT/US01/30807, dated Oct. 2, 2002, 8 pages. |
Razvi B. "Design Considerations for Direct-Conversion Receivers," IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems-II: Analog and Digital Signal Processing, vol. 44, No. 6, Jun. 1997, pp. 428-435. |
Sampei S., et al., "Adaptive DC-Offset Compensation Algorithm for Burst Mode Operated Direct Conversion Receivers," IEEE Veh. Tech. Conf., 1992, pp. 93-96. |
Tsukahara T., et al., "A 2-V 2-GHZ SI-Bipolar Direct-Conversion Quadrature Modulator," IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits, vol. 31, No. 2, Feb. 1, 1996, pp. 263-267. |
Tsurumi H., et al., "System-Level Compensation Approach to Overcome Signal Saturation, DC Offset, and 2nd-Order Nonlinear Distortion in Linear Direct Conversion Receiver," IEICE Transactions on Electronics, Institute of Electronics Information and Comm. Eng. Tokyo, JP, vol. E82-C, No. 5, May 1999. |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US10079647B2 (en) | 2014-12-10 | 2018-09-18 | Nxp Usa, Inc. | DC offset calibration of wireless receivers |
US9608587B2 (en) | 2015-06-25 | 2017-03-28 | Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. | Systems and methods to dynamically calibrate and adjust gains in a direct conversion receiver |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
JP2004536478A (en) | 2004-12-02 |
TW529274B (en) | 2003-04-21 |
CN1504015A (en) | 2004-06-09 |
US20020042256A1 (en) | 2002-04-11 |
DE10197148T1 (en) | 2003-12-04 |
WO2002054606A2 (en) | 2002-07-11 |
AU2002241708A1 (en) | 2002-07-16 |
US7068987B2 (en) | 2006-06-27 |
WO2002054606A3 (en) | 2003-07-24 |
KR20030065590A (en) | 2003-08-06 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
USRE42799E1 (en) | Packet acquisition and channel tracking for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture | |
US6735422B1 (en) | Calibrated DC compensation system for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture | |
US6560448B1 (en) | DC compensation system for a wireless communication device configured in a zero intermediate frequency architecture | |
US7409196B2 (en) | RFIC transmit power control | |
US6674998B2 (en) | System and method for detecting and correcting phase error between differential signals | |
US6748200B1 (en) | Automatic gain control system and method for a ZIF architecture | |
AU2003224784B2 (en) | Gain control for communications device | |
JP3761587B2 (en) | Phase-locked loop with continuously adjustable bandwidth | |
USRE43367E1 (en) | Power-based hardware diversity | |
US20050130687A1 (en) | Dynamic noise floors in a wireless device | |
US8477631B2 (en) | Dynamic low power radio modes | |
US7203476B2 (en) | Method and apparatus for minimizing baseband offset error in a receiver | |
US8831065B2 (en) | Method and system for fast synchronization and data reception for frequency hopping wireless communication systems | |
US7643803B2 (en) | Power estimation of a transmission | |
US6658069B1 (en) | Automatic gain control circuit and control method therefor | |
KR101472220B1 (en) | Controlling method for automatic gain in receiver and automatic gain controller in receiver | |
WO2003092178A1 (en) | Dynamic noise floors in a wireless device | |
WO2000064115A1 (en) | Radio receiver | |
US7035605B2 (en) | Method and device for automatic control of the frequency of a local oscillator in a DS-CDMA type receiver | |
KR100339662B1 (en) | Apparatus for removing direct current deflection in bluetooth system | |
KR20120004242U (en) | Receiving gain adjustment apparatus in wireless lan |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: XOCYST TRANSFER AG L.L.C., DELAWARE Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:CONEXANT, INC.;REEL/FRAME:022043/0591 Effective date: 20081016 |
|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: INTELLECTUAL VENTURES I LLC, DELAWARE Free format text: MERGER;ASSIGNOR:XOCYST TRANSFER AG L.L.C.;REEL/FRAME:026637/0603 Effective date: 20110718 |
|
CC | Certificate of correction | ||
FPAY | Fee payment |
Year of fee payment: 8 |
|
MAFP | Maintenance fee payment |
Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 12TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1553) Year of fee payment: 12 |
|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: M-RED INC., TEXAS Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:INTELLECTUAL VENTURES ASSETS 113 LLC;REEL/FRAME:048661/0804 Effective date: 20190315 |
|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: INTELLECTUAL VENTURES ASSETS 113 LLC, DELAWARE Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:INTELLECTUAL VENTURES I LLC;REEL/FRAME:048680/0188 Effective date: 20190222 |