14 research outputs found

    A hermite interpolated LUT for RF power amplifiers

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    Digital predistortion is one of the most widely used techniques to linearize a power amplifier (PA) to reduce the error vector magnitude (EVM) distortion and spectral regrowth. By far, the lookup table (LUT) predistorters are most frequently used scheme to mitigate the effects of non-linear power amplifier. In this paper, a new algorithm of joint-polynominal LUT predistorter which attains the best linearization performance is proposed. The algorithm employs the hermite interpolation LUT, which has a higher accuracy of interpolation. Simulation results show that the proposed method provides a better rejection of EVM distortion and an improvement of 30-40% of adjacent channel leakage ratio (ACLR) for the wideband code division multiple access at a minimal memory usage

    Transmitter Linearization for mm-Wave Communications Systems

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    There is an ever increasing need for enabling higher data rates in modern communication systems which brings new challenges in terms of the power consumption and nonlinearity of hardware components. These problems become prominent in power amplifiers (PAs) and can significantly degrade the performance of transmitters, and hence the overall communication system. Hence, it is of central importance to design efficient PAs with a linear operation region. This thesis proposes a methodology and a comprehensive framework to address this challenge. This is accomplished by application of predistortion to a mm-wave PA and an E-band IQ transmitter while investigating the trade-offs between linearity, efficiency and predistorter complexity using the proposed framework.In the first line of work, we have focused on a mm-wave PA. A PA has high efficiency at high input power at the expense of linearity, whereas it operates linearly for lower input power levels while sacrificing efficiency. To attain both linearity and efficiency, predistortion is often used to compensate for the PA nonlinearity. Yet, the trade-offs related to predistortion complexities are not fully understood. To address this challenge, we have used our proposed framework for evaluation of predistorters using modulated test signals and implemented it using digital predistortion and a mm-wave PA. This set-up enabled us to investigate the trade-offs between linearity, efficiency and predistorter complexity in a systematic manner. We have shown that to achieve similar linearity levels for different PA classes, predistorters with different complexities are needed and provided guidelines on the achievable limits in term linearity for a given predistorter complexity for different PA classes.In the second line of work, we have focused on linearization of an E-band transmitter using a baseband analog predistorter (APD) and under constraints given by a spectrum emission standard. In order to use the above proposed framework with these components, characterizations of the E-band transmitter and the APD are performed. In contrast to typical approaches in the literature, here joint mitigation of the PA and I/Q modulator impairments is used to model the transmitter. Using the developed models, optimal model parameters in terms of output power at the mask limit are determined. Using these as a starting point, we have iteratively optimized operating point of the APD and linearized the E-band transmitter. The experiments demonstrated that the analog predistorter can successfully increase the output power by 35% (1.3 dB) improvement while satisfying the spectrum emission mask

    Modelação comportamental e pré-distorção digital de transmissores de rádio-frequência

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    Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotécnicaNos atuais sistemas de telecomunicações, os transmissores de rádio-frequência são desenvolvidos tendo maioritariamente em conta a eficiência da conversão da potência fornecida da fonte em potência de rádio-frequência. Este tipo de desenho resulta em amplificadores de potência com características de transmissão não-lineares, que distorcem severamente o envelope de informação no processo de amplificação, gerando distorção fora da banda. Para corrigir este problema utiliza-se um processo de compensação não linear, sendo que a pré-distorção digital se tem favorecido pela sua flexibilidade e precisão. Este método é tipicamente aplicado de uma forma cega, por força bruta até se obter a compensação desejada. No entanto, quando o método se mostra ineficaz, como se verificou em amplificadores de potência baseados em transístores de nitreto de gálio, é difícil saber o que modificar nos sistemas para os tornar de novo úteis. De forma a compreender e desenhar sistemas de pré-distorção digital robustos é necessário, por um lado, perceber o comportamento dos amplificadores de rádio-frequência, por outro, perceber as limitações e relações entre os modelos digitais e o comportamento real do amplificador. Nesse sentido, esta tese explora e descreve estas relações de forma a suportar a escolha de modelos de pré-distorção, desenvolve novos modelos baseados no comportamento dos transístores, e propõe métodos de caracterização para os amplificadores de RF.In current telecommunication systems, the main concern when developing the radio frequency transmitter is power efficiency. This type of design generally leads to a highly nonlinear transmission characteristic, mainly due to the radio frequency power amplifier. This nonlinear transmission severely distorts the information envelope, leading to spectral regrowth, out-of-band distortion. To correct this problem a nonlinear compensation process is employed. For this application, digital predistortion is generally favored for its flexibility and accuracy. Digital predistortion is mostly applied in a blind manner, using brute force until the desired compensation is achieved. Because of this, when the method fails, as it has in gallium nitride based power amplifiers, it is difficult to modify the system to achieve the desired results. To understand and design robust predistortion systems, it is both necessary to have knowledge of the power amplifiers’ behavior, on one hand, and understand the limitations and relations between the digital models and these behaviors, on the other. To do this, this thesis explores and describes these relationships, granting support to the digital predistortion model choice, it further develops new predistortion models based on the physics of the transistors’ behaviors, and it proposes methods for the characterization of radio frequency power amplifiers

    A Programmable look-up table-based interpolator with nonuniform sampling scheme

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    Interpolation is a useful technique for storage of complex functions on limited memory space: some few sampling values are stored on a memory bank, and the function values in between are calculated by interpolation. This paper presents a programmable Look-Up Table-based interpolator, which uses a reconfigurable nonuniform sampling scheme: the sampled points are not uniformly spaced. Their distribution can also be reconfigured to minimize the approximation error on specific portions of the interpolated function's domain. Switching from one set of configuration parameters to another set, selected on the fly from a variety of precomputed parameters, and using different sampling schemes allow for the interpolation of a plethora of functions, achieving memory saving and minimum approximation error. As a study case, the proposed interpolator was used as the core of a programmable noise generatoroutput signals drawn from different Probability Density Functions were produced for testing FPGA implementations of chaotic encryption algorithms. As a result of the proposed method, the interpolation of a specific transformation function on a Gaussian noise generator reduced the memory usage to 2.71% when compared to the traditional uniform sampling scheme method, while keeping the approximation error below a threshold equal to 0.000030518

    ワイヤレス通信のための先進的な信号処理技術を用いた非線形補償法の研究

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    The inherit nonlinearity in analogue front-ends of transmitters and receivers have had primary impact on the overall performance of the wireless communication systems, as it gives arise of substantial distortion when transmitting and processing signals with such circuits. Therefore, the nonlinear compensation (linearization) techniques become essential to suppress the distortion to an acceptable extent in order to ensure sufficient low bit error rate. Furthermore, the increasing demands on higher data rate and ubiquitous interoperability between various multi-coverage protocols are two of the most important features of the contemporary communication system. The former demand pushes the communication system to use wider bandwidth and the latter one brings up severe coexistence problems. Having fully considered the problems raised above, the work in this Ph.D. thesis carries out extensive researches on the nonlinear compensations utilizing advanced digital signal processing techniques. The motivation behind this is to push more processing tasks to the digital domain, as it can potentially cut down the bill of materials (BOM) costs paid for the off-chip devices and reduce practical implementation difficulties. The work here is carried out using three approaches: numerical analysis & computer simulations; experimental tests using commercial instruments; actual implementation with FPGA. The primary contributions for this thesis are summarized as the following three points: 1) An adaptive digital predistortion (DPD) with fast convergence rate and low complexity for multi-carrier GSM system is presented. Albeit a legacy system, the GSM, however, has a very strict requirement on the out-of-band emission, thus it represents a much more difficult hurdle for DPD application. It is successfully implemented in an FPGA without using any other auxiliary processor. A simplified multiplier-free NLMS algorithm, especially suitable for FPGA implementation, for fast adapting the LUT is proposed. Many design methodologies and practical implementation issues are discussed in details. Experimental results have shown that the DPD performed robustly when it is involved in the multichannel transmitter. 2) The next generation system (5G) will unquestionably use wider bandwidth to support higher throughput, which poses stringent needs for using high-speed data converters. Herein the analog-to-digital converter (ADC) tends to be the most expensive single device in the whole transmitter/receiver systems. Therefore, conventional DPD utilizing high-speed ADC becomes unaffordable, especially for small base stations (micro, pico and femto). A digital predistortion technique utilizing spectral extrapolation is proposed in this thesis, wherein with band-limited feedback signal, the requirement on ADC speed can be significantly released. Experimental results have validated the feasibility of the proposed technique for coping with band-limited feedback signal. It has been shown that adequate linearization performance can be achieved even if the acquisition bandwidth is less than the original signal bandwidth. The experimental results obtained by using LTE-Advanced signal of 320 MHz bandwidth are quite satisfactory, and to the authors’ knowledge, this is the first high-performance wideband DPD ever been reported. 3) To address the predicament that mobile operators do not have enough contiguous usable bandwidth, carrier aggregation (CA) technique is developed and imported into 4G LTE-Advanced. This pushes the utilization of concurrent dual-band transmitter/receiver, which reduces the hardware expense by using a single front-end. Compensation techniques for the respective concurrent dual-band transmitter and receiver front-ends are proposed to combat the inter-band modulation distortion, and simultaneously reduce the distortion for the both lower-side band and upper-side band signals.電気通信大学201

    An enhanced modulated waveform measurement system

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    The microwave devices and circuits need to be characterized prior to being employed in the design of systems and components. Unfortunately the measurement systems required to characterize the microwave devices and circuits have not kept pace with the emerging telecommunication technologies demands. This has resulted into a situation where either the circuits being employed in the components are unoptimized or the yield and turn-around of optimized circuits are slow. One of the contributing factors of such situations is the limitations of the existing measurement systems to scale up in performance to fulfil the necessary requirements. This thesis presents an enhanced multi-tone, time domain waveform measurement and engineering system. The presented system allows for a more considered, and scientific process to be adopted in the characterisation and measurement of microwave power devices for modern day communications systems. The main contributions to the field of research come in two areas; firstly developments that allow for accurate time domain measurement of complex modulated signals using commercially available equipment; and secondly in the area of active impedance control, where significant developments were made allowing active control of impedance across a modulated bandwidth. The first research area addressed is the fundamental difficulty in sampling multi-tone waveforms, where the main achievements have been the realisation of a high quality trigger clock for the sampling oscilloscope and a “Time Domain Partitioning” approach to measure and average multi-tone waveforms on-board. This approach allows the efficient collection of high quality vectoral information for all significant distortion terms, for all bands of interest. The second area of research investigated suitable impedance control architectures to comprehensively investigate out-of-band impedance effects on the linearity performance of a device. The ultimate aim was to simultaneously present independent, baseband impedances to all the significant baseband (IF) frequency components and to 2nd harmonic that result from a multi-tone excitation. The main achievement in this area was the ability of the enhanced measurement system to present the broadband impedance. At baseband this has been achieved in the time domain using a single arbitrary waveform generator (AWG) to synthesise the necessary waveforms to allow a specific IF impedance environment to be maintained across a wide IF bandwidth. To engineer the RF out-of-band load terminations at RF frequencies and to emulate specific power amplifier modes, a Tektronix AWG7000 Arbitrary Waveform Generator was used to deliver the desired impedances, practically fulfilling the wideband application requirements for reliable device characterisation under complex modulated excitations

    An enhanced modulated waveform measurement system

    Get PDF
    The microwave devices and circuits need to be characterized prior to being employed in the design of systems and components. Unfortunately the measurement systems required to characterize the microwave devices and circuits have not kept pace with the emerging telecommunication technologies demands. This has resulted into a situation where either the circuits being employed in the components are unoptimized or the yield and turn-around of optimized circuits are slow. One of the contributing factors of such situations is the limitations of the existing measurement systems to scale up in performance to fulfil the necessary requirements. This thesis presents an enhanced multi-tone, time domain waveform measurement and engineering system. The presented system allows for a more considered, and scientific process to be adopted in the characterisation and measurement of microwave power devices for modern day communications systems. The main contributions to the field of research come in two areas; firstly developments that allow for accurate time domain measurement of complex modulated signals using commercially available equipment; and secondly in the area of active impedance control, where significant developments were made allowing active control of impedance across a modulated bandwidth. The first research area addressed is the fundamental difficulty in sampling multi-tone waveforms, where the main achievements have been the realisation of a high quality trigger clock for the sampling oscilloscope and a “Time Domain Partitioning” approach to measure and average multi-tone waveforms on-board. This approach allows the efficient collection of high quality vectoral information for all significant distortion terms, for all bands of interest. The second area of research investigated suitable impedance control architectures to comprehensively investigate out-of-band impedance effects on the linearity performance of a device. The ultimate aim was to simultaneously present independent, baseband impedances to all the significant baseband (IF) frequency components and to 2nd harmonic that result from a multi-tone excitation. The main achievement in this area was the ability of the enhanced measurement system to present the broadband impedance. At baseband this has been achieved in the time domain using a single arbitrary waveform generator (AWG) to synthesise the necessary waveforms to allow a specific IF impedance environment to be maintained across a wide IF bandwidth. To engineer the RF out-of-band load terminations at RF frequencies and to emulate specific power amplifier modes, a Tektronix AWG7000 Arbitrary Waveform Generator was used to deliver the desired impedances, practically fulfilling the wideband application requirements for reliable device characterisation under complex modulated excitations.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
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