Real-time frequency measurement for non-repetitive and statistically rare
signals are challenging problems in the electronic measurement area, which
places high demands on the bandwidth, sampling rate, data processing and
transmission capabilities of the measurement system. The time-stretching
sampling system overcomes the bandwidth limitation and sampling rate limitation
of electronic digitizers, allowing continuous ultra-high-speed acquisition at
refresh rates of billions of frames per second. However, processing the high
sampling rate signals of hundreds of GHz is an extremely challenging task,
which becomes the bottleneck of the real-time analysis for non-stationary
signals. In this work, a real-time frequency measurement system is designed
based on a parallel pipelined FFT structure. Tens of FFT channels are pipelined
to process the incoming high sampling rate signals in sequence, and a
simplified parabola fitting algorithm is implemented in the FFT channel to
improve the frequency precision. The frequency results of these FFT channels
are reorganized and finally uploaded to an industrial personal computer for
visualization and offline data mining. A real-time transmission datapath is
designed to provide a high throughput rate transmission, ensuring the frequency
results are uploaded without interruption. Several experiments are performed to
evaluate the designed real-time frequency measurement system, the input signal
has a bandwidth of 4 GHz, and the repetition rate of frames is 22 MHz.
Experimental results show that the frequency of the signal can be measured at a
high sampling rate of 20 GSPS, and the frequency precision is better than 1
MHz.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure