WO1995023453A1 - Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller - Google Patents

Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1995023453A1
WO1995023453A1 PCT/US1994/014748 US9414748W WO9523453A1 WO 1995023453 A1 WO1995023453 A1 WO 1995023453A1 US 9414748 W US9414748 W US 9414748W WO 9523453 A1 WO9523453 A1 WO 9523453A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
input
signal
phase
frequency
output
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1994/014748
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Gregory R. Black
Alexander Wayne Hietala
Original Assignee
Motorola Inc.
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Motorola Inc. filed Critical Motorola Inc.
Priority to GB9520613A priority Critical patent/GB2291754B/en
Priority to JP7522330A priority patent/JPH08509589A/en
Priority to DE4480702T priority patent/DE4480702T1/en
Priority to AU16749/95A priority patent/AU672549B2/en
Priority to DE4480702A priority patent/DE4480702C2/en
Publication of WO1995023453A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995023453A1/en
Priority to SE9503687A priority patent/SE9503687L/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C5/00Amplitude modulation and angle modulation produced simultaneously or at will by the same modulating signal
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C1/00Amplitude modulation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C3/00Angle modulation
    • H03C3/02Details
    • H03C3/09Modifications of modulator for regulating the mean frequency

Definitions

  • this invention relates to linear transmitters and, more specifically, to nesting an amplitude modulation (AM) control loop and a phase modulation (PM) control loop around a power amplifier (PA) module in a radio frequency transmitter.
  • AM amplitude modulation
  • PM phase modulation
  • PA power amplifier
  • radio frequency (RF) transmitters such as those used in radiotelephones, employ standard phase modulation
  • PM transmitters employ power amplifiers (PAs) that are highly efficient and have large amplitude nonlinearity because there is no amplitude modulation (AM) component in the modulation format.
  • PAs power amplifiers
  • AM amplitude modulation
  • These PAs often employ transistor bias techniques whereby the bias current is minimized and the output power is controlled by changing the bias current.
  • FIG. 1 is a detailed block diagram of a prior art AM/PM transmitter having an AM 115 control loop and a PM 117 control loop.
  • the PM control loop 117 performs a frequency translation of a phase reference signal 121 to the desired output frequency.
  • the PM control loop 117 includes a mixer 101, a phase detector 103, and a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 105.
  • VCO voltage controlled oscillator
  • the mixer generates an intermediate frequency signal 127 having a frequency which is equal to the difference between the frequency of a frequency reference input signal 123 and the frequency of the signal which is fed back from the VCO 105.
  • the phase comparator 103 generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of an intermediate frequency signal 127 and a phase reference input signal 121.
  • the phase comparator output drives a tuning port of the VCO such that the VCO output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 121, thus providing the phase modulation of the VCO output signal.
  • the phase comparator output drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the frequency of the local oscillator input signal plus the frequency of the phase reference signal.
  • the AM control loop is integrated about a power amplifier
  • the AM control loop 115 includes the PA 107, an output power coupler 109, an envelope detector 111 and a difference amplifier 113. A portion of the PA output signal is fed back to the envelope detector 111 via the coupler 109.
  • the difference amplifier 113 generates an error signal based on the difference in voltage of the envelope detector 111 output and the amplitude reference input signal 125.
  • the difference amplifier 113 drives the PA output amplitude control port such that the amplitude of the PA output is responsive to the voltage of the amplitude reference input signal 125, thereby achieving amplitude modulation of the power amplifier output signal.
  • AM to PM conversion effect A problem arises when the AM control signal going to the PA control port causes a phase shift on the PA output signal, referred to as an AM to PM conversion effect.
  • This AM to PM conversion effect is a result of a nonlinearity of the PA that is characteristic of PA's which employ design techniques used to minimize bias current and maximize power efficiency, and when the output power is controlled by varying the bias current.
  • FIG. 2 is a simplified block diagram of a PA embedded in a predistortion loop.
  • the input signal passes through an input coupler 201 and a phase shifter 203 before going into the PA 205.
  • the PA output signal passes through an output coupler 207.
  • the input coupler 201 and output coupler 207 feed portions of the input signal and the PA output signal to the phase comparator 209.
  • the phase comparator generates an error signal based on the difference in phase between the input signal and the PA output signal.
  • the phase comparator 209 output drives the control port of the phase shifter 203 such that the PA input is automatically predistorted and the PA output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the input signal.
  • the predistortion loop thereby eliminates the phase distortion in the PA.
  • the predistortion loop circuitry adds unwanted cost and complexity.
  • a problem arises when the phase shift of the PA exceeds the finite range of the phase shifter.
  • an AM/PM transmitter capable of frequency modulation, frequency translation and amplitude modulation, wherein there are no restrictions on the phase distortion which occurs in the PA, nor dependency upon the output signal level, the supply voltage, or the temperature.
  • FIG. 1 is a detailed illustration of a transmitter that is prior art.
  • FIG. 2 is a detailed illustration of a power amplifier which is prior art.
  • FIG. 3 is an illustration in block diagram form of a radiotelephone system in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 5 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 6 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of an alternate realization of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates, by example, a block diagram of a conventional radio communication transceiver 300
  • the transceiver 300 enables a mobile or portable subscriber unit to communicate with a base station (not shown), for example, over radio frequency (RF) channels in a radio communication system (not shown).
  • the base station thereafter provides communications with a land-line telephone system (not shown) and other subscriber units.
  • An example of a subscriber unit having the transceiver 300 is a cellular radiotelephone.
  • the transceiver 300 of FIG. 3 generally includes an antenna 301, a diplexor 302, a receiver 303, a transmitter 305, a reference frequency signal source 307, a phase locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizer 308, a processor 310, an information source 306, and an information sink 304.
  • PLL phase locked loop
  • the antenna 301 receives an RF signal 320 from the base station for filtering by the diplexor 302.
  • the diplexor 302 provides frequency selectivity to separate the RF received signal at line 311 and the RF transmit signal at line 313.
  • the diplexor may provide temporal selectivity to separate the RF received signal at line 311 and the RF transmit signal at line 313 by means of a switch.
  • the receiver 303 is coupled to receive the RF received signal at line 311 and operative to produce a received baseband signal at line 312 for the information sink 304.
  • the reference frequency signal source 307 provides a reference frequency signal at line 315.
  • the PLL frequency synthesizer 308 is coupled to receive the reference frequency signal at line 315 and information on a data bus 318 and operative to produce a transceiver tuning signal at line 316 to tune the receiver 303 and transmitter 305 to a particular RF channel.
  • the processor 310 controls the operation of the PLL frequency synthesizer 308, the receiver 303, and the transmitter 305 via the data bus 318.
  • the information source 306 produces a baseband amplitude modulation signal at line 314, and baseband phase modulation signal at line 321.
  • the transmitter 305 is coupled to receive the baseband amplitude signal 314, the baseband phase modulation signal 321 operative to produce the RF transmit signal at line 313.
  • the diplexor 302 couples RF transmit signal at line 313 for radiation by the antenna 301 as an RF signal 320.
  • the RF channels in a cellular radiotelephone system include voice and signaling channels for transmitting and receiving (hereinafter referred to as "transceiving") information between the base station and the subscriber units.
  • the voice channels are allocated for transceiving voice information.
  • the signaling channels also referred to as control channels, are allocated for transceiving data and signaling information. It is through these signaling channels that the subscriber units gain access to the cellular radiotelephone system and are assigned a voice channel for further communication with the land-line telephone system.
  • the frequency spacing of the signaling channels may be a multiple of the frequency spacing of the voice channels.
  • One such system uses a time division multiple access (TDMA) signaling method to synchronize the intermittent information.
  • TDMA time division multiple access
  • keeping the transceiver 300 fully powered during the entire time that the transceiver 300 is tuned to the signaling channel unnecessarily drains the transceiver's battery during those times when the information is not received. Therefore, portions of the transceiver 300 can be powered off to prolong battery life when the transceiver is not transceiving information. Further, portions of the transceiver 300 can be powered off to prolong battery life when the signal quality is good enough such that further repetition of the same information is not needed. Intermittently powering on and off, i.e.
  • FIG. 4 is an illustration in block diagram form of the transmitter 305 of FIG. 3.
  • the phase modulation signal 321 provides a baseband inphase (I) modulation signal and quadrature (Q) modulation signal.
  • the phase modulator 408 operates on the baseband I phase modulation signal and the baseband Q phase modulation signal to generate a modulated carrier signal 421 which acts as the phase reference signal input to the PM loop 417.
  • the PM loop 417 consists of a mixer 401, a phase detector 403, a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 405, a PA 407, a coupler 409, a switch 419, and a limiter 420.
  • VCO voltage controlled oscillator
  • the switch 419 connects the VCO 405 output signal to the limiter 420.
  • the switch 419 connects the coupler output signal to the limiter 420.
  • the switching provides a signal to the mixer 401 that has a sufficient power level for the PM control loop 417 to attain lock whether the PA 407 is on or off.
  • the switch 419 and limiter 420 could be eliminated if PA output signal is sufficient for the PM control loop 417 to attain lock while the PA 407 is off, or if the PA 407 is never turned off.
  • the mixer 401 generates an intermediate frequency signal
  • phase comparator 403 generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of the intermediate frequency signal
  • the phase comparator output drives the a tuning port of the VCO 405 such that the limiter 420 output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 421. Since the limiter 420, the switch 419, and the coupler 411 have low phase distortion, the PA output has a phase which is also approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 421.
  • the PM control loop 417 thereby achieves phase modulation of the PA 407 output signal. Additionally, the PM control loop 417 achieves the necessary predistortion at the VCO output signal such that the phase distortion in the PA is automatically canceled. The predistortion is achieved without the complexity of a dedicated predistortion loop circuit.
  • the predistortion is accomplished by tuning the VCO 405 instead of a phase shifter as discussed in the background of the invention.
  • the VCO 405 By using the VCO 405 the amount of PA phase correction is essentially unlimited. Therefore the problem of exceeding the range of possible phase shifts is eliminated.
  • the phase comparator output also drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the frequency of the frequency reference signal 316 plus or minus the frequency of the phase reference signal 421.
  • the PM loop 417 thereby achieves frequency translation.
  • the AM control loop 415 is integrated about the PA 407.
  • the AM control loop 115 includes the PA 407, the output power coupler 409, an envelope detector 411 and a difference amplifier 413. A portion of the PA output signal is fed back to the envelope detector 411 via the coupler 409.
  • the difference amplifier 413 generates an error signal based on the difference in voltage of the envelope detector output and the amplitude reference input signal 314 which comes from the information source 306. Alternatively, the amplitude reference signal 314 could be derived from the amplitude of the phase modulator output signal 421.
  • the difference amplifier 413 drives the PA output amplitude control port such that the amplitude of the
  • PA output is responsive to the voltage of the amplitude reference input signal 314, thereby achieving amplitude modulation of the power amplifier output signal.
  • FIG. 5 is an illustration in block diagram form of the transmitter 305 of FIG. 3.
  • the PM loop 517 consists of a phase detector 503, a low pass filter 502, a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 505, a PA 507, a coupler 509, a switch 519, a limiter 520, and a fractional N divider 501.
  • the fractional N divider 501 includes a multi-accumulator fractional N phase locked loop such as that shown in U.S. Patent 5,166,642 entitled "Multiple
  • the switch 519 connects the VCO 505 output signal to the limiter 520.
  • the switch connects the coupler 509 output signal to the limiter 520.
  • the switch 519 and limiter 520 thereby provide a signal to the fractional N divider 501 that has a sufficient power level for the loop to attain lock when the PA 507 is in the off condition.
  • the switch 519 and the limiter 520 could be eliminated if the PA output signal level in the off condition is sufficient for the loop to attain lock.
  • the phase comparator generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of the fractional N divider output signal 527 and the reference input signal 521.
  • the phase comparator output drives the VCO tuning port such that the limiter 520 output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the reference input signal multiplied by the fractional N division ratio. Since the limiter 520, switch 519, and coupler 509 have low phase distortion, the PA output has a phase which is also approximately equal to the phase of the reference input signal
  • the PM loop 517 thereby achieves phase modulation of the VCO 505 output signal. Furthermore the PM loop achieves the necessary predistortion at the VCO output signal such that the phase distortion in the
  • the predistortion is achieved without the complexity of a dedicated predistortion loop circuit. Since the predistortion is accomplished by tuning a VCO instead of a phase shifter, the amount of PA phase correction is essentially unlimited. Therefore the problem of exceeding the range of possible phase shifts is eliminated.
  • the phase comparator output also drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the desired transmitter output frequency.
  • FIG. 6 is an illustration in block diagram form of an alternative transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
  • the phase information signal 321 provides a digital integer representing a desired frequency input into the divide by N 501 and an analog phase modulation signal input to the adder 504 of FIG. 5.
  • the digital integer may provide a portion of the phase modulation.
  • This transmitter illustrates an alternate method of applying phase modulation to the fractional N phase locked loop.
  • an analog modulation waveform is applied to the output of phase detector 603. Due to the wide bandwidth possible with the fractional N synthesizer, the analog signal on this port may contain significant spectral components as compared to a non-fractional phase locked loop. Operation of the transmitter is identical to that shown in FIG. 5 in all other respects.
  • AM control loop 515 and AM control loop 615 are topologically and functionally similar to the AM control loop 415 of FIG. 4.

Abstract

Transmitting signals containing amplitude modulated (AM) and phase modulation (PM) components requires a transmitter having AM and PM control loops (515, 517). The PM control loop provides phase modulation, frequency translation and phase predistortion for a transmitter. The phase predistortion/correction is accomplished by using an oscillator (505), thus, the amount of PA phase correction is essentially unlimited. Additionally, the PM control loop (517) is nested about a power amplifier (507) (PA), allowing the PM control loop (517) to correct for any distortion introduced by the PA (507).

Description

Power Amplifier Having Nested Amplitude Modulation Controller and Phase Modulation Controller
Field of the Invention
Generally, this invention relates to linear transmitters and, more specifically, to nesting an amplitude modulation (AM) control loop and a phase modulation (PM) control loop around a power amplifier (PA) module in a radio frequency transmitter.
Background of the Invention
Typically, radio frequency (RF) transmitters, such as those used in radiotelephones, employ standard phase modulation
(PM) techniques. PM transmitters employ power amplifiers (PAs) that are highly efficient and have large amplitude nonlinearity because there is no amplitude modulation (AM) component in the modulation format. These PAs often employ transistor bias techniques whereby the bias current is minimized and the output power is controlled by changing the bias current.
Recently, there has been a need to have a transmitter for transmitting signals having AM components and PM components. An AM/PM transmitter requires modulation circuitry for amplitude and phase. Typically, the modulation circuitry is accomplished with control loop circuit configurations. FIG. 1 is a detailed block diagram of a prior art AM/PM transmitter having an AM 115 control loop and a PM 117 control loop. In addition to the phase modulation, the PM control loop 117 performs a frequency translation of a phase reference signal 121 to the desired output frequency. The PM control loop 117 includes a mixer 101, a phase detector 103, and a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 105. The mixer generates an intermediate frequency signal 127 having a frequency which is equal to the difference between the frequency of a frequency reference input signal 123 and the frequency of the signal which is fed back from the VCO 105. The phase comparator 103 generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of an intermediate frequency signal 127 and a phase reference input signal 121. The phase comparator output drives a tuning port of the VCO such that the VCO output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 121, thus providing the phase modulation of the VCO output signal. To perform the frequency translation, the phase comparator output drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the frequency of the local oscillator input signal plus the frequency of the phase reference signal. The AM control loop is integrated about a power amplifier
(PA) 107 having an output amplitude control port. The AM control loop 115 includes the PA 107, an output power coupler 109, an envelope detector 111 and a difference amplifier 113. A portion of the PA output signal is fed back to the envelope detector 111 via the coupler 109. The difference amplifier 113 generates an error signal based on the difference in voltage of the envelope detector 111 output and the amplitude reference input signal 125. The difference amplifier 113 drives the PA output amplitude control port such that the amplitude of the PA output is responsive to the voltage of the amplitude reference input signal 125, thereby achieving amplitude modulation of the power amplifier output signal.
A problem arises when the AM control signal going to the PA control port causes a phase shift on the PA output signal, referred to as an AM to PM conversion effect. This AM to PM conversion effect is a result of a nonlinearity of the PA that is characteristic of PA's which employ design techniques used to minimize bias current and maximize power efficiency, and when the output power is controlled by varying the bias current.
In the past, several approaches have been used to eliminate this AM to PM conversion effect. First, by using a more linear PA module, AM to PM effects were reduced. However, a linear PA is inefficient and power-consuming, and is not desirable for applications such as portable radio telephones. Second, the phase of the reference signal was adjusted such that the PA input signal phase is predistorted thereby canceling the phase distortion which occurs in the PA. However, the required degree of predistortion is dependent on output signal level, supply voltage, and temperature resulting in a very complex open loop control scheme. Third, the PA was embedded within a predistortion loop which shifted the phase of the PA input signal such that the total phase shift through the predistortion loop was automatically forced to zero.
FIG. 2 is a simplified block diagram of a PA embedded in a predistortion loop. In the circuit, the input signal passes through an input coupler 201 and a phase shifter 203 before going into the PA 205. The PA output signal passes through an output coupler 207. The input coupler 201 and output coupler 207 feed portions of the input signal and the PA output signal to the phase comparator 209. The phase comparator generates an error signal based on the difference in phase between the input signal and the PA output signal. The phase comparator 209 output drives the control port of the phase shifter 203 such that the PA input is automatically predistorted and the PA output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the input signal. The predistortion loop thereby eliminates the phase distortion in the PA. However, the predistortion loop circuitry adds unwanted cost and complexity. Furthermore, a problem arises when the phase shift of the PA exceeds the finite range of the phase shifter.
Thus, it would be desirable to develop an AM/PM transmitter capable of frequency modulation, frequency translation and amplitude modulation, wherein there are no restrictions on the phase distortion which occurs in the PA, nor dependency upon the output signal level, the supply voltage, or the temperature.
Brief Description of the Drawings
FIG. 1 is a detailed illustration of a transmitter that is prior art.
FIG. 2 is a detailed illustration of a power amplifier which is prior art. FIG. 3 is an illustration in block diagram form of a radiotelephone system in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 4 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention. FIG. 5 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention. FIG. 6 is a detailed illustration in block diagram form of an alternate realization of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
Detailed Description of a Preferred Embodiment
FIG. 3 illustrates, by example, a block diagram of a conventional radio communication transceiver 300
(hereinafter referred to as "transceiver"). The transceiver 300 enables a mobile or portable subscriber unit to communicate with a base station (not shown), for example, over radio frequency (RF) channels in a radio communication system (not shown). The base station thereafter provides communications with a land-line telephone system (not shown) and other subscriber units. An example of a subscriber unit having the transceiver 300 is a cellular radiotelephone. The transceiver 300 of FIG. 3 generally includes an antenna 301, a diplexor 302, a receiver 303, a transmitter 305, a reference frequency signal source 307, a phase locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizer 308, a processor 310, an information source 306, and an information sink 304. The interconnection of the blocks of the transceiver 300 and operation thereof is described as follows. The antenna 301 receives an RF signal 320 from the base station for filtering by the diplexor 302. The diplexor 302 provides frequency selectivity to separate the RF received signal at line 311 and the RF transmit signal at line 313. Alternatively, the diplexor may provide temporal selectivity to separate the RF received signal at line 311 and the RF transmit signal at line 313 by means of a switch. The receiver 303 is coupled to receive the RF received signal at line 311 and operative to produce a received baseband signal at line 312 for the information sink 304. The reference frequency signal source 307 provides a reference frequency signal at line 315. The PLL frequency synthesizer 308 is coupled to receive the reference frequency signal at line 315 and information on a data bus 318 and operative to produce a transceiver tuning signal at line 316 to tune the receiver 303 and transmitter 305 to a particular RF channel. The processor 310 controls the operation of the PLL frequency synthesizer 308, the receiver 303, and the transmitter 305 via the data bus 318. The information source 306 produces a baseband amplitude modulation signal at line 314, and baseband phase modulation signal at line 321. The transmitter 305 is coupled to receive the baseband amplitude signal 314, the baseband phase modulation signal 321 operative to produce the RF transmit signal at line 313. The diplexor 302 couples RF transmit signal at line 313 for radiation by the antenna 301 as an RF signal 320. The RF channels in a cellular radiotelephone system, for example, include voice and signaling channels for transmitting and receiving (hereinafter referred to as "transceiving") information between the base station and the subscriber units. The voice channels are allocated for transceiving voice information. The signaling channels, also referred to as control channels, are allocated for transceiving data and signaling information. It is through these signaling channels that the subscriber units gain access to the cellular radiotelephone system and are assigned a voice channel for further communication with the land-line telephone system.
In cellular radiotelephone systems capable of transceiving wideband data on the signaling channels, the frequency spacing of the signaling channels may be a multiple of the frequency spacing of the voice channels. In some cellular radiotelephone systems, the transceiver
300 and the base station intermittently transceive information therebetween on the signaling channel. One such system, for example, uses a time division multiple access (TDMA) signaling method to synchronize the intermittent information. In this type of system, keeping the transceiver 300 fully powered during the entire time that the transceiver 300 is tuned to the signaling channel unnecessarily drains the transceiver's battery during those times when the information is not received. Therefore, portions of the transceiver 300 can be powered off to prolong battery life when the transceiver is not transceiving information. Further, portions of the transceiver 300 can be powered off to prolong battery life when the signal quality is good enough such that further repetition of the same information is not needed. Intermittently powering on and off, i.e. enabling and disabling, the transceiver 300 during its receive operation is called discontinuous receive (DRX) mode of operation. In the DRX mode of operation, quickly enabling and disabling the portions of the transceiver 300 produces the greatest savings in battery life. FIG. 4 is an illustration in block diagram form of the transmitter 305 of FIG. 3. In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 3, the phase modulation signal 321 provides a baseband inphase (I) modulation signal and quadrature (Q) modulation signal. The phase modulator 408 operates on the baseband I phase modulation signal and the baseband Q phase modulation signal to generate a modulated carrier signal 421 which acts as the phase reference signal input to the PM loop 417. The PM loop 417 consists of a mixer 401, a phase detector 403, a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 405, a PA 407, a coupler 409, a switch 419, and a limiter 420. When the PA 407 is initially turned on, the switch 419 connects the VCO 405 output signal to the limiter 420. After the AM control loop 415 attains a locked condition, the switch 419 connects the coupler output signal to the limiter 420. The switching provides a signal to the mixer 401 that has a sufficient power level for the PM control loop 417 to attain lock whether the PA 407 is on or off. Alternatively, the switch 419 and limiter 420 could be eliminated if PA output signal is sufficient for the PM control loop 417 to attain lock while the PA 407 is off, or if the PA 407 is never turned off. The mixer 401 generates an intermediate frequency signal
427 having a frequency which is equal to the difference of the frequency of the frequency reference input signal 316 and the frequency of the signal which is fed back from the limiter 420. The phase comparator 403 generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of the intermediate frequency signal
427 and the phase reference input signal 421. The phase comparator output drives the a tuning port of the VCO 405 such that the limiter 420 output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 421. Since the limiter 420, the switch 419, and the coupler 411 have low phase distortion, the PA output has a phase which is also approximately equal to the phase of the phase reference input signal 421. The PM control loop 417 thereby achieves phase modulation of the PA 407 output signal. Additionally, the PM control loop 417 achieves the necessary predistortion at the VCO output signal such that the phase distortion in the PA is automatically canceled. The predistortion is achieved without the complexity of a dedicated predistortion loop circuit. The predistortion is accomplished by tuning the VCO 405 instead of a phase shifter as discussed in the background of the invention. By using the VCO 405 the amount of PA phase correction is essentially unlimited. Therefore the problem of exceeding the range of possible phase shifts is eliminated.
The phase comparator output also drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the frequency of the frequency reference signal 316 plus or minus the frequency of the phase reference signal 421. The PM loop 417 thereby achieves frequency translation.
The AM control loop 415 is integrated about the PA 407. The AM control loop 115 includes the PA 407, the output power coupler 409, an envelope detector 411 and a difference amplifier 413. A portion of the PA output signal is fed back to the envelope detector 411 via the coupler 409. The difference amplifier 413 generates an error signal based on the difference in voltage of the envelope detector output and the amplitude reference input signal 314 which comes from the information source 306. Alternatively, the amplitude reference signal 314 could be derived from the amplitude of the phase modulator output signal 421. The difference amplifier 413 drives the PA output amplitude control port such that the amplitude of the
PA output is responsive to the voltage of the amplitude reference input signal 314, thereby achieving amplitude modulation of the power amplifier output signal.
FIG. 5 is an illustration in block diagram form of the transmitter 305 of FIG. 3. The PM loop 517 consists of a phase detector 503, a low pass filter 502, a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 505, a PA 507, a coupler 509, a switch 519, a limiter 520, and a fractional N divider 501. The fractional N divider 501 includes a multi-accumulator fractional N phase locked loop such as that shown in U.S. Patent 5,166,642 entitled "Multiple
Accumulator Fractional N Synthesis with Series Recombination" by Hietala and assigned to the assignee of the present invention. When the PA 507 is initially turned on, the switch 519 connects the VCO 505 output signal to the limiter 520. After the PM control loop 517 attains a locked condition, the switch connects the coupler 509 output signal to the limiter 520. The switch 519 and limiter 520 thereby provide a signal to the fractional N divider 501 that has a sufficient power level for the loop to attain lock when the PA 507 is in the off condition. Alternatively, the switch 519 and the limiter 520 could be eliminated if the PA output signal level in the off condition is sufficient for the loop to attain lock. The phase comparator generates an error signal based on the difference in phase of the fractional N divider output signal 527 and the reference input signal 521. The phase comparator output drives the VCO tuning port such that the limiter 520 output signal has a phase which is approximately equal to the phase of the reference input signal multiplied by the fractional N division ratio. Since the limiter 520, switch 519, and coupler 509 have low phase distortion, the PA output has a phase which is also approximately equal to the phase of the reference input signal
521 multiplied by a fractional N division ratio provided on the phase modulation signal 321. The PM loop 517 thereby achieves phase modulation of the VCO 505 output signal. Furthermore the PM loop achieves the necessary predistortion at the VCO output signal such that the phase distortion in the
PA is automatically cancelled. The predistortion is achieved without the complexity of a dedicated predistortion loop circuit. Since the predistortion is accomplished by tuning a VCO instead of a phase shifter, the amount of PA phase correction is essentially unlimited. Therefore the problem of exceeding the range of possible phase shifts is eliminated. The phase comparator output also drives the VCO tuning port such that the VCO output signal has a frequency which is equal to the desired transmitter output frequency.
FIG. 6 is an illustration in block diagram form of an alternative transmitter in accordance with the present invention. Here, the phase information signal 321 provides a digital integer representing a desired frequency input into the divide by N 501 and an analog phase modulation signal input to the adder 504 of FIG. 5. Alternatively, the digital integer may provide a portion of the phase modulation. This transmitter illustrates an alternate method of applying phase modulation to the fractional N phase locked loop. Here, an analog modulation waveform is applied to the output of phase detector 603. Due to the wide bandwidth possible with the fractional N synthesizer, the analog signal on this port may contain significant spectral components as compared to a non-fractional phase locked loop. Operation of the transmitter is identical to that shown in FIG. 5 in all other respects. AM control loop 515 and AM control loop 615 are topologically and functionally similar to the AM control loop 415 of FIG. 4.
What is claimed is:

Claims

1. A transmitter for transmitting signals, the signals containing amplitude modulation (AM) and phase modulation (PM), the transmitter comprising: a power amplifier (PA) having a signal input and an amplitude control input, the power amplifier generating an amplified PA output signal having a phase, a frequency and a variable amplitude, the amplitude responsive to the amplitude control input; and a PM control loop having a feedback signal input, a phase reference signal input , and a frequency reference signal input having a frequency, the PM control loop including inter alia a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO), the VCO having a VCO output signal and a control signal input, the VCO output signal is coupled to the signal input of the power amplifier, and the feedback signal input coupled to the PA amplified output signal, the PM control loop providing a phase modulated and predistorted VCO output signal such that the phase of the PA output signal is responsive to the phase reference input signal, and the frequency of the PA output signal is responsive to the frequency of the frequency reference signal.
2. A transmitter in accordance with claim 1 wherein the PM control loop further comprises a mixer having a first and second input and an output, and a phase comparator having a first and second input and an output, the first mixer input coupled to the PA output signal, the second mixer input coupled to the frequency reference signal, the mixer output responsive to the frequency of the frequency reference signal and coupled to the first input of the phase comparator, the second input of the phase comparator coupled to the phase reference signal, the phase comparator output responsive to a phase of the phase reference signal and coupled to the VCO control input signal.
3. A radio for transmitting radio frequency (RF) signals on a selected channel, the radio comprising: a processor for generating an amplitude reference signal, a RF carrier signal, and a phase information signal, the radio frequency carrier signal having a first frequency and a first phase; a transmitter comprising: a modulator coupled to the phase information signal and generating a phase modulated (PM) carrier signal having a second phase; a power amplifier (PA) having a data signal input and a PA control input and an output, the output providing an amplified and modulated PA output signal having a third frequency and a third phase, the third frequency and the third phase responsive to the data signal input; an amplitude modulation (AM) controller having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the amplitude reference signal, the second input coupled to the output of the PA, the AM controller generating an amplitude control signal coupled to the PA control input, the amplitude control signal determining the amplitude of the PA output signal and responsive to the amplitude reference signal; a mixer having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the radio frequency carrier signal, the second input coupled to the power amplifier output signal, the mixer providing an output signal having a fourth frequency equal to the difference between the first frequency and the third frequency and a fourth phase equal to the difference between the first phase and the third phase; a phase comparator having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the mixer output signal, the second input coupled to the PM carrier signal, the phase comparator providing a phase detector output signal responsive to the difference between the second phase and the fourth phase; and an oscillator having an input, the input coupled to the phase detector output signal, the oscillator output coupled to the data signal input to the power amplifier, the data signal having a phase determined by the phase detector output signal and responsive to the phase modulated (PM) carrier signal and having a frequency determined by the phase detector output signal and responsive to the radio frequency carrier signal.
4. A transmitter for transmitting signals, the signals containing amplitude modulation (AM) and phase modulation (PM), the transmitter comprising: a power amplifier having a signal input and an amplitude control input, the power amplifier generating an amplified PA output signal having a variable amplitude responsive to the amplitude control input and having a phase and a frequency; and a PM control loop having a phase modulated output, a feedback signal input, a modulation reference signal input having information content, and a frequency reference signal input having a frequency, the PM control loop comprised of a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) having a VCO output signal and a control signal, the VCO output signal coupled to the signal input of the power amplifier, the feedback signal input coupled to the PA output signal, the PM control loop providing a phase modulated and predistorted VCO output signal such that the phase of the PA output signal is responsive to the information content of the modulation reference signal, and the frequency of the PA output signal is responsive to the frequency of the frequency reference signal.
5. A transmitter in accordance with claim 4 wherein the PM control loop further comprises a frequency divider having a first and a second input and an output, and a phase comparator having a first and second input and an output, the first input of the frequency divider coupled to the PA output signal, and the second input of the frequency divider coupled to the modulation reference signal, the frequency divider output coupled to the first input of the phase comparator, the second input of the phase comparator coupled to the frequency reference signal, the phase comparator output responsive to the information content of the modulation reference signal and coupled to the VCO control input signal.
6. A transmitter in accordance with claim 5 wherein the information content of the modulation reference signal is a digital signal.
7. A transmitter in accordance with claim 4 wherein the PM control loop further comprises a frequency divider having a first and a second input and an output, a phase comparator having a first and second input and an output, and an analog adder having a first and a second input and an output, the first input of the divider coupled to the PA output signal, and the second input of the divider coupled to a digital number representing the frequency of the output, the divider output coupled to the first input of the phase comparator, the second input of the phase comparator coupled to the frequency reference signal, the phase detector output coupled to the first input of the analog adder, the second input of the analog adder coupled to the modulation reference signal and the output of the analog adder coupled to the VCO input.
8. A transmitter in accordance with claim 4 wherein the amplifier control input is provided from an AM controller having a signal input and an amplitude reference input, the signal input coupled from the amplified output signal, the AM controller providing a control signal output coupled to the control input of the power amplifier such that the variable amplitude output of the power amplifier is responsive to the amplitude reference input.
9. A radio for transmitting RF signals on a selected channel the radio comprising: a processor for generating an amplitude reference signal, a reference frequency signal and a baseband phase modulated (PM) signal, the baseband PM signal having a first integer value, the reference frequency signal having a first frequency and a first phase; a transmitter comprising: a power amplifier having a data signal input and a control input and an output, the output providing an amplified and modulated output signal having a second frequency and a second phase, the second frequency and second phase responsive to the data signal input; an amplitude modulation (AM) controller having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the amplitude reference signal, the second input coupled to the output of the power amplifier, the AM controller generating an amplitude control signal coupled to the control input of the power amplifier, the amplitude control signal determining the amplitude of the power amplifier output signal and responsive to the amplitude reference signal; a frequency divider having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the baseband PM signal, the second input coupled to the power amplifier output signal, the frequency divider providing an output signal having a third frequency equal to a ratio of the second frequency and the integer value and a third phase equal to a ratio of the second phase and the integer value; a phase detector having a first input and a second input, the first input coupled to the frequency divider output signal, the second input coupled to the reference frequency signal, the phase detector providing an output signal responsive to the difference between the third phase and the first phase; and an oscillator having an input, the input coupled to the phase detector output signal, the oscillator generating the data signal input to the power amplifier, the data signal having a frequency and phase determined by the phase detector output signal and responsive to the baseband PM signal.
10. A transmitter in accordance with any claim wherein the frequency divider is composed of a fractional N type of frequency divider.
PCT/US1994/014748 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller WO1995023453A1 (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9520613A GB2291754B (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier having amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller
JP7522330A JPH08509589A (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier with nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller
DE4480702T DE4480702T1 (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier with an amplitude modulation control device and an associated phase modulation device
AU16749/95A AU672549B2 (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller
DE4480702A DE4480702C2 (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier with an amplitude modulation control device and an associated phase modulation device
SE9503687A SE9503687L (en) 1994-02-23 1995-10-20 Power amplifiers having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/201,284 1994-02-23
US08/201,284 US5430416A (en) 1994-02-23 1994-02-23 Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1995023453A1 true WO1995023453A1 (en) 1995-08-31

Family

ID=22745237

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1994/014748 WO1995023453A1 (en) 1994-02-23 1994-12-22 Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller

Country Status (13)

Country Link
US (1) US5430416A (en)
JP (1) JPH08509589A (en)
CN (1) CN1047896C (en)
AU (1) AU672549B2 (en)
DE (2) DE4480702T1 (en)
FR (1) FR2716589B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2291754B (en)
RU (1) RU2121755C1 (en)
SE (1) SE9503687L (en)
SG (1) SG69952A1 (en)
TW (1) TW269761B (en)
WO (1) WO1995023453A1 (en)
ZA (1) ZA95442B (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998000909A1 (en) * 1996-06-28 1998-01-08 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Device and method for compensating phase distortion
US6047168A (en) * 1996-06-28 2000-04-04 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Device and method for radio transmitters
US7082290B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2006-07-25 Renesas Technology Corp. Communication semiconductor integrated circuit, a wireless communication apparatus, and a loop gain calibration method
US7085544B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2006-08-01 Renesas Technology Corp. Transmitter having a phase control loop whose frequency bandwidth is varied in accordance with modulation modes
US7088968B2 (en) 2001-12-12 2006-08-08 Intel Corporation Method and polar-loop transmitter with origin offset for zero-crossing signals

Families Citing this family (80)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5732333A (en) * 1996-02-14 1998-03-24 Glenayre Electronics, Inc. Linear transmitter using predistortion
GB2313001B (en) * 1996-05-07 2000-11-01 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd Frequency modulation using a phase-locked loop
WO1998044750A2 (en) * 1997-03-27 1998-10-08 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and device for data transmission
US6215986B1 (en) * 1997-09-26 2001-04-10 Nortel Networks Corporation Reducing radio transmitter distortion
US6002923A (en) * 1997-11-07 1999-12-14 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Signal generation in a communications transmitter
US6240278B1 (en) 1998-07-30 2001-05-29 Motorola, Inc. Scalar cost function based predistortion linearizing device, method, phone and basestation
US6236837B1 (en) 1998-07-30 2001-05-22 Motorola, Inc. Polynomial Predistortion linearizing device, method, phone and base station
US6757334B1 (en) * 1998-08-10 2004-06-29 Kamilo Feher Bit rate agile third-generation wireless CDMA, GSM, TDMA and OFDM system
US6470055B1 (en) 1998-08-10 2002-10-22 Kamilo Feher Spectrally efficient FQPSK, FGMSK, and FQAM for enhanced performance CDMA, TDMA, GSM, OFDN, and other systems
US8050345B1 (en) 1999-08-09 2011-11-01 Kamilo Feher QAM and GMSK systems
US7548787B2 (en) 2005-08-03 2009-06-16 Kamilo Feher Medical diagnostic and communication system
US7415066B2 (en) * 1998-08-10 2008-08-19 Kamilo Feher Mis-matched modulation-demodulation format selectable filters
US7079584B2 (en) * 1998-08-10 2006-07-18 Kamilo Feher OFDM, CDMA, spread spectrum, TDMA, cross-correlated and filtered modulation
US7593481B2 (en) * 1998-08-31 2009-09-22 Kamilo Feher CDMA, W-CDMA, 3rd generation interoperable modem format selectable (MFS) systems with GMSK modulated systems
EP1110356A4 (en) 1998-08-31 2003-05-28 Kamilo Feher Feher keying (fk) modulation and transceivers including clock shaping processors
WO2000014887A1 (en) * 1998-09-09 2000-03-16 Ortel Corporation Electronic circuit for correcting cross modulation distortion
US6101224A (en) * 1998-10-07 2000-08-08 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Method and apparatus for generating a linearly modulated signal using polar modulation
US6194963B1 (en) 1998-11-18 2001-02-27 Ericsson Inc. Circuit and method for I/Q modulation with independent, high efficiency amplitude modulation
GB9825414D0 (en) * 1998-11-19 1999-01-13 Symbionics Limted Linear RF power amplifier and transmitter
US6295442B1 (en) * 1998-12-07 2001-09-25 Ericsson Inc. Amplitude modulation to phase modulation cancellation method in an RF amplifier
EP1017162A3 (en) * 1998-12-30 2003-07-16 Texas Instruments Incorporated Amplifier circuit with negative feedback loop for distortion reduction
US6377784B2 (en) 1999-02-09 2002-04-23 Tropian, Inc. High-efficiency modulation RF amplifier
US6864668B1 (en) 1999-02-09 2005-03-08 Tropian, Inc. High-efficiency amplifier output level and burst control
DE19905635C2 (en) 1999-02-11 2001-05-17 Daimler Chrysler Ag Portable radio transmitter, especially radio key
GB2349994B (en) * 1999-05-10 2003-06-04 Intek Global Technologies Ltd Apparatus for producing a radio-frequency signal
US6590940B1 (en) * 1999-05-17 2003-07-08 Ericsson Inc. Power modulation systems and methods that separately amplify low and high frequency portions of an amplitude waveform
FR2795280B1 (en) * 1999-06-15 2001-08-10 Sagem MOBILE TELEPHONE COMPRISING A DEVICE FOR TRANSMITTING A MODULATED PHASE AND AMPLITUDE SIGNAL AND ITS ASSOCIATED METHOD
WO2001008370A1 (en) * 1999-07-21 2001-02-01 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Modulation switch for the generation of a similtaneously phase- and amplitude modulated signal
US9813270B2 (en) 1999-08-09 2017-11-07 Kamilo Feher Heart rate sensor and medical diagnostics wireless devices
US7260369B2 (en) 2005-08-03 2007-08-21 Kamilo Feher Location finder, tracker, communication and remote control system
US9373251B2 (en) 1999-08-09 2016-06-21 Kamilo Feher Base station devices and automobile wireless communication systems
US9307407B1 (en) 1999-08-09 2016-04-05 Kamilo Feher DNA and fingerprint authentication of mobile devices
US6366177B1 (en) 2000-02-02 2002-04-02 Tropian Inc. High-efficiency power modulators
GB2359681B (en) * 2000-02-25 2004-03-10 Wireless Systems Int Ltd Switched amplifier
EP1277273B1 (en) * 2000-03-03 2007-01-24 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and transmitting circuit for generating a transmission signal
JP2003528529A (en) * 2000-03-21 2003-09-24 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 Communication system with frequency modulator and single local oscillator
US6708044B1 (en) * 2000-04-04 2004-03-16 Nec America, Inc. Apparatus and method for automated band selection via synthesizer bit insertion
GB0014344D0 (en) * 2000-06-13 2000-08-02 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd Universal modulation mode tri-amplifier
US6792282B1 (en) * 2000-09-21 2004-09-14 Skyworks Solutions, Inc. Multiple step switched translation loop for power amplifier feedback control
US6801784B1 (en) * 2000-11-02 2004-10-05 Skyworks Solutions, Inc. Continuous closed-loop power control system including modulation injection in a wireless transceiver power amplifier
DE10056472A1 (en) * 2000-11-15 2002-05-29 Infineon Technologies Ag Polar loop transmission circuit has oscillator producing HF signal depending on phase comparison, amplitude modulator, feedback path, amplifier between amplitude modulator, mixer
EP1209873A1 (en) * 2000-11-21 2002-05-29 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Procedure and apparatus for the transmission of signals modulated in phase and amplitude
GB2370169A (en) * 2000-12-15 2002-06-19 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd Radio transmitter circuits
US6472934B1 (en) * 2000-12-29 2002-10-29 Ericsson Inc. Triple class E Doherty amplifier topology for high efficiency signal transmitters
US6300830B1 (en) * 2000-12-29 2001-10-09 Ericsson Inc Multiplexed input envelope restoration scheme for linear high-efficiency power amplification
FR2824437B1 (en) * 2001-05-04 2005-06-03 Eads Defence & Security Ntwk GENERATOR OF A RADIO FREQUENCY SIGNAL MODULE IN PHASE OR FREQUENCY AND IN AMPLITUDE, AND TRANSMITTER INCORPORATING IT
FR2826205B1 (en) * 2001-06-13 2003-12-05 Matra Nortel Communications METHOD FOR MODULATING THE AMPLITUDE OF A RADIO FREQUENCY SIGNAL, AND DEVICE FOR IMPLEMENTING SAME
US7058369B1 (en) 2001-11-21 2006-06-06 Pmc-Sierra Inc. Constant gain digital predistortion controller for linearization of non-linear amplifiers
US6834084B2 (en) * 2002-05-06 2004-12-21 Rf Micro Devices Inc Direct digital polar modulator
US7991071B2 (en) * 2002-05-16 2011-08-02 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. AM to PM correction system for polar modulator
US7801244B2 (en) * 2002-05-16 2010-09-21 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Am to AM correction system for polar modulator
US7129790B2 (en) * 2002-05-24 2006-10-31 Nokia Corporation Phase-locked loop circuit
GB2412513B (en) * 2002-05-31 2006-03-08 Renesas Tech Corp Apparatus for radio telecommunication system and method of building up output power
GB2416254B (en) * 2002-05-31 2006-06-28 Renesas Tech Corp Semiconductor integrated circuit for communication, radio-communications apparatus, and transmission starting method
JP2004175052A (en) * 2002-11-29 2004-06-24 Sony Corp Medium to be recorded by ink jetting, ink jet imaging method, and printed matter
ATE551773T1 (en) * 2003-02-20 2012-04-15 Sony Ericsson Mobile Comm Ab EFFICIENT MODULATION OF HIGH FREQUENCY SIGNALS
US8320845B2 (en) * 2003-03-18 2012-11-27 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Radio transmitter
GB2404506B (en) * 2003-07-31 2006-02-22 Renesas Tech Corp Method of ramping up output level of power amplifier of radio communication system,communication semiconductor integrated circuit,& radio communication system
US7126999B2 (en) * 2003-08-11 2006-10-24 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Pseudo-polar modulation for radio transmitters
US7116951B2 (en) * 2003-12-16 2006-10-03 Motorola, Inc. Transmitter circuit and method for modulation distortion compensation
US7274748B1 (en) 2004-06-02 2007-09-25 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. AM to FM correction system for a polar modulator
US7551686B1 (en) 2004-06-23 2009-06-23 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Multiple polynomial digital predistortion
US7529523B1 (en) 2004-08-23 2009-05-05 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. N-th order curve fit for power calibration in a mobile terminal
US7359449B2 (en) * 2004-10-05 2008-04-15 Kamilo Feher Data communication for wired and wireless communication
US8070224B2 (en) * 2005-04-20 2011-12-06 Audiovox Corporation Vehicle entertainment system incorporated within the armrest/console of a vehicle
US7412215B1 (en) * 2005-06-03 2008-08-12 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. System and method for transitioning from one PLL feedback source to another
US8224265B1 (en) 2005-06-13 2012-07-17 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Method for optimizing AM/AM and AM/PM predistortion in a mobile terminal
US7787570B2 (en) * 2005-07-13 2010-08-31 Skyworks Solutions, Inc. Polar loop radio frequency (RF) transmitter having increased dynamic range amplitude control
US7280810B2 (en) 2005-08-03 2007-10-09 Kamilo Feher Multimode communication system
US10009956B1 (en) 2017-09-02 2018-06-26 Kamilo Feher OFDM, 3G and 4G cellular multimode systems and wireless mobile networks
DE602006008342D1 (en) * 2005-10-21 2009-09-17 Nxp Bv POLAR MODULATION DEVICE AND METHOD USING FM MODULATION
US7877060B1 (en) 2006-02-06 2011-01-25 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Fast calibration of AM/PM pre-distortion
US7962108B1 (en) 2006-03-29 2011-06-14 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Adaptive AM/PM compensation
US7423464B2 (en) * 2006-04-04 2008-09-09 Johann-Christoph Scheytt Phase and amplitude modulator
US7756491B2 (en) * 2006-08-04 2010-07-13 Axiom Microdevices, Inc. Phase shifter
CN100451570C (en) * 2006-09-30 2009-01-14 张希茂 Air storing type glass tube oil gauge
US7689182B1 (en) 2006-10-12 2010-03-30 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Temperature compensated bias for AM/PM improvement
US8009762B1 (en) 2007-04-17 2011-08-30 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Method for calibrating a phase distortion compensated polar modulated radio frequency transmitter
US7768353B2 (en) * 2008-06-13 2010-08-03 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Company, Ltd. Systems and methods for switching mode power amplifier control
US8489042B1 (en) 2009-10-08 2013-07-16 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. Polar feedback linearization

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4972440A (en) * 1988-09-23 1990-11-20 Hughes Aircraft Company Transmitter circuit for efficiently transmitting communication traffic via phase modulated carrier signals
US5091919A (en) * 1989-02-08 1992-02-25 Nokia-Mobira Oy Transmitter arrangement for digitally modulated signals
US5121077A (en) * 1990-02-08 1992-06-09 The Marconi Company Limted Circuit for reducing distortion produced by an r.f. power amplifier
US5124665A (en) * 1990-02-08 1992-06-23 The Marconi Company Limited Circuit for reducing distortion produced by an r.f. power amplifier
US5144258A (en) * 1990-07-19 1992-09-01 Oki Electric Industry Co., Ltd. Power amplifier system for radio transmitter and method for using the same

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5093636A (en) * 1990-09-25 1992-03-03 Hewlett-Packard Company Phase based vector modulator
US5111162A (en) * 1991-05-03 1992-05-05 Motorola, Inc. Digital frequency synthesizer having AFC and modulation applied to frequency divider
JP2723702B2 (en) * 1991-07-31 1998-03-09 日本電気株式会社 Linear compensation circuit
DE4206352A1 (en) * 1992-02-29 1993-09-02 Deutsche Aerospace METHOD FOR THE LINEAR AMPLIFICATION OF A USER SIGNAL AND AMPLIFIER FOR CARRYING OUT THE METHOD

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4972440A (en) * 1988-09-23 1990-11-20 Hughes Aircraft Company Transmitter circuit for efficiently transmitting communication traffic via phase modulated carrier signals
US5091919A (en) * 1989-02-08 1992-02-25 Nokia-Mobira Oy Transmitter arrangement for digitally modulated signals
US5121077A (en) * 1990-02-08 1992-06-09 The Marconi Company Limted Circuit for reducing distortion produced by an r.f. power amplifier
US5124665A (en) * 1990-02-08 1992-06-23 The Marconi Company Limited Circuit for reducing distortion produced by an r.f. power amplifier
US5144258A (en) * 1990-07-19 1992-09-01 Oki Electric Industry Co., Ltd. Power amplifier system for radio transmitter and method for using the same

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1998000909A1 (en) * 1996-06-28 1998-01-08 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Device and method for compensating phase distortion
US5982233A (en) * 1996-06-28 1999-11-09 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Device and method for compensating phase distortion
US6047168A (en) * 1996-06-28 2000-04-04 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Device and method for radio transmitters
AU724336B2 (en) * 1996-06-28 2000-09-14 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Device and method for compensating phase distortion
CN1110125C (en) * 1996-06-28 2003-05-28 艾利森电话股份有限公司 device and method for compensating phase distortion
US7088968B2 (en) 2001-12-12 2006-08-08 Intel Corporation Method and polar-loop transmitter with origin offset for zero-crossing signals
US7082290B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2006-07-25 Renesas Technology Corp. Communication semiconductor integrated circuit, a wireless communication apparatus, and a loop gain calibration method
US7085544B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2006-08-01 Renesas Technology Corp. Transmitter having a phase control loop whose frequency bandwidth is varied in accordance with modulation modes
US7248842B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2007-07-24 Renesas Technology Corp. Wireless communication apparatus having a phase control loop shared by first and second modulation modes and an amplitude control loop
US7433653B2 (en) 2002-05-31 2008-10-07 Renesas Technology Corp. Transmitter and semiconductor integrated circuit for communication

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
RU2121755C1 (en) 1998-11-10
SG69952A1 (en) 2000-01-25
DE4480702T1 (en) 1996-03-21
GB9520613D0 (en) 1995-12-13
ZA95442B (en) 1995-09-27
GB2291754B (en) 1998-10-07
JPH08509589A (en) 1996-10-08
TW269761B (en) 1996-02-01
US5430416A (en) 1995-07-04
SE9503687D0 (en) 1995-10-20
GB2291754A (en) 1996-01-31
FR2716589A1 (en) 1995-08-25
SE9503687L (en) 1995-12-21
AU1674995A (en) 1995-09-11
DE4480702C2 (en) 2000-04-20
CN1121752A (en) 1996-05-01
AU672549B2 (en) 1996-10-03
FR2716589B1 (en) 1999-10-29
CN1047896C (en) 1999-12-29

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5430416A (en) Power amplifier having nested amplitude modulation controller and phase modulation controller
EP0638994B1 (en) Transmitter and power amplifier therefor
JP3200184B2 (en) Synthesizer for wireless devices
US5251331A (en) High efficiency dual mode power amplifier apparatus
EP0781475B1 (en) Dual-mode satellite/cellular phone with a frequency synthesizer
JP3711109B2 (en) Continuous closed-loop power control system including injection of modulation into the power amplifier of a radiotelephone
US6150890A (en) Dual band transmitter for a cellular phone comprising a PLL
US6091303A (en) Method and apparatus for reducing oscillator noise by noise-feedforward
KR101669208B1 (en) Frequency synthesizer architecture in a time-division duplex mode for a wireless device
EP1351404A1 (en) Multiband radio signal transmitter/receiver
KR20000035604A (en) Phase lock loop and method therefor
US7109816B2 (en) Dual port modulator comprising a frequency synthesiser
US20050041766A1 (en) Accumulator based phase locked loop
US9035682B2 (en) Method and apparatus for single port modulation using a fractional-N modulator
AU724336B2 (en) Device and method for compensating phase distortion
US20070205831A1 (en) Phase Modulating Apparatus, Communication Device, Mobile Wireless Unit, And Phase Modulating Method
US5898906A (en) System and method for implementing a cellular radio transmitter device
US20040017858A1 (en) Mirror translation loop transmitter architecture
WO2004021579A2 (en) Wireless transmitter incorporating a synchronous oscillator in a translation loop
US6356770B1 (en) Composite mobile communication device
US6963620B2 (en) Communication transmitter using offset phase-locked-loop
US6526262B1 (en) Phase-locked tracking filters for cellular transmit paths
US8412116B1 (en) Wireless transceiver
GB2325362A (en) Transceiver which uses transmission signal as local oscillator for reception
GB2373113A (en) Improvements in or relating to fast frequency-hopping synthesisers

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 94191868.8

Country of ref document: CN

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AM AT AU BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CZ DE DK ES FI GB GE HU JP KE KG KP KR KZ LK LT LU LV MD MG MN MW NL NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SK TJ TT UA UZ VN

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): KE MW SD SZ BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN ML MR NE SN TD TG

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 95036877

Country of ref document: SE

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 95036877

Country of ref document: SE

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: CA