US20060135083A1 - Interoperability between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station - Google Patents
Interoperability between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station Download PDFInfo
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- US20060135083A1 US20060135083A1 US11/020,981 US2098104A US2006135083A1 US 20060135083 A1 US20060135083 A1 US 20060135083A1 US 2098104 A US2098104 A US 2098104A US 2006135083 A1 US2006135083 A1 US 2006135083A1
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- frequency band
- mobile station
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- filter
- antenna
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- 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
- H04B1/005—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges
- H04B1/0064—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges with separate antennas for the more than one band
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- 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
- H04B1/005—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges
- H04B1/0053—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges with common antenna for more than one band
- H04B1/0057—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges with common antenna for more than one band using diplexing or multiplexing filters for selecting the desired band
-
- 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
- H04B1/005—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges
- H04B1/0053—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges with common antenna for more than one band
- H04B1/006—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 adapting radio receivers, transmitters andtransceivers for operation on two or more bands, i.e. frequency ranges with common antenna for more than one band using switches for selecting the desired band
Definitions
- This invention relates generally to mobile communications and, more specifically, relates to receiving and transmitting in a mobile station.
- DVB-T Terrestrial digital video broadcasting
- DVB-T allows high quality video broadcasting to be delivered to various devices
- the DVB-T standard has certain problems with respect to mobile stations.
- One such problem is power usage, as mobile stations that implement DVB-T tend to consume too much power. Since mobile stations are battery powered unless plugged into a secondary power source, power usage is a critical design element.
- the DVB-H (a version of DVB for handheld devices) standard was created. DVB-H offers, among other things, reduced power usage as compared to DVB-T.
- DVB-H is beginning to make inroads into the mobile station market.
- Crown Castle and Nokia are piloting DVB-H technology in the United States in order to bring television (TV)-like services to mobile devices.
- the pilot has started in October, 2004 in the Pittsburgh, Pa. area, and the pilot aims to prove and test the feasibility of DVB-H technology and related service systems in the United States.
- DVB-H is an improvement over DVB-T
- DVB-H also causes certain problems.
- a mobile station typically will contain at least one transmitter that transmits using one or more frequency bands.
- the DVB-H receiver also receives in a frequency band that is different than the one or more frequency bands used by any transmitter in the mobile station.
- GSM global system for mobile communications
- certain mobile stations can support the global system for mobile communications (GSM) standard, and the frequency bands used by a GSM transmitter are different that the frequency band used by a DVB-H receiver. Nonetheless, transmitting using one frequency band can still cause interference in the frequency band used by the DVB-H receiver.
- GSM global system for mobile communications
- the present invention provides techniques that improve interoperability between transmitters and receivers in a mobile station.
- a mobile station that comprises a first antenna and at least one second antenna.
- the mobile station additionally comprises a receiver coupled to the first antenna.
- the receiver comprises first control logic adapted to generate a notification of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band.
- the mobile station also comprises a transmitter coupled to the at least one second antenna and the receiver.
- the transmitter communicates radio frequency (RF) signals in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands over an RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna.
- the transmitter comprises second control logic, at least one filter, and at least one switch.
- the at least one switch is coupled to the RF transmit path, the at least one filter, and the control logic.
- the at least one switch is adapted to modify the RF transmit path to couple a given one of the at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path.
- the second control logic is responsive to the notification to cause the at least one switch to modify the RF transmit path to couple the given filter to the RF transmit path.
- a method for operating a transmitter coupled to at least one second antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a first antenna. The method comprises the following steps. A notification is generated of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band from the first antenna. In response to the notification, a radio frequency (RF) transmit path is modified to couple a given one of at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path. Information is transmitted in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands and through the modified RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna.
- RF radio frequency
- a signal bearing medium comprising a program of machine-readable instructions executable by an apparatus to perform operations.
- the operations are for operating a transmitter coupled to at least one second antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a first antenna.
- the operations comprise the following steps.
- a notification is generated of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band from the first antenna.
- a radio frequency (RF) transmit path is modified to couple a given one of at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path.
- Information is transmitted in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands and through the modified RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna.
- RF radio frequency
- a mobile station comprises a first antenna and a second antenna.
- the mobile station additionally comprises a transmitter coupled to the first antenna.
- the transmitter comprises first control logic adapted to generate a notification of a transmission to the first antenna.
- the transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands.
- the mobile station also comprises a receiver coupled to the second antenna and to the transmitter.
- the receiver comprises second control logic and a plurality of devices.
- the second control logic is adapted to control the plurality of devices to receive information in a reception frequency band from the second antenna.
- the second control logic is responsive to the notification to modify at least one input used by at least a given one of the devices.
- the second control logic is further adapted to control the at least one given device and the rest of the plurality of devices to receive given information. The reception of the given information occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- a method for operating a transmitter coupled to a first antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a second antenna.
- the method comprises the following steps.
- a notification is generated of a transmission to the first antenna.
- the transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands.
- a modification is performed of at least one input used by at least a given one of a plurality of devices in the receiver.
- information is received in a second frequency band from the second antenna. The reception occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- a signal bearing medium comprising a program of machine-readable instructions executable by an apparatus to perform operations.
- the operations are for a transmitter coupled to a first antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a second antenna.
- the operations comprise the following steps.
- a notification is generated of a transmission to the first antenna.
- the transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands.
- a modification is performed of at least one input used by at least a given one of a plurality of devices in the receiver.
- information is received in a second frequency band from the second antenna. The reception occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a GSM transceiver
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a mobile station in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
- FIGS. 3-6A are block diagrams of exemplary portions, including RF transmit paths, of the mobile station of FIG. 2 and are used to illustrate filtering of GSM transmission signals;
- FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a mobile station in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention and is used to illustrate filtering of GSM transmission signals;
- FIG. 8 is a block diagram of a transceiver for a dual-mode mobile station that supports GSM and code-division multiple-access (CDMA);
- FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a transceiver for a dual-mode mobile station that supports GSM and CDMA, in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 10 is a block diagram of a mobile station that improves operability between a GSM transceiver and a DVB-H receiver.
- FIG. 11 is a flow chart for improving interoperability between GSM transceivers and DVB-H receivers.
- the mobile station will be considered to have a GSM transmitter and a DVB-H receiver in the same mobile station, although the present invention is not limited to this configuration.
- a mobile station is any portable device having wireless capability, such as a cellular phone, a personal digital assistant (PDA) with cellular or bluetooth capability, and the like.
- the mobile station will typically be battery powered.
- a DVB-H frequency band has a number of sub-carriers.
- the cellular transmission may destroy all sub-carriers at the same time or may destroy certain ones of the sub-carriers. For instance, GSM transmissions occur 4.6 milliseconds (ms) apart with 577 microseconds ( ⁇ s) transmission time period.
- the DVB-H time duration of the useful part of a symbol without guard interval is for example for 5 MHz channel bandwidth, in 2k mode 358.4 ⁇ s, for 4k mode 716.8 ⁇ s, and 8k mode 1433.6 ⁇ s.
- the recovery time from the cellular connection disturbance is not known, but this may be quite long.
- the recovery time is at least partially dependent on the algorithm for the automatic gain control (AGC) of the DVB-H receiver and the performance of the AGC with strong signals and humping wideband noise.
- AGC automatic gain control
- GSM850 Lower GSM Transmission 880-915 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 935-960 MHz EU
- GSM900 Higher GSM Transmission 1850-1910 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 1930-1990 MHz
- U.S. GSM1900
- EU GSM1800
- WCDMA2100 Reception 2110-2170 MHz DVB-H Band in U.S. Reception 1670-1675 MHz DVB-H Band in E.U. Reception 470-702 MHz
- the higher US GSM frequency band will generate wideband noise, which is higher than the minimum DVB-H signal level.
- the higher GSM frequency band GSM1900, typically called the “1900 frequency band” herein
- noise at the DVB-H frequency band is ⁇ 121 dBm/Hz.
- the required noise level at the minimum DVB-H signal level is less than ⁇ 169 dBm/Hz.
- the difference between actual and required levels is 48 dB.
- the assumption is that noise level is flat and the same level as the GSM reception band noise level.
- the reception band is on the lower side of the GSM frequency band (GSM900, which is a transmission frequency band of 880-915 MHz) and the reception frequency band is far enough that 900 frequency band transmission is not band-blocking the DVB-H receiver. Nonetheless, the wide band noise may be a problem also in European DVB-H reception.
- the 850 frequency band transmission will generate a second harmonic, which will be at the U.S. DVB-H reception frequency band of 1670-1675 MHz. Also, the 850 frequency band transmission will generate wide band noise to the U.S. DVB-H frequency band. The most difficult frequencies are 835.0-837.5 MHz in transmission, since these frequencies generate harmonics directly on top of the U.S. DVB-H frequency band.
- the spurious frequencies near the DVB-H reception channel will be problematic since the channel filter is not filtering nearby spurious signals effectively from the DVB-H reception signal, because the receiver channel selection is designed so that next channel will be, depending on geographical area, either 5, 6, 7, or 8 MHz apart from the desired received signal. If there are interference signals nearer than channel raster 5, 6, 7, or 8 MHz then those interference signals may cause problems since the channel filter does not filter those completely.
- a 2.5 MHz band will include 12.5 GSM RF channels, which will create co-channel interference.
- CDMA code-division multiple access
- TDMA time-division multiple access
- FIG. 1 shows an exemplary GSM transceiver 100 of a mobile station.
- the GSM transceiver 100 is used for both transmission and reception of GSM signals.
- the GSM transceiver 100 comprises an RF application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) 110 , a base-band (BB) ASIC 120 , and a front-end module (FEM) 150 .
- the BB ASIC 120 and RF ASIC 110 communicate through in-phase and quadrature (IQ) signals 115 and RF controls 116 .
- the RF ASIC 110 transmits two frequency bands, the 900 frequency band (e.g., in the 850/900 TX 125 ) and the 1900 frequency band (e.g., in the 1800/1900 TX 130 ) to the FEM.
- ASIC application-specific integrated circuit
- BB base-band
- FEM front-end module
- the FEM comprises one or more power amplifiers (PAs) 151 , one or more filters 152 (e.g., harmonic filters), FEM switches 153 , and an antenna output 154 , coupled to antenna 165 .
- the filters 152 can perform reception pre-filtering, and the FEM 150 communicates four reception frequency bands, the 850 RX 135 , 900 RX 140 , 1800 RX 145 , and 1900 RX 147 , to the RF ASIC 110 .
- the FEM 150 and the RF ASIC 110 also communicate through RF controls 117 , which include reception/transmission (RX/TX) control 118 and PA biasing 119 .
- the RX/TX control 118 is a signal that indicates whether the FEM 150 is in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode.
- the PA biasing 119 is a signal that changes PA biasing of the one or more PAs 151 .
- FIG. 1 shows, if more filtering is added for signals on the 1900 frequency band, then signals on the 1800 frequency band are also filtered. Similarly, if filtering is added for signals on the 900 frequency band, then signals on the 850 frequency band will also be filtered.
- the GSM 1800 transmission frequency band is from 1710 to 1785 MHz.
- the U.S. DVB-H reception frequency band is therefore about 40 MHz lower than the lowest GSM1800 transmission frequency band.
- the required filtering is about 50 dB, which means also noticeable loss at the GSM 1800 lowest channel powers.
- the current trend is increase radiated terminal output powers and thus extra loss after the PA 151 is not beneficial if the loss occurs all the time.
- a frequency filter e.g., at 1800/1900 MHz
- pass band to stop band roll-off like 35-40 MHz has easily a remarkable insertion loss, that degrades both transceiver transmit path and receiver path.
- Exemplary embodiments of the present invention improve interoperability between receivers and transmitter in a mobile station.
- filtering is used to filter certain frequencies of the transmission frequency band.
- the filtering is performed only when the DVB-H receiver is able to receive, and this limits power loss due to filtering.
- the DVB-H receiver modifies one or more inputs used by a device in the DVB-H receiver. The modification is performed to improve reception of DVB-H information while the transmitter is transmitting.
- the mobile station 200 comprises a GSM transceiver 201 , a DVB-H receiver 202 , a display device 204 , and an antenna 205 .
- the DVB-H receiver 208 comprises control logic 208 that controls operations of the DVB-H receiver 208 , such as generating the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 .
- the display device 204 displays at least information from the DVB-H receiver 202 .
- the DVB-H receiver 202 is coupled to the RF ASIC 210 using DVB-H receiver status signal 203 .
- the DVB-H receiver 202 receives a DVB-H RF signal 206 and converts this signal to information (not shown) suitable for display on the display device 204 .
- the exemplary GSM transceiver 201 is used for both transmission and reception of GSM RF signals 207 using antenna 265 , but could be a transmitter only, if desired.
- the GSM transceiver 201 comprises an RF ASIC 210 , a BB ASIC 220 , a FEM 250 , and a selectable RF notch filter 280 , and the antenna 265 .
- the antenna 265 need not be part of the GSM transceiver 201 .
- the BB ASIC 220 and RF ASIC 210 communicate through in-phase and quadrature (IQ) signals (generally: I- and Q-signals comprise information that is to be transmitted or received) 215 and RF controls 216 .
- I- and Q-signals comprise information that is to be transmitted or received
- the RF ASIC 210 is an RF device that creates and communicates RF signals using two frequency bands, the 850/900 TX 225 and the 1800/1900 TX 230 to the FEM. Note that the RF ASIC 210 may comprise multiple RF devices that create and communicate the RF signals.
- the FEM comprises one or more PAs 251 , one or more filters 252 , FEM switches 253 , and an antenna output 254 , coupled to antenna 265 .
- the filters 252 can perform reception pre-filtering, and the FEM 250 communicates four reception frequency bands, the 850 RX 235 , 900 RX 240 , 1800 RX 245 , and 1900 RX 247 , to the RF ASIC 210 .
- signals 225 , 230 , 235 , 240 , 245 , and 247 are individual signal lines. It should be noted that the frequency bands 225 , 230 , 235 , 240 , 245 , and 247 are can be communicated using a bus 291 . Typically, only one of the frequency bands 225 - 247 occupies the bus 291 at one time and the bus is made to hold only signals from a currently selected one of the frequency bands 225 - 247 .
- the FEM 250 and the RF ASIC 210 also communicate through RF controls 217 , which include reception/transmission (RX/TX) control 218 and PA biasing signal 219 .
- the RX/TX control 218 is a signal that indicates whether the FEM 250 is to be in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode.
- the PA biasing signal 219 is a signal that changes PA biasing of the one or more PAs 251 .
- the RF ASIC 210 transmits either the 850/900 TX 225 or the 1800/1900 TX 230 frequency bands to the antenna 265 using the RF transmit path 270 .
- the RF transmit path 270 is any path through which RF signals may be routed for transmission.
- the RF transmit path 270 comprises the bus 291 , the FEM 250 , and the antenna coupling 261 , and, optionally, the antenna 265 .
- the RF ASIC 210 communicates to the selectable RF notch filter 280 using the RF controls 290 , which include the RX/TX control 291 and RF band information 292 .
- the RX/TX control 291 is a signal that indicates whether the FEM 250 is to be in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode, and may be a copy of the RX/TX control 218 if desired.
- the RF band information 292 is a signal having information used to determine which of the 850, 950, 1800, and 1900 frequency bands is being used.
- Filtering of the transmission signals of one of the 850, 950, 1800, and 1900 frequency bands is done adaptively by using transmission on/off information (e.g., in the RX/TX control 291 ) and operating frequency band information (e.g., in the RF band information 292 ).
- the filter used in the selectable RF notch filter 280 is a branch-selectable notch filter, which has multiple selections with multiple notch rejection specifications. Exemplary selectable RF notch filters 280 are shown in FIGS. 3-6A .
- the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 can be used to determine when filtering is performed.
- the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 is a signal indicating whether the DVB-H receiver 202 is in a reception mode.
- the GSM transceiver 201 performs filtering of transmitted GSM signals.
- the DVB-H receiver 202 could be contained in a removable module (not shown).
- the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 indicates that the removable module is coupled to the mobile station 200 , and the GSM transceiver 201 performs filtering of transmitted GSM signals in response to the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 .
- the DVB-H receiver status signal 203 could be determined through a query by the RF ASIC 210 to the DVB-H receiver 202 .
- notch filtering When notch filtering is used, then higher losses can be expected in the signal communicated on the RF transmit path 270 to the antenna 265 . Thus, notch filtering means lower radiated output power. For this reason, the extra notch filtering, in an exemplary embodiment, is used only when needed.
- the selectable RF notch filter 280 modifies the RF transmit path 270 to couple one or more filters to or decouple one or more filters from the RF transmit path 270 . Since extra filtering increases loss to the RF transmit path 270 , filtering is removed when GSM is in reception mode. This way, GSM sensitivity can be maintained.
- the notch filtering in the 850 frequency band is typically performed for the second harmonic rejection and may be performed for wide band noise filtering (e.g., noise that is converted to 1670-1675 MHz frequency band).
- wide band noise filtering e.g., noise that is converted to 1670-1675 MHz frequency band.
- the filtering is done to suppress wide band noise.
- Noise from 900 MHz for EU DVB-H frequency band, and noise from 1800/1900 MHz to US DVB-H frequency band are wide band noise at their nature.
- a “notch filter” in this context is, e.g., a filter with a bandwidth sufficient to cover a DVB-H frequency band. This kind of filter can be referred as notch-filter, and noise can be referred as wideband noise. It is not an intention (though it is possible) to filter wideband, just a DVB-H frequency band (e.g., only US or EU) or frequency bands (e.g., both US and EU).]
- the PA 251 can be linearized by changing the PA biasing signal 219 to cause the PA 251 to perform closer to or at class A operation. Typically, this means a value of current on the PA biasing signal 219 would be increased. Class A operation should reduce the magnitude of the harmonics. This more linear operation will consume more power and generate more heat, but this more linear mode is needed only when the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting (e.g., which can include preparations to transmit) at the same time a DVB-H module is in reception mode. This way total current consumption is not increased significantly.
- the control logic 285 communicates the RF controls 290 to the selectable RF notch filter 280 .
- the control logic 285 also, in one exemplary embodiment, controls operations of the GSM transceiver 701 . It should be noted that a portion or all of the control logic 285 may reside in locations other than the RF ASIC 210 , such as being distributed between the RF ASIC 210 and the BB ASIC 220 or being its own module separate from the RF ASIC 210 or the BB ASIC 220 . Additionally, the control logic 285 can adjust the PA biasing signal 219 .
- a control logic portion can be added to the selectable RF notch filter 280 , if desired, so that the selectable RF notch filter 280 will determine, using signals from the RF ASIC 210 and the DVB-H receiver 208 , what filter should or should not be coupled to the antenna coupling 261 .
- the RX/TX logic 286 determines whether the RF ASIC 210 is in a transmission or reception mode and informs the control logic 285 of the mode.
- the RX/TX logic 286 (e.g., and the control logic 285 ) would typically be part of control logic 285 for the RF ASIC 210 .
- RF ASIC 210 BB ASIC 220 , and FEM 250 are shown as being separate, portions or all of the three may be combined or further sub-divided. Additionally, some or all of the functionality of the three may be performed by processors such as a digital signal processor (DSP), hardware such as very large scale integrated circuits (VLSI), or programmable logic devices (e.g., using read only memories) such as field programmable gate arrays (FPLGA), or some combination of these or any other suitable device.
- DSP digital signal processor
- VLSI very large scale integrated circuits
- FPLGA field programmable gate arrays
- the signals herein may be, for instance, signals that travel on conductive elements, such as traces or wires, or may be one or more messages that are passed between software modules.
- RF transmit path portion 370 is a portion of RF transmit path 270 .
- the portion 399 comprises the FEM 250 , the antenna coupling 261 , the selectable RF notch filter 300 , and optionally the antenna 265 .
- the selectable RF notch filter 300 comprises a switch 320 and a switch 310 .
- the switch 320 switches between the RX connection (e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is in a reception mode) and the TX connection (e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is in a transmission mode).
- the switch 310 switches between connection 311 (e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using the GSM 850 frequency band), which couples a notch filter 330 to the RF transmit path portion 370 , and the connection 312 (e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using the GSM 1900 frequency band), which couples a notch filter 340 to the RF transmit path portion 370 .
- connection 311 e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using the GSM 850 frequency band
- connection 312 e.g., when the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using the GSM 1900 frequency band
- Notch 1 (i.e., notch filter 330 ) option: Used when the GSM 850 frequency band is being used for transmission, and the filtering is performed for second harmonic and wide band noise filtering;
- Notch 2 (i.e., notch filter 340 ) option: Used when the GSM 1900 frequency band is being used for transmission, and the filtering is performed for wideband noise filtering;
- Not connected i.e., the RX connection in switch 320 , which connects to the not connected terminal 321 .
- the not connected option does not add extra loss to the RF transmit path portion 370 and thus receiver sensitivity can be maintained.
- the notch filters 330 , 340 could be realized, for instance, with ceramic components or bulk acoustic wave (BAW) components, or micro-electromechanical switches (MEMS).
- the notch filters 330 , 340 may also be realized using surface-mount devices (SMDs).
- FIG. 4 shows another possible exemplary portion 499 , including the RF transmit path portion 470 , of the mobile station 200 of FIG. 2 .
- Transmit path portion 470 is a portion of the RF transmit path 270 of FIG. 2 .
- the exemplary portion 499 comprises a gallium arsenide (GaAs) switch 300 having three positions.
- the GaAs switch 400 is responsive to the RX/TX control 291 and the RF band information 292 to select one of the switches. Note that the RX/FX control 291 and the RF band information 292 may be combined into two control signals if desired.
- the GaAs switch 400 has a first position that couples the notch filter 330 to the antenna coupling 261 , a second position that couples the notch filter 340 to the antenna coupling 261 , and a third position that couples a not connected terminal to the antenna coupling 261 .
- FIG. 5 shows another exemplary portion 599 , including the RF transmit path portion 570 , of the mobile station 200 of FIG. 2 .
- Transmit path portion 570 is a portion of the RF transmit path 270 of FIG. 2 .
- the selectable RF notch filter 500 comprises two switches 510 , 520 , which could be GaAs FETs or PIN-diodes. Each switch 510 , 520 has a corresponding control signal C 1 511 , C 2 521 .
- the control signals C 1 511 and C 2 521 are controlled as shown in table 530 of FIG. 5 . In this example, when C 1 511 is zero and C 2 521 is zero, this is a not connected option.
- the Notch 1 option is chosen when C 1 511 is one and C 2 521 is zero, while the Notch 2 option is chosen when C 1 511 is zero and C 2 521 is one.
- One exemplary technique for generating the control signals C 1 511 and C 2 521 is by having the control logic 285 (see FIG. 2 ) generate the control signals C 1 511 and C 2 521 from data about whether the GSM transceiver 201 is transmitting and, if so, on what frequency band.
- the notch filters 330 , 340 are selectable resonances. Note that control logic could be built into the selectable RF notch filter 500 so that the selectable RF notch filter generates the control signals C 1 511 and C 2 521 based on signals from the RF ASIC 210 .
- FIG. 6 another exemplary possible portion 699 , including RF transmit path portion 670 , is shown of the mobile station of FIG. 2 .
- the portion 699 comprises the FEM 150 , two switches 610 , 640 , a noise filter 620 for the GSM 1900 frequency band, a notch filter 630 for the GSM 850 frequency band, a filtering control signal 645 , the antenna coupling 261 , and optionally the antenna 265 .
- FIG. 6 illustrates an alternative proposal for a filter arrangement and is a filter bank approach.
- the switches 610 and 640 are responsive to the filtering control signal 645 to modify the transmit portion 670 to couple the noise filter 620 or notch filter 630 to the RF transmit path portion 670 or to uncouple the noise filter 620 and notch filter 630 from the RF transmit path portion 670 (e.g., using the unfiltered connection 650 ).
- the switches 610 and 640 couple the notch filter 630 to the RF transmit path portion 670 .
- the switches 610 and 640 couple the noise filter 620 to the RF transmit path portion 670 .
- the switches 610 and 640 couple the unfiltered connection 650 to the RF transmit path portion 670 .
- FIG. 6A is an alternative implementation for the radio transmitter presented in FIG. 6 .
- One difference is the second antenna 660 , which is connected to notch filter 630 .
- notch filter 630 When a filtered signal 631 is transmitted directly from filter 630 via antenna 660 , then linearity and harmonic suppression can be maintained. Also transmitted output power can be increased by insertion loss of switch 640 . Also a similar kind of extra antenna 670 can be connected to noise filter 620 and the same benefits would occur with the filtered signal 621 .
- FIG. 7 a mobile station 700 is shown in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
- Mobile station 700 contains many of the components shown in FIG. 2 .
- the GSM transceiver 701 comprises a selectable RF notch filter 705 that also uses the RX on/off signal 703 .
- the DVB-H receiver 702 comprises control logic 708 that generates the RX on/off signal 703 .
- the RX on/off signal 701 is a signal indicating whether the DVB-H receiver 702 is or is not in a reception mode.
- the selectable RF notch filter 705 comprises filter selection logic 710 that uses the RF controls 291 and the RX on/off signal 703 to select and couple a filter (see FIGS.
- the filter selection logic 710 is control logic for the selectable RF notch filter 705 .
- the RX on/off signal 703 may be enabled by the DVB-H receiver 702 when the DVB-H receiver 702 is in a reception mode, or logic in the selectable RF notch filter 705 can query the DVB-H receiver 702 for the RX on/off signal 703 .
- whether the DVB-H receiver 702 is in a reception mode or not is used also for filter selection.
- the DVB-H receiver 702 typically receives for a few hundred milliseconds and then the DVB-H receiver 702 is in idle mode for a few seconds. When the DVB-H receiver 702 is in an idle mode, extra filtering is not needed.
- filtering is generally used only when the DVB-H receiver 702 is in a reception mode (e.g., actively receiving or possibly preparing to receive) and a GSM frequency band is being transmitted by the GSM transceiver 701 at the same time.
- a reception mode e.g., actively receiving or possibly preparing to receive
- Transceiver 800 comprises an RF ASIC 810 , a GSM bus 820 , a GSM PA 830 , a WCDMA bus 840 , a WCDMA PA 850 , a duplex filter 860 , antennas 865 and 870 , and antenna couplings 831 , 841 , and 875 .
- GSM signals are transmitted over the GSM bus 820
- WCDMA signals are transmitted over the WCDMA bus 840 .
- Future U.S. products will include WCDMA operation at both cellular frequency bands 850 and 1900, and at the both of these frequency bands GSM operation will also continue.
- These future U.S. products, an exemplary transceiver 800 of which is shown in FIG. 8 will be dual-band products with dual-mode operation.
- one common antenna e.g., antenna 865 , coupled to the duplex filter 860 using the antenna coupling 875
- separate antennas e.g., antenna 865 and antenna coupling 831 for GSM and antenna 870 and antenna coupling 841 for WCDMA
- the dotted lines in FIG. 8 indicate optional arrangements.
- FIG. 8 shows only WCDMA duplex filter 860 , but in fact for each frequency band 850 and 1900, one duplex filter 860 is needed. Additionally, a duplex filter 860 typically contains two pass-band filters: one for reception and one for transmission.
- Transceiver 900 comprises an RF ASIC 910 , a GSM bus 920 , a GSM PA 930 , a WCDMA bus 940 , a WCDMA PA 950 , two duplex filters 960 and 961 , a switch module 950 , antennas 965 and 970 , and antenna couplings 931 , 941 , and 975 , and two switch outputs 921 , 922 .
- the RF ASIC 910 is an RF device that creates and communicates RF signals using one of several frequency bands.
- the RF ASIC 910 may comprise multiple RF devices (e.g., one RF device could create and communicate RF signals defined by the GSM communication protocol, while another RF device creates and communicates RF signals defined by the WCDMA protocol).
- a DVB-H receiver (not shown in FIG. 9 ) is not coupled to the dual-mode transceiver 900 or is not in a reception mode (e.g., receiving)
- signals defined by the GSM communication protocol are typically transmitted over the GSM bus 920 and the switch output 921
- signals defined by the WCDMA communication protocol are transmitted over the WCDMA bus 940 and the switch output 922 .
- one common antenna e.g., antenna 965 , coupled to the duplex filter 960 using the antenna coupling 975
- separate antennas e.g., antenna 965 and antenna coupling 931 for GSM and antenna 970 and antenna coupling 941 for WCDMA
- the dotted lines in FIG. 9 indicate optional arrangements for the antennas 965 , 970 and antenna couplings 931 , 941 , and 975 .
- duplex filter 960 e.g., the frequency band 850
- 961 e.g., the frequency band 1900
- a duplex filter 960 or 961 typically contains two pass-band filters: one for reception and one for transmission.
- the switch module 950 comprises two switches 951 and 952 .
- the control logic 955 uses an input from the DVB-H receiver (not shown in FIG. 9 ) to determine the control signal 956 , which in this example is two bits.
- the control signal 956 is also determined using the transmitting frequency bands for GSM. The control of the GSM routing to WCDMA transmitter is controlled with operating band information and when DVB-H is active.
- the switch module 950 is responsive to states of the control signal 956 and will modify the RF transmit path 970 to couple the duplex filters 960 , 961 to the RF transmit path 970 when certain conditions are met.
- the RF transmit path 970 is modified so that the duplex filters 960 , 961 are coupled to the RF transmit path 970 by coupling the GSM bus 920 to the switch output 922 , so that the WCDMA PA 950 and the duplex filters 960 , 961 (e.g., and possibly the antenna 970 ) become part of the RF transmit path 970 .
- the WCDMA PA 950 and the duplex filters 960 , 961 e.g., and possibly the antenna 970
- the GSM bus 920 is coupled to the WCDMA PA 950 when the control signal 956 has a state where two bits are a zero and a one.
- the RF transmit path 970 is modified by the switch module 950 to decouple the duplex filter 960 from the RF transmit path 970 for GSM signals from the RF ASIC 910 .
- the GSM bus 920 remains coupled to the GSM PA 930 when the control signal 956 has a state where two bits are both zeros.
- the WCDMA bus 940 remains coupled to the WCDMA PA 950 when the control signal 956 has a state where two bits are both ones.
- the state of having a first bit being a one and a second bit being a zero for the control signal 956 is not allowed in this example. It should be noted in FIG. 9 that there is only one RF transmit path 970 , as both WCDMA and GSM signals will not be transmitted at the same time.
- the transmission is filtered after the WCDMA PA 950 with a duplex filter 960 .
- Transmission filters (not shown) in the duplex filters 960 , 961 will attenuate transmission harmonics and wide band noise. For at least this reason, a GSM transmission can be filtered by the duplex filters 960 , 961 .
- the duplex filters 960 , 961 will increase loss after the WCDMA PA 950 and thus lower transmitted output power is delivered to antenna 965 (e.g., or 970 ). For this reason, it is beneficial that the GSM transmission is filtered only when DVB-H receiver is in a reception state.
- GSM means both the 850 and 1900 frequency bands for the GSM communication protocol
- WCDMA means both the 850 and 1900 frequency bands for the WCDMA communication protocol.
- the GSM PA 930 includes both GSM frequency band 850 and 1900 amplifiers
- the WCDMA PA 950 includes both WCDMA frequency band 850 and frequency band 1900 amplifiers.
- FIGS. 2-7 and 9 have shown examples of how interoperability between receivers and transmitters can be improved in a mobile station.
- FIGS. 2-7 and 9 use filtering, among other things, to improve interoperability.
- FIGS. 10 and 11 illustrate other exemplary techniques for improving interoperability between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station.
- the DVB-H receiver in response to a transmission (e.g., which can include preparations to transmit) is adjusted, preferably by modifying inputs used by devices in the DVB-H receiver.
- Mobile station 1000 comprises a GSM transceiver 1010 coupled to a DVB-H receiver 1020 .
- DVB-H receiver 1020 comprises control logic 1030 , an LNA 1035 , a mixer 1040 , one or more filters 1045 , a signal processing module 1050 , and an AGC module 1055 .
- the AGC module 1055 comprises an AGC algorithm 1061 .
- the signal processing module 1050 comprises one or more digital filters 1070 .
- the control logic 1030 controls operations of the DVB-H receiver 1020 , such as controlling the LNA 1035 , mixer 1040 , filters 1045 , signal processing module 1050 , and AGC module 1055 to receive information in the DVB-H frequency band of the DVB-H RF signal 1090 .
- Certain signals are coupled between the GSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020 .
- the control logic 1011 of the GSM transceiver 1010 generates these signals. In the example of FIG.
- the following signals are coupled between the GSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020 : 850 or 1900 operation 1005 ; RX/TX on/off 1006 ; RX/TX signal level 1007 ; and used RF channel 1008 . Note that not all of these signals need to be used and additional signals may be provided, if desired.
- the control logic is responsive to the signals 1005 - 1008 and modifies one or more of the value(s) 1036 , 1041 , 1051 , and 1061 in response to one or more of the signals 1005 - 1008 .
- GSM system Lowest channel number Highest channel number
- GSM850 128 251 GSM900 975 124
- GSM1800 512 885 GSM1900 512 810
- the signal 1007 information can be used for the optimization purposes.
- transmission signal levels are known, then the DVB-H receiver can be linearized only to a needed level. This is desirable since a more linear mode consumes more power.
- DVB-H receiver 1010 may be performed by processors such as a digital signal processor (DSP), hardware such as very large scale integrated circuits (VLSI), or programmable logic devices (e.g., using read only memories) such as field programmable gate arrays (FPLGA), or some combination of these or any other suitable device.
- DSP digital signal processor
- VLSI very large scale integrated circuits
- FPLGA field programmable gate arrays
- the signals herein may be, for instance, signals that travel on conductive elements, such as traces or wires, or may be one or more messages that are passed between software modules.
- Method 1100 is shown for improving interoperability between the GSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020 in the mobile station 1000 .
- Method 1100 is typically performed by the control logic 1030 .
- step 1110 Yes
- the method continues in step 1130 . Note that one or all of steps 1130 through 1160 may be performed.
- the LNA 1035 and mixer 1040 are adjusted using inputs 1036 and 1041 , respectively. It should be noted that the LNA 1035 and the mixer 1040 may be separately adjusted, if desired.
- the inputs for the LNA 1035 and mixer 1040 are modified for more linear mode with higher noise figure when harmonics are transmitted in order to avoid compression. This way, the DVB-H receiver 1020 can better tolerate interference signals.
- Increasing the biasing current (e.g., as input 1036 ) of the LNA 1035 can force the LNA 1035 to a more linear mode.
- mixer 1040 e.g., increasing the biasing current as input 1041 to the mixer 1040 can force the mixer 1040 to a more linear mode.
- the LNA 1035 and mixer 1040 are biased (e.g., using inputs 1036 and 1041 ) to a low biasing mode in order to achieve a long operating time for the mobile station 1000 .
- the high biasing mode (step 1130 ) is typically only used when high interference signal of a GSM transmission is present. This high biasing mode consumes more power and thus reduces operating time of the mobile station 1000 .
- step 1130 will typically change to high biasing mode when the GSM transceiver 1010 is transmitting on either of the 850 or 1900 frequency bands (e.g., as indicated by the RX/TX On/off signal 1006 ).
- step 1140 DVB-H RF filtering, as performed by filter(s) 1045 , is modified based on GSM transmission frequency information.
- the GSM transmission frequency information can be determined using the signal used RF channel 1008 , which indicates whether the 850 or 1900 frequency band was used, and the 850 or 1900 operation signal 1005 , which indicates whether one of the frequency bands 850 or 1900 is being used to transmit.
- Step 1140 is typically used when GSM harmonics will fall near the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 but the actual harmonic is outside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (e.g., an out-of-band blocker).
- Step 1140 is used, for instance, for the 1900 frequency band, which generates harmonics outside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 .
- the filtering can be changed at the base band filtering (performed, e.g., by filters 1045 ) and in filtering performed by the signal processing module 1050 .
- the signal processing module 1050 is implemented at least partially by a DSP.
- the base band filtering can be modified by reducing the signal bandwidth.
- the actual modification is the modification of a corner frequency of a low pass filter 1045 or modification of an order of the filter 1045 or both. These modifications may be performed through inputs 1046 , which are typically values associated with the filter 1045 .
- the modification of order may improve performance of the DVB-H receiver 1020 when the signal interference caused by the GSM transmission is near the DVB-H frequency band.
- Analog domain filtering is done to protect an analog-to-digital converter (not shown) in the DVB-H receiver 1020 from not saturating due to strong interference signals.
- the filtering (e.g., digital filter 1070 ) performed by the signal processing module 1050 can be changed by altering the filtering coefficient (e.g., an input 1051 ) of a finite impulse response (FIR) filter implemented by the signal processing module 1050 .
- Filtering performed by the signal processing module 1050 may also be used to filter sub-carriers of the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (see step 1150 below).
- the filtering performed by the signal processing module 1050 also corrects non-idealities caused by analog filtering.
- the non-idealities comprise amplitude and phase corrections.
- the DVB-H signal is an orthogonal frequency division multiplexed (OFDM) signal which includes a number of sub-carriers (in 2k mode 1705, 4k mode 3409 and 8k mode 6817 sub-carriers).
- OFDM orthogonal frequency division multiplexed
- the signal processing module 1050 e.g., implemented using a DSP
- Step 1150 is typically performed when transmission in a GSM frequency band, such as the 850 frequency band, generates harmonics inside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (e.g., co-channel interference or spurious interference).
- the corrupted sub-carriers can be removed by ignoring the sub-carrier information. This is the easiest technique to implement removal of sub-carriers.
- An alternative technique is to ignore sub-carrier information from sub-carriers that are expected to be corrupted and to use previous information (e.g., stored information) from these sub-carriers. This stored information is added to new information from other carriers and this mixed combined signal is filtered and further processed.
- the control logic 1030 modifies an input 1151 to the signal processing module 1050 , and the signal processing module 1050 is responsive to the modified input 1151 to filter corrupted sub-carriers.
- the input 1151 could be a default message (e.g., “perform normal processing”) when the used RF channel signal 1008 indicates that the 850 frequency band is not being used for transmission, and the input 1151 could be a different message (e.g., “remove sub-carriers”) when the used RF channel signal 1008 indicates that the 850 frequency band is being used for transmission.
- the impact of the sub-carrier removal is that raw bit-error rate will increase but if the bit-per-symbol interleaving is done over several sub-carriers and over multiple symbol times, then this sub-carrier information removal may be corrected.
- the correction is based on signal interleaving and information coding.
- the actual performance reduction, which can be seen by sub-carrier removal, is a function of the performance of interleaving and coding and the signal bandwidth of DVB-H RF signal 1090 .
- the AGC module 1055 can be altered, using inputs 1061 and typically the AGC algorithm 1060 , when harmonics are present, such as when the 850 frequency band is being used to transmit. In this manner, the recovery time from the high power spurious signals can be improved. For instance, an AGC value which determines actual amplification of the variable gain amplifier (not shown) before spurious signals are present (e.g., as determined by the 850 or 1900 operation signal 1005 and the used RF channel signal 1008 ) can be used until after the spurious signals disappear. For instance, the control logic 1030 could cause an input 1061 to be modified that in turn causes the AGC algorithm 1060 to “freeze” its value until the input 1061 is again modified. Another possibility is that AGC bandwidth can be altered (e.g., such as by modifying values using inputs 1061 of a filter used by the AGC 1055 ) when narrow-bandwidth spurious signals are expected to appear.
- AGC bandwidth can be altered (e.g., such as by modifying values using inputs 1061
- embodiments of the present invention might be implemented on a signal bearing medium comprising a program of machine-readable instructions.
- the machine-readable instructions are executable by an apparatus to perform operations of one or more steps involved with the present invention.
- filtering of a GSM signal is shown occurring at the antenna coupling 261 , but other locations are possible. For instance, filtering could occur before the PA 251 of FIGS. 2 and 7 , although filtering before the PA 251 may be less beneficial than filtering after the PA 251 .
- any frequency band that can cause problems with DVB_H frequency bands may be filtered (e.g., FIGS. 2-10 ), inputs of devices in a DVB-H receiver modified (e.g., FIGS. 10 and 11 ), or both.
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Abstract
Description
- This invention relates generally to mobile communications and, more specifically, relates to receiving and transmitting in a mobile station.
- Terrestrial digital video broadcasting (DVB-T) was first adopted as a standard in 1997, and has been deployed throughout many areas of the world. DVB-T offers about 24 megabits per second (Mb/s) data transfer capability to a fixed receiver, and about 12 Mb/s to receivers in mobile stations. Mobile stations including such mobile receivers have been made and are able to receive the DVB-T signals.
- While DVB-T allows high quality video broadcasting to be delivered to various devices, the DVB-T standard has certain problems with respect to mobile stations. One such problem is power usage, as mobile stations that implement DVB-T tend to consume too much power. Since mobile stations are battery powered unless plugged into a secondary power source, power usage is a critical design element. In response to this power usage and other effects of DVB-T, the DVB-H (a version of DVB for handheld devices) standard was created. DVB-H offers, among other things, reduced power usage as compared to DVB-T.
- Because of the benefits of DVB-H over DVB-T, DVB-H is beginning to make inroads into the mobile station market. For example, Crown Castle and Nokia are piloting DVB-H technology in the United States in order to bring television (TV)-like services to mobile devices. The pilot has started in October, 2004 in the Pittsburgh, Pa. area, and the pilot aims to prove and test the feasibility of DVB-H technology and related service systems in the United States.
- While DVB-H is an improvement over DVB-T, DVB-H also causes certain problems. For instance, a mobile station typically will contain at least one transmitter that transmits using one or more frequency bands. The DVB-H receiver also receives in a frequency band that is different than the one or more frequency bands used by any transmitter in the mobile station. For instance, certain mobile stations can support the global system for mobile communications (GSM) standard, and the frequency bands used by a GSM transmitter are different that the frequency band used by a DVB-H receiver. Nonetheless, transmitting using one frequency band can still cause interference in the frequency band used by the DVB-H receiver.
- It would therefore be desirable to provide techniques that can reduce this interference and therefore improve interoperability between transmitters and receivers in a mobile station.
- The foregoing and other problems are improved upon, and other advantages are realized, in accordance with exemplary embodiments of these teachings. In particular, the present invention provides techniques that improve interoperability between transmitters and receivers in a mobile station.
- In an exemplary aspect of the invention, exemplary embodiments are disclosed that perform filtering in a transmitter to improve interoperability. For instance, in one exemplary embodiment, a mobile station is disclosed that comprises a first antenna and at least one second antenna. The mobile station additionally comprises a receiver coupled to the first antenna. The receiver comprises first control logic adapted to generate a notification of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band. The mobile station also comprises a transmitter coupled to the at least one second antenna and the receiver. The transmitter communicates radio frequency (RF) signals in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands over an RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna. The transmitter comprises second control logic, at least one filter, and at least one switch. The at least one switch is coupled to the RF transmit path, the at least one filter, and the control logic. The at least one switch is adapted to modify the RF transmit path to couple a given one of the at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path. The second control logic is responsive to the notification to cause the at least one switch to modify the RF transmit path to couple the given filter to the RF transmit path.
- In another exemplary embodiment, a method is disclosed for operating a transmitter coupled to at least one second antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a first antenna. The method comprises the following steps. A notification is generated of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band from the first antenna. In response to the notification, a radio frequency (RF) transmit path is modified to couple a given one of at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path. Information is transmitted in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands and through the modified RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna.
- In another exemplary embodiment, a signal bearing medium is disclosed that comprises a program of machine-readable instructions executable by an apparatus to perform operations. The operations are for operating a transmitter coupled to at least one second antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a first antenna. The operations comprise the following steps. A notification is generated of the receiver being able to receive a reception frequency band from the first antenna. In response to the notification, a radio frequency (RF) transmit path is modified to couple a given one of at least one filters to or decouple the given filter from the RF transmit path. Information is transmitted in a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands and through the modified RF transmit path to the at least one second antenna.
- In another aspect of the invention, exemplary embodiments are disclosed that change one or more inputs for one or more devices in a receiver to improve interoperability. For instance, in an exemplary embodiment, a mobile station is disclosed. The mobile station comprises a first antenna and a second antenna. The mobile station additionally comprises a transmitter coupled to the first antenna. The transmitter comprises first control logic adapted to generate a notification of a transmission to the first antenna. The transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands. The mobile station also comprises a receiver coupled to the second antenna and to the transmitter. The receiver comprises second control logic and a plurality of devices. The second control logic is adapted to control the plurality of devices to receive information in a reception frequency band from the second antenna. The second control logic is responsive to the notification to modify at least one input used by at least a given one of the devices. The second control logic is further adapted to control the at least one given device and the rest of the plurality of devices to receive given information. The reception of the given information occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- In another exemplary embodiment, a method is disclosed for operating a transmitter coupled to a first antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a second antenna. The method comprises the following steps. A notification is generated of a transmission to the first antenna. The transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands. In response to the notification, a modification is performed of at least one input used by at least a given one of a plurality of devices in the receiver. Using the at least one given device and the rest of the plurality of devices, information is received in a second frequency band from the second antenna. The reception occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- In another exemplary embodiment, a signal bearing medium is disclosed that comprises a program of machine-readable instructions executable by an apparatus to perform operations. The operations are for a transmitter coupled to a first antenna in combination with a receiver coupled to a second antenna. The operations comprise the following steps. A notification is generated of a transmission to the first antenna. The transmission uses a selected one of at least one transmission frequency bands. In response to the notification, a modification is performed of at least one input used by at least a given one of a plurality of devices in the receiver. Using the at least one given device and the rest of the plurality of devices, information is received in a second frequency band from the second antenna. The reception occurs for at least some time period while the transmitter transmits in the at least one transmission frequency band.
- The foregoing and other aspects of embodiments of this invention are made more evident in the following Detailed Description of Exemplary Embodiments, when read in conjunction with the attached Drawing Figures, wherein:
-
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a GSM transceiver; -
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a mobile station in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention; -
FIGS. 3-6A are block diagrams of exemplary portions, including RF transmit paths, of the mobile station ofFIG. 2 and are used to illustrate filtering of GSM transmission signals; -
FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a mobile station in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention and is used to illustrate filtering of GSM transmission signals; -
FIG. 8 is a block diagram of a transceiver for a dual-mode mobile station that supports GSM and code-division multiple-access (CDMA); -
FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a transceiver for a dual-mode mobile station that supports GSM and CDMA, in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention; -
FIG. 10 is a block diagram of a mobile station that improves operability between a GSM transceiver and a DVB-H receiver; and -
FIG. 11 is a flow chart for improving interoperability between GSM transceivers and DVB-H receivers. - As previously described, the combination of a transmitter and a receiver in a mobile station can be problematic. A further introduction to these problems will now be given. In the examples below, the mobile station will be considered to have a GSM transmitter and a DVB-H receiver in the same mobile station, although the present invention is not limited to this configuration. A mobile station is any portable device having wireless capability, such as a cellular phone, a personal digital assistant (PDA) with cellular or bluetooth capability, and the like. The mobile station will typically be battery powered.
- In terms of what an operator of the mobile station could experience while watching digital video using the mobile station, there are several factors to consider. The business case of the DVB-H operator is based on good quality video performance, and cellular connection is not allowed to effect video quality. Nonetheless, the mobile station performs cellular operations when delivering back channel information to the interactive DVB-H media and when the mobile station needs to connect to the base station. The mobile station needs to connect to the base station periodically.
- When the mobile station transmits at a cellular frequency, DVB-H reception quality is decreased. This decrease can be seen as video flow being not constant or there being blurs in the picture. A DVB-H frequency band has a number of sub-carriers. The cellular transmission may destroy all sub-carriers at the same time or may destroy certain ones of the sub-carriers. For instance, GSM transmissions occur 4.6 milliseconds (ms) apart with 577 microseconds (μs) transmission time period. The DVB-H time duration of the useful part of a symbol without guard interval is for example for 5 MHz channel bandwidth, in 2k mode 358.4 μs, for 4k mode 716.8 μs, and 8k mode 1433.6 μs.
- The recovery time from the cellular connection disturbance is not known, but this may be quite long. The recovery time is at least partially dependent on the algorithm for the automatic gain control (AGC) of the DVB-H receiver and the performance of the AGC with strong signals and humping wideband noise.
- The interoperability problem between DVB-H in United States and the cellular frequency bands will be one of the biggest issues after service using DVB-H is launched. Both cellular bands for reception of GSM will generate problems to DVB-H band which is located between those in frequency domain. The following table illustrates exemplary transmission and reception bands for GSM and DVB-H, where “MHz” is megahertz, “U.S.” is United States, and “E.U.” is European Union.
Lower GSM Transmission 824-849 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 869-894 MHz U.S. (GSM850) Lower GSM Transmission 880-915 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 935-960 MHz EU (GSM900) Higher GSM Transmission 1850-1910 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 1930-1990 MHz U.S. (GSM1900) Higher GSM Transmission 1710-1785 MHz Frequency Band in Reception 1805-1880 MHz EU (GSM1800) Frequency band in EU Transmission 1920-1980 MHz (WCDMA2100) Reception 2110-2170 MHz DVB-H Band in U.S. Reception 1670-1675 MHz DVB-H Band in E.U. Reception 470-702 MHz - The higher US GSM frequency band will generate wideband noise, which is higher than the minimum DVB-H signal level. The higher GSM frequency band (GSM1900, typically called the “1900 frequency band” herein) noise at the DVB-H frequency band is −121 dBm/Hz. The required noise level at the minimum DVB-H signal level is less than −169 dBm/Hz. The difference between actual and required levels is 48 dB. The assumption is that noise level is flat and the same level as the GSM reception band noise level.
- In the European Union DVB-H version, the reception band is on the lower side of the GSM frequency band (GSM900, which is a transmission frequency band of 880-915 MHz) and the reception frequency band is far enough that 900 frequency band transmission is not band-blocking the DVB-H receiver. Nonetheless, the wide band noise may be a problem also in European DVB-H reception.
- In terms of the U.S. standards, the 850 frequency band transmission will generate a second harmonic, which will be at the U.S. DVB-H reception frequency band of 1670-1675 MHz. Also, the 850 frequency band transmission will generate wide band noise to the U.S. DVB-H frequency band. The most difficult frequencies are 835.0-837.5 MHz in transmission, since these frequencies generate harmonics directly on top of the U.S. DVB-H frequency band.
- The spurious frequencies near the DVB-H reception channel will be problematic since the channel filter is not filtering nearby spurious signals effectively from the DVB-H reception signal, because the receiver channel selection is designed so that next channel will be, depending on geographical area, either 5, 6, 7, or 8 MHz apart from the desired received signal. If there are interference signals nearer than channel raster 5, 6, 7, or 8 MHz then those interference signals may cause problems since the channel filter does not filter those completely. A 2.5 MHz band will include 12.5 GSM RF channels, which will create co-channel interference.
- The same problem will occur with other U.S. cellular systems like code-division multiple access (CDMA) and time-division multiple access (TDMA). This is due to fact that spurious signal level requirement is 13 dBm by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and in GSM standard the spurious requirement is −36 dBm. In CDMA, transmission is always on, thus DVB-H reception is constantly distorted when CDMA is operating with mentioned difficult RF frequencies or near by frequencies.
- In current DVB-H accessories (such as a video streaming device by Nokia called SU-22), this receiver desensitizing effect can be noticed when GSM transmission is on.
- Possible solutions to these problems are as follows. One possible solution is increased filtering at the 850 and 1900 frequency band transmission signal paths. This is not a good solution in coming GSM transmitter architectures, since there will be only one low frequency band (e.g., the 850 and 900 frequency bands will be combined together) and one high frequency band (e.g., the 1800 and 1900 frequency bands will be combined together) will be used. Therefore, if for instance more filtering is added for the 1900 frequency band signals (which are used for transmission), then the 1800 frequency band signals are also filtered (which are used for reception).
- For instance,
FIG. 1 shows anexemplary GSM transceiver 100 of a mobile station. TheGSM transceiver 100 is used for both transmission and reception of GSM signals. TheGSM transceiver 100 comprises an RF application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) 110, a base-band (BB)ASIC 120, and a front-end module (FEM) 150. TheBB ASIC 120 andRF ASIC 110 communicate through in-phase and quadrature (IQ) signals 115 and RF controls 116. TheRF ASIC 110 transmits two frequency bands, the 900 frequency band (e.g., in the 850/900 TX 125) and the 1900 frequency band (e.g., in the 1800/1900 TX 130) to the FEM. The FEM comprises one or more power amplifiers (PAs) 151, one or more filters 152 (e.g., harmonic filters), FEM switches 153, and anantenna output 154, coupled toantenna 165. Thefilters 152 can perform reception pre-filtering, and theFEM 150 communicates four reception frequency bands, the 850RX RX RX RX 147, to theRF ASIC 110. TheFEM 150 and theRF ASIC 110 also communicate through RF controls 117, which include reception/transmission (RX/TX)control 118 and PA biasing 119. The RX/TX control 118 is a signal that indicates whether theFEM 150 is in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode. The PA biasing 119 is a signal that changes PA biasing of the one ormore PAs 151. - As
FIG. 1 shows, if more filtering is added for signals on the 1900 frequency band, then signals on the 1800 frequency band are also filtered. Similarly, if filtering is added for signals on the 900 frequency band, then signals on the 850 frequency band will also be filtered. - Yet another problem is as follows. The
GSM 1800 transmission frequency band is from 1710 to 1785 MHz. The U.S. DVB-H reception frequency band is therefore about 40 MHz lower than the lowest GSM1800 transmission frequency band. The required filtering is about 50 dB, which means also noticeable loss at theGSM 1800 lowest channel powers. The current trend is increase radiated terminal output powers and thus extra loss after thePA 151 is not beneficial if the loss occurs all the time. For instance, a frequency filter (e.g., at 1800/1900 MHz) with pass band to stop band roll-off like 35-40 MHz has easily a remarkable insertion loss, that degrades both transceiver transmit path and receiver path. - If the filtering is done prior to the
PA 151, this does not solve the wide band noise problem because thePA 151 is significant source of noise. For instance, at the 850 frequency band, harmonics filtering prior to thePA 151 will not help the situation, sincePA 151 is the main contributor to the harmonics. - Exemplary embodiments of the present invention improve interoperability between receivers and transmitter in a mobile station. In an aspect of the invention, filtering is used to filter certain frequencies of the transmission frequency band. In an exemplary embodiment, the filtering is performed only when the DVB-H receiver is able to receive, and this limits power loss due to filtering. In another aspect of the invention, in response to the transmitter transmitting (e.g., which can include preparations for transmitting), the DVB-H receiver modifies one or more inputs used by a device in the DVB-H receiver. The modification is performed to improve reception of DVB-H information while the transmitter is transmitting.
- Referring now to
FIG. 2 , this figure shows amobile station 200 in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention. Themobile station 200 comprises aGSM transceiver 201, a DVB-H receiver 202, adisplay device 204, and anantenna 205. The DVB-H receiver 208 comprisescontrol logic 208 that controls operations of the DVB-H receiver 208, such as generating the DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203. Thedisplay device 204 displays at least information from the DVB-H receiver 202. The DVB-H receiver 202 is coupled to theRF ASIC 210 using DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203. The DVB-H receiver 202 receives a DVB-H RF signal 206 and converts this signal to information (not shown) suitable for display on thedisplay device 204. - The
exemplary GSM transceiver 201 is used for both transmission and reception of GSM RF signals 207 usingantenna 265, but could be a transmitter only, if desired. TheGSM transceiver 201 comprises anRF ASIC 210, aBB ASIC 220, aFEM 250, and a selectableRF notch filter 280, and theantenna 265. Theantenna 265 need not be part of theGSM transceiver 201. TheBB ASIC 220 andRF ASIC 210 communicate through in-phase and quadrature (IQ) signals (generally: I- and Q-signals comprise information that is to be transmitted or received) 215 and RF controls 216. TheRF ASIC 210 is an RF device that creates and communicates RF signals using two frequency bands, the 850/900TX 225 and the 1800/1900TX 230 to the FEM. Note that theRF ASIC 210 may comprise multiple RF devices that create and communicate the RF signals. The FEM comprises one ormore PAs 251, one ormore filters 252, FEM switches 253, and anantenna output 254, coupled toantenna 265. Thefilters 252 can perform reception pre-filtering, and theFEM 250 communicates four reception frequency bands, the 850RX RX RX RX 247, to theRF ASIC 210. Typically signals 225, 230, 235, 240, 245, and 247 are individual signal lines. It should be noted that thefrequency bands bus 291. Typically, only one of the frequency bands 225-247 occupies thebus 291 at one time and the bus is made to hold only signals from a currently selected one of the frequency bands 225-247. - The
FEM 250 and theRF ASIC 210 also communicate through RF controls 217, which include reception/transmission (RX/TX)control 218 andPA biasing signal 219. The RX/TX control 218 is a signal that indicates whether theFEM 250 is to be in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode. ThePA biasing signal 219 is a signal that changes PA biasing of the one ormore PAs 251. TheRF ASIC 210 transmits either the 850/900TX 225 or the 1800/1900TX 230 frequency bands to theantenna 265 using the RF transmitpath 270. The RF transmitpath 270 is any path through which RF signals may be routed for transmission. For instance, when theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using the 850/900TX 225 frequency band, the RF transmitpath 270 comprises thebus 291, theFEM 250, and theantenna coupling 261, and, optionally, theantenna 265. TheRF ASIC 210 communicates to the selectableRF notch filter 280 using the RF controls 290, which include the RX/TX control 291 andRF band information 292. The RX/TX control 291 is a signal that indicates whether theFEM 250 is to be in a transmit (TX) or a reception (RX) mode, and may be a copy of the RX/TX control 218 if desired. Illustratively, theRF band information 292 is a signal having information used to determine which of the 850, 950, 1800, and 1900 frequency bands is being used. - Filtering of the transmission signals of one of the 850, 950, 1800, and 1900 frequency bands is done adaptively by using transmission on/off information (e.g., in the RX/TX control 291) and operating frequency band information (e.g., in the RF band information 292). In an exemplary embodiment, the filter used in the selectable
RF notch filter 280 is a branch-selectable notch filter, which has multiple selections with multiple notch rejection specifications. Exemplary selectableRF notch filters 280 are shown inFIGS. 3-6A . - The DVB-H
receiver status signal 203 can be used to determine when filtering is performed. In one exemplary embodiment, the DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203 is a signal indicating whether the DVB-H receiver 202 is in a reception mode. In response to the DVB-H receiver being in a reception mode, theGSM transceiver 201 performs filtering of transmitted GSM signals. In another exemplary embodiment, the DVB-H receiver 202 could be contained in a removable module (not shown). When the removable module is coupled to themobile station 200, the DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203 indicates that the removable module is coupled to themobile station 200, and theGSM transceiver 201 performs filtering of transmitted GSM signals in response to the DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203. Note that the DVB-Hreceiver status signal 203 could be determined through a query by theRF ASIC 210 to the DVB-H receiver 202. - When notch filtering is used, then higher losses can be expected in the signal communicated on the RF transmit
path 270 to theantenna 265. Thus, notch filtering means lower radiated output power. For this reason, the extra notch filtering, in an exemplary embodiment, is used only when needed. - Consequently, a notch is selected based on operating frequency band and a notch is typically selected only when transmission is on. The selectable
RF notch filter 280 modifies the RF transmitpath 270 to couple one or more filters to or decouple one or more filters from the RF transmitpath 270. Since extra filtering increases loss to the RF transmitpath 270, filtering is removed when GSM is in reception mode. This way, GSM sensitivity can be maintained. - The notch filtering in the 850 frequency band is typically performed for the second harmonic rejection and may be performed for wide band noise filtering (e.g., noise that is converted to 1670-1675 MHz frequency band). In 900/1800/1900 frequency bands, the filtering is done to suppress wide band noise. Noise from 900 MHz for EU DVB-H frequency band, and noise from 1800/1900 MHz to US DVB-H frequency band are wide band noise at their nature. A “notch filter” in this context is, e.g., a filter with a bandwidth sufficient to cover a DVB-H frequency band. This kind of filter can be referred as notch-filter, and noise can be referred as wideband noise. It is not an intention (though it is possible) to filter wideband, just a DVB-H frequency band (e.g., only US or EU) or frequency bands (e.g., both US and EU).]
- Furthermore, the
PA 251 can be linearized by changing thePA biasing signal 219 to cause thePA 251 to perform closer to or at class A operation. Typically, this means a value of current on thePA biasing signal 219 would be increased. Class A operation should reduce the magnitude of the harmonics. This more linear operation will consume more power and generate more heat, but this more linear mode is needed only when theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting (e.g., which can include preparations to transmit) at the same time a DVB-H module is in reception mode. This way total current consumption is not increased significantly. - The
control logic 285, as part of theRF ASIC 210, communicates the RF controls 290 to the selectableRF notch filter 280. Thecontrol logic 285 also, in one exemplary embodiment, controls operations of theGSM transceiver 701. It should be noted that a portion or all of thecontrol logic 285 may reside in locations other than theRF ASIC 210, such as being distributed between theRF ASIC 210 and theBB ASIC 220 or being its own module separate from theRF ASIC 210 or theBB ASIC 220. Additionally, thecontrol logic 285 can adjust thePA biasing signal 219. Note that a control logic portion can be added to the selectableRF notch filter 280, if desired, so that the selectableRF notch filter 280 will determine, using signals from theRF ASIC 210 and the DVB-H receiver 208, what filter should or should not be coupled to theantenna coupling 261. The RX/TX logic 286 determines whether theRF ASIC 210 is in a transmission or reception mode and informs thecontrol logic 285 of the mode. The RX/TX logic 286 (e.g., and the control logic 285) would typically be part ofcontrol logic 285 for theRF ASIC 210. - Although the
RF ASIC 210,BB ASIC 220, andFEM 250 are shown as being separate, portions or all of the three may be combined or further sub-divided. Additionally, some or all of the functionality of the three may be performed by processors such as a digital signal processor (DSP), hardware such as very large scale integrated circuits (VLSI), or programmable logic devices (e.g., using read only memories) such as field programmable gate arrays (FPLGA), or some combination of these or any other suitable device. The signals herein may be, for instance, signals that travel on conductive elements, such as traces or wires, or may be one or more messages that are passed between software modules. - Referring now to
FIG. 3 , apossible portion 399, including one exemplary RF transmitpath portion 370, of themobile station 200 ofFIG. 2 is shown. RF transmitpath portion 370 is a portion of RF transmitpath 270. Theportion 399 comprises theFEM 250, theantenna coupling 261, the selectableRF notch filter 300, and optionally theantenna 265. The selectableRF notch filter 300 comprises aswitch 320 and aswitch 310. In response to RX/TX control 291, theswitch 320 switches between the RX connection (e.g., when theGSM transceiver 201 is in a reception mode) and the TX connection (e.g., when theGSM transceiver 201 is in a transmission mode). In response to theRF band information 292, theswitch 310 switches between connection 311 (e.g., when theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using theGSM 850 frequency band), which couples anotch filter 330 to the RF transmitpath portion 370, and the connection 312 (e.g., when theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using theGSM 1900 frequency band), which couples anotch filter 340 to the RF transmitpath portion 370. Note that for the EU DVB-H system: the kind of functionality inFIG. 3 may be used atGSM - Thus, there are three different options for notch filter selection based on transmission or reception and operating frequency band:
- Notch 1 (i.e., notch filter 330) option: Used when the
GSM 850 frequency band is being used for transmission, and the filtering is performed for second harmonic and wide band noise filtering; - Notch 2 (i.e., notch filter 340) option: Used when the
GSM 1900 frequency band is being used for transmission, and the filtering is performed for wideband noise filtering; and - Not connected (i.e., the RX connection in
switch 320, which connects to the not connected terminal 321) option: Used when theGSM transceiver 201 is in a reception mode. The not connected option does not add extra loss to the RF transmitpath portion 370 and thus receiver sensitivity can be maintained. - The notch filters 330, 340 could be realized, for instance, with ceramic components or bulk acoustic wave (BAW) components, or micro-electromechanical switches (MEMS). The notch filters 330, 340 may also be realized using surface-mount devices (SMDs).
-
FIG. 4 shows another possibleexemplary portion 499, including the RF transmitpath portion 470, of themobile station 200 ofFIG. 2 . Transmitpath portion 470 is a portion of the RF transmitpath 270 ofFIG. 2 . Theexemplary portion 499 comprises a gallium arsenide (GaAs)switch 300 having three positions. TheGaAs switch 400 is responsive to the RX/TX control 291 and theRF band information 292 to select one of the switches. Note that the RX/FX control 291 and theRF band information 292 may be combined into two control signals if desired. TheGaAs switch 400 has a first position that couples thenotch filter 330 to theantenna coupling 261, a second position that couples thenotch filter 340 to theantenna coupling 261, and a third position that couples a not connected terminal to theantenna coupling 261. -
FIG. 5 shows anotherexemplary portion 599, including the RF transmitpath portion 570, of themobile station 200 ofFIG. 2 . Transmitpath portion 570 is a portion of the RF transmitpath 270 ofFIG. 2 . In the example ofFIG. 5 , the selectableRF notch filter 500 comprises twoswitches switch control signal C1 511,C2 521. The control signalsC1 511 andC2 521 are controlled as shown in table 530 ofFIG. 5 . In this example, whenC1 511 is zero andC2 521 is zero, this is a not connected option. TheNotch 1 option is chosen whenC1 511 is one andC2 521 is zero, while theNotch 2 option is chosen whenC1 511 is zero andC2 521 is one. One exemplary technique for generating the control signalsC1 511 andC2 521 is by having the control logic 285 (seeFIG. 2 ) generate the control signalsC1 511 andC2 521 from data about whether theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting and, if so, on what frequency band. The notch filters 330, 340 are selectable resonances. Note that control logic could be built into the selectableRF notch filter 500 so that the selectable RF notch filter generates the control signalsC1 511 andC2 521 based on signals from theRF ASIC 210. - Turning now to
FIG. 6 , another exemplarypossible portion 699, including RF transmitpath portion 670, is shown of the mobile station ofFIG. 2 . Theportion 699 comprises theFEM 150, twoswitches noise filter 620 for theGSM 1900 frequency band, anotch filter 630 for theGSM 850 frequency band, afiltering control signal 645, theantenna coupling 261, and optionally theantenna 265.FIG. 6 illustrates an alternative proposal for a filter arrangement and is a filter bank approach. Theswitches filtering control signal 645 to modify the transmitportion 670 to couple thenoise filter 620 ornotch filter 630 to the RF transmitpath portion 670 or to uncouple thenoise filter 620 andnotch filter 630 from the RF transmit path portion 670 (e.g., using the unfiltered connection 650). When theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using theGSM 850 frequency band, theswitches notch filter 630 to the RF transmitpath portion 670. When theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting using theGSM 1900 frequency band, theswitches noise filter 620 to the RF transmitpath portion 670. When theGSM transceiver 201 is transmitting on theGSM H receiver 202 is not in a reception mode), theswitches unfiltered connection 650 to the RF transmitpath portion 670. -
FIG. 6A is an alternative implementation for the radio transmitter presented inFIG. 6 . One difference is thesecond antenna 660, which is connected to notchfilter 630. When afiltered signal 631 is transmitted directly fromfilter 630 viaantenna 660, then linearity and harmonic suppression can be maintained. Also transmitted output power can be increased by insertion loss ofswitch 640. Also a similar kind ofextra antenna 670 can be connected tonoise filter 620 and the same benefits would occur with the filteredsignal 621. - Turning now to
FIG. 7 , amobile station 700 is shown in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.Mobile station 700 contains many of the components shown inFIG. 2 . In this example, however, theGSM transceiver 701 comprises a selectableRF notch filter 705 that also uses the RX on/off signal 703. The DVB-H receiver 702 comprisescontrol logic 708 that generates the RX on/off signal 703. The RX on/offsignal 701 is a signal indicating whether the DVB-H receiver 702 is or is not in a reception mode. The selectableRF notch filter 705 comprisesfilter selection logic 710 that uses the RF controls 291 and the RX on/off signal 703 to select and couple a filter (seeFIGS. 3-6 ) to theantenna coupling 261 or to decouple the filter from theantenna coupling 261. Thefilter selection logic 710 is control logic for the selectableRF notch filter 705. The RX on/off signal 703 may be enabled by the DVB-H receiver 702 when the DVB-H receiver 702 is in a reception mode, or logic in the selectableRF notch filter 705 can query the DVB-H receiver 702 for the RX on/off signal 703. - In the filtering scheme of
FIG. 7 , whether the DVB-H receiver 702 is in a reception mode or not (e.g., as indicated by the RX on/off signal 703) is used also for filter selection. The DVB-H receiver 702 typically receives for a few hundred milliseconds and then the DVB-H receiver 702 is in idle mode for a few seconds. When the DVB-H receiver 702 is in an idle mode, extra filtering is not needed. - When the RX on/off signal 703 is also used for controlling filtering of frequency bands, then filtering is generally used only when the DVB-
H receiver 702 is in a reception mode (e.g., actively receiving or possibly preparing to receive) and a GSM frequency band is being transmitted by theGSM transceiver 701 at the same time. - Alternative techniques for filtering U.S. DVB-H channel noise caused by GSM transmissions can be performed in dual-mode GSM and wide-band CDMA (WCDMA) mobile stations. A typical dual-
mode transceiver 800, for use in a dual mode GSM/WDCMA mobile station, is shown inFIG. 8 .Transceiver 800 comprises anRF ASIC 810, aGSM bus 820, aGSM PA 830, aWCDMA bus 840, aWCDMA PA 850, aduplex filter 860,antennas antenna couplings GSM bus 820, and WCDMA signals are transmitted over theWCDMA bus 840. - Future U.S. products will include WCDMA operation at both
cellular frequency bands exemplary transceiver 800 of which is shown inFIG. 8 , will be dual-band products with dual-mode operation. - Since WCDMA and GSM are operating at the same frequency, one common antenna (e.g.,
antenna 865, coupled to theduplex filter 860 using the antenna coupling 875) can be used or separate antennas (e.g.,antenna 865 andantenna coupling 831 for GSM andantenna 870 andantenna coupling 841 for WCDMA) for both systems can be used. The dotted lines inFIG. 8 indicate optional arrangements. -
FIG. 8 shows onlyWCDMA duplex filter 860, but in fact for eachfrequency band duplex filter 860 is needed. Additionally, aduplex filter 860 typically contains two pass-band filters: one for reception and one for transmission. - Referring now to
FIG. 9 , this figure shows a dual-mode transceiver 900 operating in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.Transceiver 900 comprises anRF ASIC 910, aGSM bus 920, aGSM PA 930, aWCDMA bus 940, aWCDMA PA 950, twoduplex filters switch module 950,antennas antenna couplings switch outputs RF ASIC 910 is an RF device that creates and communicates RF signals using one of several frequency bands. Note that theRF ASIC 910 may comprise multiple RF devices (e.g., one RF device could create and communicate RF signals defined by the GSM communication protocol, while another RF device creates and communicates RF signals defined by the WCDMA protocol). When a DVB-H receiver (not shown inFIG. 9 ) is not coupled to the dual-mode transceiver 900 or is not in a reception mode (e.g., receiving), signals defined by the GSM communication protocol are typically transmitted over theGSM bus 920 and theswitch output 921, and signals defined by the WCDMA communication protocol are transmitted over theWCDMA bus 940 and theswitch output 922. - As with
FIG. 8 , since the communication protocols of WCDMA and GSM are operating at the same frequency, one common antenna (e.g.,antenna 965, coupled to theduplex filter 960 using the antenna coupling 975) can be used or separate antennas (e.g.,antenna 965 andantenna coupling 931 for GSM andantenna 970 andantenna coupling 941 for WCDMA) for each communication protocol can be used. The dotted lines inFIG. 9 indicate optional arrangements for theantennas antenna couplings FIG. 9 shows that for eachfrequency band duplex filter - In
FIG. 9 , theswitch module 950 comprises twoswitches control logic 955 uses an input from the DVB-H receiver (not shown inFIG. 9 ) to determine thecontrol signal 956, which in this example is two bits. Thecontrol signal 956 is also determined using the transmitting frequency bands for GSM. The control of the GSM routing to WCDMA transmitter is controlled with operating band information and when DVB-H is active. - The
switch module 950 is responsive to states of thecontrol signal 956 and will modify the RF transmitpath 970 to couple the duplex filters 960, 961 to the RF transmitpath 970 when certain conditions are met. The RF transmitpath 970 is modified so that the duplex filters 960, 961 are coupled to the RF transmitpath 970 by coupling theGSM bus 920 to theswitch output 922, so that theWCDMA PA 950 and the duplex filters 960, 961 (e.g., and possibly the antenna 970) become part of the RF transmitpath 970. In the example ofFIG. 9 and as shown in table 957, theGSM bus 920 is coupled to theWCDMA PA 950 when thecontrol signal 956 has a state where two bits are a zero and a one. For other versions of thecontrol signal 956, the RF transmitpath 970 is modified by theswitch module 950 to decouple theduplex filter 960 from the RF transmitpath 970 for GSM signals from theRF ASIC 910. For instance, theGSM bus 920 remains coupled to theGSM PA 930 when thecontrol signal 956 has a state where two bits are both zeros. TheWCDMA bus 940 remains coupled to theWCDMA PA 950 when thecontrol signal 956 has a state where two bits are both ones. The state of having a first bit being a one and a second bit being a zero for thecontrol signal 956 is not allowed in this example. It should be noted inFIG. 9 that there is only one RF transmitpath 970, as both WCDMA and GSM signals will not be transmitted at the same time. - In WCDMA mode (e.g., both bits of the
control signal 956 are ones in the example ofFIG. 9 ), the transmission is filtered after theWCDMA PA 950 with aduplex filter 960. Transmission filters (not shown) in the duplex filters 960, 961 will attenuate transmission harmonics and wide band noise. For at least this reason, a GSM transmission can be filtered by the duplex filters 960, 961. - The duplex filters 960, 961 will increase loss after the
WCDMA PA 950 and thus lower transmitted output power is delivered to antenna 965 (e.g., or 970). For this reason, it is beneficial that the GSM transmission is filtered only when DVB-H receiver is in a reception state. InFIG. 9 , “GSM” means both the 850 and 1900 frequency bands for the GSM communication protocol and “WCDMA” means both the 850 and 1900 frequency bands for the WCDMA communication protocol. Additionally, inFIG. 9 , theGSM PA 930 includes bothGSM frequency band WCDMA PA 950 includes bothWCDMA frequency band 850 andfrequency band 1900 amplifiers. -
FIGS. 2-7 and 9 have shown examples of how interoperability between receivers and transmitters can be improved in a mobile station.FIGS. 2-7 and 9 use filtering, among other things, to improve interoperability. -
FIGS. 10 and 11 illustrate other exemplary techniques for improving interoperability between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station. In particular, in response to a transmission (e.g., which can include preparations to transmit) the DVB-H receiver is adjusted, preferably by modifying inputs used by devices in the DVB-H receiver. - Turning now to
FIG. 10 , amobile station 1000 is shown.Mobile station 1000 comprises aGSM transceiver 1010 coupled to a DVB-H receiver 1020. DVB-H receiver 1020 comprisescontrol logic 1030, anLNA 1035, amixer 1040, one ormore filters 1045, asignal processing module 1050, and anAGC module 1055. TheAGC module 1055 comprises anAGC algorithm 1061. Thesignal processing module 1050 comprises one or moredigital filters 1070. Thecontrol logic 1030 controls operations of the DVB-H receiver 1020, such as controlling theLNA 1035,mixer 1040,filters 1045,signal processing module 1050, andAGC module 1055 to receive information in the DVB-H frequency band of the DVB-H RF signal 1090. Certain signals are coupled between theGSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020. Thecontrol logic 1011 of theGSM transceiver 1010 generates these signals. In the example ofFIG. 10 , the following signals are coupled between theGSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020: 850 or 1900operation 1005; RX/TX on/off 1006; RX/TX signal level 1007; and usedRF channel 1008. Note that not all of these signals need to be used and additional signals may be provided, if desired. The control logic is responsive to the signals 1005-1008 and modifies one or more of the value(s) 1036, 1041, 1051, and 1061 in response to one or more of the signals 1005-1008. - The channel numbers of different GSM systems are shown in table below:
GSM system Lowest channel number Highest channel number GSM850 128 251 GSM900 975 124 GSM1800 512 885 GSM1900 512 810 - From this table, it can be seen that the same channel numbers are used in different GSM systems. Thus operational band information is needed for controlling purposes.
- The
signal 1007 information can be used for the optimization purposes. When transmission signal levels are known, then the DVB-H receiver can be linearized only to a needed level. This is desirable since a more linear mode consumes more power. - Additionally, some or all of the functionality (e.g., including the
devices H receiver 1010 may be performed by processors such as a digital signal processor (DSP), hardware such as very large scale integrated circuits (VLSI), or programmable logic devices (e.g., using read only memories) such as field programmable gate arrays (FPLGA), or some combination of these or any other suitable device. The signals herein may be, for instance, signals that travel on conductive elements, such as traces or wires, or may be one or more messages that are passed between software modules. - Referring now to
FIG. 11 , with appropriate reference toFIG. 10 , amethod 1100 is shown for improving interoperability between theGSM transceiver 1010 and the DVB-H receiver 1020 in themobile station 1000.Method 1100 is typically performed by thecontrol logic 1030. - In
step 1110, it is determined if theGSM transceiver 1010 is in transmission mode (e.g., or is not in a reception mode). Adjustment is not needed when theGSM transceiver 1010 is in reception mode (step 1110=No), and default inputs are applied to thedevices inputs GSM transceiver 1010 may also have an idle mode, and default inputs would also be applied to the devices when theGSM transceiver 1010 is in idle mode. - If the
GSM transceiver 110 is operating in transmission mode (step 1110=Yes), then the method continues instep 1130. Note that one or all ofsteps 1130 through 1160 may be performed. - In step 1103, the
LNA 1035 andmixer 1040 are adjusted usinginputs LNA 1035 and themixer 1040 may be separately adjusted, if desired. The inputs for theLNA 1035 andmixer 1040 are modified for more linear mode with higher noise figure when harmonics are transmitted in order to avoid compression. This way, the DVB-H receiver 1020 can better tolerate interference signals. - Increasing the biasing current (e.g., as input 1036) of the
LNA 1035 can force theLNA 1035 to a more linear mode. The same applies also for mixer 1040 (e.g., increasing the biasing current asinput 1041 to themixer 1040 can force themixer 1040 to a more linear mode). In normal operation mode (step 1120), theLNA 1035 andmixer 1040 are biased (e.g., usinginputs 1036 and 1041) to a low biasing mode in order to achieve a long operating time for themobile station 1000. The high biasing mode (step 1130) is typically only used when high interference signal of a GSM transmission is present. This high biasing mode consumes more power and thus reduces operating time of themobile station 1000. - Note that
step 1130 will typically change to high biasing mode when theGSM transceiver 1010 is transmitting on either of the 850 or 1900 frequency bands (e.g., as indicated by the RX/TX On/off signal 1006). - In
step 1140, DVB-H RF filtering, as performed by filter(s) 1045, is modified based on GSM transmission frequency information. The GSM transmission frequency information can be determined using the signal usedRF channel 1008, which indicates whether the 850 or 1900 frequency band was used, and the 850 or 1900operation signal 1005, which indicates whether one of thefrequency bands Step 1140 is typically used when GSM harmonics will fall near the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 but the actual harmonic is outside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (e.g., an out-of-band blocker).Step 1140 is used, for instance, for the 1900 frequency band, which generates harmonics outside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090. - The filtering can be changed at the base band filtering (performed, e.g., by filters 1045) and in filtering performed by the
signal processing module 1050. Typically, thesignal processing module 1050 is implemented at least partially by a DSP. The base band filtering can be modified by reducing the signal bandwidth. The actual modification is the modification of a corner frequency of alow pass filter 1045 or modification of an order of thefilter 1045 or both. These modifications may be performed throughinputs 1046, which are typically values associated with thefilter 1045. The modification of order may improve performance of the DVB-H receiver 1020 when the signal interference caused by the GSM transmission is near the DVB-H frequency band. Analog domain filtering is done to protect an analog-to-digital converter (not shown) in the DVB-H receiver 1020 from not saturating due to strong interference signals. - The filtering (e.g., digital filter 1070) performed by the
signal processing module 1050 can be changed by altering the filtering coefficient (e.g., an input 1051) of a finite impulse response (FIR) filter implemented by thesignal processing module 1050. Filtering performed by thesignal processing module 1050 may also be used to filter sub-carriers of the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (seestep 1150 below). The filtering performed by thesignal processing module 1050 also corrects non-idealities caused by analog filtering. The non-idealities comprise amplitude and phase corrections. - In
step 1150, corrupted sub-carriers are removed. The DVB-H signal is an orthogonal frequency division multiplexed (OFDM) signal which includes a number of sub-carriers (in 2k mode 1705, 4k mode 3409 and 8k mode 6817 sub-carriers). When GSM channel number (e.g., through used RF channel signal 1008) is submitted to the DVB-H receiver 1020, the signal processing module 1050 (e.g., implemented using a DSP) can remove corrupted sub-carriers, because GSM harmonics will completely destroy only selected sub-carriers.Step 1150 is typically performed when transmission in a GSM frequency band, such as the 850 frequency band, generates harmonics inside of the frequency band used by the DVB-H RF signal 1090 (e.g., co-channel interference or spurious interference). - The corrupted sub-carriers can be removed by ignoring the sub-carrier information. This is the easiest technique to implement removal of sub-carriers. An alternative technique is to ignore sub-carrier information from sub-carriers that are expected to be corrupted and to use previous information (e.g., stored information) from these sub-carriers. This stored information is added to new information from other carriers and this mixed combined signal is filtered and further processed.
- In
step 1150, thecontrol logic 1030 modifies an input 1151 to thesignal processing module 1050, and thesignal processing module 1050 is responsive to the modified input 1151 to filter corrupted sub-carriers. For instance, the input 1151 could be a default message (e.g., “perform normal processing”) when the usedRF channel signal 1008 indicates that the 850 frequency band is not being used for transmission, and the input 1151 could be a different message (e.g., “remove sub-carriers”) when the usedRF channel signal 1008 indicates that the 850 frequency band is being used for transmission. - The impact of the sub-carrier removal is that raw bit-error rate will increase but if the bit-per-symbol interleaving is done over several sub-carriers and over multiple symbol times, then this sub-carrier information removal may be corrected. The correction is based on signal interleaving and information coding. The actual performance reduction, which can be seen by sub-carrier removal, is a function of the performance of interleaving and coding and the signal bandwidth of DVB-H RF signal 1090.
- In
step 1160, theAGC module 1055 can be altered, usinginputs 1061 and typically theAGC algorithm 1060, when harmonics are present, such as when the 850 frequency band is being used to transmit. In this manner, the recovery time from the high power spurious signals can be improved. For instance, an AGC value which determines actual amplification of the variable gain amplifier (not shown) before spurious signals are present (e.g., as determined by the 850 or 1900operation signal 1005 and the used RF channel signal 1008) can be used until after the spurious signals disappear. For instance, thecontrol logic 1030 could cause aninput 1061 to be modified that in turn causes theAGC algorithm 1060 to “freeze” its value until theinput 1061 is again modified. Another possibility is that AGC bandwidth can be altered (e.g., such as by modifyingvalues using inputs 1061 of a filter used by the AGC 1055) when narrow-bandwidth spurious signals are expected to appear. - Exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been described thus far in terms of specific examples of frequency bands and the like. However, it should be kept in mind that these teachings can be applied to other frequency bands, such as the frequency bands of 470-702 MHz that are allocated in the E.U. for DVB-H broadcasts, and to other the cellular transmission bands such as those produced by TDMA and/or CDMA cellular systems.
- Also, while the above disclosure of the presently preferred embodiments has concentrated on the use of the DVB-H and GSM systems, those skilled in the art should realize that these should not be read as limitations on the practice of this invention, and that other types of communications systems using the same or different frequency bands may also benefit from the use of this invention.
- It should be noted that embodiments of the present invention might be implemented on a signal bearing medium comprising a program of machine-readable instructions. The machine-readable instructions are executable by an apparatus to perform operations of one or more steps involved with the present invention.
- Furthermore, filtering of a GSM signal is shown occurring at the
antenna coupling 261, but other locations are possible. For instance, filtering could occur before thePA 251 ofFIGS. 2 and 7 , although filtering before thePA 251 may be less beneficial than filtering after thePA 251. - Additionally, the techniques presented above may be used for other frequency bands, such as the frequency bands specified by the CDMAOne and CDMA2000 standards. Broadly, any frequency band that can cause problems with DVB_H frequency bands may be filtered (e.g.,
FIGS. 2-10 ), inputs of devices in a DVB-H receiver modified (e.g.,FIGS. 10 and 11 ), or both. - The foregoing description has provided by way of exemplary and non-limiting examples a full and informative description of the best method and apparatus presently contemplated by the inventors for carrying out the invention. However, various modifications and adaptations may become apparent to those skilled in the relevant arts in view of the foregoing description, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the appended claims. However, all such and similar modifications of the teachings of this invention will still fall within the scope of this invention.
- Furthermore, some of the features of the preferred embodiments of this invention could be used to advantage without the corresponding use of other features. As such, the foregoing description should be considered as merely illustrative of the principles of the present invention, and not in limitation thereof.
Claims (59)
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US11/020,981 US20060135083A1 (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2004-12-22 | Interoperability between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
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EP05857350.2A EP1829229B1 (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2005-12-22 | Interoperability improvement between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
CN2005800478614A CN101116253B (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2005-12-22 | Interoperability improvement between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
PCT/IB2005/003904 WO2006085139A2 (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2005-12-22 | Interoperability improvement between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
KR1020077016969A KR100938619B1 (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2005-12-22 | Interoperability improvement between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
US11/473,275 US7676243B2 (en) | 2004-12-22 | 2006-06-20 | Interoperability improvement between receivers and transmitters in a mobile station |
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Also Published As
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CN101116253A (en) | 2008-01-30 |
US20060135195A1 (en) | 2006-06-22 |
US7477915B2 (en) | 2009-01-13 |
CN101116253B (en) | 2011-02-09 |
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