Chap2 - Transceiver Architectures I
Chap2 - Transceiver Architectures I
Heterodyne Direct-Conversion
Receivers Receivers
Problem of Image LO Leakage and Offsets
Mixing Spurs Even-Order Nonlinearity
Sliding-IF RX I/Q Mismatch
All of the stages in the receiver chain that precede channel-selection filtering
must be sufficiently linear
Channel selection must be deferred to some other point where center
frequency is lower and hence required Q is more reasonable
Most receiver front ends do incorporate a “band-select” filter
The front-end band-select filter suffers from a trade-off between its selectivity
and its in-band loss because the edges of the band-pass frequency response
can be sharpened only by increasing the order of the filter.
Front-end loss directly raises the NF of the entire receiver
Explain how a band-pass filter following the LNA can alleviate the TX-RX leakage
in a CDMA system.
Solution:
As depicted in below, if the BPF provides additional rejection in the TX band, the linearity
required of the rest of the RX chain is proportionally relaxed. The LNA compression point,
however, must still be sufficiently high.
Suppose two channels at ω1 and ω2 have been received and ω1 < ω2. Study the
downconverted spectrum as the LO frequency varies from below ω1 to above ω2.
Suppose two channels at ω1 and ω2 have been received and ω1 < ω2. Study the
downconverted spectrum as the LO frequency varies from below ω1 to above ω2.
Solution:
ωLO midway between ω1 and ω2 ωLO > ω2
Formulate the downconversion above using expressions for the desired signal
and the image.
Solution: and
We observe that the components at ωin +ωLO and ωim +ωLO are removed by low-pass filtering,
and those at ωin - ωLO = -ωIF and ωim - ωLO = +ωIF coincide.
Chapter 4 Transceiver Architectures 13
Image Rejection
The most common approach is to precede the mixer with an “image-reject filter”
A filter with high image rejection typically appears between the LNA and the
mixer so that the gain of the LNA lowers the filter’s contribution to the receiver
noise figure
The linearity and selectivity required of the image-reject filter have dictated
passive, off-chip implementations.
The front-end filter selects the band while providing some image rejection as
well (Point B)
Chapter 4 Transceiver Architectures 17
Dual Downconversion (Ⅱ)
Partial channel selection BPF3 permits the use of a second mixer with
reasonable linearity. (Point E)
Spectrum is translated to second IF. (Point F)
Solution:
As shown below, the first image lies at 2ωLO1 -ωin. The second image is located at 2ωLO2 -
(ωin - ωLO1).
As shown below, the desired channel appears at ± ωIF1 and is accompanied by the
interferer. Upon mixing in the time domain, the spectrum at negative frequencies is
convolved with the LO impulse at +ωLO2, sliding to a zero center frequency for the desired
channel. Similarly, the spectrum at positive frequencies is convolved with the impulse at
-ωLO2 and shifted down to zero. The output thus consists of two copies of the desired
channel surrounded by the interferer spectrum at both positive and negative frequencies.
Solution:
To avoid self-corruption, the downconverted spectra must not overlap each other. Thus, as
shown in figure below, the signal can be downconverted to an IF equal to half of the signal
bandwidth. Of course, an interferer may now become the image.
Quadrature downconversion
Fractional bandwidth:
IF
RF input