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Green radio despite "Dirty RF" front-end

Abstract

In this article, we show that the non-ideal Radio-Frequency (RF) front-ends have to be corrected in order to contribute in a Green radio development. In fact, the effects of typical RF imperfections, like nonlinearities, carrier frequency offsets, and IQ imbalances, can be compensated for, when digital correction algorithms are applied. Such algorithms enable Green applications (e.g., Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access for the uplink) despite a restrictive RF imperfection, or allow a less constrained hardware design, which reduces the chip area and the number of components (Green design) or facilitate the reduction of spectral pollution and of power consumption (Green transmission). So, we propose to implement these correction methods to compensate for the damaging effects of RF imperfections in mind of a Green issue.

Introduction

It is now well established that the optimization of the performance of the whole communication system has to consider the effect of its Radio-Frequency (RF) front-end to avoid a waste of resources and a huge margin in design. This requirement becomes particularly important due to the increasing use of complex dynamic signals, like Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM). Such signals are necessary to improve the system performance in hostile environment or to develop reconfigurable systems for cognitive radio. Concerning the RF part, designing a Green radio first consists in the improvement of efficiency. It is well known that the most power-consuming circuit is the power amplifier (PA) of the transmitter of handset systems as well as of the base station [1]. Many authors have considered this issue in particular since complex modulations with non-constant envelope signals are employed.

On top of that, the RF front-end limits the performance of the transmission because of its imperfections. Indeed the performance is affected by various RF imperfections like nonlinearities, frequency offset between the transmitter and the receiver, phase noise of local oscillator, IQ imbalance, etc. These RF imperfections and their impacts have been reported in a new concept referred as "Dirty RF" by Fettweis et al. [2]. In recent years, several parts of the RF front-end have been considered to evaluate the overall performance of a communication system, and digital methods have been developed to compensate for their damaging effects and then to improve the performance of a given non-ideal system.

In this article, we show how the correction of RF front-end imperfections can participate in the design of Green radio. Some of these corrections enable a Green transmission (in the sense of the reduction of spectral pollution and energy consumption) or a Green application (like Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access--OFDMA in the uplink); other corrections allow to reduce the chip area and the number of circuit components, and thus allow a Green production. So, in the sequel, we give some examples to show that the application of our correction methods can help in the compensation of the effect of RF circuit imperfections in different Green objectives.

Green radio despite "Dirty RF physical implementation" thanks to digital correction

One Green objective for the RF front-end can be to minimize the chip area and the number of components. To achieve this objective, a transmission system with direct frequency conversion is a good solution. Unfortunately, such systems are more sensitive to some RF imperfections, like IQ imbalance in the modulator/demodulator or carrier frequency offsets (CFOs) (due to a higher frequency of the local oscillator). The consequences are a degradation of the performance, which has to be compensated for.

It is well known that the IQ imbalance can be modeled by a mismatch of the phase φ due to an imprecise phase quadrature and/or by a mismatch of the gain g due to different mixer characteristics between the two branches I and Q.

For the transmitter case (Figure 1) at the transposed frequency f OL , the equivalent base band signal affected by the IQ imbalance can be written in the frequency domain as

Figure 1
figure 1

IQ imbalance representation at the transmitter.

S k ( n ) = F e I k E k ( n ) K E 1 k + E - k * ( n ) K E 2 - k *
(1)

with

K E 1 k = 1 + g E e j φ E F e Q k F e I k 2
(2)

and

K E 2 - k = 1 - g E e - j φ E F e Q - k F e I - k 2
(3)

where F eIk and F eQk are the I and Q frequency responses on the band, k is the carrier index (particularly in the case of an OFDM signal), n is the symbol index, and E k (n) is the initial symbol to be transmitted. The gain of the PA is considered to be linear and equal to 1 in this equation.

The IQ imbalance causes interference between the two branches. Furthermore, the received signal is affected by the propagation channel and the receiver noise. A similar model takes into account the IQ imbalance at the receiver.

In order to compensate for these degradations, the receiver needs to jointly estimate the channel response and the imbalance characteristics before correcting the received symbols.

Many methods have been proposed to compensate for the IQ imbalance effect but generally the complexity of such methods is high or their application requires modifications of standards. Recently, we have developed a digital correction method, presented in [3], that gives good performances with a low complexity, even for large mismatches. Applying this algorithm to a 64QAM-OFDM signal (like in HiperLAN2) allows for example to accept:

  • an IQ imbalance at the transmitter up to 10° in phase and 20% in gain with a degradation of the Signal-to-Noise ratio (SNR) less than 2 dB for a fixed uncoded BER of 10-2;

  • an IQ imbalance at the receiver up to 30° in phase and 100% in gain with a degradation of the SNR less than 1.5 dB for a fixed uncoded BER of 10-2.

This example shows that it is then possible to relax constraints on the implementation because the phase variation induces a possible variation of the branches length, leading to a reduction of the chip area. For a carrier frequency in the GHz range, a phase of several degrees corresponds to a length of several millimeters.

The ability of efficiently correcting the effect of the IQ imbalance (frequency selective or not) facilitates to accept an imperfect physical implementation with a reduced chip area. That is a way to help in the design of a Green radio especially in the case of a direct-conversion system.

Green radio despite "Dirty RF amplifier" thanks to channels pollution reduction method

One Green objective for the RF front-end is to minimize the spectral pollution of adjacent channels.

At the same time, it is necessary to optimize the transmitter efficiency, for the base station as well as handsets. To benefit from a large PA efficiency, it is necessary to operate near the nonlinear zone, degrading consequently the linearity of the whole system. This brings a particular disadvantage for non-constant envelope signals. It is then necessary to compensate for that by applying a linearization method or a signal dynamic reduction to avoid the pollution of neighboring channels.

Though many studies have dealt with this issue, applying such techniques separately is not sufficient, in particular in the case of complex signals like OFDM, which present a large dynamic. The combination of these methods seems promising [4] as long as the complexity is not dramatically increased.

In our recent studies [5], we have combined (Figure 2) a linearization method, usually called "Digital Predistortion" (DPD), and a Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) reduction technique called "Active Constellation Extension" (ACE) method. This combination has not yet been studied before, and it allows to improve the linearity performance without degradation of the bit error rate (BER). Measurements have been made on a real amplifier to prove its efficiency.

Figure 2
figure 2

Joint DPD and ACE.

The ACE method is well suited, as it is dedicated to OFDM signals. Moreover, compared to other methods, it allows to improve the out-of-band performance without degrading the in-band performance. The ACE method makes it possible to modify the constellation of the digital modulation of OFDM symbols to reduce their dynamic without degrading the BER. The ACE is an iterative process, which requires one extra FFT algorithm. However, the development of the digital circuits allows the implementation of the ACE with increasing efficiency [6].

The DPD of the input signal by a function that approximates the inverse of the nonlinearity is the most popular linearization method. In our case, the "predistortion function" is determined based on the amplifier output (path 1 in Figure 2), and it is modeled using a memory polynomial expression. As this algorithm computes directly the predistorter characteristic, it is less complex than those that need to evaluate the amplifier characteristic before inverting it.

The predistortion function is then applied to the OFDM signal, of which the PAPR has been reduced. This predistorded OFDM signal is supposed to be nearly linearly amplified when passing through the amplifier (path 2 in Figure 2).

To evaluate the impact of the method, the Adjacent Channel Power Ratio (ACPR) and Alternate Channel Power Ratio (AltCPR) (Figure 3) are measured. They indicate the pollution in direct adjacent channels (ACPR) and next ones (AltCPR), by comparing it to the power in the signal bandwidth (B u ). The largest ACPR and AltCPR correspond to the lowest pollution.

Figure 3
figure 3

ACPR and AltCPR display.

Validated for a simulated nonlinear amplifier, our algorithm has been first applied to a real amplifier (GaN PA polarized in AB-class) for a QPSK-OFDM signal [5]. Figure 4 shows the test bench used to measure the spectrum at the output of the amplifier (called Booster in the figure).

Figure 4
figure 4

Test bench for measurements.

The following figures present the comparison of the new results in terms of ACPR (Figure 5), and AltCPR (Figure 6) measured at the amplifier output versus the output power, obtained for a 16QAM-OFDM signal with 5-MHz bandwidth. The labels "ACE" or "no ACE" refer to the case where the ACE method is applied or not; the labels "DPD" or "no DPD" refer to the case where the DPD method is applied or not.

Figure 5
figure 5

ACPR measurements versus amplifier output power.

Figure 6
figure 6

AltCPR measurements versus amplifier output power.

These new measurement results confirm an improvement of the linearity performance, compared to the cases where the two methods are applied separately, in the immediate adjacent channels as well as in the next ones. Indeed better ACPR and AltCPR performances are obtained when ACE and DPD are jointly applied (red curve). For example, for an output power of 42 dBm, the ACPR is improved by 17 dB compared to the initial case (without ACE and DPD) and the AltCPR is improved by 12 dB. Moreover, for a target ACPR, the work point can be pushed near the saturation zone of the amplifier to achieve a better efficiency. These results are obtained in a more sensitive case (16QAM-OFDM) than in [5] (QPSK-OFDM) proving the robustness of our method.

So, we showed that the combination of these two methods allows to reduce the pollution of both the adjacent and the following channels and thus it helps in the deployment of Green radio systems. Indeed, not only the transmitter efficiency of the considered user is improved, but also the adjacent users are less interfered. Furthermore, BER measurements have shown negligible degradations after the application of the predistortion and ACE methods.

Green radio despite "Dirty RF synthesizer" thanks to interferences reduction method

Another Green objective of new communication systems is to be flexible. However, band and sub-band flexibility leads to an increase of the sensibility to the RF imperfections or to complex RF front-ends. In the following, we show two examples for the case where interference reduction methods permit to deploy efficient Green systems due to the reduction of the effect of various RF imperfections of the frequency synthesizer.

OFDMA in uplink systems for Green radio

OFDMA is an adaptation of the well-known OFDM system that enables to share the spectrum between several users based on a Carrier Allocation Scheme. It is well adapted for Green radio systems as it allows optimized resource and power allocations, with great flexibility, leading to an efficient transmission [7]. Well established for downlink transmission, OFDMA has not yet been chosen for uplink transmissions because the synthesizer in the RF front-end at the transmitter (mobile handset) is not ideal enough and causes interferences between the sub-carriers of received signals at the base station. Figure 7 shows the model of the emitter affected by a CFO resulting from the oscillator frequency mismatch of the emitters.

Figure 7
figure 7

OFDMA transmitter affected by CFO's.

In a recent study [8], we have developed a model that takes into account the CFO between each user and the base station. The signal at the output of the transmitter of user u can be written as

x ( u ) ( t ) = R e e j 2 π f c + δ f c ( u ) t k = 0 N p - 1 a k ( u ) p ( u ) t - k T N p
(4)

where fc is the carrier frequency, δ f c ( u ) represents the CFO of user u with respect to f c , p(u) is the impulse response of the filter at the transmitter, T is the symbol period of an OFDMA symbol, N p is the total number of subcarriers, and a k ( u ) are the symbols after the output of the inverse DFT.

The received signal at the base station is the sum of the signals from each user affected by their respective channels. As it has been shown in [8], at the output of the DFT block the vector of the received signals can be written as

R ¯ = u = 1 N u G ( u ) ¯ A ( u ) ¯
(5)

where R, an N p × 1 vector containing the samples of the received signals, A ( u ) = F -1 a ( u ), the vector of transmitted modulation symbols of user u after subcarrier mapping with F , the N p × N p DFT matrix, G ( u ), the N p × N p channel matrix that can be expressed as

G ( u ) ¯ = H ( u ) ¯ F ¯ δ ( u ) ¯ F 1 ¯ + ( δ N p ( u ) 1 ) F ¯ h Δ ( u ) ¯ δ ( u ) ¯ F 1 ¯
(6)

with H ( u ), the diagonal DFT channel matrix for a user u, δ(u) , a diagonal matrix of the shift coefficients δ k ( u ) = e j 2 π k δ f c ( u ) T N p due to the CFO δ f c ( u ) , h Δ ( u ) , a triangular matrix involving the channel impulse response due to the effect of the CFO on the cyclic prefix (this term is usually neglected in the literature).

As opposed to other models, like [9], our model of the received signal takes into account the effect of the CFO on the cyclic prefix. This makes the model more realistic and improves the channel estimation [10].

Based on this model, we propose to correct the effect of the CFO in presence of estimated channels. This correction will lead to the suppression of most interference at the receiver and allows to deploy OFDMA in uplink transmissions. For the sake of simplicity we allocate K = N p /N u subcarriers to each of the N u users. Adapted from the Serial Interference Cancellation (SIC) algorithm, we propose to divide the blocks G(u)of size K × K into smaller blocks of size S × S, called the inner-blocks, where N s = K/S. Only the S × S blocks are inverted to cancel the interference, which reduces considerably the interference cancellation complexity (see Table 1). We call this method the self-SIC method. Figure 8 shows new results for the performance in presence of CFO and their improvement due to our self-SIC algorithm. The normalized CFO δf(u)is obtained by the ratio of the CFO δ f c ( u ) and the subcarrier spacing Δf, i.e., δ f ( u ) =δ f c ( u ) /Δf. The simulation is based on IEEE 802.11a specifications deployed for N u = 4 users, N p = 256 subcarriers, K = N p /N u = 4, a cyclic prefix of length Lcp = N p /4 = 64, and an SNR of 15 dB.

Table 1 Complexity of our algorithm compared to [11]
Figure 8
figure 8

Performance comparison with and without interference cancellation.

The BER performance is improved due to the self-SIC method, which reduces the interference at the receiver. Up to a normalized CFO of 0.3, the BER of 10-2 is practically maintained. A normalized CFO of δf(u)= 0.3 corresponds in this example to ± 20 ppm stability at 5 GHz; this range of δf(u)corresponds to realistic characteristics of an actual VCO.

Various simulated cases show that the quality of improvement does not depend on the block-size used for each user. This makes our algorithm very competitive in terms of complexity compared to other methods. As an example, the interference cancellation method described in [11] depends on the block-size K and as a consequence its complexity increases with the block-size. Indeed, large block-sizes K × K require the implementation of the inversion of large G(u)matrices. Table 1 compares the computational complexity of our proposed self-SIC method to that of the interference cancellation method proposed in [11].

It is clear that our proposed self-SIC overcomes the disadvantage of large matrix inversions, especially when the number of sub-carriers in the block is large.

So, we prove that despite a mismatch in the low-cost RF front-end synthesizers, it is possible to deploy OFDMA in an uplink transmission due to a not so costly digital correction. This dirty RF model and new digital correction is a suggestion for a Green flexible system.

Optimized multi-band synthesizer for Green radio

In the context of modern Green communications, it is important to allow frequency band hoping to benefit from frequency diversity for each user or from multi-mode running. However, the required frequency synthesizer can suffer from high complexity, as it needs to fulfill the constraints necessary to avoid interference between the users. Based on the example of the MB-OFDM (multi-band OFDM) standard [12] with very strict constraints, we have studied and developed an agile frequency synthesizer, able to switch between 14 frequency bands between 3.432 and 10.296 GHz [13]. It requires only one phase locked loop (PLL); the frequencies are generated by consecutive mixing and selection between different outputs of the PLL.

This architecture allows a switch time less than 10 ns. Imperfections of the components, however, like mixer or multiplexer leakages, or mixer nonlinearities, lead to the generation of spurious frequencies when one of the 14 frequencies is selected. To generate as few spurs as possible, several filters have to be added after the mixers; they are designed to minimize the total spurious power, which must be at least 24 dBc lower than the power of the generated frequency to ensure a good SNR at the receiver. Table 2 shows the spur levels generated in the case of the most constraining frequencies without band-pass filter after mixers and those obtained with suitable band-pass filters. The results prove the positive impact of the filters.

Table 2 Difference between the power of the main frequency and the total spurs power in dBc (has to be greater than 24 dBc)

However, the system can be optimized in terms of the surface area and the number of components if a compensation algorithm is applied to reduce the interference at the receiver produced by the spurs. We have shown, in an uplink transmission, that a SIC algorithm applied at the receiver can improve the performance [14]. With the developed method, it is possible to tolerate a level between total spurious power and the generated frequency of 17 dBc (instead of 24 dBc) with a degradation of the SNR less than 0.1 dB. As shown in Table 2, this minimum level is not reached without a filter, except for the channel Q of 9768 and 10296 MHz, for which the level is nevertheless very close to 17 dBc.

This result shows that the filters may be removed because the associated degradation can be compensated for. The BER at the receiver will not be increased due to the reduction of the induced interferences.

Therefore, we propose to simplify the synthesizer architecture by removing the pass-band filters after the mixers I, II, III, and IV (Figure 9).

Figure 9
figure 9

Proposed simplified agile multi-band synthesizer.

In such a complex structure, removing the filters is an efficient way to reduce the RF system complexity and to optimize the chip surface with regard to a Green objective for the uplink transmission.

Conclusion

Though the RF front-end has often been considered as a degrading part of the system because of its "dirty" characteristics, it has to be taken into account in the development of a Green radio: the imperfections of RF front-end can either be minimized, or they can be compensated for. The examples presented in this article prove that it is possible to tolerate RF imperfections, as the performance can greatly be improved by digital correction methods. This leads to either more efficient transmission in terms of power consumption or spectral pollution, or to a smaller and less complex radio front-end. Both approaches contribute to a Green radio.

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Acknowledgement

The authors would like to thank Jessica Bouvier and Sylvain Traverso of THALES Communications for their participation in the amplifier predistortion study, and the French Ile de France Region DIM for supporting the study on OFDMA uplink through the DESAP project.

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Correspondence to Myriam Ariaudo.

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Ariaudo, M., Fijalkow, I., Gautier, JL. et al. Green radio despite "Dirty RF" front-end. J Wireless Com Network 2012, 146 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1499-2012-146

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