Abstract:
A noise canceler for use in a transceiver is disclosed. In an exemplary embodiment, an apparatus includes a split amplifier to output an amplified transmit signal, the split amplifier providing a first noise attenuation factor in a receive band. The apparatus also includes a transmit antenna to transmit the amplified transmit signal, the transmit antenna being isolated from a receive antenna by an antenna isolation factor that provides a second noise attenuation factor in the receive band. The apparatus also includes a noise canceler configured to subtract a detection signal from a received signal to obtain an adjusted received signal, wherein subtraction of the detection signal provides a third noise attenuation factor in the receive band, and wherein the first, second, and third noise attenuation factors combine to provide a selected amount of noise attenuation in the receive band.
Abstract:
Disclosed is a wideband antenna comprising a dielectric-loaded cavity-backed patch antenna driven with a stripline. The antenna includes a dielectric resonator. The stripline feeds a probe disposed within the dielectric resonator. The probe emits EM radiation, which is coupled to the patch antenna for transmission.
Abstract:
Methods, systems, and devices are described for transceiver architecture for millimeter wave wireless communications. A device may include two transceiver chip modules configured to communicate in different frequency ranges. The first transceiver chip module may include a baseband sub-module, a first radio frequency front end (RFFE) component and associated antenna array. The second transceiver chip module may include a second RFFE component and associated antenna array. The second transceiver chip module may be separate from the first transceiver chip module. The second transceiver chip module may be electrically coupled to the baseband sub-module of the first transceiver chip module.
Abstract:
An in-band full-duplex transceiver includes a self-interference mixer for up-converting an adjusted digital baseband signal into an up-converted self-interference cancellation signal. The adjusted digital baseband signal has a phase opposite to a phase for a leakage signal from a leakage path for the transceiver. Similarly, the adjusted digital baseband signal has a magnitude matching a magnitude for the leakage signal. Given this phasing and magnitude for the up-converted self-interference signal, it substantially cancels the leakage signal when added with a received signal contaminated by the leakage signal.
Abstract:
Systems and methods for providing indications about the TX RF non-linear impairments are disclosed. In accordance with some implementations, a first device (UE or base station) estimates EVM indications for the signal and determines if the EVM indications is above a threshold. The first device may transmit the estimated TX non-linearity indications such as AM-AM, AM-PM, Volterra coefficients, and/or other performance metrics to a second device, that transmitted the signal, when it is determined that the EVM indications is above the threshold. Systems and methods for wireless communication impairment correction are also disclosed wherein, in accordance with some implementations, a first device receives estimated TX non-linearity indications such as AM-AM, AM-PM, and/or Volterra coefficients from a second device and performs non-linear correction of a transmit signal for the second receiver device based at least in part on the EVM indications. Other aspects, embodiments, and features are also claimed and described.
Abstract:
An apparatus and method for cancelling and/or attenuating one or more signal impairments included within a transmitted RF signal is disclosed. In at least one exemplary embodiment, a baseband signal is generated based, at least in part, on a predicted impairment signal subtracted from a desired baseband signal. An impairment detection signal may be generated by multiplying the predicted impairment signal by the baseband signal. The predicted impairment signal may be adjusted based, at least in part, on the impairment detection signal.
Abstract:
Methods, systems, and devices are described for transceiver architecture for millimeter wave wireless communications. A device may include two transceiver chip modules configured to communicate in different frequency ranges. The first transceiver chip module may include a baseband sub-module, a first radio frequency front end (RFFE) component and associated antenna array. The second transceiver chip module may include a second RFFE component and associated antenna array. The second transceiver chip module may be separate from the first transceiver chip module. The second transceiver chip module may be electrically coupled to the baseband sub-module of the first transceiver chip module.
Abstract:
A noise canceler for use in a transceiver is disclosed. In an exemplary embodiment, an apparatus includes a split amplifier to output an amplified transmit signal, the split amplifier providing a first noise attenuation factor in a receive band. The apparatus also includes a transmit antenna to transmit the amplified transmit signal, the transmit antenna being isolated from a receive antenna by an antenna isolation factor that provides a second noise attenuation factor in the receive band. The apparatus also includes a noise canceler configured to subtract a detection signal from a received signal to obtain an adjusted received signal, wherein subtraction of the detection signal provides a third noise attenuation factor in the receive band, and wherein the first, second, and third noise attenuation factors combine to provide a selected amount of noise attenuation in the receive band.
Abstract:
An apparatus includes a modulator configured to frequency modulate a control signal at a baseband device and an interface configured to transmit the frequency modulated control signal via a cable to a radio-frequency (RF) device.
Abstract:
The apparatus operates communicates with a second wireless device during an active period and performs a radio impairment calibration during a periodic silent period. The calibration may include a receiver calibration, e.g., including gain state training. The calibration may comprise a transmitter calibration.