| Bluetooth Transmitter |
Kaben's Bluetooth TransmitterA more detailed look at Kaben's Polar Loop Bluetooth transmitter architecture is provided in the diagram below. Here the complex (baseband) signal to be transmitted is first converted from Cartesian representation (I & Q) to Polar representation (Magnitude and Phase). The Phase component is fed through a Delta-Sigma Modulator to the (digital) Phase Detector of a Frequency Synthesizer loop. The Phase component of the modulating signal is thus superimposed onto the Voltage Controlled Oscillator output. Meanwhile, the Magnitude component of the modulating signal is held in memory to match the latency of the Phase component traveling through the synthesizer loop, converted to a (baseband) analog signal, and applied as an Automatic Gain Control signal to the output Power Amplifier. This Polar Modulation architecture embraces the frequency agility of a synthesizer loop, while enjoying the well known ultra-low phase-noise and spur-level of Kaben's frequency synthesizers.
The ideal transmit constellation for differential 8PSK modulation is shown in the top diagram. Here, the effect of finite symbol duration manifests itself as eight clusters of output phases / amplitudes, rather than eight distinct points. Including the above relative delay and quantization error, the 8PSK transmit constellation becomes that in the bottom diagram. As can be seen, the amplitude quantization has the most visible effect of stratifying the eight clusters of points.
See Bluetooth |
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