|
Claims  |
|
|
I claim:
1. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator, comprising:
(a) a primary filter means having an input, a coefficient update means, and
an output, wherein said primary filter means is arranged to receive at its
input and at its coefficient update means an error signal from a phase
detector which compares an equalized phase corrected signal entering a
decision means with a signal exiting the decision means, and wherein said
primary filter means is arranged to adaptively provide at its output a
first jitter signal indicative at least of the fundamental phase jitter
frequency of the signal entering the decision means;
(b) harmonic derivation means coupled to the output of said primary filter
means for obtaining said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental
phase jitter frequency and for providing therefrom at least one adapted
signal indicative of at least one higher harmonic of said fundamental
phase jitter frequency;
(c) at least one secondary filter means, each secondary filter means having
an input, a coefficient update means, and an output, wherein a particular
adapted higher harmonic signal corresponding to a particular secondary
filter means is provided to said input thereof, and wherein said error
signal is provided to said coefficient update of each secondary filter
means; and
(d) summation means coupled to the outputs of said primary and secondary
filter means for summing said outputs thereof and for applying said sum to
a multiplier which multiplies functions of said sum with equalized signals
to provide phase correction of an equalized signal which is sent to said
decision means.
2. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 1,
wherein:
said primary and secondary filter means are infinite impulse response
filters.
3. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 2,
wherein:
each of said infinite impulse response filters comprises a finite impulse
response filter having a summing junction input and an output, feedback
from said finite impulse response filter output to said summing junction
input, and a said coefficient update means.
4. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 3,
wherein:
said at least one secondary filter means comprises at least a second and a
third infinite impulse response filter, wherein said second infinite
impulse response filter is provided at its summing junction with a first
adapted higher harmonic signal from said harmonic derivation means, and
said third infinite impulse response filter is provided at its summing
junction with a second adapted higher harmonic signal from said harmonic
derivation means.
5. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 1,
wherein:
said harmonic derivation means comprises first multiplication means for
multiplying said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental phase jitter
by itself to provide a first alternating current (a.c.) signal and a first
direct current (d.c.) signal, and a filtering means for substantially
eliminating said d.c. signal from said a.c. signal, to provide said first
a.c. signal indicative of said first adapted higher harmonic of said
fundamental phase jitter.
6. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 5,
wherein:
said harmonic derivation means further comprises
second multiplication means for multiplying said first a.c. signal and
first d.c. signal by said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental
phase jitter to obtain a third harmonic a.c. signal and a second a.c
signal,
a second filtering means for substantially eliminating said first a.c.
signal from said first d.c. signal,
a third multiplication means for multiplying said first d.c. signal by a
constant to provide a scaled d.c. signal,
a fourth multiplication means for multiplying said scaled d.c. signal by
said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental phase jitter to obtain a
third a.c. signal, and
a summing means for summing said third harmonic a.c. signal, said second
a.c. signal and said third a.c. signal to provide said third harmonic a.c.
signal.
7. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 4,
wherein:
said harmonic derivation means comprises first multiplication means for
multiplying said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental phase jitter
by itself to provide a first alternating current (a.c.) signal and a first
direct current (d.c.) signal, and a filtering means for substantially
eliminating said d.c. signal from said a.c. signal, to provide said first
a.c. signal indicative of said first adapted higher harmonic of said
fundamental phase jitter,
second multiplication means for multiplying said first a.c. signal and
first d.c. signal by said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental
phase jitter to obtain a third harmonic a.c. signal and a second a.c.
signal,
a second filtering means for substantially eliminating said first a.c.
signal from said first d.c. signal,
a third multiplication means for multiplying said first d.c. signal by a
constant to provide a scaled d.c. signal,
a fourth multiplication means for multiplying said scaled d.c. signal by
said jitter signal indicative of said fundamental phase jitter to obtain a
third a.c. signal, and
second summation means for summing said third harmonic a.c. signal, said
second a.c. signal and said third a.c. signal to provide said third
harmonic a.c. signal.
8. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 1,
wherein:
said summation means further comprises means for providing the cosine and
sine function of said sum of said outputs, wherein said sine and cosine of
said sum are multiplied with said equalized signals to provide phase
correction for an equalized signal which is sent to said decision means.
9. A multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator according to claim 4,
wherein:
said summation means further comprises means for providing the cosine and
sine function of said sum of said outputs, wherein said sine and cosine of
said sum are multiplied with said equalized signals to provide phase
correction for an equalized signal which is sent to said decision means. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND
This invention relates to the correction of phase jitter which is
experienced by digital data signals during transmission over media of
limited frequency bandwidth. More particularly, this invention relates to
phase jitter correction via the use of a multiharmonic adaptive phase
compensator.
It has been well known in the art for some time to utilize limited
frequency band channels for the transmission of data over telephone voice
lines. Recently, the technology has advanced to the point where
transmission of data at 14,400 and even 19,200 bits of data per second is
accomplishable. In providing such high data rates it has been necessary to
increase the number of points in the transmitted constellation while
maintaining the same average power. With more constellation points, it has
become advisable to correct for and/or eliminate as many impairments as
possible because given the identical bit rate and amount of noise and
impairments, fewer errors would be expected to occur in a system with
fewer constellation points. In other words, the closer the constellation
points are one to the other, the smaller is the transmission impairment
which will cause an error.
In the modems of the art, it is well known that an incoming signal is
demodulated and phase corrected. The so-corrected signal is then passed to
circuitry which decides to which constellation point it corresponds. By
comparing in a phase detector the complex signal being fed into the
decision circuitry and the complex signal put out by the decision
circuitry, a waveform representative of the phase may be obtained. The
resulting phase waveform may then be fed back via a phase jitter canceller
to the phase corrector which corrects the phase of the incoming signal.
It will be appreciated that the phase waveform resulting from the
comparison of the complex signals may be said to take the form of:
.PSI.=.alpha. sin (w.sub.j t+.PHI.)+n(t) (1)
where .DELTA..alpha. is the amplitude of the phase deviation in degrees or
radians, w.sub.j is the jitter frequency, .PHI. is the initial phase, and
n(t) is the noise. In correcting for phase jitter, it is evident that it
is desirable to drive the phase .PSI. to zero. Indeed, various approaches
which attempt to accomplish this correction are known in the art. For
example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,320,526 to Gitlin, an adaptive phase jitter
compensator seen in FIG. 1 is provided. The compensator 20 obtains signals
which are sent to decision circuitry 22, conducts in phase detector 24 a
phase comparison on the incoming signals with the complex signals output
by the decision circuitry 22, and sends the determined phase error to the
input 26 and the coefficient update 28 of an adaptive infinite impulse
response filter 30 which is essentially comprised of a finite impulse
response filter 32 with feedback 34. The IIR 30, in accord with techniques
well known in the art automatically tunes itself to the predominant phase
jitter frequency and provides a signal indicative of the predominant phase
jitter frequency and amplitude of the phase jitter. The sine and cosine of
the output signal of the IIR (itself a sine wave) are then taken at means
36 such that when the values are multiplied by the equalized signal, the
complex equalized signal is corrected and the phase error minimized. Thus,
the IIR provides a signal with automatically adjusted amplitude, phase,
and frequency.
A second arrangement for phase jitter compensation is seen in FIG. 2 herein
which substantially amounts to an equivalent arrangement of that described
in U.S. Pat. No. 4,253,184 to Gitlin et al. In FIG. 2, it is seen that a
digital oscillator 50 is provided and outputs the sine and cosine function
for a given frequency and for second and third harmonics of the same. The
sine and cosine functions for each harmonic are input into adaptive
amplitude-phase correctors 52a, 52b, and 52c which also receive phase
comparison information from a phase detector 54 which compares signals
which are sent to decision circuitry 56 with the complex signals output by
the decision circuitry 56. Given set frequencies w.sub.j, 2w.sub.j and
3w.sub.j, the adaptive correctors 52 adjust the amplitude and initial
phase so as to minimize the output of phase detector 54.
While the adaptive phase jitter compensation arrangement of U.S. Pat.
4,320,526 does provide some phase correction, it will be appreciated that
the provided arrangement assumes that all of the phase jitter is first
order; i.e. that the phase jitter does not include any harmonics. When
even small amounts of harmonics of the phase jitter frequency are present,
however, the performance of the provided arrangement degrades
significantly. On the other hand, while the phase jitter compensation
arrangement of U.S. Pat. No. 4,253,184 does account for harmonics and
permits the phase and amplitude of the jitter to be adaptively found, the
arrangement assumes a particular frequency for the jitter. However, if the
jitter frequency is not known in advance, the compensation technique of
U.S. Pat. No. 4,253,184 cannot be implemented because it requires
pretuning; i.e. it is not adaptive to jitter frequency.
Further, it should be appreciated that while a first arrangement provides a
means for adapting to the frequency, amplitude and initial phase of the
phase jitter, and a second arrangement provides a means for accounting for
the phase jitter harmonics, the two arrangements cannot be easily
combined. For example, the combination which would suggest itself would be
to use additional adaptive IIR filters of U.S. Pat. No. 4,320,526 in the
parallel arrangement of U.S. Pat. No. 4,253,184, with the phase error as
decided by the phase detector as the input into each IIR filter in order
to cancel the second and third harmonics. However, in providing such an
arrangement, all three filters interact with each other and the entire
system becomes unstable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide a multiharmonic
adaptive phase jitter compensator.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a stable multiharmonic
adaptive phase jitter compensator where second and third harmonics of an
adaptively found fundamental phase jitter frequency are used as driving
inputs to second and third IIRs.
In accord with the objects of the invention, a multiharmonic adaptive phase
jitter compensator for a high speed modem generally comprises:
(a) a primary filter means having an input, a coefficient update means, and
an output, wherein the primary filter means is arranged to receive at its
input and at its coefficient update means an error signal from a phase
detector which compares an equalized phase corrected signal entering a
decision means with the signal exiting the decision means, and wherein the
primary filter means is arranged to adaptively provide at its output a
wave indicative at least of the fundamental phase jitter frequency of the
signal entering the decision means;
(b) harmonic derivation means connected to the output of the primary filter
means for obtaining at least one non-fundamental harmonic of the phase
jitter frequency provided by the first filter means;
(c) at least one secondary filter means, each secondary filter means having
an input, a coefficient update means, and an output, wherein a particular
non-fundamental harmonic is provided by the harmonic derivation means to
an input of a corresponding particular secondary filter means while said
error signal is provided to the coefficient update of each secondary
filter means; and
(d) summation means connected to outputs of said primary and secondary
filter means for summing the outputs and applying the sum to a multiplier
which multiplies a function of the sum with the equalized signals to
provide a equalized and phase corrected signal which is sent to the
decision means.
Preferably, the filter means are infinite impulse response filters (IIRs),
and at least second and third IIRs are provided. The second IIR is
supplied with the second harmonic and the third IIR is supplied with the
third harmonic of the fundamental phase jitter frequency by the harmonic
derivation means. The second and third harmonics train the IIRs to look
for and correct for the second and third harmonics in the error signal.
The second harmonic is essentially obtained by multiplying the output of
the primary IIR (A sin w.sub.j t) by itself to provide a value A.sup.2
/2-(A.sup.2 /2) cos 2w.sub.j t, and by filtering to remove the d.c.
component. The third harmonic is preferably obtained by cubing the output
of the primary IIR to obtain 0.75A.sup.3 sin w.sub.j t-0.25A.sup.3 sin
3w.sub.j t, and subtracting therefrom the product of the primary IIR
output and a scaled d.c. component of the square of the primary IIR
output.
A better understanding of the invention, and additional advantages and
objects of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art
upon reference to the detailed description and the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of an adaptive phase jitter compensator of the
art;
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an equivalent to a phase jitter compensator of
the art which compensates for harmonics;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of the multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter
compensator of the invention; and
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of the harmonic computator of the
multiharmonic adaptive phase jitter compensator of FIG. 3.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Turning to FIG. 3, a block diagram of the preferred multiharmonic adaptive
phase jitter compensator is seen. As with the adaptive compensator of the
art shown in FIG. 1, the compensator 120 of FIG. 3 obtains signals which
are sent from an equalizer 118 which with other circuitry known to those
skilled in the art (not shown) corrects for constant phase shift and
frequency offset to decision circuitry 122. Phase detector 124 is provided
to conduct a phase comparison on the incoming signals with the complex
signals output by the decision circuitry 122. The signal resulting from
the phase comparison information is then fed as an input into an adaptive
infinite impulse response filter 130a (the "primary filter") which is
essentially comprised of a finite impulse response filter 132a with
feedback 134a, a summing junction 126a for the feedback and the filter
input signal, and a coefficient update means 128a for the tap coefficients
of filter 132a. Not only is the phase comparison signal sent to the
summing junction 126a, but it is also sent to the coefficient update 128a
of the primary filter. The phase comparison signal is further sent to the
coefficient updates 128b and 128c of infinite impulse response filters
130b and 130c (the "secondary filters"). However, as will be described
hereinafter, the phase comparison signal is not sent as an input (i.e. to
the summing junctions) to the secondary filters.
When fed with the phase comparison information, the IIR 130a, automatically
tunes itself to the predominant (fundamental) phase jitter frequency (i.e.
the phase jitter frequency having the highest amplitude; the "first
harmonic") and provides in response thereto an output wave signal 136a of
a single frequency of the form A.sub.1 sin (w.sub.j t+.PHI..sub.j), where
A.sub.1 is the amplitude of the phase jitter, w.sub.j is the fundamental
phase jitter frequency, and .PHI..sub.j is the phase offset. The output
signal 136a of the IIR is fed to a harmonic derivation means 170 which
computes at least one non-fundamenal harmonic of the predominant phase
jitter frequency according to means which are discussed hereinafter with
reference to FIG. 4. The higher harmonics are then sent to the summing
junction inputs 126b and 126c of IIR filters 130b and 130c which are
further comprised of finite impulse response filters 132b and 132c,
feedback paths 134b and 134c, and coefficient updates 128b and 128c
respectively. With the higher harmonics being supplied as the inputs to
the IIRs 130b and 130c, and with the phase comparison information from the
phase detector 124 being supplied to the coefficient updates 128b and
128c, IIRs 132b and 132c tune themselves to their particular harmonics and
provide output waves 136b and 136c which are indicative of the phase and
amplitude of the harmonic frequencies of the jitter. The outputs from IIRs
130a, 130b and 130c are then summed by summation means 180, and the sine
and cosine of the sum is obtained at generator 182. The sine and cosine of
the sum are then applied by a multiplier 184 as a corrective signal to the
signals (which include phase jitter) being sent from equalizer 118 to
decision means 122.
According to the preferred embodiment at least second and third IIRs 130b
and 130c are provided to correct for phase jitter. It will be recognized,
however, that if desired, additional IIRs trained to the fourth and
succeeding harmonics could be provided if desired.
Turning to FIG. 4, the preferred manner of supplying the second and third
harmonic signals to the secondary IIRs 130b and 130c is seen. If the
output signal from primary IIR 130a is taken as A sin w.sub.j t,
multiplier 186 is used to provide the second harmonic. Thus, by squaring
the primary output signal, it will be seen that by simple trigonometric
identity, the value (A.sup.2 /2) (1-cos 2w.sub.j t) is obtained. By
filtering, the d.c. component of the signal may be removed, and the
remaining signal is a function of twice the fundamental harmonic
frequency. The remaining signal may then be provided as the input to the
IIR 130b. It will be recognized that as the output from primary IIR 130a
changes (adapts), the input signal into IIR 130b will also adapt.
The third harmonic signal is preferably obtained by cubing the output of
the primary IIR (multiplying at multiplier 188 the output signal from
primary IIR 130a by the squared value of the primary IIR 130a obtained at
multiplier 186) to obtain 0.75A.sup.3 sin w.sub.j t-0.25A.sup.3 sin
3w.sub.j t, and subtracting therefrom at summing means 190 the product of
the primary IIR 130a output and a scaled d.c. component of the square of
the primary IIR output (0.75A.sup.3 sin w.sub.j t). The product of the
primary IIR 130a output and a scaled d.c. component of the square of the
pimary IIR output is obtained by using a low pass filter 192 to filter the
signal obtained at multiplier 186 (thus obtaining the value A.sup.2 /2),
scaling the obtained d.c. component by multiplying at multiplier 194 by a
value of 3/2 (thus obtaining the value 3A.sup.2 /4), and multiplying at
multiplier 196 the scaled d.c component by the output of the primary IIR
130a. In this manner, while the signal from phase detector 124 is being
used as an input into coefficient updates 128b and 128c, the harmonics of
the phase jitter are supplied to the summing junction inputs of respective
IIR filters 130b and 130c to permit the filters to properly train on the
respective harmonics.
There has been described and illustrated herein a multiharmonic adaptive
phase jitter compensator for a modem. While a particular embodiment has
been described it is not intended that the invention be limited thereby as
it is intended that the invention be broad in scope and that the
specification be read likewise. Thus, for example, while particular
harmonic derivation means were provided for generating second and third
phase jitter harmonics for training the second and third IIR filters, it
will be appreciated that other harmonic derivation means such as a Hilbert
transformer means with corresponding trigonemetrical relationships could
be utilized to accomplish the same. Therefore, it will be apparent to
those skilled in the art that additional modifications can be made to the
described invention without deviating from the scope of the invention as
so claimed.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|