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Time-Varying Frequency Selective IQ Imbalance Estimation and Compensation

Direct-Down Conversion (DDC) principle based transceiver architectures are of interest to meet the diverse needs of present and future wireless systems. DDC transceivers have a simple structure with fewer analog components and offer low-cost, flexible and multi-standard solutions. However, DDC transceivers have certain circuit impairments affecting their performance in wide-band, high data rate and multi-user systems.

IQ imbalance is one of the problems of DDC transceivers that limits their image rejection capabilities. Compensation techniques for frequency independent IQI arising due to gain and phase mismatches of the mixers in the I/Q paths of the transceiver have been widely discussed in the literature. However for wideband multi-channel transceivers, it is becoming increasingly important to address frequency dependent IQI arising due to mismatches in the analog I/Q lowpass filters.

A hardware-efficient and standard independent digital estimation and compensation technique for frequency dependent IQI is introduced which is also capable of tracking time-varying IQI changes. The technique is blind and adaptive in nature, based on the second order statistical properties of complex random signals such as properness/circularity.

A detailed performance analysis of the introduced technique is executed through computer simulations for various real-time operating scenarios. A novel technique for finding the optimal number of taps required for the adaptive IQI compensation filter is proposed and the performance of this technique is validated. In addition, a metric for the measure of properness is developed and used for error power and step size analysis. / Master of Science / A wireless transceiver consists of two major building blocks namely the RF front-end and digital baseband. The front-end performs functions such as frequency conversion, filtering, and amplification. Impurities because of deep-submicron fabrication lead to non-idealities of the front-end components which limit their accuracy and affect the performance of the overall transceiver.

Complex (I/Q) mixing of baseband signals is preferred over real mixing because of its inherent trait of bandwidth efficiency. The I/Q paths enabling this complex mixing in the front-end may not be exactly identical thereby disturbing the perfect orthogonality of inphase and quadrature components leading to IQ Imbalance. The resultant IQ imbalance leads to an image of the signal formed at its mirror frequencies. Imbalances arising from mixers lead to an image of constant strength whereas I/Q low-pass filter mismatches lead to an image of varying strength across the Nyquist range. In addition, temperature effects cause slow variation in IQ imbalance with time.

In this thesis a hardware efficient and standard-independent technique is introduced to compensate for performance degrading IQ imbalance. The technique is blind and adaptive in nature and uses second order statistical signal properties like circularity or properness for IQ imbalance estimation.

The contribution of this work, which gives a key insight into the optimal number of taps required for the adaptive compensation filter improves the state-of-the-art technique. The performance of the technique is evaluated under various scenarios of interest and a detailed analysis of the results is presented.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/78202
Date14 June 2017
CreatorsInti, Durga Laxmi Narayana Swamy
ContributorsElectrical and Computer Engineering, Beex, Aloysius A., Dhillon, Harpreet Singh, Buehrer, R. Michael
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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