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IQ imbalance

IQ imbalance is a performance-limiting issue in the design of a class of radio receivers known as direct conversion receivers.[a] These translate the received radio frequency (RF, or pass-band) signal directly from the carrier frequency to baseband using a single mixing stage.[b]

Direct conversion receivers contain a local oscillator (LO) which generates both a sine wave at and a copy delayed by 90°. These are individually mixed with the RF signal, producing what are known respectively as the in-phase and quadrature signals, labelled and .

However, in the analog domain, the phase difference is never exactly 90°. Neither is the gain perfectly matched between the parallel sections of circuitry dealing with the two signal paths.

IQ imbalance results from these two imperfections, and is one of the two major drawbacks of direct-conversion receivers compared to traditional superheterodyne receivers. (The other is DC offset.) Their design must include measures to control IQ imbalance, so as to limit errors in the demodulated signal.

Definition edit

A direct-conversion receiver uses two quadrature sinusoidal signals to perform the so-called quadrature down-conversion. This process requires shifting the LO signal by 90° to produce a quadrature sinusoidal component, and a matched pair of mixers converting the same input signal with the two versions of the LO. Mismatches between the two LO signals and/or along the two branches of down-conversion mixers, and any following amplifiers, and low-pass filters, cause the quadrature baseband signals to be corrupted, either due to amplitude or phase differences. Suppose the received pass-band signal is identical to the transmitted signal and is given by:

 
where   is the transmitted base-band signal. Assume that the gain error is  dB and the phase error is   degrees. Then we can model such imbalance using mismatched local oscillator output signals:
 
Multiplying the pass-band signal by the two LO signals and passing through a pair of low-pass filters, one obtains the demodulated base-band signals as:
 
The above equations clearly indicate that IQ imbalance causes interference between the   and   base-band signals. To analyze IQ imbalance in the frequency domain, the above equation can be rewritten as:
 
where   denotes the complex conjugate of  . In an OFDM system, the base-band signal consists of several sub-carriers. Complex-conjugating the base-band signal of the kth sub-carrier carrying data   is identical to carrying   on the  th sub-carrier:
 
where   is the sub-carrier spacing. Equivalently, the received base-band OFDM signal under the IQ imbalance effect is given by:
 
In conclusion, besides a complex gain imposed on the current sub-carrier data  , IQ imbalance also introduces Inter Carrier Interference (ICI) from the adjacent carrier or sub-carrier. The ICI term makes OFDM receivers very sensitive to IQ imbalances. To solve this problem, the designer can request a stringent specification of the matching of the two branches in the frond-end or compensate for the imbalance in the base-band receiver. On the other hand, a digital Odd-Order I/Q-demodulator with only one input can be used,[1][2] but such design has a bandwidth limitation.

Simulation edit

IQ imbalance can be simulated by computing the gain and phase imbalance and applying them to the base-band signal by means of several real multipliers and adders.

Synchronization errors edit

The time domain base-band signals with IQ imbalance can be represented by

 
Note that   and   can be assumed to be time-invariant and frequency-invariant, meaning that they are constant over several sub carriers and symbols. With this property, multiple OFDM sub-carriers and symbols can be used to jointly estimate   and   to increase the accuracy. Transforming to the frequency domain, we have the frequency domain OFDM signals under the influence of IQ imbalance given by:
 
Note that the second term represents interference coming from the mirrored sub-carrier  

IQ imbalance estimation in MIMO-OFDM systems edit

In MIMO-OFDM systems, each RF channel has its own down-converting circuit. Therefore, the IQ imbalance for each RF channel is independent of those for the other RF channels. Considering a   MIMO system as an example, the received frequency domain signal is given by:

 
where   and   are the IQ imbalance coefficients of the qth receive RF channel. Estimation of   and   is the same for each RF channel. Therefore, we take the first RF channel as an example. The received signals at the pilot sub-carriers of the first RF channel are stacked into a vector  ,
 
where   is the   matrix defined by:
 

Clearly, the above formula is similar to that of the SISO case and can be solved using the LS method. Moreover, the estimation complexity can be reduced by using fewer pilot sub-carriers in the estimation.

IQ imbalance compensation edit

The IQ imbalance can be compensated in either the time domain[3] or the frequency domain. In the time domain, the compensated signal   in the current mth sample point is given by:

 
We can see that, by using the ratio   to mitigate the IQ imbalance, there is a loss factor  . When the noise is added before the IQ imbalance, the SNR remains the same, because both noise and signal suffer this loss. However, if the noise is added after IQ imbalance, the effective SNR degrades. In this case,   and  , respectively, should be computed.[3] Compared with the time domain approach, compensating in the frequency domain is more complicated because the mirrored sub-carrier is needed. The frequency domain compensated signal at the ith symbol and the kth sub-carrier:
 
Nevertheless, in reality, the time domain compensation is less preferred because it introduces larger latency between IQ imbalance estimation and compensation.

IQ imbalance estimation edit

Frequency domain OFDM signals under the influence of IQ imbalance is given by:

 
The IQ imbalance coefficients   and   are mixed with the channel frequency responses, making both the IQ imbalance estimation and channel estimation difficult. In the first half of the training sequence, only sub-carriers ranging from   to N/2 − 1 transmit pilot symbols; the remaining sub-carriers are not used. In the second half, the sub-carriers from -1 to -N/2 are used for pilot transmission. Such a training scheme easily decouples the IQ imbalance and the channel frequency response. Assuming the value of the pilot symbols is +1, the received signals at sub-carriers from 1 to N/2 − 1 are given by  , while the received signals at the mirrored sub-carriers take the form  .

From the two sets of received signals, the ratio   can be easily estimated by  . The second half of the training sequence can be used in a similar way. Furthermore, the accuracy of this ratio estimation can be improved by averaging over several training symbols and several sub-carriers. Although the IQ imbalance estimation using this training symbol is simple, this method suffers from low spectrum efficiency, as quite a few OFDM symbols must be reserved for training. Note that, when the thermal noise is added before the IQ imbalance, the ratio   is sufficient to compensate the IQ imbalance. However, when the noise is added after the IQ imbalance, compensation using only   can degrade the ensuing demodulation performance.

Notes edit

  1. ^ These are also known as zero intermediate frequency or homodyne receivers.
  2. ^ This contrasts with a traditional superheterodyne receiver, which needs an intermediate frequency stage between RF and baseband, and an image rejection filter. Direct conversion receivers contain fewer components, making them easier to miniaturise.

References edit

  1. ^ V. I. Slyusar, “I/Q-Demodulation Of The Odd Order”, in International Conference on Antenna Theory and Techniques, 21–24 April, 2015, Kharkiv, Ukraine. – pp. 156–158.
  2. ^ Slyusar, V., Serdiuk, P. Synthesis Method of Procedure for Odd-Order I/Q Demodulation Based on Replacing Multistage with Equivalent Single-Stage Demodulation Schemes.// Radioelectron.Commun.Syst. 63, 273–280 (2020).- DOI: 10.3103/S0735272720050064
  3. ^ a b Slyusar, V. I., Soloshchev, O. N., Titov, I. V. A method for correction of quadrature disbalance of reception channels in a digital antenna array// Radioelectronics and Communications Systems. – 2004, VOL 47; PART 2, pages 30–35.

Further reading edit

  1. M. Valkama, M. Renfors, and V. Koivunen, 2001. "Advanced methods for I/Q imbalance compensation in communication receivers," IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 49, 2335–2344
  2. J. Tubbax, B. Come, L. V. der Perre, S. Donnay, M. Engels, H. D. Man, and M. Moonen, 2005. " Compensation of IQ imbalance and phase noise in OFDM systems," IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, 4, 872–877.
  3. T.D Chiueh, PY Tsai, IW L, "Baseband Receiver Design for Wireless MIMO_OFDM Communications 2nd"
  4. Slyusar, V. I., Soloshchev, O. N., Titov, I. V. A method for correction of quadrature disbalance of reception channels in a digital antenna array// Radioelectronics and Communications Systems. – 2004, VOL 47; PART 2, pages 30–35.

imbalance, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, august, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, performance, limiting, issue, design, class. This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message IQ imbalance is a performance limiting issue in the design of a class of radio receivers known as direct conversion receivers a These translate the received radio frequency RF or pass band signal directly from the carrier frequency fc displaystyle f c to baseband using a single mixing stage b Direct conversion receivers contain a local oscillator LO which generates both a sine wave at fc displaystyle f c and a copy delayed by 90 These are individually mixed with the RF signal producing what are known respectively as the in phase and quadrature signals labelled I displaystyle I and Q displaystyle Q However in the analog domain the phase difference is never exactly 90 Neither is the gain perfectly matched between the parallel sections of circuitry dealing with the two signal paths IQ imbalance results from these two imperfections and is one of the two major drawbacks of direct conversion receivers compared to traditional superheterodyne receivers The other is DC offset Their design must include measures to control IQ imbalance so as to limit errors in the demodulated signal Contents 1 Definition 2 Simulation 3 Synchronization errors 4 IQ imbalance estimation in MIMO OFDM systems 5 IQ imbalance compensation 6 IQ imbalance estimation 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingDefinition editA direct conversion receiver uses two quadrature sinusoidal signals to perform the so called quadrature down conversion This process requires shifting the LO signal by 90 to produce a quadrature sinusoidal component and a matched pair of mixers converting the same input signal with the two versions of the LO Mismatches between the two LO signals and or along the two branches of down conversion mixers and any following amplifiers and low pass filters cause the quadrature baseband signals to be corrupted either due to amplitude or phase differences Suppose the received pass band signal is identical to the transmitted signal and is given by y t Re x t ej2pfct xI t cos 2pfct xQ t sin 2pfct displaystyle y t operatorname Re x t e j2 pi f c t x I t cos 2 pi f c t x Q t sin 2 pi f c t nbsp where x t xI t jxQ t displaystyle x t x I t jx Q t nbsp is the transmitted base band signal Assume that the gain error is 20log 1 eA 1 eA displaystyle 20 log 1 varepsilon A 1 varepsilon A nbsp dB and the phase error is e8 displaystyle varepsilon theta nbsp degrees Then we can model such imbalance using mismatched local oscillator output signals 2 1 eA cos 2pfct e8 2 2 1 eA sin 2pfct e8 2 displaystyle 2 1 varepsilon A cos 2 pi f c t varepsilon theta 2 quad 2 1 varepsilon A sin 2 pi f c t varepsilon theta 2 nbsp Multiplying the pass band signal by the two LO signals and passing through a pair of low pass filters one obtains the demodulated base band signals as x I t 1 eA xI t cos e8 2 xQ t sin e8 2 x Q t 1 eA xQ t cos e8 2 xI t sin e8 2 displaystyle begin cases tilde x I t amp 1 varepsilon A x I t cos varepsilon theta 2 x Q t sin varepsilon theta 2 6pt tilde x Q t amp 1 varepsilon A x Q t cos varepsilon theta 2 x I t sin varepsilon theta 2 end cases nbsp The above equations clearly indicate that IQ imbalance causes interference between the I displaystyle I nbsp and Q displaystyle Q nbsp base band signals To analyze IQ imbalance in the frequency domain the above equation can be rewritten as x t x I t jx Q t cos e8 2 jeAsin e8 2 x t eAcos e8 2 jsin e8 2 x t hax t hbx t displaystyle begin alignedat 3 tilde x t amp tilde x I t j tilde x Q t 6pt amp cos varepsilon theta 2 j varepsilon A sin varepsilon theta 2 x t varepsilon A cos varepsilon theta 2 j sin varepsilon theta 2 x t 6pt amp eta alpha x t eta beta x t end alignedat nbsp where x displaystyle x nbsp denotes the complex conjugate of x displaystyle x nbsp In an OFDM system the base band signal consists of several sub carriers Complex conjugating the base band signal of the kth sub carrier carrying data Xk displaystyle X k nbsp is identical to carrying Xk displaystyle X k nbsp on the k displaystyle k nbsp th sub carrier Xk I jXk Q ej2pkfSt Xk I jXk Q e j2pkfSt Xk ej2p k fSt displaystyle X k I jX k Q e j2 pi kf S t X k I jX k Q e j2 pi kf S t X k e j2 pi k f S t nbsp where fS displaystyle f S nbsp is the sub carrier spacing Equivalently the received base band OFDM signal under the IQ imbalance effect is given by X k haXk hbX k displaystyle tilde X k eta alpha X k eta beta X k nbsp In conclusion besides a complex gain imposed on the current sub carrier data Xk displaystyle X k nbsp IQ imbalance also introduces Inter Carrier Interference ICI from the adjacent carrier or sub carrier The ICI term makes OFDM receivers very sensitive to IQ imbalances To solve this problem the designer can request a stringent specification of the matching of the two branches in the frond end or compensate for the imbalance in the base band receiver On the other hand a digital Odd Order I Q demodulator with only one input can be used 1 2 but such design has a bandwidth limitation Simulation editIQ imbalance can be simulated by computing the gain and phase imbalance and applying them to the base band signal by means of several real multipliers and adders Synchronization errors editThe time domain base band signals with IQ imbalance can be represented byzi n haz t hbz t t i N N g Ts NgTs nTs displaystyle z i n eta alpha z t eta beta z t Bigg t i N N mid g T s N g T s nT s nbsp Note that ha displaystyle eta alpha nbsp and hb displaystyle eta beta nbsp can be assumed to be time invariant and frequency invariant meaning that they are constant over several sub carriers and symbols With this property multiple OFDM sub carriers and symbols can be used to jointly estimate ha displaystyle eta alpha nbsp and hb displaystyle eta beta nbsp to increase the accuracy Transforming to the frequency domain we have the frequency domain OFDM signals under the influence of IQ imbalance given by zi k haHi kXi k hbHi k Xi k Vi k displaystyle z i k eta alpha H i k X i k eta beta H i k X i k V i k nbsp Note that the second term represents interference coming from the mirrored sub carrier Xi k displaystyle X i k nbsp IQ imbalance estimation in MIMO OFDM systems editIn MIMO OFDM systems each RF channel has its own down converting circuit Therefore the IQ imbalance for each RF channel is independent of those for the other RF channels Considering a 2 2 displaystyle 2 times 2 nbsp MIMO system as an example the received frequency domain signal is given by Zi k 0 ha 0 Hi k 0 0 Xi k 0 Hi k 0 1 Xi k 1 hb 0 Hi k 0 0 Xi k 0 Hi k 0 1 Xi k 1 Vi k 0 Zi k 1 ha 1 Hi k 1 0 Xi k 0 Hi k 1 1 Xi k 1 hb 1 Hi k 1 0 Xi k 0 Hi k 1 1 Xi k 1 Vi k 1 displaystyle begin cases Z i k 0 amp eta alpha 0 H i k 0 0 X i k 0 H i k 0 1 X i k 1 eta beta 0 H i k 0 0 X i k 0 H i k 0 1 X i k 1 V i k 0 6pt Z i k 1 amp eta alpha 1 H i k 1 0 X i k 0 H i k 1 1 X i k 1 eta beta 1 H i k 1 0 X i k 0 H i k 1 1 X i k 1 V i k 1 end cases nbsp where ha q displaystyle eta alpha q nbsp and hb q displaystyle eta beta q nbsp are the IQ imbalance coefficients of the qth receive RF channel Estimation of ha q displaystyle eta alpha q nbsp and hb q displaystyle eta beta q nbsp is the same for each RF channel Therefore we take the first RF channel as an example The received signals at the pilot sub carriers of the first RF channel are stacked into a vector zi a q displaystyle z i alpha q nbsp zi a 0 zi a0 0 zi a1 0 zi aJ 1 0 Ai a 0 ha 0 hb 0 vi a 0 displaystyle mathbf z i alpha 0 begin bmatrix z i alpha 0 0 z i alpha 1 0 vdots z i alpha J 1 0 end bmatrix mathbf A i alpha 0 begin bmatrix eta alpha 0 eta beta 0 end bmatrix mathbf v i alpha 0 nbsp where Ai a 0 displaystyle mathbf A i alpha 0 nbsp is the J 2 displaystyle mathbf J times 2 nbsp matrix defined by Ai a 0 Hi a0 0 0 Xi a0 0 Hi a0 0 1 Xi a0 1 Hi aJ 1 0 0 Xi aJ 1 0 Hi aJ 1 0 1 Xi aJ 1 1 Hi a1 0 0 Xi a1 0 Hi a1 0 1 Xi a1 1 Hi aJ 2 0 0 Xi aJ 2 0 Hi aJ 2 0 1 Xi aJ 2 1 Hi aJ 1 0 0 Xi aJ 1 0 Hi aJ 1 0 1 Xi aJ 1 1 Hi a0 0 0 Xi a0 0 Hi a0 0 1 Xi a0 1 displaystyle mathbf A i alpha 0 begin bmatrix H i alpha 0 0 0 X i alpha 0 0 H i alpha 0 0 1 X i alpha 0 1 amp H i alpha J 1 0 0 X i alpha J 1 0 H i alpha J 1 0 1 X i alpha J 1 1 H i alpha 1 0 0 X i alpha 1 0 H i alpha 1 0 1 X i alpha 1 1 amp H i alpha J 2 0 0 X i alpha J 2 0 H i alpha J 2 0 1 X i alpha J 2 1 vdots amp vdots H i alpha J 1 0 0 X i alpha J 1 0 H i alpha J 1 0 1 X i alpha J 1 1 amp H i alpha 0 0 0 X i alpha 0 0 H i alpha 0 0 1 X i alpha 0 1 end bmatrix nbsp Clearly the above formula is similar to that of the SISO case and can be solved using the LS method Moreover the estimation complexity can be reduced by using fewer pilot sub carriers in the estimation IQ imbalance compensation editThe IQ imbalance can be compensated in either the time domain 3 or the frequency domain In the time domain the compensated signal Zm displaystyle Z m nbsp in the current mth sample point is given by z m h a zm h bzm h a 2 h b 2 h a h a 2 h b 2 zm h bh a zm displaystyle overline z m frac widehat eta alpha z m widehat eta beta z m widehat eta alpha 2 widehat eta beta 2 frac widehat eta alpha widehat eta alpha 2 widehat eta beta 2 z m frac widehat eta beta widehat eta alpha z m nbsp We can see that by using the ratio h b h a displaystyle widehat eta beta widehat eta alpha nbsp to mitigate the IQ imbalance there is a loss factor h a h a 2 h b 2 displaystyle widehat eta alpha widehat eta alpha 2 widehat eta beta 2 nbsp When the noise is added before the IQ imbalance the SNR remains the same because both noise and signal suffer this loss However if the noise is added after IQ imbalance the effective SNR degrades In this case ha displaystyle eta alpha nbsp and hb displaystyle eta beta nbsp respectively should be computed 3 Compared with the time domain approach compensating in the frequency domain is more complicated because the mirrored sub carrier is needed The frequency domain compensated signal at the ith symbol and the kth sub carrier Z i k h a Zi k h bZi k h a 2 h b 2 displaystyle overline Z i k frac widehat eta alpha Z i k widehat eta beta Z i k widehat eta alpha 2 widehat eta beta 2 nbsp Nevertheless in reality the time domain compensation is less preferred because it introduces larger latency between IQ imbalance estimation and compensation IQ imbalance estimation editFrequency domain OFDM signals under the influence of IQ imbalance is given by zi k haHi kXi k hbHi k Xi k Vi k displaystyle z i k eta alpha H i k X i k eta beta H i k X i k V i k nbsp The IQ imbalance coefficients ha displaystyle eta alpha nbsp and hb displaystyle eta beta nbsp are mixed with the channel frequency responses making both the IQ imbalance estimation and channel estimation difficult In the first half of the training sequence only sub carriers ranging from 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp to N 2 1 transmit pilot symbols the remaining sub carriers are not used In the second half the sub carriers from 1 to N 2 are used for pilot transmission Such a training scheme easily decouples the IQ imbalance and the channel frequency response Assuming the value of the pilot symbols is 1 the received signals at sub carriers from 1 to N 2 1 are given by Zi k haHi k Vi k k 1 N 2 1 displaystyle Z i k eta alpha H i k V i k forall k 1 ldots N 2 1 nbsp while the received signals at the mirrored sub carriers take the form Zi k hbHi k Vi k k 1 N 2 1 displaystyle Z i k eta beta H i k V i k forall k 1 ldots N 2 1 nbsp From the two sets of received signals the ratio hb ha displaystyle eta beta eta alpha nbsp can be easily estimated by Zi k Zi k displaystyle Z i k Z i k nbsp The second half of the training sequence can be used in a similar way Furthermore the accuracy of this ratio estimation can be improved by averaging over several training symbols and several sub carriers Although the IQ imbalance estimation using this training symbol is simple this method suffers from low spectrum efficiency as quite a few OFDM symbols must be reserved for training Note that when the thermal noise is added before the IQ imbalance the ratio hb ha displaystyle eta beta eta alpha nbsp is sufficient to compensate the IQ imbalance However when the noise is added after the IQ imbalance compensation using only hb ha displaystyle eta beta eta alpha nbsp can degrade the ensuing demodulation performance Notes edit These are also known as zero intermediate frequency or homodyne receivers This contrasts with a traditional superheterodyne receiver which needs an intermediate frequency stage between RF and baseband and an image rejection filter Direct conversion receivers contain fewer components making them easier to miniaturise References edit V I Slyusar I Q Demodulation Of The Odd Order in International Conference on Antenna Theory and Techniques 21 24 April 2015 Kharkiv Ukraine pp 156 158 Slyusar V Serdiuk P Synthesis Method of Procedure for Odd Order I Q Demodulation Based on Replacing Multistage with Equivalent Single Stage Demodulation Schemes Radioelectron Commun Syst 63 273 280 2020 DOI 10 3103 S0735272720050064 a b Slyusar V I Soloshchev O N Titov I V A method for correction of quadrature disbalance of reception channels in a digital antenna array Radioelectronics and Communications Systems 2004 VOL 47 PART 2 pages 30 35 Further reading editM Valkama M Renfors and V Koivunen 2001 Advanced methods for I Q imbalance compensation in communication receivers IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 49 2335 2344 J Tubbax B Come L V der Perre S Donnay M Engels H D Man and M Moonen 2005 Compensation of IQ imbalance and phase noise in OFDM systems IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications 4 872 877 T D Chiueh PY Tsai IW L Baseband Receiver Design for Wireless MIMO OFDM Communications 2nd Slyusar V I Soloshchev O N Titov I V A method for correction of quadrature disbalance of reception channels in a digital antenna array Radioelectronics and Communications Systems 2004 VOL 47 PART 2 pages 30 35 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title IQ imbalance amp oldid 1210515190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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