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Accurately measuring phase and delay error in direct I/Q modulators Apr 1, 2006 12:00 PM By Peter Stroet
Direct-conversion I/Q modulation is an attractive solution for advanced RF transmitters, enabling complex modulation at lower cost. A direct I/Q modulator can generate an RF waveform of arbitrary phase, frequency and amplitude. In a typical application, the I/Q modulator produces a single-sideband output signal. For an ideal modulator with perfect 90° phase shift between the I-mixer and Q-mixer local oscillators, and with no other undesired phase or gain impairments, the modulator output will contain only the desired sideband. In practice, non-idealities arise from other sources of phase error such as baseband I/Q delay mismatch and DAC skew. The error terms of interest in this analysis are the I/Q skew error due to the baseband signal source (φ In order to achieve the best image rejection for a broadband communications channel (e.g., W-CDMA), it is important to understand these error sources. This article provides a measurement method to determine the sources of RF and baseband phase error. The method requires a baseband I/Q signal generator with a user-adjustable phase (φ First measurement
As shown and defined in Figure 1, there can be phase differences between the I and the Q path for the baseband generator (φ R Note that the phases φ are in radians. The image term can be minimized by adjusting the signal generator phase setting to φ Second measurement
This configuration differs from that of Figure 1 in that the differential baseband connections to the modulator's I inputs are reversed (Figure 2). The controllable signal generator phase, φ The lower sideband suppression is given by: R The image is minimum for: φ Third measurement
In this configuration (Figure 3), the I and Q differential inputs are exchanged. The controllable signal generator phase, φ R The image is minimum for: φ Calculation of phase impairments
We can solve equations, (2), (4) and (6) to give: φ φ φ Applying the method
As an example, the techniques described here were used to determine the error terms for an LT5528 direct I/Q modulator. A Rohde and Schwarz AMIQ I/Q modulation generator was used as the baseband signal source. For five different LT5528 examples, φ ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Peter Stroet is a design engineer with Linear Technology Corp., Milpitas, Calif.
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