This paper proposes an active radio frequency (RF) cancellation solution to suppress the transmitter (TX) passband leakage signal in radio transceivers supporting simultaneous transmission and reception. The proposed technique is… Click to show full abstract
This paper proposes an active radio frequency (RF) cancellation solution to suppress the transmitter (TX) passband leakage signal in radio transceivers supporting simultaneous transmission and reception. The proposed technique is based on creating an opposite-phase baseband equivalent replica of the TX leakage signal in the transceiver digital front-end through adaptive nonlinear filtering of the known transmit data, to facilitate highly accurate cancellation under a nonlinear power amplifier (PA). The active RF cancellation is then accomplished by employing an auxiliary TX chain to generate the actual RF cancellation signal, and combining it with the received signal at the receiver (RX) low-noise amplifier (LNA) input. A closed-loop parameter learning approach, based on the decorrelation learning rule, is also developed to efficiently estimate the coefficients of the nonlinear cancellation filter in the presence of a nonlinear PA with memory, finite passive isolation, and a nonlinear LNA. The performance of the proposed cancellation technique is evaluated through comprehensive RF measurements adopting commercial LTE-Advanced transceiver hardware components. The results show that the proposed technique can provide an additional suppression of up to 54 dB for the TX passband leakage signal at the LNA input, even at very high transmit power levels and with wide transmission bandwidths. Such a novel cancellation solution can, therefore, substantially improve the TX–RX isolation, hence reducing the requirements on passive isolation and RF component linearity, as well as increasing the efficiency and flexibility of the RF spectrum use in the emerging 5G radio networks.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.