Interface for shunt voltage regulator in a contactless smartcard
First Claim
1. A voltage regulator circuit for a contactless smartcard that regulates an incoming inductively coupled and modulated signal comprising:
- an inductor coil for converting an electromagnetic field into a current;
rectifying means connected to said inductor coil for converting said current to a rectified output voltage carrying a demodulated data signal;
a shunt device having at least one controllable conductive path for connecting the output of said rectifying means to ground, said shunt device diverting current from said output in accordance with control signals it receives at a controlling input, said controlling input being connected to a feedback path that is comprised of the following components;
a voltage dividing means for taking said output voltage from said rectifying means as an input and outputting a proportionally lowered voltage;
a low-pass filter means connected between the output of said voltage dividing means and said controlling input of said shunt device means for removing high frequency modulation components from the signal transmitted to said controlling input;
means for transmitting modulation of the data signal at the output of said rectifying means to the controlling input of said shunt device, thereby imposing a modulation on the shunt current that is proportional to the modulation of the output voltage of said rectifying means, and thereby maintaining the proportionality of the voltage variation at the output of the rectifier caused by the modulation; and
a non-linear processing means having a first, second and third input connected to said voltage dividing means, a reference voltage means and a controlling electrode of said shunt device, respectively, said non-linear processing means generating a voltage proportional to the difference in voltage between the output of said voltage dividing means and said reference voltage wherein the proportionality is modified to compensate for the non-linear nature of the transconductance of the shunt device by modifying the bias conditions of the circuit;
the output voltage being further modified by a resistive means that compensates for the non-linear nature of the transconductance of the shunt device.
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Accused Products
Abstract
The present invention provides shunt voltage regulation by employing a rectifying means to rectify an incoming signal and a current sinking means to divert current from the output of the rectifying means in such a way that the output voltage is maintained at an appropriate level and the modulation level does not rise above the acceptable range. This is accomplished by having two feedback mechanisms for the control of said current sinking means. A first feedback mechanism utilizes a voltage dividing means to generate a control voltage signal that will cause the average output voltage of the rectifying means to be equal to the a reference voltage. A second feedback mechanism utilizes non-linear processing means and capacitors to transmit part of the modulation frequency to the control of the current sinking means, thereby keeping the modulation at the output of the rectifying mean at an appropriate level at all time.
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Citations
8 Claims
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1. A voltage regulator circuit for a contactless smartcard that regulates an incoming inductively coupled and modulated signal comprising:
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an inductor coil for converting an electromagnetic field into a current;
rectifying means connected to said inductor coil for converting said current to a rectified output voltage carrying a demodulated data signal;
a shunt device having at least one controllable conductive path for connecting the output of said rectifying means to ground, said shunt device diverting current from said output in accordance with control signals it receives at a controlling input, said controlling input being connected to a feedback path that is comprised of the following components;
a voltage dividing means for taking said output voltage from said rectifying means as an input and outputting a proportionally lowered voltage;
a low-pass filter means connected between the output of said voltage dividing means and said controlling input of said shunt device means for removing high frequency modulation components from the signal transmitted to said controlling input;
means for transmitting modulation of the data signal at the output of said rectifying means to the controlling input of said shunt device, thereby imposing a modulation on the shunt current that is proportional to the modulation of the output voltage of said rectifying means, and thereby maintaining the proportionality of the voltage variation at the output of the rectifier caused by the modulation; and
a non-linear processing means having a first, second and third input connected to said voltage dividing means, a reference voltage means and a controlling electrode of said shunt device, respectively, said non-linear processing means generating a voltage proportional to the difference in voltage between the output of said voltage dividing means and said reference voltage wherein the proportionality is modified to compensate for the non-linear nature of the transconductance of the shunt device by modifying the bias conditions of the circuit;
the output voltage being further modified by a resistive means that compensates for the non-linear nature of the transconductance of the shunt device. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
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7. A method of regulating voltage in a contactless smart card comprising the steps of:
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a) inductively receiving a data-modulated electromagnetic signal and converting it into an alternating current electric signal;
b) rectifying the alternating current signal into a direct current signal comprising a rectified output voltage carrying a demodulated data signal with an amplitude, and outputting the direct current signal; and
c) establishing mean voltage of said rectified output voltage at a reference level by means of a voltage divider network and differential comparator, while also proportionally changing the amplitude of the data signal by shunting excess current away from the output, the amount of current being shunted being controlled by an output of a low-pass filter responsive to the demodulated data signal. - View Dependent Claims (8)
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Specification