Power dissipation reduction in wireless transceivers
DCFirst Claim
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1. A method of controlling power dissipation in a receiver signal path of a receiver comprising:
- a) receiving an input signal by the receiver;
b) providing a first signal indicative of the sum of a desired signal and interfering signals in the input signal at a first location in the receiver signal path;
c) providing a second signal indicative of the sum of a desired signal and interfering signals at a second location in the receiver signal path, the relative proportions of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the second signal being different from the relative proportions of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the first signal;
d) deducing a strength of the desired signal relative to the strength of interferer signals in the input signal from a combination of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the first signal relative to a combination of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the second signal;
e) scaling an impedance of at least a component in the receiver signal path responsive to the result obtained in d);
wherein the scaling of the impedance of the at least a component in the receiver signal path results in lower power dissipation for higher strengths of the desired signal relative to the respective strength of an interferer signals in the input signal than for lower strengths of the desired signal relative to a strength of the respective interferer signals in the input signal.
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Abstract
Methods and circuits for reducing power dissipation in wireless transceivers and other electronic circuits and systems. Embodiments of the present invention use bias current reduction, impedance scaling, and gain changes either separately or in combination to reduce power dissipation. For example, bias currents are reduced in response to a need for reduced signal handling capability, impedances are scaled thus reducing required drive and other bias currents in response to a strong received signal, or gain is increased and impedances are scaled in response to a low received signal in the presence of no or weak interfering signals.
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Citations
8 Claims
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1. A method of controlling power dissipation in a receiver signal path of a receiver comprising:
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a) receiving an input signal by the receiver; b) providing a first signal indicative of the sum of a desired signal and interfering signals in the input signal at a first location in the receiver signal path; c) providing a second signal indicative of the sum of a desired signal and interfering signals at a second location in the receiver signal path, the relative proportions of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the second signal being different from the relative proportions of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the first signal; d) deducing a strength of the desired signal relative to the strength of interferer signals in the input signal from a combination of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the first signal relative to a combination of the desired signal and the interfering signals in the second signal; e) scaling an impedance of at least a component in the receiver signal path responsive to the result obtained in d); wherein the scaling of the impedance of the at least a component in the receiver signal path results in lower power dissipation for higher strengths of the desired signal relative to the respective strength of an interferer signals in the input signal than for lower strengths of the desired signal relative to a strength of the respective interferer signals in the input signal.
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2. A method of controlling power dissipation in a receiver, when a receiver is receiving and processing an input signal that includes a desired signal and at least an interferer signal, the method comprising:
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determining at a first node a strength of the input signal; determining at a second node a strength of a signal, that is substantially the desired signal with the interferer signal reduced by filtering from the input signal; comparing the signal levels at the first node and the second node to deduce the relative increase or decrease in strengths of the desired signal and the at least an interferer signal; and causing a variable decrease in power dissipation within the receiver and a resultant decrease in a battery drain of the receiver, by variably changing an impedance of at least a component in the receiver, based on the input signal strength, upon determination that the relative strength of the desired signal has increased or the relative strength of the interferer signal has decreased; and
,causing a variable increase in power dissipation within the receiver and a resultant increase in the battery drain of the receiver, by variably changing the impedance of the at least a component in the receiver, based on the input signal, upon determination that the relative strength of the desired signal has decreased or the strength of the interferer signal has increased. - View Dependent Claims (3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
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Specification