Interference mitigation for simultaneous transmit and receive applications on digital phased array systems

Trevor M Snow, Purdue University

Abstract

As analog-to-digital (ADC) and digital-to-analog conversion (DAC) technologies become cheaper and digital processing capabilities improve, phased array systems with digital transceivers at every element will become more commonplace. These architectures offer greater capability over traditional analog systems and enable advanced applications such as multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) communications, adaptive beamforming, space-time adaptive processing (STAP), and MIMO for radar. Capabilities for such systems are still limited by the need for isolating self-interference from transmitters at co-located receivers. The typical approach of time-sharing the antenna aperture between transmitters and receivers works but leaves the receivers blind for a period of time. For full-duplex operation, some systems use separate frequency bands for transmission and reception, but these require fixed filtering which reduces the system's ability to adapt to its environment and is also an inefficient use of spectral resources. To that end, tunable, high quality-factor filters are used for sub-band isolation and protect receivers while allowing open reception at other frequencies. For more flexibility, another emergent area of related research has focused on co-located spatial isolation using multiple antennas and direct injection of interference cancellation signals into receivers, which enables same-frequency full-duplex operation. With all these methods, self-interference must be reduced by an amount that prevents saturation of the ADC. Intermodulation products generated in the receiver in this process can potentially be problematic, as certain intermodulation products may appear to come from a particular angle and cohere in the beamformer. This work explores various digital phased array architectures and the how the flexibility afforded by an all-digital beamforming architecture, layered with other methods of isolation, can be used to reduce self-interference within the system. Specifically, digital control of coupled energy into receiving elements for planar and cylindrical array symmetries can be significantly reduced using near-field nulling, optimization of transmission frequencies for particular steering angles, and optimization of phase weights over restricted sets, without major impacts to the far-field performance of the system. Finally, a method for reducing in-band intermodulation that would ordinarily cohere in a system's receive beamformer is demonstrated using parallel cross-linearization of adjacent digital receivers in a phased array.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Chappell, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Electrical engineering|Electromagnetics

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