Abstract:
A mixer circuit has a first filter connected between a local oscillator terminal and a node and another filter connected between a RF signal terminal and the node. A first circuit path extends from the node through a first diode to a first tuned circuit which can be connected to an input terminal of a balanced-to-unbalanced converter. A second circuit path extends from the node through an oppositely disposed diode which is connected to another tuned circuit which can be connected to another input terminal of the balanced-to-unbalanced converter. The diodes alternately conduct in response to opposite half cycles of the local oscillator signal and the RF signal to generate a variety of mixing components. The tuned circuits preserve the desired output signal and attenuate the other mixing components.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates generally to mixer circuits and particularly to such circuitry utilizing filter circuits. 
     Modern high frequency communication systems such as transceivers or equipment for testing such systems often include frequency converter or mixer circuits which can perform a variety of functions. For instance, it is desired that mixing circuitry be utilized in transceivers for providing an intermediate frequency (IF) signal at a first terminal in response to a local oscillator signal applied to a second terminal and a radio frequency (RF) input signal applied at a third terminal, when such equipment is operated in a &#34;receive mode&#34;. It is also desired that the same circuitry be usable for converting the frequencies of a modulated signal applied to the first terminal to provide a desired output signal at the third terminal, when such equipment is operated in a &#34;transmit mode&#34; or as a signal generator. 
     Generally, prior art circuitry for performing mixing functions at frequencies of between 1 and 3 gigahertz (GH z ) utilize complex, broadband transformers for cancelling unwanted signals. These transformers are expensive and tend to take up space and add excessive additional weight. Furthermore, some prior art systems require redundant circuitry to perform the functions of the above described &#34;receive&#34; and &#34;transmit&#34; modes. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide balanced mixer circuitry which does not require that broadband transformers be utilized therein. 
     The above and other objects and advantages of the present invention are carried out in one form by providing mixer circuitry having a first filter connected between a local oscillator and a node and another filter connected between a RF signal terminal and the node. A first circuit path extends from the node through a first diode to a first tuned circuit which is also connected to an input terminal of a balanced-to-unbalanced converter. A second circuit path extends from the node through an oppositely disposed diode which is connected to another tuned circuit that is also connected to another input terminal of the balanced-to-unbalanced converter. The diodes alternately conduct in response to opposite half cycles of the local oscillator signal to nonlinearly combine the frequencies of the local oscillator and input signal to generate a variety of mixing components. The tuned circuits select and preserve the desired output signal and attenuate the other mixing components. As a result, the desired output signal is applied to the balanced-to-unbalanced converter. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
     A more complete understanding of the present invention can be derived by referring to the detailed description and claims when considered along with the accompanying drawings. 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of a balanced filter circuit in accordance with the present invention; and 
     FIG. 2 is a graph of the bandpass characteristics of the filters and tuned circuits of FIG. 1. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     Referring now to the drawings, FIG. 1 shows a schematic diagram of a balanced mixer 10 having a local oscillator input terminal 12 and a RF signal terminal 14. Input capacitor 16 is connected to terminal 18 of high pass filter 20 which also includes inductor 22 and capacitor 24. More specifically, inductor 22 is connected between terminal 18 and a ground or reference conductor 26. Capacitor 24 couples terminal 18 to node 28. High pass filter 20 is designed to provide a low impedance for the local oscillator signal which can be tunable from 1,710.4 megahertz (MH z ) to 2,710 MH z , for instance. 
     Direct current (DC) blocking input capacitor 30 is connected between RF signal terminal 14 and terminal 32 of low pass filter 34 which also includes inductors 36 and 38 that are connected in series between terminal 32 and node 28. Inductors 36 and 38 are connected at node 44 and capacitor 40 is connected from node 44 to ground or reference conductor 26. Low pass filter 34 is designed to provide a low impedance path between terminals 14 and 28 for signals having frequencies of between 0.4 MH z  to 1000 MH z , for instance. 
     Inductor 38 tends to provide a high impedance at node 28 to signals passed by high pass filter 20 thereby enhancing the high pass function of filter 20. Furthermore, capacitor 24 provides a high impedance at node 28 to the signals passed by low pass filter 34 thereby enhancing the operation of filter 34. 
     FIG. 2 illustrates relative amplitude versus frequency in GH z  characteristics of filters 20 and 34. More specifically, FIG. 2 shows a graph having an abscissa axis 50 for measuring frequency and an ordinate axis 52 for measuring the amplitude of the admittances of filters 20 and 34, which are the reciprocals of the impedances of filters 20 and 34. Curve 54 represents the bandpass characteristic of low pass filter 34 and curve 56 illustrates the high pass characteristic of filter 20. Thus, FIG. 2 indicates that low pass filter 34 provides high impedances to frequencies falling within the pass band of high pass filter 20 and that high pass filter 20 provides high impedances to signals having frequencies falling within the pass band of low pass filter 34. Accordingly, the local oscillator signal applied to terminal 12 is blocked from RF signal terminal 14 by filter 34, and when circuit 10 is operated in the &#34;receive mode&#34;, the input signal applied to terminal 14 is blocked from entering the local oscillator coupled to terminal 12 by filter 20, for instance. 
     Detector diode 60 includes an anode electrode 62 coupled to node 28 and a cathode electrode 64. Tuned circuit 66 includes a capacitor 68 and an inductor 70 which are connected in parallel between cathode electrode 64 and ground or reference conductor 26. The cathode 64 of diode 60 is also connected to first input terminal 72 of balanced-to-unbalanced converter 74. Another detector diode 76 includes a cathode electrode 78 connected to node 28 and an anode electrode 80 connected to tuned circuit 82. Capacitor 84 and inductor 86 are connected in parallel with each other to form tuned circuit 82 which is connected between anode 80 and ground or reference conductor 26. Anode 80 is connected to another input terminal 88 of balanced-to-unbalanced converter 74. Detector diodes 60 and 76 may be &#34;hot carrier&#34; diodes of a known type. Hot carrier diodes are used in circuit 10 because they provide a low capacitance and thereby a high &#34;off&#34; impedance when nonconductive, at the desired frequency. The high &#34;off&#34; impedances provided by diodes 60 and 76 tend to not load down the driving circuitry coupled thereto. 
     Tuned circuits 66 and 82 are each tuned to a center frequency equal to the IF center frequency which can be approximately 1.7 GH z , for instance, as shown by IF bandpass characteristic 90 of FIG. 2. An IF amplifier connected to terminal 92 can have a bandpass of about 10 MH z , for instance. Hence, the tuned circuits provide a high impedance to signals in a band centered at the IF frequency while tending to provide low impedance at other frequencies including the local oscillator and RF signal frequencies. 
     Balanced-to-unbalanced converter 74 may be provided by a piece of 50 ohm coaxial transmission line cut to a length equal to one-quarter wavelength at the IF center frequency. Conductor 92 represents the center conductor of the coaxial cable and the surface of cylinder 94 indicates the grounded shield wire of such cable which is separated from conductor 92 by an insulator 96. Outer conductor 94 is connected to ground conductor 26. Hence, differential signals applied between terminals 72 and 88 are converted to single ended signals at terminal 92 which is referenced to the ground potential, in a known manner. Terminal 92 can be connected to either the IF amplifier in the &#34;receive&#34; mode or to a signal source in the &#34;transmit&#34; mode in a known manner. 
     More specifically, in either the &#34;receive&#34; or the &#34;transmit&#34; mode of operation, the local oscillator signal applied to terminal 12 has a relatively high magnitude which can on the order of 7 decibels above 1 milliwatt (dBm). This local oscillator signal is applied to terminal 12 and an RF input signal having a relatively small magnitude on the order of -10 dBm, for instance, is applied to terminal 14 in the &#34;receive&#34; mode. The RF input signal can be modulated to produce sidebands around the center frequency. In the &#34;receive&#34; mode, the output is taken from terminal 92. Alternatively, in the &#34;transmit&#34; mode, an RF input signal is applied to terminal 92 and the output is taken from terminal 14. In either mode, the positive going excursions of the sinusoidal local oscillator signal render diode 60 conductive and the negative going excursions of the local oscillator signal render diode 76 conductive. Because of the nonlinear transfer characteristics of these diodes, the sum and difference of the frequencies of the local oscillator and RF input signals along with other frequency components are generated by this mixing action. These signal components are sampled on the positive going half cycles by tuned circuit 66 and on the negative going half cycles by tuned circuit 82. In the &#34;receive&#34; mode, the frequency of the local oscillator signal can be adjusted such that the difference between the frequency of the local oscillator signal and the RF input signal is within the IF band centered about the IF frequency of approximately 1.7 GH z . The DC blocking capacitors 24, 30 and 40 enable the same DC current through both diodes 60 and 76 since these diodes are in series from a DC point of view. This enables the diodes to operate in a balanced manner. 
     Hence, the local oscillator and RF signals tend to be in phase and have equal magnitudes at the ends of tuned circuits 66 and 82 that are respectively connected to diodes 60 and 76. Therefore, these signals tend to be &#34;balanced&#34; or to cancel each other because of tuned circuits 68 and 82. Alternatively, the desired frequency which can be the difference between the frequencies of the local oscillator and the RF signal will be out of phase in tuned circuits 66 and 82 because of the alternate conductive periods of diodes 60 and 76. Hence, the desired differences signal is developed between input terminals 72 and 88 of converter 74 by tuned circuits 66 and 82. 
     The following table indicates some of the operating characteristics for a circuit 10 operated in the &#34;receive&#34; mode, that was tested at an IF frequency of 1710 MH z . 
     
         __________________________________________________________________________RF = -10 dBm      LO = +7 dBm     Conversion                            LO to IFNOMINAL    +/-.5 dB              IF Level                      Loss  Isolation__________________________________________________________________________.4  MHz    1.7104          GH.sub.z              -18 dBm 8  dB 30 dB2.0        1.712   -18     8     308.0        1.718   -18     8     3132.0       1.742   -18     8     41100.0    (-10.2 dBm)      1.810   -19     8.8   42200 (-10.4 dBm)      1.91    -19.2   8.8   25300 (-10.4 dBm)      2.01    -19     8.6   20400 (-10.4 dBm)      2.11    -18     7.6   19500 (-10.5 dBm)      2.21    -18     7.5   15600 (-11.5 dBm)      2.31    -19.5   8.0   14700 (-11 dBm)      2.41    -18     7     14.5800 (-11 dBm)      2.51    -18     7     15900        2.61    -17.5   7.5   161000       2.71    -18     8     15__________________________________________________________________________ 
    
     The conversion loss illustrated in the fourth column of the foregoing table is the difference between the power level of the input signal at terminal 14 and the power level of the resulting output signal at IF terminal 92. The measurements in the table were taken for a circuit 10 having components with the following values: 
     C 16  =3.0 picofarads 
     C 24  =1.5 picofarads 
     C 30  =0.1 microfarad 
     C 40  =3.0 picofarads 
     C 68  =C 84  =3.0 picofarads 
     L 70  =L 86  =30 mil×220 mil microstrip line 
     L 36  =L 38  =15 mil×300 mil microstrip line 
     L 22  =15 mil×230 mil microstrip line 
     As indicated in the foregoing table of operating characteristics, circuitry 10 provides up to approximately 30 dB suppression of the local oscillator signal at terminal 92, for instance. To attain this high level of suppression, some prior art circuitry require expensive, doubly balanced mixers which generally are more complex and expensive than the mixer of circuit 10. Parallel tuned circuits 66 and 82 provide a high impedance at the IF frequencies and a low impedance path to ground for the local oscillator and the input signal. Balun 94 provides a high impedance between terminals 72 and 88 with respect to ground. 
     In the &#34;transmit&#34; mode of operation, as previously mentioned, a RF input signal is applied to terminal 92 and the local oscillator signal is applied to terminal 12. The mixing action of diodes 60 and 76 results in a frequency converted output signal at terminal 14. The output signal is selected by filter 34. The signal driving applied to terminal 92 may be either modulated or unmodulated. 
     Circuit 10 can be constructed by simple and low cost techniques. More specifically, high pass filter 20 and low pass filter 34 may be printed on a printed circuit board of the previously indicated dimensions. Furthermore, tuned circuits 66 and 82 also may be printed on the circuit board. The result is a low cost, efficient, mechanically sturdy well-balanced mixer. 
     Although the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will understand that changes in the form and details thereof may occur without departing from the scope of the present invention.