4-21
Procedure to Set Acq. Signal Quality Parameters
Example
There are four registers that set the acquisition signal quality
thresholds, they are: CR 8, 9, 10, and 11
(RX_SQX_IN_ACQ). Each threshold consists of two bytes,
high and low that hold a 16-bit number.
These two thresholds, bit sync amplitude CR (8 and 9) and
phase error CR (10 and 11) are used to determine if the
desired signal is present. If the thresholds are set too “l(fā)ow”,
that increases the probability of missing a high signal to
noise detection due to being busy processing a false alarm.
If they are set too “high”, that increases the probability of
missing a low signal to noise detection. For the bit sync
amplitude, “high” actually means high amplitude while for
phase noise “high” means low noise or high SNR.
A recommended procedure is to set these thresholds
individually optimizing each one of them to the same false
alarm rate with no desired signal present. Only the
background environment should be present, usually additive
gaussian white noise (AGWN). When programming each
threshold, the other threshold is set so that it always indicates
that the signal is present. Set register CR8 to 00h while trying
to determine the value of the phase error signal quality
threshold for registers CR 10 and 11. Set register CR10 to
FFh while trying to determine the value of the Bit sync
amplitude signal quality threshold for registers 8 and 9.
Monitor the Carrier Sense (CRS) output (TEST 6, pin 45) in
test mode 1 and adjust the threshold to produce the desired
rate of false detections. CRS indicates valid initial PN
acquisition. After both thresholds are programmed in the
device the CRS rate is a logic “and” of both signal qualities
rate of occurrence over their respective thresholds and will
therefore be much lower than either.
PN Correlators Description
There are two types of correlators in the HFA3860B
baseband processor. The first is a parallel matched
correlator that correlates for the Barker sequence used in
preamble, header, and PSK data modes. This PN correlator
is designed to handle BPSK spreading with carrier offsets up
to
±
50ppm and 11 chips per symbol. Since the spreading is
BPSK, the correlator is implemented with two real
correlators, one for the I and one for the Q Channel. The
same Barker sequence is always used for both I and Q
correlators.
16 SYMBOLS
B
126 SYMBOL SYNC
SFD
JUST
MISSED
DET
ANT1
SYMB
TIMING
DETECT
ANT1
CHECK
ANT2
TX
POWER
RAMP
NO
SIG
FOUND
ANT2
16 SYMBOLS 16 SYMBOLS 16 SYMBOLS 16 SYMBOLS 16 SYMBOLS 16 SYMBOLS
A
B
A
7S
16 SYMBOLS
B
B
A
B
DETECT
ANT1
SFD DET
START DATA
SEED
DESCRAMBLER
7S
CHECK
ANT2
INTERNAL
SET UP TIME
VERIFY
ANT1
2
NOTES:
4. Worst Case Timing; antenna dwell starts before signal is full strength.
5. Time line shown assumes that antenna 2 gets insufficient signal.
FIGURE 12. DUAL ANTENNA ACQUISITION TIMELINE
2
16 SYMBOLS
78 SYMBOL SYNC
SFD
JUST
MISSED
DET
DETECT
TX
POWER
RAMP
16 SYMBOLS
16 SYMBOLS
16 SYMBOLS
7 SYM
16 SYMBOLS
SYMB
TIMING
VERIFY
SFD DET
START DATA
SEED
DESCRAMBLER
7 SYM
INTERNAL
SET UP TIME
FIGURE 13. SINGLE ANTENNA ACQUISITION TIMELINE
HFA3860B