Patents Assigned to Quellan, Inc.
  • Publication number: 20100295591
    Abstract: A skew adjustor that can reduce inter-pair skew between differential signals received via a cable is disclosed. In one embodiment, a skew adjustor includes: a skew detector that receives signals from a cable, and provides a detected skew amount when skew is detected between two of the signals; an offset controller for receiving the detected skew amount, and for providing a delay control signal in response thereto; and a skew delay circuit that receives the signals and the delay control signal, and enables one or more delay stages in a path of a first arriving of the two skewed signals based on the delay control signal, such that an adjusted skew between the two skewed signals at an output of the skew delay circuit is less than the detected skew amount by an amount corresponding to the enabled one or more delay stages.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 20, 2009
    Publication date: November 25, 2010
    Applicant: Quellan Inc.
    Inventors: Georgios Asmanis, Faouzi Chaahoub
  • Publication number: 20100278085
    Abstract: A signal selector enhancer suitable for portable electronic devices and base stations is disclosed. In one embodiment, the enhancer can include: a filter for receiving a signal from a first node, and for providing a filtered signal output therefrom, where the first node is coupled to a signal selector; and a noise canceller for receiving the filtered signal output, and for providing an adjusted filtered signal at a second node, where the second node is coupled to the signal selector, and where an operation of the signal selector is enhanced by the filter and the noise canceller arrangement.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 29, 2009
    Publication date: November 4, 2010
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventor: Wilhelm Steffen Hahn
  • Publication number: 20100244943
    Abstract: A signal filter and accompanying methods. In one embodiment, the filter includes a first mechanism for receiving a first signal. A second mechanism employs one or more modified representations of the first signal to cancel one or more frequency components of the first signal, yielding an output signal in response thereto. In a more specific embodiment, the first mechanism includes a splitter for receiving the first signal and splitting the first signal onto a first path and a second path. The second mechanism further includes one or more delay modules and one or more phase shifters in the first path and/or the second path. One or more controllable amplifiers are optionally included in the first path and/or the second path. The one or more delay modules, phase shifters, or amplifiers are responsive to one or more control signals from a controller. The controller is adapted to modify behavior of the second mechanism so that the filter is characterized by a desired frequency response.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 27, 2009
    Publication date: September 30, 2010
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Wilhelm Steffen Hahn, Wei Chen
  • Patent number: 7804760
    Abstract: A circuit can process a sample of a signal to emulate, simulate, or model an effect on the signal. Thus, an emulation circuit can produce a representation of a real-world signal transformation by processing the signal according to one or more signal processing parameters that are characteristic of the real-world signal transformation. The emulation circuit can apply analog signal processing and/or mixed signal processing to the signal. The signal processing can comprise feeding the signal through two signal paths, each having a different delay, and creating a weighted sum of the outputs of the two signal paths. The signal processing can also (or alternatively) comprise routing the signal through a network of delay elements, wherein a bank of switching or routing elements determines the route and thus the resulting delay.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 23, 2006
    Date of Patent: September 28, 2010
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Bruce C. Schmukler, Arvind Raghavan, Ziba Nami, Jyothi Emmanuel Peddi, Andrew Joo Kim, Michael G. Vrazel, Charles E. Summers
  • Patent number: 7729431
    Abstract: A wireless communication system can comprise two or more antennas that interfere with one another via free space coupling, surface wave crosstalk, dielectric leakage, or other interference effect. The interference effect can produce an interference signal on one of the antennas. A cancellation device can suppress antenna interference by generating an estimate of the interference signal and subtracting the estimate from the interference signal. The cancellation device can generate the estimate based on sampling signals on an antenna that generates the interference or on an antenna that receives the interference. The cancellation device can comprise a model of the crosstalk effect. Transmitting test signals on the communication system can define or refine the model.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 8, 2008
    Date of Patent: June 1, 2010
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Edward Gebara, Joy Laskar, Emmanouil M. Tentzeris, Andrew Joo Kim
  • Patent number: 7725079
    Abstract: Signals propagating on an aggressor communication channel can cause detrimental interference in a victim communication channel. A signal processing circuit can generate an interference cancellation signal that, when applied to the victim communication channel, cancels the detrimental interference. The signal processing circuit can dynamically adjust or update two or more aspects of the interference cancellation signal, such as an amplitude or gain parameter and a phase or delay parameter. Via the dynamic adjustments, the signal processing circuit can adapt to changing conditions, thereby maintaining an acceptable level of interference cancellation in a fluctuating operating environment. A control circuit that implements the parametric adjustments can have at least two modes of operation, one for adjusting the amplitude parameter and one for adjusting the phase parameter. The modes can be selectable or can be intermittently available, for example.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 9, 2006
    Date of Patent: May 25, 2010
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Edward Gebara, Bruce C. Schmukler, Mark W. Dickmann, Michael F. Farrell, Michael G. Vrazel, David Anthony Stelliga, Joy Laskar, Charles E. Summers
  • Publication number: 20100074315
    Abstract: A noise sampling detector suitable for portable electronic devices is disclosed. The detector may detect noise, transmitter signals, spurs, and/or interference. In one embodiment, a detector can include: a load portion; an antenna pattern shaping portion coupled to the load portion, where the antenna pattern shaping portion includes meandering segments of variable lengths and/or widths; and an impedance matching circuit coupled to the antenna pattern shaping portion.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 24, 2008
    Publication date: March 25, 2010
    Applicant: QUELLAN, INC.
    Inventor: Wilhelm Steffen Hahn
  • Publication number: 20100039923
    Abstract: Signals propagating in one communication channel can generate crosstalk interference in another communication channel. A crosstalk cancellation device can process the signals causing the crosstalk interference and generate a crosstalk cancellation signal that can compensate for the crosstalk when applied to the channel receiving crosstalk interference. The crosstalk cancellation device can include a model of the crosstalk effect that generates a signal emulating the actual crosstalk both in form an in timing. The crosstalk cancellation device can include a controller that monitors crosstalk-compensated communication signals and adjusts the model to enhance crosstalk cancellation performance. The crosstalk cancellation device can have a mode of self configuration or calibration in which defined test signals can be transmitted on the crosstalk-generating channel and the crosstalk-receiving channel.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 19, 2009
    Publication date: February 18, 2010
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Michael G. Vrazel, Sanjay Bajekal, Charles Summers
  • Publication number: 20100027709
    Abstract: A slicer can receive a communication signal having a level or amplitude that is between two discrete levels of a multilevel digital communication scheme. The slicer can compare the communication signal to a plurality of references such that multiple comparisons proceed essentially in parallel. A summation node can add the results of the comparisons to provide an output signal set to one of the discrete levels. The slicer can process the communication signal and provide the output signal on a symbol-by-symbol basis. A decision feedback equalizer (“DFE”) can comprise the slicer. A feedback circuit of the DFE can delay and scale the output signal and apply the delayed and scaled signal to the communication signal to reduce intersymbol interference (“ISI”).
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 14, 2009
    Publication date: February 4, 2010
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Cattalen Pelard, Edward Gebara
  • Patent number: 7626916
    Abstract: Signals propagating in one communication channel can generate crosstalk interference in another communication channel. A crosstalk cancellation device can process the signals causing the crosstalk interference and generate a crosstalk cancellation signal that can compensate for the crosstalk when applied to the channel receiving crosstalk interference. The crosstalk cancellation device can include a model of the crosstalk effect that generates a signal emulating the actual crosstalk both in form an in timing. The crosstalk cancellation device can include a controller that monitors crosstalk-compensated communication signals and adjusts the model to enhance crosstalk cancellation performance. The crosstalk cancellation device can have a mode of self configuration or calibration in which defined test signals can be transmitted on the crosstalk-generating channel and the crosstalk-receiving channel.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 19, 2006
    Date of Patent: December 1, 2009
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Michael G. Vrazel, Sanjay Bajekal, Charles Summers
  • Patent number: 7616700
    Abstract: A slicer can receive a communication signal having a level or amplitude that is between two discrete levels of a multilevel digital communication scheme. The slicer can compare the communication signal to a plurality of references such that multiple comparisons proceed essentially in parallel. A summation node can add the results of the comparisons to provide an output signal set to one of the discrete levels. The slicer can process the communication signal and provide the output signal on a symbol-by-symbol basis. A decision feedback equalizer (“DFE”) can comprise the slicer. A feedback circuit of the DFE can delay and scale the output signal and apply the delayed and scaled signal to the communication signal to reduce intersymbol interference (“ISI”).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 22, 2004
    Date of Patent: November 10, 2009
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Cattalen Pelard, Edward Gebara
  • Patent number: 7602860
    Abstract: A multilevel optical receiver can comprise a plurality of comparators that generally correspond with the number of levels in a multilevel data stream. Each comparator can be individually controlled and fed a decision threshold in order to decode a multilevel signal. The multilevel optical receiver can generate a statistical characterization of the received symbols in the form of a marginal cumulative distribution function (CDF) or probability density function (pdf). This characterization can be used to produce a set of ?-support estimates from which conditional pdfs are derived for each of the transmission symbols. These conditional pdfs may then be used to determine decision thresholds for decoding the received signal. The conditional pdfs may further be used to continuously estimate the fidelity or error rate of the received signal without the transmission of a testing sequence. The ?-supports may further be used to automatically control the gain on the receiver.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 4, 2006
    Date of Patent: October 13, 2009
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Vincent Mark Hietala, Andrew Joo Kim
  • Patent number: 7573966
    Abstract: A Signal Conditioning Filter (SCF) and a Signal Integrity Unit (SIU) address the coupled problem of equalization and noise filtering in order to improve signal fidelity for decoding. Specifically, a received signal can be filtered in a manner to optimize the signal fidelity even in the presence of both significant (large magnitudes of) ISI and noise. The present invention can provide an adaptive method that continuously monitors a signal fidelity measure. Monitoring the fidelity of a multilevel signal can be performed by external means such as by the SIU. A received signal y(t) can be “conditioned” by application of a filter with an electronically adjustable impulse response g(t). A resulting output z(t) can then be interrogated to characterize the quality of the conditioned signal. This fidelity measure q(t) can be used to adjust the filter response to maximize the fidelity measure of the conditioned signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 21, 2006
    Date of Patent: August 11, 2009
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Joo Kim, Vincent Mark Hietala, Sanjay Bajekal
  • Patent number: 7522883
    Abstract: Signals propagating on an aggressor communication channel can cause interference in a victim communication channel. A sensor coupled to the aggressor channel can obtain a sample of the aggressor signal. The sensor can be integrated with or embedded in a system, such as a flex circuit or a circuit board, that comprises the aggressor channel. The sensor can comprise a dedicated conductor or circuit trace that is near an aggressor conductor, a victim conductor, or an EM field associated with the interference. An interference compensation circuit can receive the sample from the sensor. The interference compensation circuit can have at least two operational modes of operation. In the first mode, the circuit can actively generate or output a compensation signal that cancels, corrects, or suppresses the interference. The second mode can be a standby, idle, power-saving, passive, or sleep mode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 2005
    Date of Patent: April 21, 2009
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Edward Gebara, Andrew Joo Kim, Joy Laskar, Anthony Stelliga, Emmanouil M. Tentzeris
  • Publication number: 20090016545
    Abstract: A noise-reduction system includes a noise-pattern predictor in communication with a noise-canceling module. In a more specific embodiment, the noise-reduction apparatus further includes an input collector in communication with the noise-pattern predictor. The input collector is coupled to a first module, such as a sensor, that provides information to the noise-pattern predictor to facilitate predicting noise in an accompanying signal environment and to provide a first signal in response thereto. In an illustrative embodiment, the first signal includes information indicating when an ignition system of a vehicle will turn on. The first signal further includes information indicating when a second signal transmitted from a cellular base station will affect noise in the signal environment. The second signal may include a burst in a cellular signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 21, 2008
    Publication date: January 15, 2009
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: David Anthony Stelliga, Wilhelm Steffan Hahn
  • Publication number: 20080146183
    Abstract: A wireless communication system can comprise two or more antennas that interfere with one another via free space coupling, surface wave crosstalk, dielectric leakage, or other interference effect. The interference effect can produce an interference signal on one of the antennas. A cancellation device can suppress antenna interference by generating an estimate of the interference signal and subtracting the estimate from the interference signal. The cancellation device can generate the estimate based on sampling signals on an antenna that generates the interference or on an antenna that receives the interference. The cancellation device can comprise a model of the crosstalk effect. Transmitting test signals on the communication system can define or refine the model.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 8, 2008
    Publication date: June 19, 2008
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Edward Gebara, Joy Laskar, Emmanouil M. Tentzeris, Andrew Joo Kim
  • Patent number: 7366244
    Abstract: A wireless communication system can comprise two or more antennas that interfere with one another via free space coupling, surface wave crosstalk, dielectric leakage, or other interference effect. The interference effect can produce an interference signal on one of the antennas. A cancellation device can suppress antenna interference by generating an estimate of the interference signal and subtracting the estimate from the interference signal. The cancellation device can generate the estimate based on sampling signals on an antenna that generates the interference or on an antenna that receives the interference. The cancellation device can comprise a model of the crosstalk effect. Transmitting test signals on the communication system can define or refine the model.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 30, 2006
    Date of Patent: April 29, 2008
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Edward Gebara, Joy Laskar, Emmanouil M. Tentzeris, Andrew Joo Kim
  • Patent number: 7352824
    Abstract: Decreasing the average transmitted power in an optical fiber communication channel using multilevel amplitude modulation in conjunction with Pulse Position Modulation (PPM). This multilevel PPM method does not entail any tradeoff between decreased power per channel and channel bandwidth, enabling a lower average transmitted power compared to On/Off Keying (OOK) with no reduction in aggregate data rate. Therefore, multilevel PPM can be used in high-speed Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexed (DWDM) systems where the maximum number of channels is traditionally limited by nonlinear effects such as self-phase modulation (SPM), cross-phase modulation (XPM), four-wave mixing (FWM), stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS), and stimulated Raman scattering (SRS). This modulation technique can enable an increased number of channels in DWDM systems, thereby increasing aggregate data rates within those systems.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 5, 2006
    Date of Patent: April 1, 2008
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael G. Vrazel, Stephen E. Ralph, Vincent Mark Hietala
  • Patent number: 7307569
    Abstract: Data throughput rates are increased in an optical fiber communication system without requiring replacement of the existing optical fiber in a link. Channel throughput is increased by upgrading the components and circuitry in the head and terminal of an optical fiber communication system link. Aggregate throughput in a fiber optic link is increased beyond the range of conventional Wavelength Division Multiplexed (WDM) upgrades, while precluding the necessity of replacing existing fiber plants. The increase in system throughput is achieved by using advanced modulation techniques to encode greater amounts of data into the transmitted spectrum of a channel, thereby increasing the spectral efficiency of each channel. This novel method of increasing transmission capacity by upgrading the head and terminal of the system to achieve greater spectral efficiency and hence throughput, alleviates the need to replace existing fiber plants.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 15, 2006
    Date of Patent: December 11, 2007
    Assignee: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael G. Vrazel, Stephen E. Ralph, Joy Laskar, Sungyong Jung, Vincent Mark Hietala, Edward Gebara
  • Publication number: 20070222654
    Abstract: Data throughput rates are increased in an optical fiber communication system without requiring replacement of the existing optical fiber in a link. Channel throughput is increased by upgrading the components and circuitry in the head and terminal of an optical fiber communication system link. Aggregate throughput in a fiber optic link is increased beyond the range of conventional Wavelength Division Multiplexed (WDM) upgrades, while precluding the necessity of replacing existing fiber plants. The increase in system throughput is achieved by using advanced modulation techniques to encode greater amounts of data into the transmitted spectrum of a channel, thereby increasing the spectral efficiency of each channel. This novel method of increasing transmission capacity by upgrading the head and terminal of the system to achieve greater spectral efficiency and hence throughput, alleviates the need to replace existing fiber plants.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 15, 2006
    Publication date: September 27, 2007
    Applicant: Quellan, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael Vrazel, Stephen Ralph, Joy Laskar, Sungyong Jung, Vincent Hietala, Edward Gebara