Patents by Inventor Jeremy Lubkin

Jeremy Lubkin has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 8340604
    Abstract: An RF power amplifier system comprises an amplitude control loop and a phase control loop. The amplitude control loop adjusts the supply voltage to the power amplifier based upon the amplitude correction signal indicating the amplitude difference between the amplitude of the input signal and an attenuated amplitude of the output signal. The phase control loop adjusts the phase of the input signal based upon a phase error signal indicating a phase difference between phases of the input signal and the output signal. The phase control loop may comprise one or more variable phase delays introducing a relative phase delay to allow the phase differences between the input and output signals of the PA circuit to be within a range compatible with a phase comparator generating the phase error signal, and a low frequency blocking module that removes the larger extent, lower frequency components of the phase error signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 24, 2011
    Date of Patent: December 25, 2012
    Assignee: Quantance, Inc.
    Inventors: Serge Francois Drogi, Vikas Vinayak, Mark Gehring, Cary Renzema, Jeremy Lubkin
  • Publication number: 20110140777
    Abstract: An RF power amplifier system comprises an amplitude control loop and a phase control loop. The amplitude control loop adjusts the supply voltage to the power amplifier based upon the amplitude correction signal indicating the amplitude difference between the amplitude of the input signal and an attenuated amplitude of the output signal. The phase control loop adjusts the phase of the input signal based upon a phase error signal indicating a phase difference between phases of the input signal and the output signal. The phase control loop may comprise one or more variable phase delays introducing a relative phase delay to allow the phase differences between the input and output signals of the PA circuit to be within a range compatible with a phase comparator generating the phase error signal, and a low frequency blocking module that removes the larger extent, lower frequency components of the phase error signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 24, 2011
    Publication date: June 16, 2011
    Applicant: QUANTANCE, INC.
    Inventors: Serge Francois Drogi, Vikas Vinayak, Mark Gehring, Cary Renzema, Jeremy Lubkin
  • Patent number: 7917106
    Abstract: An RF power amplifier system comprises an amplitude control loop and a phase control loop. The amplitude control loop adjusts the supply voltage to the power amplifier based upon the amplitude correction signal indicating the amplitude difference between the amplitude of the input signal and an attenuated amplitude of the output signal. The phase control loop adjusts the phase of the input signal based upon a phase error signal indicating a phase difference between phases of the input signal and the output signal. The phase control loop may comprise one or more variable phase delays introducing a relative phase delay to allow the phase differences between the input and output signals of the PA circuit to be within a range compatible with a phase comparator generating the phase error signal, and a low frequency blocking module that removes the larger extent, lower frequency components of the phase error signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 31, 2007
    Date of Patent: March 29, 2011
    Assignee: Quantance, Inc.
    Inventors: Serge Francois Drogi, Vikas Vinayak, Mark Gehring, Cary Renzema, Jeremy Lubkin
  • Publication number: 20070184794
    Abstract: An RF power amplifier system comprises an amplitude control loop and a phase control loop. The amplitude control loop adjusts the supply voltage to the power amplifier based upon the amplitude correction signal indicating the amplitude difference between the amplitude of the input signal and an attenuated amplitude of the output signal. The phase control loop adjusts the phase of the input signal based upon a phase error signal indicating a phase difference between phases of the input signal and the output signal. The phase control loop may comprise one or more variable phase delays introducing a relative phase delay to allow the phase differences between the input and output signals of the PA circuit to be within a range compatible with a phase comparator generating the phase error signal, and a low frequency blocking module that removes the larger extent, lower frequency components of the phase error signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 31, 2007
    Publication date: August 9, 2007
    Applicant: Quantance, Inc.
    Inventors: Serge Drogi, Vikas Vinayak, Mark Gehring, Cary Renzema, Jeremy Lubkin
  • Patent number: 6331833
    Abstract: A multi-bit analog-to-digital converter architecture, which during normal operation behaves like a single-bit converter, thus sharing the high linearity and low distortion properties of the simpler system. When a high input signal is applied, a second bit is triggered and the system behaves like a more complex multi-bit system, providing system stability where a single-bit comparator would overload and the system would become unstable. During normal operation, a single-bit converter is sufficient to stabilize the system. When the input is a large, sustained signal (relative to the full scale of the converter) this single-bit approach is not sufficient to maintain system stability. Thus, if the input to the analog-to-digital converter is close to its maximum or minimum range (implying a large positive or negative input signal) a second bit is triggered, providing stable linearity where the signal-to-noise ratio of a conventional sigma-delta converter would rapidly drop off.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 20, 2000
    Date of Patent: December 18, 2001
    Assignee: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Eric H. Naviasky, Michael M. Hufford, Jeremy Lubkin