WO1994018781A1 - Method and system for compensating for coupling between circuits of quaded cable in a telecommunication transmission system - Google Patents
Method and system for compensating for coupling between circuits of quaded cable in a telecommunication transmission system Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO1994018781A1 WO1994018781A1 PCT/US1994/000949 US9400949W WO9418781A1 WO 1994018781 A1 WO1994018781 A1 WO 1994018781A1 US 9400949 W US9400949 W US 9400949W WO 9418781 A1 WO9418781 A1 WO 9418781A1
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- Prior art keywords
- coupling
- circuits
- cable
- quaded
- quad
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Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B3/00—Line transmission systems
- H04B3/02—Details
- H04B3/32—Reducing cross-talk, e.g. by compensating
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B3/00—Line transmission systems
- H04B3/02—Details
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B3/00—Line transmission systems
- H04B3/02—Details
- H04B3/46—Monitoring; Testing
- H04B3/487—Testing crosstalk effects
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/20—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path using different combinations of lines, e.g. phantom working
Definitions
- This invention relates to methods and systems for compensating for coupling between circuits of quaded cable and, in particular, to methods and systems for compensating for coupling between such circuits in a telecommunication transmission system.
- the elemental units in these cables are quads which are four insulated conductors or wires twisted together.
- quading is that more circuits can be packed into a given cross-sectional area of cable.
- the disadvantage comes from the fact that the quad is geometrically unstable and the capacitances between the conductors in the quad are difficult to control. These factors lead to poorer crosstalk performance between circuits in the same quad.
- Quaded cable can be made in two different configurations. In multiple twin quad, the two pairs that constitute the quad are individually twisted and then stranded together to effectively form a two-pair sub-unit. In star-quaded cable, the four conductors are twisted together. Most quaded cable is star-quaded.
- the cross-section of a typical star-quad is illustrated in Figure la. The natural modes of propagation of a perfectly constructed star-quad are obvious from the symmetry of the quad, and are illustrated in Figures 1b, 1c and 1d.
- Two balanced pair modes do not couple to each other because of the symmetry and opposite polarities of two conductors of the cable.
- the balanced pair modes are frequently referred to as "side circuits," a terminology descended from the use of multiple twin quad. Besides the balanced pair modes, one could use the phantom circuit of the balanced pair modes as shown in Figure Id.
- the coupling or cross-talk between conductors can be at unacceptable levels.
- the far end coupling, the coupling at the receive end of the cable, generated by the signal induced at the transmitted end, increases by 20 dB per decade. Further, the near end coupling induced on the transmitter by the transmitted signals increases by 15 dB per decade.
- An object of the present invention is to provide a method and system for compensating for coupling between the circuits of a quad, such as a starquad, so that all three circuits on such a quad can be used with essentially no noticeable coupling between them.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and system for compensating for coupling between circuits of a quad, such as a star-quad, by adaptively terminating the circuits in an economical and simple way to improve the performance and capacity of such star-quads.
- a method for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads. The method includes the step of receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quad. The set of actual signals is a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quad and the coupling between the circuits.
- the method also includes the steps of estimating coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits, modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals, and transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
- the step of estimating includes an approximation method which utilizes the set of actual signals.
- the quad is a star-quad.
- a system for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads.
- the system includes means for receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quaded cable.
- the set of actual signals is a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quaded cable and the coupling between the circuits.
- the system further includes means for estimating coupling informa tion which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits, means for modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals, and means for transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
- FIGURE 1a is a cross-sectional view of a typical star-quad
- FIGURE 1b is a cross-sectional view of a side circuit of such a star-quad wherein conductors two and four are at ground and conductors one and three are at +1 and -1 volts, respectively;
- FIGURE 1c is a view similar to Figure lb except conductors one and three are at ground and conductors two and four are at -1 and +1 volts, respectively;
- FIGURE 1d is a cross-sectional view of a phantom circuit of such a cable wherein conductors one through four are at +1, -1, +1 and -1 volts, respectively;
- FIGURE 2 is a block diagram flow chart illustrating the various steps of the method of the present invention.
- FIGURE 3 is a block diagram of a system for carrying out the method steps of the present invention.
- FIG 2 there is illustrated in block diagram flow chart form the method of the present invention in a telecommunication transmission system.
- a portion of the transmission system is illustrated in Figure 3 and includes a transmitter 10, a quaded cable (i.e. quad), generally indicated at 12, having twisted conductors or quads and a receiver, generally indicated at 14.
- the method and system are provided for compensating for coupling between the circuits of the cable 12.
- a set of actual signals are received at the receiver 14 at one end 17 of the quaded cable 12.
- the set of actual signals are a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end 19 of the quaded cable 12 from the transmitter 10 and the coupling between the circuits of the quad.
- coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the conductors is estimated utilizing an approximation method described in detail hereinbelow.
- the set of actual signals is modified based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals.
- the set of modified actual signals are transmitted by the receiver 14 along a line 24.
- the receiver 14 preferably includes a processor such as a microprocessor 26, a databus 28 and a system memory 30 which is used to store statistical information which correlates sets of actual signals received at the receiver to sets of transmittal signals transmitted at the transmitter 10. The statistical information is provided for all of the possible frequencies for the sets of signals.
- a processor such as a microprocessor 26, a databus 28 and a system memory 30 which is used to store statistical information which correlates sets of actual signals received at the receiver to sets of transmittal signals transmitted at the transmitter 10. The statistical information is provided for all of the possible frequencies for the sets of signals.
- Statistical information is used by the microprocessor 26 to estimate the coupling information.
- the receiver 14 also preferably includes a circuit 32 for modifying the set of received actual signals based on the coupling information.
- the circuit 32 may include a set of amplifiers having gain factors which are adaptively controlled by the microprocessor 26 so that these outputs of the amplifiers provide an estimate of the set of transmittal signals transmitted from the transmitter 10.
- the voltages in (1) are with respect to a putative remote ground at voltage zero.
- Two side circuits One circuit has conductors two and four at ground, with conductors one and three at +1 and -1 volts, respectively.
- the other circuit has conductors one and three at ground, with conductors two and four at +1 and -1 volts, respectively.
- the eigenvalues of both of the side circuit modes is a-c. •
- the phantom circuit. This mode has the four conductor voltages equal to +1, -1, +1, -1, respectively.
- the eigenvalue for this mode is a-2b+c.
- the phantom circuit is usually the lossiest mode, and the ground return the least lossy. Since ground return modes in separate quads couple strongly to each other, they are never used for transmission, but are important to the theory of crosstalk coupling and inductive interference and impulse noise. Adapting Quad Terminations To Minimize Coupling
- the normalized eigenvectors (mode vectors) of the nominal quad may be called ⁇ e i ⁇ .
- the received voltage vector on a nominal quad would be v, given by: (4)
- Equation (14) is an inhomogeneous set of linear equations in the elements of B 0 and may hence be solved by standard methods.
- a relatively simple method and system has been described above for compensating for coupling between conductors in star-cfuaded cable.
- the method and system adaptively terminate star-quaded cable to substantially suppress coupling between nominal quad modes when there is loose coupling between them.
- An approximation method is described for estimating the transmitted signal using only information that is available at the receiver 14 and is good to second order in small quantities when the coupling is of first order. Thus, for example, if the coupling between modes is down, say, 20 dB, the adaptive termination would suppress it so that it was down about 40 dB.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Cable Transmission Systems, Equalization Of Radio And Reduction Of Echo (AREA)
Abstract
A method and system are provided for compensating for coupling between circuits of star-quaded cable by adaptively terminating the cable at a receiver. An approximation method uses a set of actual signals received (16) by the receiver (14) at one end of the cable to estimate (18) coupling information which, in turn, is utilized to modify (20) the set of actual signals. The modified set of signals estimate a set of transmitted signals received at the opposite end of the cable.
Description
METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR
COMPENSATING FOR COUPLING BETWEEN
CIRCUITS OF QUADED CABLE IN A
TELECOMMUNICATION TRANSMISSION SYSTEM Technical Field
This invention relates to methods and systems for compensating for coupling between circuits of quaded cable and, in particular, to methods and systems for compensating for coupling between such circuits in a telecommunication transmission system.
Background Art
Almost all North American telephone loop wire pair cable is multipair cable. These transmission circuits are formed by individually twisted pairs of copper wires that are stranded together.
In contrast, much of the European and Asian cable plant is constituted of quaded cable or circuits. Some building cables in North America are also quaded.
The elemental units in these cables are quads which are four insulated conductors or wires twisted together. The advantage of quading is that more circuits can be packed into a given cross-sectional area of cable. The disadvantage comes from the fact that the quad is geometrically unstable and the capacitances between the conductors in the quad are difficult to control. These factors lead to poorer crosstalk performance between circuits in the same quad.
Quaded cable can be made in two different configurations. In multiple twin quad, the two pairs that constitute the quad are individually twisted and then stranded together to effectively form a two-pair sub-unit. In star-quaded cable, the four conductors are twisted together. Most quaded cable is star-quaded. The cross-section of a typical star-quad is illustrated in Figure la. The natural modes of propagation of a perfectly constructed star-quad are obvious from the symmetry of the quad, and are illustrated in Figures 1b, 1c and 1d.
Two balanced pair modes, illustrated in Figures 1b and 1c, do not couple to each other because of the symmetry and opposite polarities of two conductors of the cable. The balanced pair modes are frequently referred to as "side circuits," a terminology descended from the use of multiple twin quad. Besides the balanced pair modes, one could use the phantom circuit of the balanced pair modes as shown in Figure Id.
The polarities of the voltages on the four conductors guarantees that there would be no coupling between the phantom mode and the side circuits in a perfectly constructed star-quad. Thus, in such a quad, one would get three transmission circuits with four conductors. As far as coupling between quads is concerned, coupling between side circuits in different quads would be like dipole-dipole coupling as it is in multipair cables. Coupling between phantom circuits would be quadripole-quadripole coupling, which is generally looser than dipole-dipole coupling.
Unfortunately, it is essentially impossible to achieve the precision and stability of the quad structure to take advantage of the mode structure. The mechanical instability of the quad structure leads to coupling between circuits in the same quad. At high frequencies the coupling or cross-talk between conductors can be at unacceptable levels. The far end coupling, the coupling at the receive end of the cable, generated by the signal induced at the transmitted end, increases by 20 dB per decade. Further, the near end coupling induced on the transmitter by the transmitted signals increases by 15 dB per decade.
Consequently, phantom circuits are never used and side circuits in quaded cable have a shorter range at the higher frequencies used in modern services, such as Basic Rate ISDN.
Summary Of The Invention
An object of the present invention is to provide a method and system for compensating for coupling between the circuits of a quad, such as a starquad, so that all three circuits on such a quad can be used with essentially no noticeable coupling between them.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and system for compensating for coupling between circuits of a quad, such as a star-quad, by adaptively terminating the circuits in an economical and simple way to improve the performance and capacity of such star-quads.
In carrying out the above objects and other objects of the present invention, in a telecommunication transmission system including a quaded cable (i.e. quad) having quads, a method is provided for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads. The method includes the step of receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quad. The set of actual signals is a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quad and the coupling between the circuits. The method also includes the steps of estimating coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits, modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals, and transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
Preferably, the step of estimating includes an approximation method which utilizes the set of actual signals. Also, preferably, the quad is a star-quad.
Further in carrying out the above objects and other objects of the present invention, in a telecommunication transmission system including a quaded cable having quads, a system is provided for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads. The system includes means for receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quaded cable. The set of actual signals is a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quaded cable and the coupling between the circuits. The system further includes means for estimating coupling informa
tion which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits, means for modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals, and means for transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
The above objects and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best mode for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Brief Description Of The Drawings
FIGURE 1a is a cross-sectional view of a typical star-quad;
FIGURE 1b is a cross-sectional view of a side circuit of such a star-quad wherein conductors two and four are at ground and conductors one and three are at +1 and -1 volts, respectively;
FIGURE 1c is a view similar to Figure lb except conductors one and three are at ground and conductors two and four are at -1 and +1 volts, respectively;
FIGURE 1d is a cross-sectional view of a phantom circuit of such a cable wherein conductors one through four are at +1, -1, +1 and -1 volts, respectively;
FIGURE 2 is a block diagram flow chart illustrating the various steps of the method of the present invention; and
FIGURE 3 is a block diagram of a system for carrying out the method steps of the present invention.
Best Mode For Carrying Out The Invention
Referring now to Figure 2, there is illustrated in block diagram flow chart form the method of the present invention in a telecommunication transmission system. A portion of the transmission system is illustrated in Figure 3 and includes a transmitter 10, a quaded cable (i.e. quad), generally indicated at 12, having twisted conductors or quads and a receiver, generally indicated at 14. The method and system are provided for compensating for coupling between the circuits of the cable 12.
Referring again to Figure 2, at block 16 a set of actual signals are received at the receiver 14 at one end 17 of the quaded cable 12. The set of actual signals are a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end 19 of the quaded cable 12 from the transmitter 10 and the coupling between the circuits of the quad.
At block 18, coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the conductors is estimated utilizing an approximation method described in detail hereinbelow.
At block 20, the set of actual signals is modified based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals.
Finally, the set of modified actual signals are transmitted by the receiver 14 along a line 24.
Referring again to Figure 3, the receiver 14 preferably includes a processor such as a microprocessor 26, a databus 28 and a system memory 30 which is used to store statistical information which correlates sets of actual signals received at the receiver to sets of transmittal signals transmitted at the transmitter 10. The statistical information is provided for all of the possible frequencies for the sets of signals.
Statistical information is used by the microprocessor 26 to estimate the coupling information.
The receiver 14 also preferably includes a circuit 32 for modifying the set of received actual signals based on the coupling information. The circuit 32 may include a set of amplifiers having gain factors which are adaptively controlled by the microprocessor 26 so that these outputs of the amplifiers provide an estimate of the set of transmittal signals transmitted from the transmitter 10.
Characteristics Of Nominal Star Quads Since a star-quad has four conductors, the voltage transfer matrix from one end of the quad (x=0) to the other (x=1) is a four by four matrix:
(1)
The voltages in (1) are with respect to a putative remote ground at voltage zero.
In a nominal quad configuration, there is perfect geometrical symmetry within the quad and with respect to ground. Consequently, the coefficients in the transfer matrix satisfy the following symmetry:
ai . i+n = ak. k+n ; all k (2)
Consequently, (1) may be written in the form:
The natural modes, or eigenvectors of this nominal quad are easy to identify. They are:
The ground return mode, with all conductors at the same voltage, with an eigenvalue of a+2b+c.
Two side circuits. One circuit has conductors two and four at ground, with conductors one and three at +1 and -1 volts, respectively. The other circuit has conductors one and three at ground, with conductors two and four at +1 and -1 volts, respectively. The eigenvalues of both of the side circuit modes is a-c.
• The phantom circuit. This mode has the four conductor voltages equal to +1, -1, +1, -1, respectively. The eigenvalue for this mode is a-2b+c.
The phantom circuit is usually the lossiest mode, and the ground return the least lossy. Since ground return modes in separate quads couple strongly to each other, they are never used for transmission, but are important to the theory of crosstalk coupling and inductive interference and impulse noise. Adapting Quad Terminations To Minimize Coupling
Real quads are never nominal, but differ slightly from the nominal configurations as mentioned above. Thus, the side and phantom circuits of the quad will all be coupled loosely. The method and system illustrated in Figures 2 and 3 can be used to minimize the coupling between the modes.
For example, the normalized eigenvectors (mode vectors) of the nominal quad may be called {ei}. Then, the received voltage vector on a nominal quad would be v, given by: (4)
where the {Si} are the transmitted data. Of course, if the ground mode is not used, one of the Si would be zero. It is assumed, in writing (4), that the transmission effects have been equalized.
To extract the ith data value (Si) from the received vector, one can use the orthogonality of the normalized eigenvectors:
is the transpose of ei
Assuming that the mode vectors have been normalized. Of course, when the quad is not nominal, what is received is not Si, but ri, given by:
where the Cij are unknown coupling constants. This equation may be written in matrix form as follows:
r - CS (8) with obvious definitions for r, C and S. When the coupling is relatively loose, which is almost always the case, the diagonal elements in the coupling matrix, i.e., the Cii, are close to one and the off-diagonal elements are (Cij for i≠j) close to zero. In this case, one may advantageously write (7) in the form:
r - (E + B) S (9) where E is a unit matrix and B is small in the sense that it substantially reduces the magnitude of any vector that it operates on. If one knew the cross-covariance of r and S, one could determine B and use this knowledge to cancel intermodal coupling. To see this, take the outer
product of both sides of (8) with S+ and take expected values to get:
<r S†> - (E+B) <S S†> (10) which could be solved for B if <r S†> were known (where the brackets "< >" indicate expected value or statistical expectation). However, S is never known at the receiver 14 so that <r S†> cannot be obtained. However, one can write <r S†> in terms of what is known at the receiver 14. To do this, take the outer product of both sides of (8) with r† and take expectations to get:
<r r†> - (E+B) <S r†> (ID or equivalently,
<r r†> - <r S†> (E+B†) (12)
Combining (9) and (11) then yields:
<r r†> - (E+B)<S S†> (E+B†) (13)
This equation may be written in the form:
( 14 )
<r r†> - <S S†) - B <S S†> + <S S†>B† + B <S S†> B†
If this equation could be solved for B one would know the cable matrix C and would be able to make error free determination of the transmitted signal vectors. An approximate solution for (13) is easy to obtain. The clue to this is to note that, since B is small, the last term on the right in (13) is of second order in small quantities and may be neglected in obtaining an approximation, B0, for B. Thus, B0 is a solution of:
<r r†> - <S S†> - B0 <S S†> + <S S†> B0 † (15)
Equation (14) is an inhomogeneous set of linear equations in the elements of B0 and may hence be solved by standard methods.
The error, (B - B0), between B and its approximant, B0, is of second order in small quantities. To see this, (4) is subtracted from (13) to obtain:
(B0 - B) <S S†> + <S S†> (B0 † - B†) - B <S S†> B† (16)
Since <S S†> is not small or singular and the right side of (15) is of second order in small quantities, so is (B0-B). Hence, B0 is a good approximation to B. If we use B0 to obtain an estimate,
of the transmitted signal vector, one has:
r - (E+B0)
(16) or, since B0 is small,
- (E-B0) r (17) which is good to first order as a solution of (16). In a similar way, one could write:
S - (E-B) r (18) Subtracting (17) from (18) one gets:
Since it has been shown that (B0-B) is of second order in small quantities, (19) shows that the error in S is of the second order in small quantities.
If the first order estimate B0 needs to be improved, successively better approximation can be obtained by converting (13) into an iteration equation, which uses an earlier estimate for B in the second order term on the extreme right in (13) to obtain a closer approximation. Thus, one may write:
<r r†> - <S S†> - Bn-1 <S S†> B† n-1 -
(20)
Bn <S S†> + <S S†>Bn
If one sets B11=0, setting n=0 in (20) yields (14).
A relatively simple method and system has been described above for compensating for coupling between conductors in star-cfuaded cable. The method and system adaptively terminate star-quaded cable to substantially suppress coupling between nominal quad modes when there is loose coupling between them. An approximation method is described for estimating the transmitted signal using only information that is available at the receiver 14 and is good to second order in small quantities when the coupling is of first order. Thus, for example, if the coupling between modes is down, say, 20 dB, the adaptive termination would suppress it so that it was down about 40 dB.
Obviously, more elaborate adaptation procedures that require the transmission of information about received signal levels back to the transmitter 10, or the use of known training sequences, could reduce this error further.
While the best mode for carrying out the invention has been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will
recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention as defined by the following claims.
Claims
1. In a telecommunication transmission system including a quaded cable having quads, a method for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads, the method comprising the steps of:
receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quaded cable, the set of actual signals being a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quaded cable and the coupling between the circuits;
estimating coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits;
modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals; and
transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the step of estimating includes an approximation method which utilizes the set of actual signals.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the quaded cable is a star-quaded cable.
4. In a telecommunication transmission system including a quaded cable having quads, a system for compensating for coupling between circuits of the quads, the system comprising:
means for receiving a set of actual signals at one end of the quaded cable, the set of actual signals being a function of a corresponding set of transmitted signals received at an opposite end of the quaded cable and the coupling between the circuits;
means for estimating coupling information which is determined by the electromagnetic interactions between the circuits;
means for modifying the set of actual signals based on the coupling information to estimate the set of transmitted signals; and
means for transmitting the set of modified actual signals.
5. The system as claimed in claim 4 wherein the means for estimating includes means for performing an approximation method which utilizes the set of actual signals.
6. The system as claimed in claim 4 wherein the quaded cable is a star-quaded cable.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US1595093A | 1993-02-10 | 1993-02-10 | |
US08/015,950 | 1993-02-10 |
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WO1994018781A1 true WO1994018781A1 (en) | 1994-08-18 |
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PCT/US1994/000949 WO1994018781A1 (en) | 1993-02-10 | 1994-01-26 | Method and system for compensating for coupling between circuits of quaded cable in a telecommunication transmission system |
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Cited By (3)
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WO1998006186A1 (en) * | 1996-08-02 | 1998-02-12 | Northern Telecom Limited | Reducing crosstalk between communications systems |
EP1109328A1 (en) * | 1999-12-14 | 2001-06-20 | STMicroelectronics S.A. | DSL transmission system with far-end crosstalk compensation |
US7639596B2 (en) | 2003-12-07 | 2009-12-29 | Adaptive Spectrum And Signal Alignment, Inc. | High speed multiple loop DSL system |
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US4995104A (en) * | 1989-05-08 | 1991-02-19 | At&T Bell Laboratories | Interference cancelling circuit and method |
US5086423A (en) * | 1989-07-05 | 1992-02-04 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Crosstalk correction scheme |
US5157697A (en) * | 1991-03-21 | 1992-10-20 | Novatel Communications, Ltd. | Receiver employing correlation technique for canceling cross-talk between in-phase and quadrature channels prior to decoding |
US5271037A (en) * | 1990-10-10 | 1993-12-14 | Alcatel N.V. | Line equipment for the compensation of crosstalk |
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1994
- 1994-01-26 WO PCT/US1994/000949 patent/WO1994018781A1/en active Application Filing
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US4995104A (en) * | 1989-05-08 | 1991-02-19 | At&T Bell Laboratories | Interference cancelling circuit and method |
US5086423A (en) * | 1989-07-05 | 1992-02-04 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Crosstalk correction scheme |
US5271037A (en) * | 1990-10-10 | 1993-12-14 | Alcatel N.V. | Line equipment for the compensation of crosstalk |
US5157697A (en) * | 1991-03-21 | 1992-10-20 | Novatel Communications, Ltd. | Receiver employing correlation technique for canceling cross-talk between in-phase and quadrature channels prior to decoding |
Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO1998006186A1 (en) * | 1996-08-02 | 1998-02-12 | Northern Telecom Limited | Reducing crosstalk between communications systems |
US6055297A (en) * | 1996-08-02 | 2000-04-25 | Northern Telecom Limited | Reducing crosstalk between communications systems |
US6339613B2 (en) | 1996-08-02 | 2002-01-15 | Nortel Networks Limited | Reducing crosstalk between communications systems |
EP1109328A1 (en) * | 1999-12-14 | 2001-06-20 | STMicroelectronics S.A. | DSL transmission system with far-end crosstalk compensation |
US7639596B2 (en) | 2003-12-07 | 2009-12-29 | Adaptive Spectrum And Signal Alignment, Inc. | High speed multiple loop DSL system |
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