beautypg.com

Power supply, Power supply description, Figure 2 – Sierra Wireless AIRPRIME WISMO218 User Manual

Page 24: Power supply during burst emission

background image

WA_DEV_W218_PTS_002

Rev 006

April 29, 2010

24

Product Technical Specification &
Customer Design Guidelines

Interfaces

3.2. Power Supply

3.2.1.

Power Supply Description

The power supply is one of the key elements in the design of a GSM terminal.

Due to the burst emission in GSM/GPRS, the power supply must be able to deliver high current peaks
in a short time. During the peaks, the ripple (U

ripple

) on the supply voltage must not exceed a certain

limit (see Table 1: Input Power Supply Voltage below).

Listed below are the corresponding radio burst rates for the different GPRS classes in communication
mode.

 A GSM/GPRS class 2 terminal emits 577µs radio bursts every 4.615ms. (See Figure 2 Power

Supply During Burst Emission below.)

Uripp

VBATT

Uripp

T = 4,615 ms

t = 577 µs

Figure 2. Power Supply During Burst Emission

 A GPRS class 10 terminal emits 1154µs radio bursts every 4.615ms.

VBATT provides for the following functions:

 Directly supplies the RF components with 3.6V. It is essential to keep a minimum voltage

ripple at this connection in order to avoid any phase error.

The peak current (1.4A peak in GSM /GPRS mode) flows with a ratio of:

1/8 of the time (around 577µs every 4.615ms for GSM /GPRS cl. 2)

and

1/4 of the time (around 1154µs every 4.615ms for GSM /GPRS cl. 10)

with the rising time at around 10µs.

 Internally used to provide, via several regulators, the supply required for the baseband

signals.