5 research outputs found

    12???14.5 GHZ DIGITALLY CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR USING A HIGH-RESOLUTION DELTA-SIGMA DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTER

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringThis thesis focuses on the design of digitally-controlled oscillators (DCO) for ultra-low-jitter digital phase-locked-loops (PLL), which requires very fine frequency resolution and low phase noise performance. Before going details of the design, fundamentals of the digital-to-analog converter (DAC), delta-sigma modulator (DSM), LC voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) are discussed in Chapters 2, 3, and 4 respectively. Detailly, Chapter 2 begins with the basic operations of the digital-toanalog converters. Plus, several types of DACs and their properties are discussed. For instance, resistorbased DAC or current source-based DAC. In Chapter 3, the backgrounds of DSMs are presented. The reason why DSMs are indispensable components in fractional number generation is presented. The meaning of the randomization and noise shaping in DSMs is discussed then high-order noise shaping DSMs are explained as well. Chapter 4, starts with the LC tanks. Integrated passive components are introduced such as spiral inductors, metal-insulator-metal (MIM) capacitors, and metal-oxide-metal (MOM) capacitors. The start-up of the oscillators also explained by using two approaches, the Barkhausen criterion and the negative resistance theory. Then the pros and cons of the CMOS and NMOS type topologies are stated. Finally, the phase noise in oscillators is analyzed by using the Leeson???s equation and the impulse-sensitivity function theory. In chapter 5, the detailed designs of the prototype DCO are presented. The designed DCO consists of 2nd order DSM, string resistor-based DAC, and CMOS-type LC VCO. The frequency resolutions of the proportional and integral path are different but the structures are identical. For the high-performance oscillator, iterative design is required. In the measurements, the designed DCO achieved 17 and 18 bit of frequency resolution in the proportional and integral path respectively, 12-14.5GHz of the frequency tuning range, 50 and 500MHz/V of KVCO for the main and auxiliary loop respectively, and -184.5 dB of figure of merit (FOM). The power consumption is 5.5mW and the prototype was fabricated in TSMC 65nm CMOS process.clos

    A Wide Band Adaptive All Digital Phase Locked Loop With Self Jitter Measurement And Calibration

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    The expanding growth of mobile products and services has led to various wireless communication standards that employ different spectrum bands and protocols to provide data, voice or video communication services. Software deffned radio and cognitive radio are emerging techniques that can dynamically integrate various standards to provide seamless global coverage, including global roaming across geographical regions, and interfacing with different wireless networks. In software deffned radio and cognitive radio, one of the most critical RF blocks that need to exhibit frequency agility is the phase lock loop (PLL) frequency synthesizer. In order to access various standards, the frequency synthesizer needs to have wide frequency tuning range, fast tuning speed, and low phase noise and frequency spur. The traditional analog charge pump frequency synthesizer circuit design is becoming diffcult due to the continuous down-scalings of transistor feature size and power supply voltage. The goal of this project was to develop an all digital phase locked loop (ADPLL) as the alternative solution technique in RF transceivers by taking advantage of digital circuitry\u27s characteristic features of good scalability, robustness against process variation and high noise margin. The targeted frequency bands for our ADPLL design included 880MHz-960MHz, 1.92GHz-2.17GHz, 2.3GHz-2.7GHz, 3.3GHz-3.8GHz and 5.15GHz-5.85GHz that are used by wireless communication standards such as GSM, UMTS, bluetooth, WiMAX and Wi-Fi etc. This project started with the system level model development for characterizing ADPLL phase noise, fractional spur and locking speed. Then an on-chip jitter detector and parameter adapter was designed for ADPLL to perform self-tuning and self-calibration to accomplish high frequency purity and fast frequency locking in each frequency band. A novel wide band DCO is presented for multi-band wireless application. The proposed wide band adaptive ADPLL was implemented in the IBM 0.13µm CMOS technology. The phase noise performance, the frequency locking speed as well as the tuning range of the digitally controlled oscillator was assessed and agrees well with the theoretical analysis

    3.3GHz DCO with a frequency resolution of 150Hz for All-digital PLL

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    A 3.3 GHz DCO that achieves a minimum frequency quantization step of 150 Hz without any dithering is presented. The fine digital tuning is obtained through a capacitive degeneration of a portion of the transistor switching pair used in a classical LC-tank oscillator. The DCO exhibits a phase noise of -127.5 dBc/Hz@1 MHz drawing 16 mA from a 1.8 V supply, resulting in an FoM of 183 dBc/Hz. The active area is 700 ¿m à 450 ¿
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