6 research outputs found

    A 0.68V 0.68mW 2.4GHz PLL for ultra-low power RF systems

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    A 2.4GHz PLL consuming 0.68mW has been implemented in 65nm LPCMOS for use in ultra-low power Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) applications. VCO, charge pump and dynamic flip-flop design optimization allow low voltage operation at 0.68V, bringing down dynamic power. The integer-N PLL covers all BLE channels and has a phase noise of −110dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset. To extend operation to extremely low duty cycles, extensive power gating is applied to bring the leakage power down to 170pW.Shell Oil CompanyTexas Instruments Incorporate

    Improve Performance of Adaptive Multi-Modulus Frequency Divider by Pulse Triggered Flip Flop

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    A divider of frequency with minimal power & greater speed with multi modulus is elaborated along design of a PLL. In this document by making use of a ff initiated by a pulse is plowed by which a definite divider with 2 levels can improvise the frequency of function & deduce decadence of power. A constituent which is adaptive s formulated to be retained in a divider with great mode of saving in power. The frequency of a defined divider with 2 levels in accordance to CMOS of 130 nm process may attain 4 GHz. The basic decadence f power is division by 49 mode at 63 uW with frequency of 1 GHz or 156uW at 4 GHz. In a contrast of the counter of Johnson FD, frequency of a divider with 2 levels is improvised & so the proportion of optimization of power

    Frequency Synthesizers and Oscillator Architectures Based on Multi-Order Harmonic Generation

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    Frequency synthesizers are essential components for modern wireless and wireline communication systems as they provide the local oscillator signal required to transmit and receive data at very high rates. They are also vital for computing devices and microcontrollers as they generate the clocks required to run all the digital circuitry responsible for the high speed computations. Data rates and clocking speeds are continuously increasing to accommodate for the ever growing demand on data and computational power. This places stringent requirements on the performance metrics of frequency synthesizers. They are required to run at higher speeds, cover a wide range of frequencies, provide a low jitter/phase noise output and consume minimum power and area. In this work, we present new techniques and architectures for implementing high speed frequency synthesizers which fulfill the aforementioned requirements. We propose a new architecture and design approach for the realization of wideband millimeter-wave frequency synthesizers. This architecture uses two-step multi-order harmonic generation of a low frequency phase-locked signal to generate wideband mm-wave frequencies. A prototype of the proposed system is designed and fabricated in 90nm Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology. Measurement results demonstrated that a very wide tuning range of 5 to 32 GHz can be achieved, which is costly to implement using conventional techniques. Moreover the power consumption per octave resembles that of state-of-the art reports. Next, we propose the N-Push cyclic coupled ring oscillator (CCRO) architecture to implement two high performance oscillators: (1) a wideband N-Push/M-Push CCRO operating from 3.16-12.8GHz implemented by two harmonic generation operations using the availability of different phases from the CCRO, and (2) a 13-25GHz millimeter-wave N-Push CCRO with a low phase noise performance of -118dBc/Hz at 10MHz. The proposed oscillators achieve low phase noise with higher FOM than state of the art work. Finally, we present some improvement techniques applied to the performance of phase locked loops (PLLs). We present an adaptive low pass filtering technique which can reduce the reference spur of integer-N charge-pump based PLLs by around 20dB while maintaining the settling time of the original PLL. Another PLL is presented, which features very low power consumption targeting the Medical Implantable Communication Standard. It operates at 402-405 MHz while consuming 600microW from a 1V supply

    A 0.65V 2.5GHz Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer in 90nm CMOS

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