26 research outputs found

    Quadrature Phase-Domain ADPLL with Integrated On-line Amplitude Locked Loop Calibration for 5G Multi-band Applications

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    5th generation wireless systems (5G) have expanded frequency band coverage with the low-band 5G and mid-band 5G frequencies spanning 600 MHz to 4 GHz spectrum. This dissertation focuses on a microelectronic implementation of CMOS 65 nm design of an All-Digital Phase Lock Loop (ADPLL), which is a critical component for advanced 5G wireless transceivers. The ADPLL is designed to operate in the frequency bands of 600MHz-930MHz, 2.4GHz-2.8GHz and 3.4GHz-4.2GHz. Unique ADPLL sub-components include: 1) Digital Phase Frequency Detector, 2) Digital Loop Filter, 3) Channel Bank Select Circuit, and 4) Digital Control Oscillator. Integrated with the ADPLL is a 90-degree active RC-CR phase shifter with on-line amplitude locked loop (ALL) calibration to facilitate enhanced image rejection while mitigating the effects of fabrication process variations and component mismatch. A unique high-sensitivity high-speed dynamic voltage comparator is included as a key component of the active phase shifter/ALL calibration subsystem. 65nm CMOS technology circuit designs are included for the ADPLL and active phase shifter with simulation performance assessments. Phase noise results for 1 MHz offset with carrier frequencies of 600MHz, 2.4GHz, and 3.8GHz are -130, -122, and -116 dBc/Hz, respectively. Monte Carlo simulations to account for process variations/component mismatch show that the active phase shifter with ALL calibration maintains accurate quadrature phase outputs when operating within the frequency bands 600MHz-930MHz, 2.4GHz-2.8GHz and 3.4GHz-4.2GHz

    캘리브레이션이 필요없는 위상고정 루프의 설계

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2017. 2. 김재하.A PVT-insensitive-bandwidth PLL and a chirp frequency synthesizer PLL are proposed using a constant-relative-gain digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO), a constant-gain time-to-digital converter (TDC), and a simple digital loop filter (DLF) without an explicit calibration or additional circuit components. A digital LC-PLL that realizes a PVT-insensitive loop bandwidth (BW) by using the constant-relative-gain LC-DCO and constant-gain TDC is proposed. In other words, based on ratiometric circuit designs, the LC-DCO can make a fixed percent change to its frequency for a unit change in its digital input and the TDC can maintain a fixed range and resolution measured in reference unit intervals (UIs) across PVT variations. With such LC-DCO and TDC, the proposed PLL can realize a bandwidth which is a constant fraction of the reference frequency even with a simple proportional-integral digital loop filter without any explicit calibration loops. The prototype digital LC-PLL fabricated in a 28-nm CMOS demonstrates a frequency range of 8.38~9.34 GHz and 652-fs,rms integrated jitter from 10-kHz to 1-GHz at 8.84-GHz while dissipating 15.2-mW and occupying 0.24-mm^2. Also, the PLL across three different die samples and supply voltage ranging from 1.0 to 1.2V demonstrates a nearly constant BW at 822-kHz with the variation of ±4.25-% only. A chirp frequency synthesizer PLL (FS-PLL) that is capable of precise triangular frequency modulation using type-III digital LC-PLL architecture for X-band FMCW imaging radar is proposed. By employing a phase-modulating two-point modulation (TPM), constant-gain TDC, and a simple second-order DLF with polarity-alternating frequency ramp estimator, the PLL achieves a gain self-tracking TPM realizing a frequency chirp with fast chirp slope (=chirp BW/chirp period) without increasing frequency errors around the turn-around points, degrading the effective resolution achievable. A prototype chirp FS-PLL fabricated in a 65nm CMOS demonstrates that the PLL can generate a precise triangular chirp profile centered at 8.9-GHz with 940-MHz bandwidth and 28.8-us period with only 1.9-MHz,rms frequency error including the turn-around points and 14.8-mW power dissipation. The achieved 32.63-MHz/us chirp slope is higher than that of FMCW FS-PLLs previously reported by 2.6x.CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 MOTIVATION 1 1.2 THESIS ORGANIZATION 5 CHAPTER 2 CONVENTIONAL PHASE-LOCKED LOOP 7 2.1 CHARGE-PUMP PLL 7 2.1.1 OPERATING PRINCIPLE 7 2.1.2 LOOP DYNAMICS 9 2.2 DIGITAL PLL 10 2.2.1 OPERATING PRINCIPLE 11 2.2.2 LOOP DYNAMICS 12 CHAPTER 3 VARIATIONS ON PHASE-LOCKED LOOP 14 3.1 OSCILLATOR GAIN VARIATION 14 3.1.1 RING VOLTAGE-CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR 15 3.1.2 LC VOLTAGE-CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR 17 3.1.3 LC DIGITALLY-CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR 19 3.2 PHASE DETECTOR GAIN VARIATION 20 3.2.1 LINEAR PHASE DETECTOR 20 3.2.2 LINEAR TIME-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER 21 CHAPTER 4 PROPOSED DCO AND TDC FOR CALIBRATION-FREE PLL 23 4.1 DIGTALLY-CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR (DCO) 25 4.1.1 OVERVIEW 24 4.1.2 CONSTANT-RELATIVE-GAIN DCO 26 4.2 TIME-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER (TDC) 28 4.2.1 OVERVIEW 28 4.2.2 CONSTANT-GAIN TDC 30 CHAPTER 5 PVT-INSENSITIVE-BANDWIDTH PLL 35 5.1 OVERVIEW 36 5.2 PRIOR WORKS 37 5.3 PROPOSED PVT-INSENSITIVE-BANDWIDTH PLL 39 5.4 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION 41 5.4.1 CAPACITOR-TUNED LC-DCO 41 5.4.2 TRANSFORMER-TUNED LC-DCO 45 5.4.3 OVERSAMPLING-BASED CONSTANT-GAIN TDC 49 5.4.4 PHASE DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTER 52 5.4.5 DIGITAL LOOP FILTER 54 5.4.6 FREQUENCY DIVIDER 55 5.4.7 BANG-BANG PHASE-FREQUENCY DETECTOR 56 5.5 CELL-BASED DESIGN FLOW 57 5.6 MEASUREMENT RESULTS 58 CHAPTER 6 CHIRP FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZER PLL 66 6.1 OVERVIEW 67 6.2 PRIOR WORKS 71 6.3 PROPOSED CHIRP FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZER PLL 75 6.4 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION 83 6.4.1 SECOND-ORDER DIGITAL LOOP FILTER 83 6.4.2 PHASE MODULATOR 84 6.4.3 CONSTANT-GAIN TDC 85 6.4.4 VRACTOR-BASED LC-DCO 87 6.4.5 OVERALL CLOCK CHAIN 90 6.5 MEASUREMENT RESULTS 91 6.6 SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO OF RADAR 98 CHAPTER 7 CONCLUSION 100 BIBLIOGRAPHY 102 초록 109Docto

    Design of 5.1 GHz ultra-low power and wide tuning range hybrid oscillator

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    The objective of the proposed work is to demonstrate the use of a hybrid approach for the design of a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) which can lead to higher performance. The performance is improved in terms of the tuning range, frequency of oscillation, voltage swing, and power consumption. The proposed hybrid VCO is designed using an active load common source amplifier and current starved inverter that are cascaded alternatively to achieve low power consumption. The proposed VCO achieves a measured phase noise of -74 dBc/Hz and a figure of merit (FOM) of -152.6 dBc/Hz at a 1 MHz offset when running at 5.1 GHz frequency. The hybrid current starved-current starved VCO (CS-CS VCO) consumes a power of 289 µW using a 1.8 V supply and attains a wide tuning range of 96.98%. Hybrid VCO is designed using 0.09 µm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology. To justify the robustness, reliability, and scalability of the circuit different corner analysis is performed through 500 runs of Monte-Carlo simulation

    RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications

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    While mobile phones enjoy the largest production volume ever of any consumer electronics products, the demands they place on radio-frequency (RF) transceivers are particularly aggressive, especially on integration with digital processors, low area, low power consumption, while being robust against process-voltage-temperature variations. Since mobile terminals inherently operate on batteries, their power budget is severely constrained. To keep up with the ever increasing data-rate, an ever-decreasing power per bit is required to maintain the battery lifetime. The RF oscillator is the second most power-hungry block of a wireless radio (after power amplifiers). Consequently, any power reduction in an RF oscillator will greatly benefit the overall power efficiency of the cellular transceiver. Moreover, the RF oscillators' purity limits the transceiver performance. The oscillator's phase noise results in power leakage into adjacent channels in a transmit mode and reciprocal mixing in a receive mode. On the other hand, the multi-standard and multi-band transceivers that are now trending demand wide tuning range oscillators. However, broadening the oscillator’s tuning range is usually at the expense of die area (cost) or phase noise. The main goal of this book is to bring forth the exciting and innovative RF oscillator structures that demonstrate better phase noise performance, lower cost, and higher power efficiency than currently achievable. Technical topics discussed in RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications include: Design and analysis of low phase-noise class-F oscillators Analyze a technique to reduce 1/f noise up-conversion in the oscillators Design and analysis of low power/low voltage oscillators Wide tuning range oscillators Reliability study of RF oscillators in nanoscale CMO

    RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications

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    While mobile phones enjoy the largest production volume ever of any consumer electronics products, the demands they place on radio-frequency (RF) transceivers are particularly aggressive, especially on integration with digital processors, low area, low power consumption, while being robust against process-voltage-temperature variations. Since mobile terminals inherently operate on batteries, their power budget is severely constrained. To keep up with the ever increasing data-rate, an ever-decreasing power per bit is required to maintain the battery lifetime. The RF oscillator is the second most power-hungry block of a wireless radio (after power amplifiers). Consequently, any power reduction in an RF oscillator will greatly benefit the overall power efficiency of the cellular transceiver. Moreover, the RF oscillators' purity limits the transceiver performance. The oscillator's phase noise results in power leakage into adjacent channels in a transmit mode and reciprocal mixing in a receive mode. On the other hand, the multi-standard and multi-band transceivers that are now trending demand wide tuning range oscillators. However, broadening the oscillator’s tuning range is usually at the expense of die area (cost) or phase noise. The main goal of this book is to bring forth the exciting and innovative RF oscillator structures that demonstrate better phase noise performance, lower cost, and higher power efficiency than currently achievable. Technical topics discussed in RF CMOS Oscillators for Modern Wireless Applications include: Design and analysis of low phase-noise class-F oscillators Analyze a technique to reduce 1/f noise up-conversion in the oscillators Design and analysis of low power/low voltage oscillators Wide tuning range oscillators Reliability study of RF oscillators in nanoscale CMO

    Energy-Efficient Wireless Connectivity and Wireless Charging For Internet-of-Things (IoT) Applications

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    During the recent years, the Internet-of-Things (IoT) has been rapidly evolving. It is indeed the future of communication that has transformed Things of the real world into smarter devices. To date, the world has deployed billions of “smart” connected things. Predictions say there will be 10’s of billions of connected devices by 2025 and in our lifetime we will experience life with a trillion-node network. However, battery lifespan exhibits a critical barrier to scaling IoT devices. Replacing batteries on a trillion-sensor scale is a logistically prohibitive feat. Self-powered IoT devices seems to be the right direction to stand up to that challenge. The main objective of this thesis is to develop solutions to achieve energy-efficient wireless-connectivity and wireless-charging for IoT applications. In the first part of the thesis, I introduce ultra-low power radios that are compatible with the Bluetooth Low-Energy (BLE) standard. BLE is considered as the preeminent protocol for short-range communications that support transmission ranges up to 10’s of meters. Number of low power BLE transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) architectures have been designed, fabricated and tested in different planar CMOS and FinFET technologies. The low power operation is achieved by combining low power techniques in both the network and physical layers, namely: backchannel communication, duty-cycling, open-loop transmission/reception, PLL-less architectures, and mixer-first architectures. Further novel techniques have been proposed to further reduce the power the consumption of the radio design, including: a fast startup time and low startup energy crystal oscillators, an antenna-chip co-design approach for quadrature generation in the RF path, an ultra-low power discrete-time differentiator-based Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying (GFSK) demodulation scheme, an oversampling GFSK modulation/demodulation scheme for open loop transmission/reception and packet synchronization, and a cell-based design approach that allows automation in the design of BLE digital architectures. The implemented BLE TXs transmit fully-compliant BLE advertising packet that can be received by commercial smartphone. In the second part of the thesis, I introduce passive nonlinear resonant circuits to achieve wide-band RF energy harvesting and robust wireless power transfer circuits. Nonlinear resonant circuits modeled by the Duffing nonlinear differential equation exhibit interesting hysteresis characteristics in their frequency and amplitude responses that are exploited in designing self-adaptive wireless charging systems. In the magnetic-resonance wireless power transfer scenario, coupled nonlinear resonators are proposed to maintain the power transfer level and efficiency over a range of coupling factors without active feedback control circuitry. Coupling factor depends on the transmission distance, lateral, and angular misalignments between the charging pad and the device. Therefore, nonlinear resonance extends the efficient charging zones of a wireless charger without the requirement for a precise alignment.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169842/1/omaratty_1.pd

    LOW-POWER FREQUENCY SYNTHESIS BASED ON INJECTION LOCKING

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Energy-Efficient Wireless Circuits and Systems for Internet of Things

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    As the demand of ultra-low power (ULP) systems for internet of thing (IoT) applications has been increasing, large efforts on evolving a new computing class is actively ongoing. The evolution of the new computing class, however, faced challenges due to hard constraints on the RF systems. Significant efforts on reducing power of power-hungry wireless radios have been done. The ULP radios, however, are mostly not standard compliant which poses a challenge to wide spread adoption. Being compliant with the WiFi network protocol can maximize an ULP radio’s potential of utilization, however, this standard demands excessive power consumption of over 10mW, that is hardly compatible with in ULP systems even with heavy duty-cycling. Also, lots of efforts to minimize off-chip components in ULP IoT device have been done, however, still not enough for practical usage without a clean external reference, therefore, this limits scaling on cost and form-factor of the new computer class of IoT applications. This research is motivated by those challenges on the RF systems, and each work focuses on radio designs for IoT applications in various aspects. First, the research covers several endeavors for relieving energy constraints on RF systems by utilizing existing network protocols that eventually meets both low-active power, and widespread adoption. This includes novel approaches on 802.11 communication with articulate iterations on low-power RF systems. The research presents three prototypes as power-efficient WiFi wake-up receivers, which bridges the gap between industry standard radios and ULP IoT radios. The proposed WiFi wake-up receivers operate with low power consumption and remain compatible with the WiFi protocol by using back-channel communication. Back-channel communication embeds a signal into a WiFi compliant transmission changing the firmware in the access point, or more specifically just the data in the payload of the WiFi packet. With a specific sequence of data in the packet, the transmitter can output a signal that mimics a modulation that is more conducive for ULP receivers, such as OOK and FSK. In this work, low power mixer-first receivers, and the first fully integrated ultra-low voltage receiver are presented, that are compatible with WiFi through back-channel communication. Another main contribution of this work is in relieving the integration challenge of IoT devices by removing the need for external, or off-chip crystals and antennas. This enables a small form-factor on the order of mm3-scale, useful for medical research and ubiquitous sensing applications. A crystal-less small form factor fully integrated 60GHz transceiver with on-chip 12-channel frequency reference, and good peak gain dual-mode on-chip antenna is presented.PHDElectrical and Computer EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162975/1/jaeim_1.pd

    Techniques for high-performance digital frequency synthesis and phase control

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-190).This thesis presents a 3.6-GHz, 500-kHz bandwidth digital [delta][sigma] frequency synthesizer architecture that leverages a recently invented noise-shaping time-to-digital converter (TDC) and an all-digital quantization noise cancellation technique to achieve excellent in-band and out-of-band phase noise, respectively. In addition, a passive digital-to-analog converter (DAC) structure is proposed as an efficient interface between the digital loop filter and a conventional hybrid voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) to create a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO). An asynchronous divider structure is presented which lowers the required TDC range and avoids the divide-value-dependent delay variation. The prototype is implemented in a 0.13-am CMOS process and its active area occupies 0.95 mm². Operating under 1.5 V, the core parts, excluding the VCO output buffer, dissipate 26 mA. Measured phase noise at 3.67 GHz achieves -108 dBc/Hz and -150 dBc/Hz at 400 kHz and 20 MHz, respectively. Integrated phase noise at this carrier frequency yields 204 fs of jitter (measured from 1 kHz to 40 MHz). In addition, a 3.2-Gb/s delay-locked loop (DLL) in a 0.18-[mu]m CMOS for chip-tochip communications is presented. By leveraging the fractional-N synthesizer technique, this architecture provides a digitally-controlled delay adjustment with a fine resolution and infinite range. The provided delay resolution is less sensitive to the process, voltage, and temperature variations than conventional techniques. A new [delta][sigma] modulator enables a compact and low-power implementation of this architecture. A simple bang-bang detector is used for phase detection. The prototype operates at a 1.8-V supply voltage with a current consumption of 55 mA. The phase resolution and differential rms clock jitter are 1.4 degrees and 3.6 ps, respectively.by Chun-Ming Hsu.Ph.D

    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
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