2 research outputs found

    ULTRA-LOW-JITTER, MMW-BAND FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZERS BASED ON A CASCADED ARCHITECTURE

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringThis thesis presents an ultra-low-jitter, mmW-band frequency synthesizers based on a cascaded architecture. First, the mmW-band frequency synthesizer based on a CP PLL is presented. At the first stage, the CP PLL operating at GHz-band frequencies generated low-jitter output signals due to a high-Q VCO. At the second stage, an ILFM operating at mmW-band frequencies has a wide injection bandwidth, so that the jitter performance of the mmW-band output signals is determined by the GHz-range PLL. The proposed ultra-low-jitter, mmW-band frequency synthesizer based on a CP PLL, fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS technology, generated output signals from GHz-band frequencies to mmW-band frequencies, achieving an RMS jitter of 206 fs and an IPN of ???31 dBc. The active silicon area and the total power consumption were 0.32 mm2 and 42 mW, respectively. However, due to a large in-band phase noise contribution of a PFD and a CP in the CP PLL, this first stage was difficult to achieve an ultra-low in-band phase noise. Second, to improve the in-band phase noise further, the mmW-band frequency synthesizer based on a digital SSPLL is presented. At the first stage, the digital SSPLL operating at GHz-band frequencies generated ultra-low-jitter output signals due to its sub-sampling operation and a high-Q GHz VCO. To minimize the quantization noise of the voltage quantizer in the digital SSPLL, this thesis presents an OSVC as a voltage quantizer while a small amount of power was consumed. The proposed ultra-low-jitter, mmW-band frequency synthesizer fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS technology, generated output signals from GHz-band frequencies to mmW-band frequencies, achieving an RMS jitter of 77 fs and an IPN of ???40 dBc. The active silicon area and the total power consumption were 0.32 mm2 and 42 mW, respectively.clos

    LOW-JITTER AND LOW-SPUR RING-OSCILLATOR-BASED PHASE-LOCKED LOOPS

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringIn recent years, ring-oscillator based clock generators have drawn a lot of attention due to the merits of high area efficiency, potentially wide tuning range, and multi-phase generation. However, the key challenge is how to suppress the poor jitter of ring oscillators. There have been many efforts to develop a ring-oscillator-based clock generator targeting very low-jitter performance. However, it remains difficult for conventional architectures to achieve both low RMS jitter and low levels of reference spurs concurrently while having a high multiplication factor. In this dissertation, a time-domain analysis is presented that provides an intuitive understanding of RMS jitter calculation of the clock generators from their phase-error correction mechanisms. Based on this analysis, we propose new designs of a ring-oscillator-based PLL that addresses the challenges of prior-art ring-based architectures. This dissertation introduces a ring-oscillator-based PLL with the proposed fast phase-error correction (FPEC) technique, which emulates the phase-realignment mechanism of an injection-locked clock multiplier (ILCM). With the FPEC technique, the phase error of the voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) is quickly removed, achieving ultra-low jitter. In addition, in the transfer function of the proposed architecture, an intrinsic integrator is involved since it is naturally based on a PLL topology. The proposed PLL can thus have low levels of reference spurs while maintaining high stability even for a large multiplication factor. Furthermore, it presents another design of a digital PLL embodying the FPEC technique (or FPEC DPLL). To overcome the problem of a conventional TDC, a low-power optimally-spaced (OS) TDC capable of effectively minimizing the quantization error is presented. In the proposed FPEC DPLL, background digital controllers continuously calibrate the decision thresholds and the gain of the error correction by the loop to be optimal, thus dramatically reducing the quantization error. Since the proposed architecture is implemented in a digital fashion, the variables defining the characteristics of the loop can be easily estimated and calibrated by digital calibrators. As a result, the performances of an ultra-low jitter and the figure-of-merit can be achieved.clos
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