2 research outputs found

    μ € 작음 디지털 μœ„μƒλ™κΈ°λ£¨ν”„μ˜ ν•©μ„±

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    ν•™μœ„λ…Όλ¬Έ (박사)-- μ„œμšΈλŒ€ν•™κ΅ λŒ€ν•™μ› : 전기·컴퓨터곡학뢀, 2014. 2. 정덕균.As a device scaling proceeds, Charge Pump PLL has been confronted by many design challenges. Especially, a leakage current in loop filter and reduced dynamic range due to a lower operating voltage make it difficult to adopt a conventional analog PLL architecture for a highly scaled technology. To solve these issues, All Digital PLL (ADPLL) has been widely studied recently. ADPLL mitigates a filter leakage and a reduced dynamic range issues by replacing the analog circuits with digital ones. However, it is still difficult to get a low jitter under low supply voltage. In this thesis, we propose a dual loop architecture to achieve a low jitter even with a low supply voltage. And bottom-up based multi-step TDC and DCO are proposed to meet both fine resolution and wide operation range. In the aspect of design methodology, ADPLL has relied on a full custom design method although ADPLL is fully described in HDL (Hardware Description Language). We propose a new cell based layout technique to automatically synthesize the whole circuit and layout. The test chip has no linearity degradation although it is fully synthesized using a commercially available auto P&R tool. We has implemented an all digital pixel clock generator using the proposed dual loop architecture and the cell based layout technique. The entire circuit is automatically synthesized using 28nm CMOS technology. And s-domain linear model is utilized to optimize the jitter of the dual-loop PLL. Test chip occupies 0.032mm2, and achieves a 15ps_rms integrated jitter although it has extremely low input reference clock of 100 kHz. The whole circuit operates at 1.0V and consumes only 3.1mW.Abstract i Lists of Figures vii Lists of Tables xiii 1. Introduction 1 1.1 Thesis Motivation and Organization 1 1.1.1 Motivation 1 1.1.2 Thesis Organization 2 1.2 PLL Design Issues in Scaled CMOS Technology 3 1.2.1 Low Supply Voltage 4 1.2.2 High Leakage Current 6 1.2.3 Device Reliability: NBTI, HCI, TDDB, EM 8 1.2.4 Mismatch due to Proximity Effects: WPE, STI 11 1.3 Overview of Clock Synthesizers 14 1.3.1 Dual Voltage Charge Pump PLL 14 1.3.2 DLL Based Edge Combining Clock Multiplier 16 1.3.3 Recirculation DLL 17 1.3.4 Reference Injected PLL 18 1.3.5 All Digital PLL 19 1.3.6 Flying Adder Clock Synthesizer 20 1.3.7 Dual Loop Hybrid PLL 21 1.3.8 Comparisons 23 2. Tutorial of ADPLL Design 25 2.1 Introduction 25 2.1.1 Motivation for a pure digital 25 2.1.2 Conversion to digital domain 26 2.2 Functional Blocks 26 2.2.1 TDC, and PFD/Charge Pump 26 2.2.2 Digital Loop Filter and Analog R/C Loop Filter 29 2.2.3 DCO and VCO 34 2.2.4 S-domain Model of the Whole Loop 34 2.2.5 ADPLL Loop Design Flow 36 2.3 S-domain Noise Model 41 2.3.1 Noise Transfer Functions 41 2.3.2 Quantization Noise due to Limited TDC Resolution 45 2.3.3 Quantization Noise due to Divider ΔΣ Noise 46 2.3.4 Quantization Noise due to Limited DCO Resolution 47 2.3.5 Quantization Noise due to DCO ΔΣ Dithering 48 2.3.6 Random Noise of DCO and Input Clock 50 2.3.7 Over-all Phase Noise 50 3. Synthesizable All Digital Pixel Clock PLL Design 53 3.1 Overview 53 3.1.1 Introduction of Pixel Clock PLL 53 3.1.1 Design Specifications 55 3.2 Proposed Architecture 60 3.2.1 All Digital Dual Loop PLL 60 3.2.2 2-step controlled TDC 61 3.2.3 3-step controlled DCO 64 3.2.4 Digital Loop Filter 76 3.3 S-domain Noise Model 78 3.4 Loop Parameter Optimization Based on the s-domain Model 85 3.5 RTL and Gate Level Circuit Design 88 3.5.1 Overview of the design flow 88 3.5.2 Behavioral Simulation and Gate level synthesis 89 3.5.1 Preventing a meta-stability 90 3.5.1 Reusable Coding Style 92 3.6 Layout Synthesis 94 3.6.1 Auto P&R 94 3.6.2 Design of Unit Cells 97 3.6.3 Linearity Degradation in Synthesized TDC 98 3.6.4 Linearity Degradation in Synthesized DCO 106 3.7 Experiment Results 109 3.7.1 DCO measurement 109 3.7.2 PLL measurement 113 3.8 Conclusions 117 A. Device Technology Scaling Trends 118 A.1. Motivation for Technology Scaling 118 A.2. Constant Field Scaling 120 A.3. Quasi Constant Voltage Scaling 123 A.4. Device Technology Trends in Real World 124 B. Spice Simulation Tip for a DCO 137 C. Phase Noise to Jitter Conversion 141 Bibliography 144 초둝 151Docto

    Tanlock based loop with improved performance

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    This thesis is focused on the design, analysis, simulation and implementation of new improved architectures of the Time Delay Digital Tanlock Loop (TDTL) based digital phase-locked loop (DPLL). The proposed architectures overcome some fundamental limitations exhibited by the original TDTL. These limitations include the presence of nonlinearity in the phase detector (PD), the non-zero phase error of the first-order loop, the restricted locking range, particularly of the second-order loop, the limited acquisition speed and the noise performance. Two approaches were adopted in this work to alleviate these limitations: the first involved modifying the original TDTL through the incorporation of auxiliary circuit blocks that enhance its performance, whilst the second involved designing new tanlock-based architectures. The proposed architectures, which resulted from the above approaches, were tested under various input signal conditions and their performance was compared with the original TDTL. The proposed architectures demonstrated an improvement of up to fourfold in terms of the acquisition times, twofold in noise performance and a marked enhancement in the linearity and in the locking range. The effectiveness of the proposed tanlock-based architectures was also assessed and demonstrated by using them in various applications, which included FM demodulation, FM threshold extension, FM demodulation with improved THD (total harmonic distortion), and Doppler effect improvement. The results from these applications showed that the performance of the new architectures outperformed the original TDTL. Real-time performance of these architectures was evaluated through implementation of some of them on an FPGA (field-programmable gate array) based system. Practical results from the prototype FPGA based implementations confirmed the simulation results obtained from MATLAB/Simulink
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