475 research outputs found

    FULLY INTEGRATED HIGH-FREQUENCY CLOCK GENERATION AND SYNCHRONIZATION TECHINIQUES

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringThis thesis presents clock generation and synchronization techniques for RF wireless communication. First, it deals with voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) for local oscillators (LO) in transceivers, and secondly delay-locked loops for synchronization. For the high-performance LO, VCO is one of the key blocks. LC VCOs and ring VCOs are commonly-used types. Their characteristics are varied for different frequency bands. In this thesis, two types of VCOs, LC VCO and ring VCO, are presented with specific applications. For the multi-clock generator which could be used for carrier aggregation or frequency hopping, ring-type digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) was designed covering 900-1200 MHz with -165 dB FOM. For the multi-band frequency synthesizer which could be used for 5G communication with backward compatibility, three LC VCOs are designed which frequency range of 25-30 GHz for 5G, 5.2-6.0 GHz for LTE, 2.7-4.2 GHz for 2G-3G communication, respectively. For the clock synchronization in RF communications, a delay-locked loop (DLL) using a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) based band-selecting circuit (BSC) was presented to achieve a wide harmonic-locking-free frequency range. The BSC used the proposed exponential digital-to-analog converter (EDAC) to generate a collection of initial control voltages which follow a sequence of geometric with satisfying the condition for preventing harmonic locking problem. Therefore, the BSC can cover a much wider frequency range which is free from harmonic locking problem compared to initial band selection techniques using conventional, linear DAC (LDAC) that have a set of control voltages of arithmetic sequence. In this thesis, the DLL was implemented in a 65-nm CMOS process, and it had a measured frequency range from 100 to 1500 MHz which range is free from harmonic locking. The measure rms jitter and 1-MHz phase noise at 1000 MHz were 1.99 ps and ?28 dBc/Hz, respectively. The DLL consumes 5.5 mW and its active area was 0.052 mm2.clos

    Design of Digital Frequency Synthesizer for 5G SDR Systems

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    The previous frequency synthesizer techniques for scalable SDR are not compatible with high end applications due to its complex computations and the intolerance over increased path interference rate which leads to an unsatisfied performance with improved user rate in real time environment. Designing an efficient frequency synthesizer framework in the SDR system is essential for 5G wireless communication systems with improved Quality of service (QoS). Consequently, this research has been performed based on the merits of fully digitalized frequency synthesizer and its explosion in wide range of frequency band generations. In this paper hardware optimized reconfigurable digital base band processing and frequency synthesizer model is proposed without making any design complexity trade-off to deal with the multiple standards. Here fully digitalized frequency synthesizer is introduced using simplified delay units to reduce the design complexity. Experimental results and comparative analyzes are carried out to validate the performance metrics and exhaustive test bench simulation is also carried out to verify the functionality

    A photonic frequency discriminator based on a two wavelength delayed self-heterodyne interferometer for low phase noise tunable micro/mm wave synthesis

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    Low phase noise frequency synthesizers are of paramount interest in many areas of micro-mm wave technology, encompassing for example advanced wireless communication, radar, radio-astronomy, and precision instrumentation. Although this broad research field is not bereft of methods for the generation of either low phase noise micro- or mm waves, no universal system applicable to low phase noise generation for micro and mm waves has yet been demonstrated. Here we propose a new photonic frequency discriminator based on a two wavelength delayed self-heterodyne interferometer which is compatible with such an objective. The photonic frequency discriminator can be a reference both for micro and mm waves to lower their phase noise. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate a low phase noise tunable OEO (6–18 GHz) and locking of a heterodyne beat between two cw lasers (10–400 GHz) with low relative phase noise. The required components for the photonic frequency discriminator are off-the-shelf and can be readily assembled. We believe this new type of photonic frequency discriminator will enable a new generation of universal precision tunable sources for the X, K, V, W and mm-bands and beyond

    Design of CMOS integrated frequency synthesizers for ultra-wideband wireless communications systems

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    Ultra¬wide band (UWB) system is a breakthrough in wireless communication, as it provides data rate one order higher than existing ones. This dissertation focuses on the design of CMOS integrated frequency synthesizer and its building blocks used in UWB system. A mixer¬based frequency synthesizer architecture is proposed to satisfy the agile frequency hopping requirement, which is no more than 9.5 ns, three orders faster than conventional phase¬locked loop (PLL)¬based synthesizers. Harmonic cancela¬tion technique is extended and applied to suppress the undesired harmonic mixing components. Simulation shows that sidebands at 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz are below 36 dBc from carrier. The frequency synthesizer contains a novel quadrature VCO based on the capacitive source degeneration structure. The QVCO tackles the jeopardous ambiguity of the oscillation frequency in conventional QVCOs. Measurement shows that the 5¬GHz CSD¬QVCO in 0.18 µm CMOS technology draws 5.2 mA current from a 1.2 V power supply. Its phase noise is ¬120 dBc at 3 MHz offset. Compared with existing phase shift LC QVCOs, the proposed CSD¬QVCO presents better phase noise and power efficiency. Finally, a novel injection locking frequency divider (ILFD) is presented. Im¬plemented with three stages in 0.18 µm CMOS technology, the ILFD draws 3¬mA current from a 1.8¬V power supply. It achieves multiple large division ratios as 6, 12, and 18 with all locking ranges greater than 1.7 GHz and injection frequency up to 11 GHz. Compared with other published ILFDs, the proposed ILFD achieves the largest division ratio with satisfactory locking range
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