18 research outputs found

    Study and design of an impulse radio UWB synthesizer for 3.1-10.6 GHz band in 28 NM CMOS FD-SOI technology

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    Orientador: Prof. Ph.D. André Augusto MarianoCoorientador: Prof. Ph.D. Rémy VaucheDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal do Paraná, Setor de Tecnologia, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Engenharia Elétrica. Defesa : Curitiba, 21/03/2022Inclui referências: p. 107-110Resumo: Este trabalho de dissertação de mestrado apresenta o estudo e desenvolvimento de sintetizador de pulsos de radio ultra banda larga para a banda 3,1-10,6 GHz em tecnologia 28 nm CMOS FD-SOI. A primeira utilização dessa banda de frequência foi autorizada pela comissão federal de comunicações dos Estados Unidos em 2002. Visando a explorar essa banda de frequência, o padrão IEEE 802.15.4 escolheu as comunicações baseadas em pulsos de radio em detrimento das comunicações tradicionais de banda estreita. Uma linha importante de pesquisa e o estudo e desenvolvimento de um transmissor ultra banda larga, capaz de endereçar múltiplas bandas e múltiplos padrões diferentes, que e consistido em um sintetizador de pulsos de radio devendo ter a capacidade de cobrir a banda 3,1-10,6 GHz. Para atingir tal objetivo, visa-se a implementação de uma arquitetura versátil baseada em um gerador de pulsos constituído principalmente por um oscilador controlado por tensão, e um circuito de formatação da envoltória do pulso, em que e possível fazer ajuste da duração e da frequência central dos pulsos, e compensar variações PVT (Processo, Tensão e Temperatura). O objetivo principal deste trabalho de dissertação de mestrado e estudo e desenvolvimento de um sintetizador de pulsos baseado nessa arquitetura em tecnologia 28 nm CMOS FD-SOI, de maneira que esse circuito seja capaz de cobrir toda banda 3.1-10.6 GHz e ao mesmo tempo cumprir os requerimentos espectrais estabelecidos pelos padrões IEEE 802.15.4 e IEEE 802.15.6. No projeto do circuito proposto, utilizou-se a técnica de síntese de pulso por transposição de frequência, constituído principalmente por um oscilador local comutado, permitindo a redução do consumo de energia, em que o sinal produzido pelo oscilador e modulado por um pulso em banda base. Em relação a metodologia do projeto, trata-se de um projeto totalmente personalizado, em que se utilizou as logicas CMOS e CML (Logica Diferencial), e se considerou capacitâncias parasitas estimadas no intuito de melhorar o dimensionamento dos transistores. A arquitetura do oscilador escolhida neste projeto foi o oscilador em anel, a qual permite de se obter uma banda de frequência suficientemente alta. Acerca da formatação do pulso, escolheu-se uma envoltória possível de se implementar com circuito digital reprogramável, visando a endereçar os diferentes canais do padrão IEEE 802.15.4 e IEEE 802.15.6. O sistema implementado, em nível de esquemático de transistor considerando capacitâncias parasitas estimadas, apresenta um desempenho satisfatório sobre a toda a banda de frequência de interesse, em que os pulsos gerados respeitam os gabaritos espectrais impostos pelos padrões IEEE, evidenciando a capacidade do circuito prosposto de ser multi-banda e cobrir toda a banda de frequência de interesse. Em relação ao consumo de potência, esse e influenciado pela duração do pulso e sua frequência central. Ademais, obteve-se um consumo de potencia estática 14 µW e um consumo de energia por pulso emitido máximo de 308 pJ, em que para esse caso, o pulso apresenta um energia transmitida de 11,7 pJ por pulso, assim apresentando uma eficiência de 3,8 %.Abstract: This dissertation work concerns the study and design of an impulse radio ultra-wide band synthesizer for 3.1-10.6 GHz frequency band in 28 nm CMOS FD-SOI technology. Indeed, this frequency band exploitation was initially authorized by the federal communications commission of United States in 2002. Targeting to exploit this frequency band, the IEEE 802.15.4 standard has chosen the communications based on impulse radio instead of the traditional narrowband communications. Besides, the impulse radio communications should respect communications standards, like the IEEE 802.15.4 for wireless personal networks, or IEEE 802.15.6 for wireless body networks. These IEEE standards define the generated pulse bandwidth and its central frequency. An important line of research is the study and design of a multi-standard or multi-band UWB transmitter, consisted by a pulse synthesizer that should be able to address all the standardized channels. To accomplish this, a proposed solution reposes on design of versatile architecture based on pulse generator and an envelope shaping circuit, where it is possible to tune the pulse duration and central frequency, and also to compensate PVT variations (Process, Voltage and Temperature). The dissertation work main goal is the study and design of a pulse synthesizer based on this architecture in 28 nm CMOS FD-SOI technology, such that the designed system is capable to cover all the 3.1-10.6 GHz and at same time to comply the spectral requirements established by IEEE 802.15.4 and 802.15.6 standards. In relation of the proposed circuit design, it is applied the pulse synthesis technique based on frequency transposition, that is mainly composed by a local oscillator that can be turned on and off, which allows to reduce the power consumption. The generated oscillation is modulated by a baseband pulse. Concerning the design methodology, it is a full-custom project, where CMOS and CML logics were used, and estimated parasitic capacitances were considered to achieve more reliable transistor sizing. The oscillator architecture chosen is based on ring oscillator, which allows to reach a frequency range sufficiently large. For the pulse shaping, it was chosen a envelope that is feasible to implement with fully digital circuit, targeting to address all IEEE 802.15.4 and IEEE 802.15.6 standard channels. The implemented system presents, in schematic levels considering parasitic capacitances, a satisfactory performance over all the 3.1-10.6 GHz band, where the generated pulses respect the spectral requirements imposed by the IEEE standards, therefore indicating that the proposed circuit is multi-band and able to cover all frequency band of interest. In terms of power consumption, it was achieved a power leakage of 14 µW and a maximal energy per pulse consumption of 308 pJ, where for this case, the pulse has an emitted energy of 11.7 pJ per pulse, therefore a efficiency of 3.8 %

    Digitally Controlled Oscillator for mm-Wave Frequencies

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    In the fifth generation of mobile communication, 5G, frequencies above 30 GHz, so-called millimeter-wave (mm-wave) frequencies are expected to play a prominent role. For the synthesis of these frequencies, the all-digital phase locked loop (ADPLL) has recently gained much attention. A core component of the ADPLL is the digitally controlled oscillator (DCO), an oscillator that tunes the frequency discretely. For good performance, the frequency steps must be made very small, while the total tuning range must be large. This thesis covers several coarse- and fine-tuning techniques for DCOs operating at mm-wave frequencies. Three previously not published fine-tuning schemes are presented: The first one tunes the second harmonic, which will, due to the Groszkowski effect, tune the fundamental tone. The second one is a current-modulation scheme, which utilizes the weak current-dependence of the capacitance of a transistor to tune the frequency. In the third one, a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) is connected to the bulk of the differential pair and tunes the frequency by setting the bulk voltage. The advantages and disadvantages of the presented tuning schemes are discussed and compared with previously reported fine-tuning schemes. Two oscillators were implemented at 86 GHz. Both oscillator use the same oscillator core and hence have the same power consumption and tuning range, 14.1 mW and 13.9%. A phase noise of -89.7 dBc/Hz and -111.4 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz and 10 MHz offset, respectively, were achieved, corresponding to a Figure-of-Merit of -178.5 dBc/Hz. The first oscillator is fine-tuned using a combination of a transformer-based fine-tuning and the current modulation scheme presented here. The achieved frequency resolution is 55 kHz, but can easily be made finer. The second oscillator utilizes the bulk bias technique to achieve its fine tuning. The fine-tuning resolution is here dependent on the resolution of the DAC; a 100μV resolution corresponds to a resolution of 50 kHz.n 2011, the global monthly mobile data usage was 0.5 exabytes, or 500 million gigabytes. In 2016, this number had increased to 7 exabytes, an increase by a factor 14 in just five years, and there are no signs of this trend slowing down. To meet the demands of the ever increasing data usage, engineers have begun to investigate the possibility to use significantly higher frequencies, 30 GHz or higher, for mobile communication than what is used today, which is 3 GHz or below. To be able to transmit and receive data at these high frequency, an oscillator capable of operating at these frequencies are required. An oscillator is an electrical circuit that generates an alternating current (a current that first goes one way, and then the other) at a specific frequency. Below is an example to illustrate to function and importance of the oscillator: Imagine driving a car and listening to the radio. Suddenly, a horrendous song starts playing from the radio, so you instantly tune to another station and find some great, smooth jazz. Satisfied, you lean back and drive on. But what exactly happened when you "tuned to another station"? What you really did was changing the frequency of the oscillator, which can be found in the radio receiver of the car. The radio receiver filters out all frequencies, except for the frequency of the local oscillator. So by setting the frequency of the local oscillator to the frequency of the desired radio channel, only this radio channel will reach the speakers of the car. Thus, the oscillator must be able to vary its frequency to any frequency that a radio station can transmit on. While an old car radio may seem like a simple example, the very same principle is used in mobile communication, even at frequencies above 30 GHz. The oscillator is also used in the same way when transmitting signals, so that the signals are transmitted on the correct frequency. The design of the local oscillator is a hot topic among radio engineers. A poorly designed oscillator will ruin the performance of the whole receiver or transmitter. This thesis covers the design of a special type of oscillators, called digital controlled oscillators or DCO, operating at 30 GHz or higher. The frequency of these oscillators are determined by a digital word (ones and zeros), instead of using an analog voltage, which is traditionally used. Digital control results in greater flexibility and higher noise-resilience, but it also means that the frequency can’t be changed continuously, but rather in discrete steps. This discrete behavior will cause noise in the receiver. To minimize this noise, the frequency steps should be minimized. In this thesis, we have proposed a DCO design, operating at 85.5 GHz, which can be tuned almost 7 % in either direction. To our knowledge, no other DCO operates at such high frequencies. In the proposed oscillators the frequency steps are only 55 kHz apart, which is so small that its effect on the radio receiver can, with a good conscience, be ignored. This is achieved with a novel technique that makes tiny, tiny changes in the current that passes through the oscillator

    A high speed serializer/deserializer design

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    A Serializer/Deserializer (SerDes) is a circuit that converts parallel data into a serial stream and vice versa. It helps solve clock/data skew problems, simplifies data transmission, lowers the power consumption and reduces the chip cost. The goal of this project was to solve the challenges in high speed SerDes design, which included the low jitter design, wide bandwidth design and low power design. A quarter-rate multiplexer/demultiplexer (MUX/DEMUX) was implemented. This quarter-rate structure decreases the required clock frequency from one half to one quarter of the data rate. It is shown that this significantly relaxes the design of the VCO at high speed and achieves lower power consumption. A novel multi-phase LC-ring oscillator was developed to supply a low noise clock to the SerDes. This proposed VCO combined an LC-tank with a ring structure to achieve both wide tuning range (11%) and low phase noise (-110dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset). With this structure, a data rate of 36 Gb/s was realized with a measured peak-to-peak jitter of 10ps using 0.18microm SiGe BiCMOS technology. The power consumption is 3.6W with 3.4V power supply voltage. At a 60 Gb/s data rate the simulated peak-to-peak jitter was 4.8ps using 65nm CMOS technology. The power consumption is 92mW with 2V power supply voltage. A time-to-digital (TDC) calibration circuit was designed to compensate for the phase mismatches among the multiple phases of the PLL clock using a three dimensional fully depleted silicon on insulator (3D FDSOI) CMOS process. The 3D process separated the analog PLL portion from the digital calibration portion into different tiers. This eliminated the noise coupling through the common substrate in the 2D process. Mismatches caused by the vertical tier-to-tier interconnections and the temperature influence in the 3D process were attenuated by the proposed calibration circuit. The design strategy and circuits developed from this dissertation provide significant benefit to both wired and wireless applications

    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

    Clock multiplication techniques for high-speed I/Os

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    Generation of a low-jitter, high-frequency clock from a low-frequency reference clock using classical analog phase-locked loops (PLLs) requires a large loop filter capacitor and power hungry oscillator. Digital PLLs can help reduce area but their jitter performance is severely degraded by quantization error. In this dissertation different clock multiplication techniques have been explored that can be suitable for high-speed wireline systems. With the emphasis on ring oscillator based architecture using cascaded stages, three possible architectures are explored. First, a scrambling TDC (STDC) is presented to improve deterministic jitter (DJ) performance when used with a low-frequency reference clock. A cascaded architecture with digital multiplying delay locked loop as the first stage and hybrid analog/digital PLL as the second stage is used to achieve low random jitter in a power efficient manner. Fabricated in a 90nm CMOS process, the prototype frequency synthesizer consumes 4.76mW power from a 1.0V supply and generates 160MHz and 2.56 GHz output clocks from a 1.25MHz crystal reference frequency. The long-term absolute jitter of the 60MHz digital MDLL and 2.56 GHz digital PLL outputs are 2.4 psrms and 4.18 psrms, while the peak-to-peak jitter is 22.1 ps and 35.2 ps, respectively. The proposed frequency synthesizer occupies an active die area of 0.16mm2 and achieves power efficiency of 1.86 mW/GHz. Second, a hybrid phase/current-mode phase interpolator (HPC-PI) is presented to improve phase noise performance of ring oscillator-based fractional-N PLLs. The proposed HPC-PI alleviates the bandwidth trade-off between VCO phase noise suppression and ΔΣ quantization noise suppression. By combining the phase detection and interpolation functions into an XOR phase detector/interpolator (XOR PD-PI) block, accurate quantization error cancellation is achieved without using calibration. Use of a digital MDLL in front of the fractional-N PLL helps in alleviating the bandwidth limitation due to reference frequency and enables bandwidth extension even further. The extended bandwidth helps in suppressing the ring-VCO phase noise and lowering the in-band noise floor. Fabricated in 65nm CMOS process, the prototype generates fractional frequencies from 4.25 to 4.75 GHz, with an in-band phase noise floor of -104 dBc/Hz and 1.5 psrms integrated jitter. The clock multiplier achieves power efficiency of 2.4mW/GHz and FoM of -225.8 dB. Finally, an efficient clock generation, recovery, and distribution techniques for flexible-rate transceivers are presented. Using a fixed-frequency low-jitter clock provided by an integer-N PLL, fractional frequencies are generated/recovered locally using multi-phase fractional clock multipliers. Fabricated in a 65nm CMOS, the prototype transceiver can be programmed to operate at any rate from 3-to-10 Gb/s. At 10 Gb/s, integrated jitter of the Tx output and recovered clock is 360 fsrms and 758 fsrms, respectively

    Design and investigation of nanometric and submicron integrated circuits for voltage and digital controlled oscillators

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    Disertacijoje nagrinėjama LC-ĮVG ir LC-SVG, architektūros, modeliai bei jų kūrimas taikant nanometrines ir submikronines integrinių grandynų technologijas. Iškeliama ir įrodoma hipotezė, kad tinkamos architektūros parinkimas ir integrinių grandynų technologijų taikymas įgalina sukurti reikiamų parametrų ir kokybės 2–10 GHz įtampa ir skaitmeniniu būdu valdomus generatorius nanometriniuose ir submikroniniuose integriniuose grandynuose. Darbo tikslas – sukurti 2–10 GHz LC-ĮVG ir LC-SVG blokus nanometrinėse bei submikroninėse KMOP integrinių grandynų technologijose, leidžiančius pasiekti reikiamus parametrus skirtus daugiastandarčiams daugiajuosčiams belaidžio ryšio siųstuvams-imtuvams iki 10 GHz. Darbe išspręsti tokie uždaviniai: ištirtos LC-ĮVG ir LC-SVG architektūros skirtingose integrinių grandynų KMOP technologijose ir parinkta optimali architektūra integrinių grandynų sukūrimui, pasiūlytos naujos kokybės funkcijos skirtos LC-ĮVG ir LC-SVG palyginamajai analizei, sukurti ir ištirti LC-ĮVG ir LC-SVG integriniai grandynai. Disertaciją sudaro įvadas, trys skyriai, bendrosios išvados, naudotos literatūros ir autoriaus publikacijų disertacijos tema sąrašai ir trys priedai. Įvadiniame skyriuje aptariama tiriamoji problema, darbo aktualumas, aprašomas tyrimų objektas, formuluojamas darbo tikslas bei uždaviniai, aprašoma tyrimų metodika, darbo mokslinis naujumas, darbo rezultatų praktinė reikšmė, ginamieji teiginiai. Įvado pabaigoje pristatomos disertacijos tema autoriaus paskelbtos publikacijos ir pranešimai konferencijose bei disertacijos struktūra. Pirmajame skyriuje analizuojamos dažnio generatorių architektūros, jų pritaikymas bei jų pagrindiniai parametrai. Pateikiami pagrindiniai dažnio generatorių parametrai. Apžvelgiamos kokybės funkcijos, nusakančios dažnio generatorių pagrindinius parametrus skirtus palyginamajai analizei. Antrajame skyriuje pateikiamos naujos FOMTT FOMT2 kokybės funkcijos, kuriomis remiantis vertinami valdomo dažnio generatorių pagrindiniai parametrai palyginamajai analizei. Taip pat pateikiami induktyvumo ritės kokybės gerinimo būdai. Trečiajame skyriuje, taikant kompiuterinių skaičiavimų ir eksperimentinius metodus yra kuriami ir tiriami įtampa ir skaitmeniniu būdu valdomų generatorių bei papildomų blokų integriniai grandynai. Disertacijos tema yra atspausdinti 7 moksliniai straipsniai: 2 – mokslo žurnaluose, įtrauktuose į Clarivate Analytics Web of Science duomenų bazę, 3 – tarptautinių konferencijų medžiagoje, įtrauktoje į Clarivate Analy-tics Proceedings duomenų bazę, 2 – mokslo žurnaluose, referuojamuose kitose tarptautinėse duomenų bazėse. Disertacijoje atliktų tyrimų rezultatai buvo paskelbti dvylikoje mokslinių konferencijų Lietuvoje ir užsienyje.Disertacij

    Radiation Tolerant Electronics, Volume II

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    Research on radiation tolerant electronics has increased rapidly over the last few years, resulting in many interesting approaches to model radiation effects and design radiation hardened integrated circuits and embedded systems. This research is strongly driven by the growing need for radiation hardened electronics for space applications, high-energy physics experiments such as those on the large hadron collider at CERN, and many terrestrial nuclear applications, including nuclear energy and safety management. With the progressive scaling of integrated circuit technologies and the growing complexity of electronic systems, their ionizing radiation susceptibility has raised many exciting challenges, which are expected to drive research in the coming decade.After the success of the first Special Issue on Radiation Tolerant Electronics, the current Special Issue features thirteen articles highlighting recent breakthroughs in radiation tolerant integrated circuit design, fault tolerance in FPGAs, radiation effects in semiconductor materials and advanced IC technologies and modelling of radiation effects

    Self-Calibrated, Low-Jitter and Low-Reference-Spur Injection-Locked Clock Multipliers

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringThis dissertation focuses primarily on the design of calibrators for the injection-locked clock multiplier (ILCM). ILCMs have advantage to achieve an excellent jitter performance at low cost, in terms of area and power consumption. The wide loop bandwidth (BW) of the injection technique could reject the noise of voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO), making it thus suitable for the rejection of poor noise of a ring-VCO and a high frequency LC-VCO. However, it is difficult to use without calibrators because of its sensitiveness in process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations. In Chapter 2, conventional frequency calibrators are introduced and discussed. This dissertation introduces two types of calibrators for low-power high-frequency LC-VCO-based ILFMs in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 and high-performance ring-VCO-based ILCM in Chapter 5. First, Chapter 3 presents a low power and compact area LC-tank-based frequency multiplier. In the proposed architecture, the input signals have a pulsed waveform that involves many high-order harmonics. Using an LC-tank that amplifies only the target harmonic component, while suppressing others, the output signal at the target frequency can be obtained. Since the core current flows for a very short duration, due to the pulsed input signals, the average power consumption can be dramatically reduced. Effective removal of spurious tones due to the damping of the signal is achieved using a limiting amplifier. In this work, a prototype frequency tripler using the proposed architecture was designed in a 65 nm CMOS process. The power consumption was 950 ??W, and the active area was 0.08 mm2. At a 3.12 GHz frequency, the phase noise degradation with respect to the theoretical bound was less than 0.5 dB. Second, Chapter 4 presents an ultra-low-phase-noise ILFM for millimeter wave (mm-wave) fifth-generation (5G) transceivers. Using an ultra-low-power frequency-tracking loop (FTL), the proposed ILFM is able to correct the frequency drifts of the quadrature voltage-controlled oscillator of the ILFM in a real-time fashion. Since the FTL is monitoring the averages of phase deviations rather than detecting or sampling the instantaneous values, it requires only 600??W to continue to calibrate the ILFM that generates an mm-wave signal with an output frequency from 27 to 30 GHz. The proposed ILFM was fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process. The 10-MHz phase noise of the 29.25-GHz output signal was ???129.7 dBc/Hz, and its variations across temperatures and supply voltages were less than 2 dB. The integrated phase noise from 1 kHz to 100 MHz and the rms jitter were???39.1 dBc and 86 fs, respectively. Third, Chapter 5 presents a low-jitter, low-reference-spur ring voltage-controlled oscillator (ring VCO)-based ILCM. Since the proposed triple-point frequency/phase/slope calibrator (TP-FPSC) can accurately remove the three root causes of the frequency errors of ILCMs (i.e., frequency drift, phase offset, and slope modulation), the ILCM of this work is able to achieve a low-level reference spur. In addition, the calibrating loop for the frequency drift of the TP-FPSC offers an additional suppression to the in-band phase noise of the output signal. This capability of the TP-FPSC and the naturally wide bandwidth of the injection-locking mechanism allows the ILCM to achieve a very low RMS jitter. The ILCM was fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS technology. The measured reference spur and RMS jitter were ???72 dBc and 140 fs, respectively, both of which are the best among the state-of-the-art ILCMs. The active silicon area was 0.055 mm2, and the power consumption was 11.0 mW.clos
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