9,492 research outputs found

    A New Low-Power CMOS Quadrature VCO with Current Reused Structure

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    A new quadrature voltage controlled oscillator (QVCO) circuit topology is proposed for low-voltage and low-power applications. In the proposed circuit, two oscillators with current-reused structure are coupled to each other by two P&N-MOS pairs. In this way, low phase noise quadrature signals are generated with low-voltage and low-power. The simulation is made by Cadence in chartered 0.18 μm CMOS process. The simulation result shows that the QVCO phase noise is approximately - 117.1 dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset from 1.8 GHz operation frequency. The QVCO dissipates 1.92 mW with a 1.1 V supply voltage

    A Subthreshold Low-Voltage Low-Phase-Noise CMOS LC-VCO with Resistive Biasing

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    This paper presents a low-phase-noise LC voltage-controlled oscillator (LC-VCO) with top resistive biasing in subthreshold region. The subthreshold LC-VCO has low-power and low-phase-noise due to its high transconductance efficiency and low gate bias condition. The top resistive biasing has more benefit with the feature of phase noise than MOS current source since it can support the low-noise characteristics and large output swing. The LC-VCO designed in 130-nm CMOS process with 0.7-V supply voltage achieves phase noise of -116 dBc/Hz at 200 kHz offset with tuning range of 398 MHz to 408 MHz covering medical implant communication service (MICS) band

    A Programmable CMOS Voltage Controlled Ring Oscillator for Radio-Frequency Diathermy On-chip Circuit

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    In this work we present the design of a digitally controlled ring type oscillator in 0.5 μm CMOS technology for a low-cost and portable radio-frequency diathermy (RFD) device. The oscillator circuit is composed by a low frequency ring oscillator (LFRO), a voltage controlled ring oscillator (VCRO), and a logic control. The digital circuit generates an input signal for the LFO, which generates a voltage ramp that controls the oscillating output signal of the VCRO in the range of 100 KHz to 1 MHz. Simulation results show that the proposed circuit exhibits controllable output characteristics in the range of 100 KHz – 1 MHz, with low power consumption and low phase noise, making it suitable for a portable RFD device

    Design of VCOs in Deep Sub-micron Technologies

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    This work will present a more accurate frequency prediction model for single-ended ring oscillators (ROs), a case-study comparing different ROs, and a design method for LC voltage-controlled oscillators (LCVCOs) that uses a MATLAB script based on analytical equations to output a graphical design space showing performance characteristics as a function of design parameters. Using this method, design trade-offs become clear, and the designer can choose which performance characteristics to optimize. These methods were used to design various topologies of ring oscillators and LCVCOs in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology, comparing the performance between different topologies based on simulation results. The results from the MATLAB design script were compared to simulation results as well to show the effectiveness of the design methods. Three varieties of 5 GHz voltage controlled ring oscillators were designed in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology. The first is a low current low dropout regulator (LDO) tuned ring oscillator designed with thin oxide devices and a 0.85 V supply. The second is a high current LDO-tuned ring oscillator designed with medium oxide devices and a 1.5 V supply. The third is varactor-tuned ring oscillator with no LDO, and 0.85 V supply. Performance comparison of these ring oscillator systems are presented, outlining trade-offs between tuning range, phase noise, power dissipation, and area. The varactor-tuned ring oscillator exhibits 8.89 dBc/Hz (with power supply noise) and 16.27 dBc/Hz (without power supply noise) improvement in phase noise over the best-performing LDO-tuned ring oscillator. There are advantages in average power dissipation and area for a minimal tradeoff in tuning range with the varactor-tuned ring oscillator. Four multi-GHz LCVCOs were designed in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology: 15 GHz varactor-tuned NMOS-only, 9 GHz varactor-tuned self-biased CMOS, 14.2 GHz digitally-tuned NMOS-only, and 8.2 GHz digitally-tuned self-biased CMOS. As a design method, analytical ex-pressions describing tuning range, tank amplitude constraint, and startup condition were used in MATLAB to output a graphical view of the design space for both NMOS-only and CMOS LCVCOs, with maximum varactor capacitance on the y-axis and NMOS transistor width on the x-axis. Phase noise was predicted as well. In addition to the standard varactor control voltage tuning method, digitally-tuned implementations of both NMOS and CMOS LCVCOs are presented. The performance aspects of all designed LCVCOs are compared. Both varactor-tuned and digitally-tuned NMOS LCVCOs have lower phase noise, lower power consumption, and higher tuning range than both CMOS topologies. The varactor-tuned NMOS LCVCO has the lowest phase noise of -97 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset from 15 GHz center frequency, FOM of -172.20 dBc/Hz, and FOMT of -167.76 dBc/Hz. The digitally-tuned CMOS LCVCO has the greatest tuning range at 10%. Phase noise is improved by 3 dBc/Hz with the digitally-tuned CMOS topology over varactor-tuned CMOS

    Analysis of Phase Noise and Jitter in Ring Oscillators

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    Voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs) have gain paramount importance in frequency modulation (FM) and pulse modulation (PM) circuits, phase locked loops (PLLs), function generators, frequency synthesizers etc. which are vital for communication circuits. CMOS based ring oscillators have tuning range, tuning gain and phase noise as the important characteristics. The most difficult task is that variation of phase due to stochastic perturbations. Phase noise has been the designer’s primary concerned. The effect of oscillator’s noise is one of the most insightful issues in the designing of modern RF telecommunication systems. A low phase noise with minimum power dissipation is rapidly preferred criteria for the design of voltage controlled ring oscillators (VCROs). A very simple and precise analysis of different phase noise models of ring VCOs and their causes is analyzed in this paper. For each case, the flicker noise and the white noise component of phase noise and jitter are considered which limits the signal. The important elements that determine the phase noise in VCOs are the transistor's flicker noise ( noise), the output power level, and the quality factor (Q). A synchronized relationship among the effective noise components in the oscillatory circuits leads to good agreement for new design insights and also improves the performance. Keywords: Ring Oscillators, Voltage Controlled Oscillator, Voltage Controlled Ring Oscillator, Phase noise, jitter

    Phase Noise in CMOS Phase-Locked Loop Circuits

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    Phase-locked loops (PLLs) have been widely used in mixed-signal integrated circuits. With the continuously increasing demand of market for high speed, low noise devices, PLLs are playing a more important role in communications. In this dissertation, phase noise and jitter performances are investigated in different types of PLL designs. Hot carrier and negative bias temperature instability effects are analyzed from simulations and experiments. Phase noise of a CMOS phase-locked loop as a frequency synthesizer circuit is modeled from the superposition of noises from its building blocks: voltage-controlled oscillator, frequency divider, phase-frequency detector, loop filter and auxiliary input reference clock. A linear time invariant model with additive noise sources in frequency domain is presented to analyze the phase noise. The modeled phase noise results are compared with the corresponding experimentally measured results on phase-locked loop chips fabricated in 0.5 m n-well CMOS process. With the scaling of CMOS technology and the increase of electrical field, MOS transistors have become very sensitive to hot carrier effect (HCE) and negative bias temperature instability (NBTI). These two reliability issues pose challenges to designers for designing of chips in deep submicron CMOS technologies. A new strategy of switchable CMOS phase-locked loop frequency synthesizer is proposed to increase its tuning range. The switchable PLL which integrates two phase-locked loops with different tuning frequencies are designed and fabricated in 0.5 µm CMOS process to analyze the effects under HCE and NBTI. A 3V 1.2 GHz programmable phase-locked loop frequency synthesizer is designed in 0.5 μm CMOS technology. The frequency synthesizer is implemented using LC voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) and a low power dual-modulus prescaler. The LC VCO working range is from 900MHz to 1.4GHz. Current mode logic (CML) is used in designing high speed D flip-flop in the dual-modulus prescaler circuits for low power consumption. The power consumption of the PLL chip is under 30mW. Fully differential LC VCO is used to provide high oscillation frequency. A new design of LC VCO using carbon nanotube (CNT) wire inductor has been proposed. The PLL design using CNT-LC VCO shows significant improvement in phase noise due to high-Q LC circuit

    Low power low voltage quadrature RC oscillators for modern RF receivers

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    Dissertação apresentada na Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa para a obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de ComputadoresThis thesis proposes a study of three different RC oscillators, two relaxation and a ring oscillator. All the circuits are implemented using UMC 130 nm CMOS technology with a supply voltage of 1.2 V. We present a wideband MOS current/voltage controlled quadrature oscillator constituted by two multivibrators. Two different forms of coupling named, soft (traditional)and hard (proposed) are differentiated and investigated. It is found that hard coupling reduces the quadrature error and results in a low phase-noise (about 2 dB improvement) with respect to soft coupling. The behaviour of the singular and coupled multivibrators is investigated, when an external synchronizing harmonic is applied. We introduce a new RC relaxation oscillator with pulse self biasing, to reduce power consumption, and with harmonic ltering and resistor feedback, to reduce phase-noise. The designed circuit has a very low phase-noise, -132.6 dBc/Hz @ 10 MHz offset, and the power consumption is only 1 mW, which leads to a gure of merit (FOM) of -159.1 dBc/Hz. The nal circuit is a two integrator fully implemented in CMOS technology, with low power consumption. The respective layout is made and occupies a total area of5.856x10-3 mm2, post-layout simulation is also done

    Design of a 41.14-48.11 GHz triple frequency based VCO

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    © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Growing deployment of more efficient communication systems serving electric power grids highlights the importance of designing more advanced intelligent electronic devices and communication-enabled measurement units. In this context, phasor measurement units (PMUs) are being widely deployed in power systems. A common block in almost all PMUs is a phase locked oscillator which uses a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO). In this paper, a triple frequency based voltage controlled oscillator is presented with low phase noise and robust start-up. The VCO consists of a detector, a comparator, and triple frequency. A VCO starts-up in class AB, then steadies oscillation in class C with low current oscillation. The frequency of the VCO, which is from 13.17 GHz to 16.03 GHz, shows that the frequency is tripling to 41.14-48.11 GHz. Therefore, its application is not limited to PMUs. This work has been simulated in a standard 0.18 µm CMOS process. The simulated VCO achieves a phase noise of -99.47 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset and -121.8 dBc/Hz at 10 MHz offset from the 48.11 GHz carrier
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