61 research outputs found

    Integrated radio frequency synthetizers for wireless applications

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    This thesis consists of six publications and an overview of the research topic, which is also a summary of the work. The research described in this thesis concentrates on the design of phase-locked loop radio frequency synthesizers for wireless applications. In particular, the focus is on the implementation of the prescaler, the phase detector, and the chargepump. This work reviews the requirements set for the frequency synthesizer by the wireless standards, and how these requirements are derived from the system specifications. These requirements apply to both integer-N and fractional-N synthesizers. The work also introduces the special considerations related to the design of fractional-N phase-locked loops. Finally, implementation alternatives for the different building blocks of the synthesizer are reviewed. The presented work introduces new topologies for the phase detector and the chargepump, and improved topologies for high speed CMOS prescalers. The experimental results show that the presented topologies can be successfully used in both integer-N and fractional-N synthesizers with state-of-the-art performance. The last part of this work discusses the additional considerations that surface when the synthesizer is integrated into a larger system chip. It is shown experimentally that the synthesizer can be successfully integrated into a complex transceiver IC without sacrificing the performance of the synthesizer or the transceiver.reviewe

    Digital enhancement techniques for fractional-N frequency synthesizers

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    Meeting the demand for unprecedented connectivity in the era of internet-of-things (IoT) requires extremely energy efficient operation of IoT nodes to extend battery life. Managing the data traffic generated by trillions of such nodes also puts severe energy constraints on the data centers. Clock generators that are essential elements in these systems consume significant power and therefore must be optimized for low power and high performance. The focus of this thesis is on improving the energy efficiency of frequency synthesizers and clocking modules by exploring design techniques at both the architectural and circuit levels. In the first part of this work, a digital fractional-N phase locked loop (FNPLL) that employs a high resolution time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a truly ΔΣ fractional divider to achieve low in-band noise with a wide bandwidth is presented. The fractional divider employs a digital-to-time converter (DTC) to cancel out ΔΣ quantization noise in time domain, thus alleviating TDC dynamic range requirements. The proposed digital architecture adopts a narrow range low-power time-amplifier based TDC (TA-TDC) to achieve sub 1ps resolution. Fabricated in 65nm CMOS process, the prototype PLL achieves better than -106dBc/Hz in-band noise and 3MHz PLL bandwidth at 4.5GHz output frequency using 50MHz reference. The PLL achieves excellent jitter performance of 490fsrms, while consumes only 3.7mW. This translates to the best reported jitter-power figure-of-merit (FoM) of -240.5dB among previously reported FNPLLs. Phase noise performance of ring oscillator based digital FNPLLs is severely compromised by conflicting bandwidth requirements to simultaneously suppress oscillator phase and quantization noise introduced by the TDC, ΔΣ fractional divider, and digital-to-analog converter (DAC). As a consequence, their FoM that quantifies the power-jitter tradeoff is at least 25dB worse than their LC-oscillator based FNPLL counterparts. In the second part of this thesis, we seek to close this performance gap by extending PLL bandwidth using quantization noise cancellation techniques and by employing a dual-path digital loop filter to suppress the detrimental impact of DAC quantization noise. A prototype was implemented in a 65nm CMOS process operating over a wide frequency range of 2.0GHz-5.5GHz using a modified extended range multi-modulus divider with seamless switching. The proposed digital FNPLL achieves 1.9psrms integrated jitter while consuming only 4mW at 5GHz output. The measured in-band phase noise is better than -96 dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset. The proposed FNPLL achieves wide bandwidth up to 6MHz using a 50 MHz reference and its FoM is -228.5dB, which is at about 20dB better than previously reported ring-based digital FNPLLs. In the third part, we propose a new multi-output clock generator architecture using open loop fractional dividers for system-on-chip (SoC) platforms. Modern multi-core processors use per core clocking, where each core runs at its own speed. The core frequency can be changed dynamically to optimize for performance or power dissipation using a dynamic frequency scaling (DFS) technique. Fast frequency switching is highly desirable as long as it does not interrupt code execution; therefore it requires smooth frequency transitions with no undershoots. The second main requirement in processor clocking is the capability of spread spectrum frequency modulation. By spreading the clock energy across a wide bandwidth, the electromagnetic interference (EMI) is dramatically reduced. A conventional PLL clock generation approach suffers from a slow frequency settling and limited spread spectrum modulation capabilities. The proposed open loop fractional divider architecture overcomes the bandwidth limitation in fractional-N PLLs. The fractional divider switches the output frequency instantaneously and provides an excellent spread spectrum performance, where precise and programmable modulation depth and frequency can be applied to satisfy different EMI requirements. The fractional divider has unlimited modulation bandwidth resulting in spread spectrum modulation with no filtering, unlike fractional-N PLL; consequently it achieves higher EMI reduction. A prototype fractional divider was implemented in a 65nm CMOS process, where the measured peak-to-peak jitter is less than 27ps over a wide frequency range from 20MHz to 1GHz. The total power consumption is about 3.2mW for 1GHz output frequency. The all-digital implementation of the divider occupies the smallest area of 0.017mm2 compared to state-of-the-art designs. As the data rate of serial links goes higher, the jitter requirements of the clock generator become more stringent. Improving the jitter performance of conventional PLLs to less than (200fsrms) always comes with a large power penalty (tens of mWs). This is due to the PLL coupled noise bandwidth trade-off, which imposes stringent noise requirements on the oscillator and/or loop components. Alternatively, an injection-locked clock multiplier (ILCM) provides many advantages in terms of phase noise, power, and area compared to classical PLLs, but they suffer from a narrow lock-in range and a high sensitivity to PVT variations especially at a large multiplication factor (N). In the fourth part of this thesis, a low-jitter, low-power LC-based ILCM with a digital frequency-tracking loop (FTL) is presented. The proposed FTL relies on a new pulse gating technique to continuously tune the oscillator's free-running frequency. The FTL ensures robust operation across PVT variations and resolves the race condition existing in injection locked PLLs by decoupling frequency tuning from the injection path. As a result, the phase locking condition is only determined by the injection path. This work also introduces an accurate theoretical large-signal analysis for phase domain response (PDR) of injection locked oscillators (ILOs). The proposed PDR analysis captures the asymmetric nature of ILO's lock-in range, and the impact of frequency error on injection strength and phase noise performance. The proposed architecture and analysis are demonstrated by a prototype fabricated in 65 nm CMOS process with active area of 0.25mm2. The prototype ILCM multiplies the reference frequency by 64 to generate an output clock in the range of 6.75GHz-8.25GHz. A superior jitter performance of 190fsrms is achieved, while consuming only 2.25mW power. This translates to a best FoM of -251dB. Unlike conventional PLLs, ILCMs have been fundamentally limited to only integer-N operation and cannot synthesize fractional-N frequencies. In the last part of this thesis, we extend the merits of ILCMs to fractional-N and overcome this fundamental limitation. We employ DTC-based QNC techniques in order to align injected pulses to the oscillator's zero crossings, which enables it to pull the oscillator toward phase lock, thus realizing a fractional-N ILCM. Fabricated in 65nm CMOS process, a prototype 20-bit fractional-N ILCM with an output range of 6.75GHz-8.25GHz consumes only 3.25mW. It achieves excellent jitter performance of 110fsrms and 175fsrms in integer- and fractional-N modes respectively, which translates to the best-reported FoM in both integer- (-255dB) and fractional-N (-252dB) modes. The proposed fractional-N ILCM also features the first-reported rapid on/off capability, where the transient absolute jitter performance at wake-up is bounded below 4ps after less than 4ns. This demonstrates almost instantaneous phase settling. This unique capability enables tremendous energy saving by turning on the clock multiplier only when needed. This energy proportional operation leverages idle times to save power at the system-level of wireline and wireless transceivers

    Synchronising coherent networked radar using low-cost GPS-disciplined oscillators

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    This text evaluates the feasibility of synchronising coherent, pulsed-Doppler, networked, radars with carrier frequencies of a few gigahertz and moderate bandwidths of tens of megahertz across short baselines of a few kilometres using low-cost quartz GPSDOs based on one-way GPS time transfer. It further assesses the use of line-of-sight (LOS) phase compensation, where the direct sidelobe breakthrough is used as the phase reference, to improve the GPS-disciplined oscillator (GPSDO) synchronised bistatic Doppler performance. Coherent bistatic, multistatic, and networked radars require accurate time, frequency, and phase synchronisation. Global positioning system (GPS) synchronisation is precise, low-cost, passive and covert, and appears well-suited to synchronise networked radar. However, very few published examples exist. An imperfectly synchronised bistatic transmitter-receiver is modelled. Measures and plots are developed enabling the rapid selection of appropriate synchronisation technologies. Three low-cost, open, versatile, and extensible, quartz-based GPSDOs are designed and calibrated at zero-baselines. These GPSDOs are uniquely capable of acquiring phase-lock four times faster than conventional phase-locked loops (PLLs) and a new time synchronisation mechanism enables low-jitter sub-10 ns oneway GPS time synchronisation. In collaboration with University College London, UK, the 2.4 GHz coherent pulsed-Doppler networked radar, called NetRAD, is synchronised using the University of Cape Town developed GPSDOs. This resulted in the first published example of pulsed-Doppler phase synchronisation using GPS. A tri-static experiment is set up in Simon’s Bay, South Africa, with a maximum baseline of 2.3 km. The Roman Rock lighthouse was used as a static target to simultaneously assess the range, frequency, phase, and Doppler performance of the monostatic, bistatic, and LOS phase corrected bistatic returns. The real-world results compare well to that predicted by the earlier developed bistatic model and zero-baseline calibrations. GPS timing limits the radar bandwidth to less than 37.5 MHz when it is required to synchronise to within the range resolution. Low-cost quartz GPSDOs offer adequate frequency synchronisation to ensure a target radial velocity accuracy of better than 1 km/h and frequency drift of less than the Doppler resolution over integration periods of one second or less. LOS phase compensation, when used in combination with low-cost GPSDOs, results in near monostatic pulsed-Doppler performance with a subclutter visibility improvement of about 30 dB

    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

    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

    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

    High-fidelity, near-field microwave gates in a cryogenic surface trap

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    We present a novel dynamical decoupling strategy for near field microwave gradient driven, Mølmer-Sørensen style, two-ion quantum logic gates, which suppresses errors from both fluctuations in the qubit frequency and imperfection in the decoupling drive itself. Using a microwave-integrated surface-trap which is operated cryogenically at 25 K and a magnetically insensitive 43-Ca+ qubit at 288 G, we demonstrate a 331 us two-ion quantum logic gates, with 4.9(11)e-3 logic error probability. This is below the 1% error threshold required for quantum error correction and represents a ~10x gate time reduction when compared to previously demonstrated near field gradient driven microwave gates below the 1% error probability threshold. Additionally, two faster gates were demonstrated without the use of dynamical decoupling. Respectively, these two gates had gate operation durations of 216.8 us & 153.8 us and measured gate error probabilities of 8.5(20)e-3 & 9.8(21)e-3. Further, we develop a method for rapid calculation of ion transport operations. We successfully demonstrate ion transport as well as crystal splitting and merging operations within two different ion traps using the waveforms calculated by this ion transport toolbox

    Energy-efficient wireline transceivers

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    Power-efficient wireline transceivers are highly demanded by many applications in high performance computation and communication systems. Apart from transferring a wide range of data rates to satisfy the interconnect bandwidth requirement, the transceivers have very tight power budget and are expected to be fully integrated. This thesis explores enabling techniques to implement such transceivers in both circuit and system levels. Specifically, three prototypes will be presented: (1) a 5Gb/s reference-less clock and data recovery circuit (CDR) using phase-rotating phase-locked loop (PRPLL) to conduct phase control so as to break several fundamental trade-offs in conventional receivers; (2) a 4-10.5Gb/s continuous-rate CDR with novel frequency acquisition scheme based on bang-bang phase detector (BBPD) and a ring oscillator-based fractional-N PLL as the low noise wide range DCO in the CDR loop; (3) a source-synchronous energy-proportional link with dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) and rapid on/off (ROO) techniques to cut the link power wastage at system level. The receiver/transceiver architectures are highly digital and address the requirements of new receiver architecture development, wide operating range, and low power/area consumption while being fully integrated. Experimental results obtained from the prototypes attest the effectiveness of the proposed techniques
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