2,618 research outputs found

    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

    Synchronization and Characterization of an Ultra-Short Laser for Photoemission and Electron-Beam Diagnostics Studies at a Radio Frequency Photoinjector

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    A commercially-available titanium-sapphire laser system has recently been installed at the Fermilab A0 photoinjector laboratory in support of photoemission and electron beam diagnostics studies. The laser system is synchronized to both the 1.3-GHz master oscillator and a 1-Hz signal use to trigger the radiofrequency system and instrumentation acquisition. The synchronization scheme and performance are detailed. Long-term temporal and intensity drifts are identified and actively suppressed to within 1 ps and 1.5%, respectively. Measurement and optimization of the laser's temporal profile are accomplished using frequency-resolved optical gating.Comment: 16 pages, 17 figures, Preprint submitted to Elsevie

    Frequency and phase modulation performance of an injection-locked CW magnetron.

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    It is demonstrated that the output of a 2.45-GHz magnetron operated as a current-controlled oscillator through its pushing characteristic can lock to injection signals in times of the order of 100-500 ns depending on injection power, magnetron heater power, load impedance, and frequency offset of the injection frequency from the natural frequency of the magnetron. Accordingly, the magnetron can follow frequency and phase modulations of the injection signal, behaving as a narrow-band amplifier. The transmission of phase-shift-keyed data at 2 Mb/s has been achieved. Measurements of the frequency response and anode current after a switch of phase as a function of average anode current and heater power give new insight into the locking mechanisms and the noise characteristics of magnetrons

    Fast synchronization 3R burst-mode receivers for passive optical networks

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    This paper gives a tutorial overview on high speed burst-mode receiver (BM-RX) requirements, specific for time division multiplexing passive optical networks, and design issues of such BM-RXs as well as their advanced design techniques. It focuses on how to design BM-RXs with short burst overhead for fast synchronization. We present design principles and circuit architectures of various types of burst-mode transimpedance amplifiers, burst-mode limiting amplifiers and burst-mode clock and data recovery circuits. The recent development of 10 Gb/s BM-RXs is highlighted also including dual-rate operation for coexistence with deployed PONs and on-chip auto reset generation to eliminate external timing-critical control signals provided by a PON medium access control. Finally sub-system integration and state-of-the-art system performance for 10 Gb/s PONs are reviewed

    Radio-Communications Architectures

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    Wireless communications, i.e. radio-communications, are widely used for our different daily needs. Examples are numerous and standard names like BLUETOOTH, WiFI, WiMAX, UMTS, GSM and, more recently, LTE are well-known [Baudoin et al. 2007]. General applications in the RFID or UWB contexts are the subject of many papers. This chapter presents radio-frequency (RF) communication systems architecture for mobile, wireless local area networks (WLAN) and connectivity terminals. An important aspect of today's applications is the data rate increase, especially in connectivity standards like WiFI and WiMAX, because the user demands high Quality of Service (QoS). To increase the data rate we tend to use wideband or multi-standard architecture. The concept of software radio includes a self-reconfigurable radio link and is described here on its RF aspects. The term multi-radio is preferred. This chapter focuses on the transmitter, yet some considerations about the receiver are given. An important aspect of the architecture is that a transceiver is built with respect to the radio-communications signals. We classify them in section 2 by differentiating Continuous Wave (CW) and Impulse Radio (IR) systems. Section 3 is the technical background one has to consider for actual applications. Section 4 summarizes state-of-the-art high data rate architectures and the latest research in multi-radio systems. In section 5, IR architectures for Ultra Wide Band (UWB) systems complete this overview; we will also underline the coexistence and compatibility challenges between CW and IR systems

    A 2.4GHz fast-switching integer-N frequency synthesizer

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    The adaptive bandwidth technique is commonly used to implement fast switching in low-spurious frequency synthesizers. In this technique the high loop bandwidth used during the switching mode has to be restored once switching is complete. The process of restoring the bandwidth adds to the total switching time because of the glitches on the VCO control voltage arising from the perturbation caused in the loop. Often in applications demanding ultra fast switching times and tight error tolerances, the additional settling time due to these secondary glitches can be a significant fraction of the total switching time. In this thesis, a more efficient multi-step bandwidth-switching scheme is proposed that can significantly reduce the total switching time by minimizing the effect of secondary glitches. After satisfactory behavioral simulations, a proof-of-concept test chip integrating a 2.4GHz Integer-N synthesizer is designed and fabricated in the TSMC 0.25mum mixed-signal CMOS process. Simulations using time contraction show that the synthesizer switches 14% faster in the four-step mode compared to the one-step mode for a frequency step of 20MHz and 0.1% error tolerance

    Proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC 1990)

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    Presented here are the proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC), held June 17-20, 1990 in Ottawa, Canada. Topics covered include future mobile satellite communications concepts, aeronautical applications, modulation and coding, propagation and experimental systems, mobile terminal equipment, network architecture and control, regulatory and policy considerations, vehicle antennas, and speech compression
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