528 research outputs found

    Concepts and methods in optimization of integrated LC VCOs

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    Underlying physical mechanisms controlling the noise properties of oscillators are studied. This treatment shows the importance of inductance selection for oscillator noise optimization. A design strategy centered around an inductance selection scheme is executed using a practical graphical optimization method to optimize phase noise subject to design constraints such as power dissipation, tank amplitude, tuning range, startup condition, and diameters of spiral inductors. The optimization technique is demonstrated through a design example, leading to a 2.4-GHz fully integrated, LC voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) implemented using 0.35-μm MOS transistors. The measured phase-noise values are -121, -117, and -115 dBc/Hz at 600-kHz offset from 1.91, 2.03, and 2.60-GHz carriers, respectively. The VCO dissipates 4 mA from a 2.5-V supply voltage. The inversion mode MOSCAP tuning is used to achieve 26% of tuning range. Two figures of merit for performance comparison of various oscillators are introduced and used to compare this work to previously reported results

    A New Technique for the Design of Multi-Phase Voltage Controlled Oscillators

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    © 2017 World Scientific Publishing Company.In this work, a novel circuit structure for second-harmonic multi-phase voltage controlled oscillator (MVCO) is presented. The proposed MVCO is composed of (Formula presented.) ((Formula presented.) being an integer number and (Formula presented.)2) identical inductor–capacitor ((Formula presented.)) tank VCOs. In theory, this MVCO can provide 2(Formula presented.) different phase sinusoidal signals. A six-phase VCO based on the proposed structure is designed in a TSMC 0.18(Formula presented.)um CMOS process. Simulation results show that at the supply voltage of 0.8(Formula presented.)V, the total power consumption of the six-phase VCO circuit is about 1(Formula presented.)mW, the oscillation frequency is tunable from 2.3(Formula presented.)GHz to 2.5(Formula presented.)GHz when the control voltage varies from 0(Formula presented.)V to 0.8(Formula presented.)V, and the phase noise is lower than (Formula presented.)128(Formula presented.)dBc/Hz at 1(Formula presented.)MHz offset frequency. The proposed MVCO has lower phase noise, lower power consumption and more outputs than other related works in the literature.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Ultra Wideband Oscillators

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    Design of Power Optimized circuit of LC Voltage Controlled Oscillator for use in GSM Handsets

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    The recent performance requirements for mobile phones have been extending its area of interest. Handsets need to have high resolution graphics, pictures, and applications. Consequently, the requirement for a longer battery life has become a bare necessity. This makes optimization of power a critical issue. Along with this cell phones need to be thin and have light weight. A major portion of the power consumption of the handsets can be attributed to the LC oscillators used in the system. A Voltage Controlled Oscillator plays an important role in any communication system. It provides the frequency signal for down-conversion of input signals and also the carrier signals for the modulating signal. Proper amplitude and low phase noise are two important criteria to achieve suitable performance for a VCO in any transceiver system. The strong combination of low phase noise specifications with very low power consumption (battery operation) forces designers to use LC-VCOs. A great research effort has been done in the design of integrated voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs) using integrated or external resonators, but as their power consumption still cannot be unacceptable, today’s mobile phones commonly use external LC-VCO modules. Inductors used in these oscillators are usually bulky and have high power consumption. The low power LC oscillator increases the standby time, thus improving the battery life. Extended battery life provides processing power at lower clock speeds, enabling low leakage process that optimizes power consumption and increases battery time. Also provides integrated and sophisticated systems with improved power management. The main purpose of this project is to design a circuit for LC VCO to be used in GSM system with a tuning rage of 3-4GHz. Since the phase noise requirement for the system is less than 150dBc/Hz at 20 KHz offset. Also for a GSM system, the size of the inductor used in the oscillator is a major issue in determining its overall size, efforts will be made to optimize the size of the inductor as well

    Design of CMOS LC voltage controlled oscillators

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    This work presents the design and implementation of CMOS LC voltage controlled oscillators. On-chip planar spiral inductors and PMOS inversion mode varactors were utilized to implement the resonator. Two voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs) were realized as a part of this work, one designed to operate at 1.1 GHz while the second at 1.8 GHz. Both VCOs were implemented in a scalable digital CMOS process, with the former in a 1.5 micron CMOS process and the latter in a 0.5 micron technology. A simulation based methodology was adopted to arrive at a simple pi model used to model the metal and substrate related losses responsible for deteriorating the integrated inductor\u27s performance. Geometry based optimization techniques were utilized to arrive at an inductor geometry that ensures reasonable quality factor. In addition to the core VCO structure a host of test structures have been incorporated in order to carry out two-port network measurements in the future. Such measurements should enable one to gain a greater insight into the integrated inductor and varactor\u27s performance

    A study of Radiation-Tolerant Voltage-Controlled Oscillators designs in 65 nm bulk and 28 nm FDSOI CMOS technologies

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    Phase-locked loop (PLL) systems are widely employed in integrated circuits for space analog devices and communications systems that operate in radiation environments, where significant perturbations, especially in terms of phase noise, can be generated due to radiation particles. Among all the blocks that form a PLL system, previous research suggests the voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) is one of the most critical components in terms of radiation tolerance and electric performance. Ring oscillators (ROs) and LC-tank VCOs have been commonly employed in high-performance PLLs. Nevertheless, both structures have drawbacks including a limited tuning range, high sensitivity to phase noise, limited radiation tolerance, and large design areas. In order to fulfill these high-performance requirements, a current-model logic (CML) based RO-VCO is presented as a possible solution capable of reducing the limitations of the commonly used structures and exploiting their advantages. The proposed hybrid VCO model includes passive components in its design which are the key parameters that define oscillation frequency of this structure. This tunable oscillator has been designed and tested in 65nm Bulk and 28 nm Fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FDSOI) CMOS technologies The 65nm testchip was designed to compare the behavior of the proposed CML VCO with a current-starved RO and a radiation hardened by design (RHBD) LC-tank VCO in terms of tuning range, phase noise, Single event effect (SEE) sensitivity and design area. Simulations were carried out by applying a double exponential current pulse into different sensitive nodes of the three VCOs. In addition, SEE tests were conducted using pulsed laser experiments. Simulation and test results show that a CML VCO can effectively overcome the limitations presented by a RO-VCO and LC-tank VCO, achieving a wide range of tuning, and low sensitivity to noise and SEEs without the need for a large cross-section. Further studies of the proposed CML VCO were done on 28nm FDSOI in order to reduce the leakage current and increase the switching speed. the same current-starved VCO and CML VCO were implemented on this testchip, and simulations were performed by injecting a double exponential current pulse energy into the previously defined sensitive nodes. The results show SEE sensitivity improvement without narrowing the tuning range or affecting the phase noise response

    High-frequency oscillator design for integrated transceivers

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    Low power digitally controlled oscillator for IoT applications

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    This work is focused on the design of a Low Power CMOS DCO for IEEE 802.11ah in IoT applications. The design methodology is based on the Unified current-control model (UICM), which is a physics-based model and enables an accurate all-region model of the operation of the device. Additionally, a transformer-based resonator has been used to solve the low-quality factor issue of integrated inductors. Two digitally controlled oscillators (DCO) have been implemented to show the advantages of utilizing a transformedbased resonator and the methodology based on the UICM model. These designs aim for the operation in low voltage supply (VDD) since VDD scaling is a trend in systems-onchip (SoCs), in which the circuitry is mostly digital. Despite the degradation caused by VDD scaling, new RF and analog circuits must deliver similar performance of the older CMOS nodes. The first DCO design was a low power LC-tank DCO, implemented in 40nm bulk-CMOS. The first design presented a DCO operating at 45% of the nominal VDD without compromise the performance. By reducing the VDD below the nominal value, this DCO reduces power consumption, which is a crucial feature for IoT circuits. The main contribution of this first DCO is the reduction of VDD scaling impact on the phase-noise do the DCO. The LC-based DCO operates from 1.8 to 1.86 GHz. At the maximum frequency and 0.395V VDD, the power consumption is a mere 380 W with a phase-noise of -119.3 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz. The circuit occupies an area of 0.46mm2 in 40 nm CMOS, mostly due to the inductor. The second DCO design was a low-power transformer-based DCO design, implemented in 28nm bulk-CMOS. This second design aims for the VDD reduction to below 0.3 V. Operating in a frequency range similar to the LC-based DCO, the transformer-based DCO operated with 0.280V VDD with a power consumption of 97 W. Meanwhile, the phase-noise was -101.95 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz. Even in the worst-case scenario (i.e., slow-slow and 85oC), this second DCO was able to operate at 0.330V VDD, consuming 126 W, while it keeps a similar phase-noise performance of the typical case. The core circuit occupies an area of 0.364 mm2.Este trabalho objetiva o projeto de um DCO de baixa potência em CMOS para aplicações de IoT e aderentes ao padrão IEEE 802.11ah. A metodologia de projeto é baseada no modelo de controle de corrente unificado (UICM), que é um modelo com embasamento físico que permite uma operação precisa em todas as regiões de operação do dispositivo. Adicionalmente, é utilizado um ressonador baseado em transformador visando solucionar os problemas provenientes do baixo fator de qualidade de indutores integrados. Para destacar as melhorias obtidas com o projeto do ressonador baseado em transformador e com a metodologia baseada no modelo UICM, dois projetos de DCO são realizados. Esses projetos visam a operação com baixa tensão de alimentação (VDD), uma vez que o escalonamento do VDD é uma tendência em sistemas em chip (SoCs), em que o circuito é majoritariamente digital. Independente da degradação causada pelo escalonamento de VDD, circuitos analógicos e de RF atuais devem oferecer desempenho semelhante ao alcançado em tecnologias CMOS mais antigas. O primeiro projeto foi um DCO de baixa potência com tanque LC, implementado em tecnologia bulk-CMOS de 40nm. O primeiro projeto apresentou uma operação a 45% do VDD nominal sem comprometer o desempenho. Ao reduzir o VDD abaixo do valor nominal, este DCO reduz o consumo de energia, que é uma característica crucial para circuitos IoT. A principal contribuição deste DCO é a redução do impacto do escalonamento do VDD no ruído de fase. O DCO com tanque LC opera de 1,8 a 1,86 GHz. Na frequência máxima e com VDD de apenas 0,395V, o consumo de energia é 380 W e o ruído de fase é -119,3 dBc/Hz a 1 MHz. O circuito ocupa uma área de 0.46mm2 em processo CMOS de 40 nm. O segundo projeto foi um DCO de baixa potência baseado em transformador, implementado em tecnologia bulk- CMOS de 28nm. Este projeto visa a redução de VDD abaixo de 0,3 V. Operando em uma faixa de frequência semelhante ao primeiro DCO, o DCO baseado em transformador opera com VDD de 0,280V e com consumo de potência de 97 W. O ruído de fase foi de -101,95 dBc/Hz a 1 MHz. Mesmo no pior caso de processo, este DCO opera a um VDD de 0,330V, consumindo 126 W, com o ruído de fase semelhante ao caso típico. O circuito ocupa uma área de 0.364mm2
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