1,702 research outputs found
Low-Jitter Clock Multiplication: a Comparioson between PLLs and DLLs
This paper shows that, for a given power budget, a practical phase-locked loop (PLL)-based clock multiplier generates less jitter than a delay-locked loop (DLL) equivalent. This is due to the fact that the delay cells in a PLL ring-oscillator can consume more power per cell than their counterparts in the DLL. We can show that this effect is stronger than the notorious jitter accumulation effect that occurs in the voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) of a PLL. First, an analysis of the stochastic-output jitter of the architectures, due to the most important noise sources, is presented. Then, another important source of jitter in a DLL-based clock multiplier is treated, namely the stochastic mismatch in the delay cells which compose the DLL voltage-controlled delay line (VCDL). An analysis is presented that relates the stochastic spread of the delay of the cells to the output jitter of the clock multiplier. A circuit design technique, called impedance level scaling, is then presented which allows the designer to optimize the noise and mismatch behavior of a circuit, independently from other specifications such as speed and linearity. Applying this technique on a delay cell design yields a direct tradeoff between noise induced jitter and power usage, and between stochastic mismatch induced jitter and power usage
Programmable rate modem utilizing digital signal processing techniques
The engineering development study to follow was written to address the need for a Programmable Rate Digital Satellite Modem capable of supporting both burst and continuous transmission modes with either binary phase shift keying (BPSK) or quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) modulation. The preferred implementation technique is an all digital one which utilizes as much digital signal processing (DSP) as possible. Here design tradeoffs in each portion of the modulator and demodulator subsystem are outlined, and viable circuit approaches which are easily repeatable, have low implementation losses and have low production costs are identified. The research involved for this study was divided into nine technical papers, each addressing a significant region of concern in a variable rate modem design. Trivial portions and basic support logic designs surrounding the nine major modem blocks were omitted. In brief, the nine topic areas were: (1) Transmit Data Filtering; (2) Transmit Clock Generation; (3) Carrier Synthesizer; (4) Receive AGC; (5) Receive Data Filtering; (6) RF Oscillator Phase Noise; (7) Receive Carrier Selectivity; (8) Carrier Recovery; and (9) Timing Recovery
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Noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based time to digital converter
Time-to-digital converters (TDCs) are key elements for the digitization of timing information in modern mixed-signal circuits such as digital PLLs, DLLs, ADCs, and on-chip jitter-monitoring circuits. Especially, high-resolution TDCs are increasingly employed in on-chip timing tests, such as jitter and clock skew measurements, as advanced fabrication technologies allow fine on-chip time resolutions. Its main purpose is to quantize the time interval of a pulse signal or the time interval between the rising edges of two clock signals. Similarly to ADCs, the performance of TDCs are also primarily characterized by Resolution, Sampling Rate, FOM, SNDR, Dynamic Range and DNL/INL. This work proposes and demonstrates 2nd order noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based TDC architecture with highest resolution of 0.25 ps among current state of art designs with respect to post-layout simulation results. This circuit is a combination of low power/High Resolution 2nd Order Noise Shaped Asynchronous SAR ADC backend with simple Time to Amplitude converter (TAC) front-end and is implemented in 40nm CMOS technology. Additionally, special emphasis is given on the discussion on various current state of art TDC architectures.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Generalized lock-in amplifier for precision measurement of high frequency signals
We herein formulate the concept of a generalized lock-in amplifier for the
precision measurement of high frequency signals based on digital cavities.
Accurate measurement of signals higher than 200 MHz using the generalized
lock-in is demonstrated. The technique is compared with a traditional lock-in
and its advantages and limitations are discussed. We also briefly point out how
the generalized lock-in can be used for precision measurement of giga-hertz
signals by using parallel processing of the digitized signals
Matrix multiplication using quantum-dot cellular automata to implement conventional microelectronics
Quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) shows promise as a post silicon CMOS, low
power computational technology. Nevertheless, to generalize QCA for
next-generation digital devices, the ability to implement conventional
programmable circuits based on NOR, AND, and OR gates is necessary. To this
end, we devise a new QCA structure, the QCA matrix multiplier (MM), employing
the standard Coulomb blocked, five quantum dot (QD) QCA cell and
quasi-adiabatic switching for sequential data latching in the QCA cells. Our
structure can multiply two N x M matrices, using one input and one
bidirectional input/output data line. The calculation is highly parallelizable,
and it is possible to achieve reduced calculation time in exchange for
increasing numbers of parallel matrix multiplier units. We show convergent, ab
initio simulation results using the Intercellular Hartree Approximation for
one, three, and nine matrix multiplier units. The structure can generally
implement any programmable logic array (PLA) or any matrix multiplication based
operation.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, supplemental informatio
A Bang-Bang All-Digital PLL for Frequency Synthesis
abstract: Phase locked loops are an integral part of any electronic system that requires a clock signal and find use in a broad range of applications such as clock and data recovery circuits for high speed serial I/O and frequency synthesizers for RF transceivers and ADCs. Traditionally, PLLs have been primarily analog in nature and since the development of the charge pump PLL, they have almost exclusively been analog. Recently, however, much research has been focused on ADPLLs because of their scalability, flexibility and higher noise immunity. This research investigates some of the latest all-digital PLL architectures and discusses the qualities and tradeoffs of each. A highly flexible and scalable all-digital PLL based frequency synthesizer is implemented in 180 nm CMOS process. This implementation makes use of a binary phase detector, also commonly called a bang-bang phase detector, which has potential of use in high-speed, sub-micron processes due to the simplicity of the phase detector which can be implemented with a simple D flip flop. Due to the nonlinearity introduced by the phase detector, there are certain performance limitations. This architecture incorporates a separate frequency control loop which can alleviate some of these limitations, such as lock range and acquisition time.Dissertation/ThesisM.S. Electrical Engineering 201
A Low-Power and High-Speed Frequency Multiplier for DLL-Based Clock Generator
A low-power and high-speed frequency multiplier for a delay-locked loop-based clock generator is proposed to generate a multiplied clock with different range of frequencies. The modified edge combiner consumes low power and achieves a high-speed operation. The proposed frequency multiplier overcomes a deterministic jitter problem by reducing the delay difference between positive- and negative-edge generation paths. The proposed frequency multiplier is implemented in a 0.13-µm CMOS process technology achieved power consumption to a frequency ratio of 2.9 µW/MHz, and has the multiplication ratios of 16, and an output range of 100 MHz–3.3 GHz
Digital synchronizer Patent
Digital synchronizer for extracting binary data in receiver of PSK/PCM communication syste
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