58 research outputs found

    LOW-POWER IMPULSE-RADIO ULTRA-WIDEBAND TECHNIQUES FOR BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS.

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Inductorless Frequency Synthesizers for Low-Cost Wireless

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    AbstractThe quest for ubiquitous wireless connectivity, drives an increasing demand for compact and efficient means of frequency generation. Conventional synthesizer options, however, generally trade one requirement for the other, achieving either excellent levels of efficiency by leveraging LC-oscillators, or a very compact area by relying on ring-oscillators. This chapter describes a recently introduced class of inductorless frequency synthesizers, based on the periodic realignment of a ring-oscillator, that have the potential to break this tradeoff. After analyzing their jitter-power product, the conditions that ensure optimum performance are derived and a novel digital-to-time converter range-reduction technique is introduced, to enable low-jitter and low-power fractional-N frequency synthesis. A prototype, which implements the proposed design guidelines and techniques, has been fabricated in 65 nm CMOS. It occupies a core area of 0:0275 mm2^{2} 2 and covers the 1:6-to-3:0 GHz range, achieving an absolute rms jitter (integrated from 30 kHz-to-30 MHz) of 397 fs at 2:5 mW power. With a corresponding jitter-power figure-of-merit of −244 dB in the fractional-N mode, the prototype outperforms prior state-of-the-art inductorless frequency synthesizers

    The Design of Low Power Ultra-Wideband Transceiver

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    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

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort

    Multi-Loop-Ring-Oscillator Design and Analysis for Sub-Micron CMOS

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    Ring oscillators provide a central role in timing circuits for today?s mobile devices and desktop computers. Increased integration in these devices exacerbates switching noise on the supply, necessitating improved supply resilience. Furthermore, reduced voltage headroom in submicron technologies limits the number of stacked transistors available in a delay cell. Hence, conventional single-loop oscillators offer relatively few design options to achieve desired specifications, such as supply rejection. Existing state-of-the-art supply-rejection- enhancement methods include actively regulating the supply with an LDO, employing a fully differential or current-starved delay cell, using a hi-Z voltage-to-current converter, or compensating/calibrating the delay cell. Multiloop ring oscillators (MROs) offer an additional solution because by employing a more complex ring-connection structure and associated delay cell, the designer obtains an additional degree of freedom to meet the desired specifications. Designing these more complex multiloop structures to start reliably and achieve the desired performance requires a systematic analysis procedure, which we attack on two fronts: (1) a generalized delay-cell viewpoint of the MRO structure to assist in both analysis and circuit layout, and (2) a survey of phase-noise analysis to provide a bank of methods to analyze MRO phase noise. We distill the salient phase-noise-analysis concepts/key equations previously developed to facilitate MRO and other non-conventional oscillator analysis. Furthermore, our proposed analysis framework demonstrates that all these methods boil down to obtaining three things: (1) noise modulation function (NMF), (2) noise transfer function (NTF), and (3) current-controlled-oscillator gain (KICO). As a case study, we detail the design, analysis, and measurement of a proposed multiloop ring oscillator structure that provides improved power-supply isolation (more than 20dB increase in supply rejection over a conventional-oscillator control case fabricated on the same test chip). Applying our general multi-loop-oscillator framework to this proposed MRO circuit leads both to design-oriented expressions for the oscillation frequency and supply rejection as well as to an efficient layout technique facilitating cross-coupling for improved quadrature accuracy and systematic, substantially simplified layout effort

    Frequency Synthesizers and Oscillator Architectures Based on Multi-Order Harmonic Generation

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    Frequency synthesizers are essential components for modern wireless and wireline communication systems as they provide the local oscillator signal required to transmit and receive data at very high rates. They are also vital for computing devices and microcontrollers as they generate the clocks required to run all the digital circuitry responsible for the high speed computations. Data rates and clocking speeds are continuously increasing to accommodate for the ever growing demand on data and computational power. This places stringent requirements on the performance metrics of frequency synthesizers. They are required to run at higher speeds, cover a wide range of frequencies, provide a low jitter/phase noise output and consume minimum power and area. In this work, we present new techniques and architectures for implementing high speed frequency synthesizers which fulfill the aforementioned requirements. We propose a new architecture and design approach for the realization of wideband millimeter-wave frequency synthesizers. This architecture uses two-step multi-order harmonic generation of a low frequency phase-locked signal to generate wideband mm-wave frequencies. A prototype of the proposed system is designed and fabricated in 90nm Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology. Measurement results demonstrated that a very wide tuning range of 5 to 32 GHz can be achieved, which is costly to implement using conventional techniques. Moreover the power consumption per octave resembles that of state-of-the art reports. Next, we propose the N-Push cyclic coupled ring oscillator (CCRO) architecture to implement two high performance oscillators: (1) a wideband N-Push/M-Push CCRO operating from 3.16-12.8GHz implemented by two harmonic generation operations using the availability of different phases from the CCRO, and (2) a 13-25GHz millimeter-wave N-Push CCRO with a low phase noise performance of -118dBc/Hz at 10MHz. The proposed oscillators achieve low phase noise with higher FOM than state of the art work. Finally, we present some improvement techniques applied to the performance of phase locked loops (PLLs). We present an adaptive low pass filtering technique which can reduce the reference spur of integer-N charge-pump based PLLs by around 20dB while maintaining the settling time of the original PLL. Another PLL is presented, which features very low power consumption targeting the Medical Implantable Communication Standard. It operates at 402-405 MHz while consuming 600microW from a 1V supply

    Inductorless bi-directional piezoelectric transformerbased converters: Design and control considerations.

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    Design and investigation of nanometric integrated circuits for all-digital frequency synthesisers

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    Disertacijoje nagrinėjami daugiajuosčių dažnio sintezatorių blokai, modeliai bei jų kūrimas taikant nanometrines integrinių grandynų technologijas. Iškeliama ir įrodoma hipotezė, kad taikant nanometrines technologijas visiškai skaitmeniniai dažnio sintezatoriai įgalina gauti parametrus, reikiamus daugiajuosčiams belai- džio ryšio siųstuvams-imtuvams. Darbo tikslas – sukurti visiškai skaitmeninio dažnio sintezatoriaus blokus, kuriuos naudojant galima pasiekti reikiamus sinte- zatoriaus, skirto daugiajuosčiams belaidžio ryšio siųstuvams-imtuvams, paramet- rus taikant nanometrines integrinių grandynų gamybos technologijas. Darbe išsp- ręsti tokie uždaviniai: ištirtos dažnio sintezatorių struktūros ir sukurta struktūra, tinkama įgyvendinti taikant nanometrines technologijas, sukurti ir ištirti siūlomos struktūros sintezatorių sudarančių blokų modeliai ir integriniai grandynai. Disertaciją sudaro įvadas, trys skyriai, bendrosios išvados, naudotos literatū- ros ir autoriaus publikacijų disertacijos tema sąrašai ir keturi priedai. Įvadiniame skyriuje aptariama tiriamoji problema, darbo aktualumas, aprašo- mas tyrimų objektas, formuluojamas darbo tikslas bei uždaviniai, aprašoma ty- rimų metodika, darbo mokslinis naujumas, darbo rezultatų praktinė reikšmė, gi- namieji teiginiai bei disertacijos struktūra. Pirmajame skyriuje apžvelgiamos dažnio sintezatorių rūšys, aprašomi pag- rindiniai dažnio sintezatorių parametrai ir dažniausiai naudojamos kokybės funk- cijos. Apžvelgiami dažnio sintezatorių modeliai ir jų veikimas fazės ir dažnio sri- tyse. Aprašomi visiškai skaitmeninio dažnio sintezatoriaus triukšmų šaltiniai. Skyriaus pabaigoje suformuluojami disertacijos uždaviniai. Antrajame skyriuje pasiūlyta ir taikoma nauja kokybės funkcija, leidžianti at- likti daugiajuosčių dažnio sintezatorių palyginamąją analizę. Iškeliami reikalavi- mai pagrindiniams sintezatoriaus blokams, nagrinėjami laikinio skaitmeninio kei- tiklio skiriamosios gebos didinimo būdai, sukurtas naujas laikinio skaitmeninio keitiklio modelis. Siūloma dažnio sintezatoriaus struktūra daugiajuosčiams siųs- tuvams-imtuvams. Trečiajame skyriuje pagal iškeltus reikalavimus daugiajuosčio dažnio sinte- zatoriaus blokams, taikant kompiuterinių skaičiavimų ir eksperimentinius meto- dus yra kuriami ir tiriami laikinio skaitmeninio keitiklio, skaitmeniniu būdu val- domo generatoriaus bei skaitmeninio filtro integriniai grandynai. Disertacijos tema yra atspausdinti 7 moksliniai straipsniai: 4 – mokslo žurna- luose, įtrauktuose į Clarivate Analytics Web of Science duomenų bazę, 1 – tarp- tautinių konferencijų medžiagoje, įtrauktoje į Clarivate Analytics Proceedings duomenų bazę, 2 – mokslo žurnaluose, referuojamuose kitose tarptautinėse duo- menų bazėse. Disertacijoje atliktų tyrimų rezultatai buvo paskelbti devyniose mokslinėse konferencijose Lietuvoje ir užsienyje
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