H03L7/24

Method Of Manufacturing Oscillator And Oscillator
20230246593 · 2023-08-03 ·

A method of manufacturing an oscillator including housing a first resonator and a first integrated circuit device configured to oscillate the first resonator in a first container to manufacture the first oscillator, and housing a second resonator and a second integrated circuit device configured to oscillate the second resonator in a second container to manufacture the second oscillator, wherein the first integrated circuit device includes a first oscillation circuit configured to oscillate the first resonator to output a first oscillation signal, and no PLL circuit, the second integrated circuit device includes a second oscillation circuit configured to oscillate the second resonator to output a second oscillation signal, and a PLL circuit to which the second oscillation signal is input, and which is configured to output a third oscillation signal, and the first container and the second container are containers same in type.

ADAPTIVE CLOCK SIGNAL MANAGEMENT
20230299778 · 2023-09-21 ·

Various embodiments disclosed herein relate to adaptive clock signal management, and more specifically to generating a clock signal at desired frequencies based on inputs to a clock subsystem for peripheral use. A clock subsystem is provided herein that comprises an oscillator configured to provide a clock signal at either a first frequency or a second frequency, and a controller coupled to the oscillator and configured to perform various functions. The controller can be configured to determine a desired frequency of the clock signal based on a state of each input of multiple inputs, wherein the multiple inputs comprise a power mode input and an analog-to-digital converter input, and provide a signal to the oscillator to produce the clock signal at the desired frequency.

ADAPTIVE CLOCK SIGNAL MANAGEMENT
20230299778 · 2023-09-21 ·

Various embodiments disclosed herein relate to adaptive clock signal management, and more specifically to generating a clock signal at desired frequencies based on inputs to a clock subsystem for peripheral use. A clock subsystem is provided herein that comprises an oscillator configured to provide a clock signal at either a first frequency or a second frequency, and a controller coupled to the oscillator and configured to perform various functions. The controller can be configured to determine a desired frequency of the clock signal based on a state of each input of multiple inputs, wherein the multiple inputs comprise a power mode input and an analog-to-digital converter input, and provide a signal to the oscillator to produce the clock signal at the desired frequency.

SIGNAL GENERATION CIRCUIT AND METHOD, AND DIGIT-TO-TIME CONVERSION CIRCUIT AND METHOD

A signal generating electric circuit, a signal generating method, a digit-to-time converting electric circuit and a digit-to-time converting method. The signal generating electric circuit includes: a first generating electric circuit configured for, based on a first frequency control word and a reference time unit, generating a periodic first output signal; and a second generating electric circuit configured for, based on a second frequency control word and the reference time unit, generating a periodic second output signal. The first frequency control word includes a first integer part and a first fractional part, the second frequency control word includes a second integer part and a second fractional part, the first integer part is equal to the second integer part, the first fractional part and the second fractional part are not equal, and a period of the first output signal and a period of the second output signal are not equal.

SIGNAL GENERATION CIRCUIT AND METHOD, AND DIGIT-TO-TIME CONVERSION CIRCUIT AND METHOD

A signal generating electric circuit, a signal generating method, a digit-to-time converting electric circuit and a digit-to-time converting method. The signal generating electric circuit includes: a first generating electric circuit configured for, based on a first frequency control word and a reference time unit, generating a periodic first output signal; and a second generating electric circuit configured for, based on a second frequency control word and the reference time unit, generating a periodic second output signal. The first frequency control word includes a first integer part and a first fractional part, the second frequency control word includes a second integer part and a second fractional part, the first integer part is equal to the second integer part, the first fractional part and the second fractional part are not equal, and a period of the first output signal and a period of the second output signal are not equal.

Method for generating a plurality of currents each having a frequency

Disclosed is a method for generating, from a first electric current having a first frequency, a plurality of second currents each having a second respective frequency component, the method including the following steps: supplying a frequency distributor including a first set of pillars including a layer made from a first magnetic material and having a resonance frequency; exciting each pillar of the first set with an electromagnetic field having the first frequency, the ratio between twice the resonance frequency of each pillar of the first set and the first frequency being equal, to within ten percent, to a first natural integer; and generating, by each pillar of the first set, a second frequency component in the second respective current.

Method for generating a plurality of currents each having a frequency

Disclosed is a method for generating, from a first electric current having a first frequency, a plurality of second currents each having a second respective frequency component, the method including the following steps: supplying a frequency distributor including a first set of pillars including a layer made from a first magnetic material and having a resonance frequency; exciting each pillar of the first set with an electromagnetic field having the first frequency, the ratio between twice the resonance frequency of each pillar of the first set and the first frequency being equal, to within ten percent, to a first natural integer; and generating, by each pillar of the first set, a second frequency component in the second respective current.

Digital frequency synthesizer with robust injection locked divider

A phased-locked loop (PLL) circuit with an injection locked digital digitally controlled oscillator (ILD) that has an ILD control input element, an ILD injection input element and an ILD output element. The PLL circuit also includes an adaptive control unit (ACU), wherein the ACU is configured to receive an error signal and is configured to output an ILD control word. The ILD control input element is configured to receive the ILD control word, and the ILD control word may set a natural oscillation frequency of the ILD. The ILD is further configured to output a first output signal from the ILD output element, where the natural oscillation frequency may set a frequency of the first output signal.

Digital frequency synthesizer with robust injection locked divider

A phased-locked loop (PLL) circuit with an injection locked digital digitally controlled oscillator (ILD) that has an ILD control input element, an ILD injection input element and an ILD output element. The PLL circuit also includes an adaptive control unit (ACU), wherein the ACU is configured to receive an error signal and is configured to output an ILD control word. The ILD control input element is configured to receive the ILD control word, and the ILD control word may set a natural oscillation frequency of the ILD. The ILD is further configured to output a first output signal from the ILD output element, where the natural oscillation frequency may set a frequency of the first output signal.

DIGITAL RADIO HEAD CONTROL

Techniques are described related to digital radio control and operation. The various techniques described herein enable high-frequency local oscillator (LO) signal generation using injection locked cock multipliers (ILCMs). The techniques also include the use of LO signals for carrier aggregation applications for phased array front ends. Furthermore, the disclosed techniques include the use of array element-level control using per-chain DC-DC converters. Still further, the disclosed techniques include the use of adaptive spatial filtering and optimal combining of analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) to maximize dynamic range in digital beamforming systems.