H03L7/187

Oscillator and clock circuit

An oscillator and a clock circuit are disclosed. In an oscillator (100), a tail inductor connected to a cross-coupled transistor includes at least two inductors connected in parallel. Therefore, an inductance of the tail inductor is less than an inductance of any one of the inductors. This can address a design difficulty that a tail inductor with a smaller inductance needs to be used as an operating frequency of a VCO increases. The oscillator (100) includes a first cross-coupled transistor (121) and a first tail inductor (111). The first tail inductor (111) includes at least two inductors connected in parallel. The first tail inductor (111) is coupled to a source of the first cross-coupled transistor (121). The source of the first cross-coupled transistor (121) is coupled to a power supply or a ground through the first tail inductor (111).

Oscillator and clock circuit

An oscillator and a clock circuit are disclosed. In an oscillator (100), a tail inductor connected to a cross-coupled transistor includes at least two inductors connected in parallel. Therefore, an inductance of the tail inductor is less than an inductance of any one of the inductors. This can address a design difficulty that a tail inductor with a smaller inductance needs to be used as an operating frequency of a VCO increases. The oscillator (100) includes a first cross-coupled transistor (121) and a first tail inductor (111). The first tail inductor (111) includes at least two inductors connected in parallel. The first tail inductor (111) is coupled to a source of the first cross-coupled transistor (121). The source of the first cross-coupled transistor (121) is coupled to a power supply or a ground through the first tail inductor (111).

FREQUENCY LOCKED LOOP OF A HETERODYNE STRUCTURE
20190238140 · 2019-08-01 ·

A frequency locked loop is disclosed. The disclosed frequency locked loop may include: a voltage-controlled oscillator configured to output a LO signal; a mixer configured to mix an RF signal with the LO signal to output an IF signal; a first IF path part configured to transfer the IF signal; a second IF path part configured to transfer the IF signal; and an error amplifier configured to receive output signals of the first IF path part and output signals of the second IF part as input, where the voltage-controlled oscillator adjusts a frequency of the LO signal based on an output signal of the error amplifier, the first IF path part has the conversion gain decreased according to an increase in the frequency of the IF signal, and the second IF path part has the conversion gain increased according to an increase in the frequency of the IF signal.

FREQUENCY LOCKED LOOP OF A HETERODYNE STRUCTURE
20190238140 · 2019-08-01 ·

A frequency locked loop is disclosed. The disclosed frequency locked loop may include: a voltage-controlled oscillator configured to output a LO signal; a mixer configured to mix an RF signal with the LO signal to output an IF signal; a first IF path part configured to transfer the IF signal; a second IF path part configured to transfer the IF signal; and an error amplifier configured to receive output signals of the first IF path part and output signals of the second IF part as input, where the voltage-controlled oscillator adjusts a frequency of the LO signal based on an output signal of the error amplifier, the first IF path part has the conversion gain decreased according to an increase in the frequency of the IF signal, and the second IF path part has the conversion gain increased according to an increase in the frequency of the IF signal.

Apparatus and methods for tuning a voltage controlled oscillator

Apparatus and methods for tuning a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) are provided. In one aspect, a method of auto-tuning in a phase-locked loop includes generating a VCO clock signal using a VCO coupled to a capacitor array, dividing the VCO clock signal to generate a divided clock signal using a prescaler circuit having a selectable division ratio, controlling a value of the selectable division ratio using a first counter and a second counter of a counter module, generating a phase-frequency detector feedback signal based on a division control signal M and the divided clock signal using the counter module, counting a number of cycles of the divided clock signal that occur during a calibration interval using a cycle counter of a digital processing logic circuit, and determining the value of a capacitor array control signal based on the number of cycles counted during the calibration interval.

Apparatus and methods for tuning a voltage controlled oscillator

Apparatus and methods for tuning a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) are provided. In one aspect, a method of auto-tuning in a phase-locked loop includes generating a VCO clock signal using a VCO coupled to a capacitor array, dividing the VCO clock signal to generate a divided clock signal using a prescaler circuit having a selectable division ratio, controlling a value of the selectable division ratio using a first counter and a second counter of a counter module, generating a phase-frequency detector feedback signal based on a division control signal M and the divided clock signal using the counter module, counting a number of cycles of the divided clock signal that occur during a calibration interval using a cycle counter of a digital processing logic circuit, and determining the value of a capacitor array control signal based on the number of cycles counted during the calibration interval.

Charge pump circuits for clock and data recovery

The present invention is directed to electrical circuits. More specifically, embodiments of the present invention provide a charge pump, which can be utilized as a part of a clock data recovery device. Early and late signals are used as differential switching voltage signals in the charge pump. The first switch and a second switch are used for controlling the direction of the current flowing into the loop filter. Input differential voltages to the switches are being generated with an opamp negative feedback loop. The output voltage of the first switch and the second switch is used in conjunction with a resistor to generate a charge pump current. There are other embodiments as well.

Charge pump circuits for clock and data recovery

The present invention is directed to electrical circuits. More specifically, embodiments of the present invention provide a charge pump, which can be utilized as a part of a clock data recovery device. Early and late signals are used as differential switching voltage signals in the charge pump. The first switch and a second switch are used for controlling the direction of the current flowing into the loop filter. Input differential voltages to the switches are being generated with an opamp negative feedback loop. The output voltage of the first switch and the second switch is used in conjunction with a resistor to generate a charge pump current. There are other embodiments as well.

APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR GENERATING CLOCK SIGNAL WITH LOW JITTER AND CONSTANT FREQUENCY WHILE CONSUMING LOW POWER
20190089364 · 2019-03-21 ·

A clock signal generator includes ramp and threshold voltage generators. The clock signal generator further includes a comparator configured to initiate a first phase of a clock signal based on the ramp and threshold voltages applied to its first and second inputs, respectively. The comparator is further configured to initiate a second phase of the clock signal based on the ramp and threshold voltages applied to its second and first inputs, respectively. Because the application of the ramp and threshold voltages to the inputs of the comparator is swapped per phase of the clock signal, any offset voltage in the comparator does not affect the period of the clock signal because they cancel out after two-half periods. This ensures that the clock signal has a substantially constant frequency. Other features include enabling the high power consuming comparator during a small window to achieve low jitter and low average power consumption.

APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR GENERATING CLOCK SIGNAL WITH LOW JITTER AND CONSTANT FREQUENCY WHILE CONSUMING LOW POWER
20190089364 · 2019-03-21 ·

A clock signal generator includes ramp and threshold voltage generators. The clock signal generator further includes a comparator configured to initiate a first phase of a clock signal based on the ramp and threshold voltages applied to its first and second inputs, respectively. The comparator is further configured to initiate a second phase of the clock signal based on the ramp and threshold voltages applied to its second and first inputs, respectively. Because the application of the ramp and threshold voltages to the inputs of the comparator is swapped per phase of the clock signal, any offset voltage in the comparator does not affect the period of the clock signal because they cancel out after two-half periods. This ensures that the clock signal has a substantially constant frequency. Other features include enabling the high power consuming comparator during a small window to achieve low jitter and low average power consumption.