H03L7/185

Digitally controlled oscillator device and high frequency signal processing device
09735731 · 2017-08-15 · ·

The present invention provides a digitally controlled oscillator device capable of realizing a reduction in DNL. The digitally controlled oscillator device includes, for example, an amplifier circuit block, coil elements and a plurality of unitary capacitor units coupled in parallel between oscillation output nodes. Each of the unitary capacitor units is provided with capacitive elements, and a switch which selects whether the capacitive elements should be allowed to contribute as set parameters for an oscillation frequency. The switch is driven by an on/off control line extending from a decoder circuit. The on/off control line is shielded between the oscillation output nodes by a shield section.

FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZERS HAVING LOW PHASE NOISE
20220239301 · 2022-07-28 · ·

Frequency synthesizers having reduced phase noise and a small step size. One example can provide frequency synthesizers having low phase noise by eliminating dividers in a feedback path and instead employing frequency converters, such as mixers. Step size can be further reduced by providing frequency converters in a reference signal feedforward path. Acquisition time can be decreased by employing a fast-acquisition phase-locked loop that is switched out after acquisition in favor of a low phase-noise phase-locked loop. Another example can reduce phase noise by employing a YIG oscillator. To improve acquisition time, a first, faster phase-locked loop can be used to lock to a signal before switching to a second, slower phase-locked loop that includes the YIG oscillator. Another example can provide low noise by including phase-locked loops that operate in a frequency range having low thermal noise while a frequency of an output signal varies over a wide range.

FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZERS HAVING LOW PHASE NOISE
20220239301 · 2022-07-28 · ·

Frequency synthesizers having reduced phase noise and a small step size. One example can provide frequency synthesizers having low phase noise by eliminating dividers in a feedback path and instead employing frequency converters, such as mixers. Step size can be further reduced by providing frequency converters in a reference signal feedforward path. Acquisition time can be decreased by employing a fast-acquisition phase-locked loop that is switched out after acquisition in favor of a low phase-noise phase-locked loop. Another example can reduce phase noise by employing a YIG oscillator. To improve acquisition time, a first, faster phase-locked loop can be used to lock to a signal before switching to a second, slower phase-locked loop that includes the YIG oscillator. Another example can provide low noise by including phase-locked loops that operate in a frequency range having low thermal noise while a frequency of an output signal varies over a wide range.

Wide-band frequency synthesizer for zero-IF WLAN radio transceiver and method thereof
11356109 · 2022-06-07 · ·

A frequency synthesizer includes a clock multiplier unit configured to receive a first clock and output a second clock in accordance with a multiplication factor; a divide-by-three circuit configured to receive the second clock and output a third clock; a first divide-by-two circuit configured to receive the second clock and output a fourth clock; a second divide-by-two circuit configured to receive the fourth clock and output a fifth clock; a first multiplexer configured to receive the third clock and the fourth clock and output a seventh clock in accordance with a first selection signal; a second multiplexer configured to receive the third clock and the fifth clock and output an eighth clock in accordance with a second selection signal; and a mixer configured to receive the seventh clock and the eighth clock and output an output clock.

Wide-band frequency synthesizer for zero-IF WLAN radio transceiver and method thereof
11356109 · 2022-06-07 · ·

A frequency synthesizer includes a clock multiplier unit configured to receive a first clock and output a second clock in accordance with a multiplication factor; a divide-by-three circuit configured to receive the second clock and output a third clock; a first divide-by-two circuit configured to receive the second clock and output a fourth clock; a second divide-by-two circuit configured to receive the fourth clock and output a fifth clock; a first multiplexer configured to receive the third clock and the fourth clock and output a seventh clock in accordance with a first selection signal; a second multiplexer configured to receive the third clock and the fifth clock and output an eighth clock in accordance with a second selection signal; and a mixer configured to receive the seventh clock and the eighth clock and output an output clock.

Phase synchronization updates without synchronous signal transfer

Embodiments of the present disclosure provide systems and methods for realizing phase synchronization updates based on an input system reference signal SYSREF without the need to synchronously distribute the SYSREF signal on a high-speed domain. In particular, phase synchronization mechanisms of the present disclosure are based on keeping a first phase accumulator in the device clock domain and using a second phase accumulator in the final digital clock domain to asynchronously transmit phase updates to the final digital clock domain. Arrival of a new SYSREF pulse may be detected based on the counter value of the first phase accumulator, which value is asynchronously transferred and scaled to the second phase accumulator downstream. In this manner, even though the SYSREF signal itself is not synchronously transferred to the second phase accumulator, the phase updates from the SYSREF signal may be transferred downstream so that the final phase may be generated deterministically.

Phase synchronization updates without synchronous signal transfer

Embodiments of the present disclosure provide systems and methods for realizing phase synchronization updates based on an input system reference signal SYSREF without the need to synchronously distribute the SYSREF signal on a high-speed domain. In particular, phase synchronization mechanisms of the present disclosure are based on keeping a first phase accumulator in the device clock domain and using a second phase accumulator in the final digital clock domain to asynchronously transmit phase updates to the final digital clock domain. Arrival of a new SYSREF pulse may be detected based on the counter value of the first phase accumulator, which value is asynchronously transferred and scaled to the second phase accumulator downstream. In this manner, even though the SYSREF signal itself is not synchronously transferred to the second phase accumulator, the phase updates from the SYSREF signal may be transferred downstream so that the final phase may be generated deterministically.

High-order phase tracking loop with segmented proportional and integral controls

Clock circuits, components, systems and signal processing methods enabling digital communication are described. A phase locked loop device derives an output signal locked to a first reference clock signal in a feedback loop. A common phase detector is employed to obtain phase differences between a copy of the output signal and a second reference clock signal. The phase differences are employed in an integral phase control loop within the feedback loop to lock the phase locked loop device to the center frequency of the second reference signal. The phase differences are also employed in a proportional phase control loop within the feedback loop to reduce the effect of imperfect component operation. Cascading the integral and proportional phase control within the feedback loop enables an amount of phase error to be filtered out from the output signal.

Non-quadrature local oscillator mixing and multi-decade coverage

Aspects of this disclosure relate to a very low intermediate frequency (VLIF) receiver with multi-decade contiguous radio frequency (RF) band coverage. Non-quadrature local oscillator (LO) signals drive mixers. The non-quadrature signals can be generated from low noise digital dividers having non-traditional division ratios. The non-traditional division ratios can be prime number ratios such as 5 and 7. The systematic non-quadrature nature of the LO/mixer can be subsequently corrected by a deterministic I-Q coupling network prior to complex signal processing.

Non-quadrature local oscillator mixing and multi-decade coverage

Aspects of this disclosure relate to a very low intermediate frequency (VLIF) receiver with multi-decade contiguous radio frequency (RF) band coverage. Non-quadrature local oscillator (LO) signals drive mixers. The non-quadrature signals can be generated from low noise digital dividers having non-traditional division ratios. The non-traditional division ratios can be prime number ratios such as 5 and 7. The systematic non-quadrature nature of the LO/mixer can be subsequently corrected by a deterministic I-Q coupling network prior to complex signal processing.