High-order phase tracking loop with segmented proportional and integral controls
11349486 · 2022-05-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Sadok Aouini (Gatineau, CA)
- Naim Ben-Hamida (Ottawa, CA)
- Timothy James Creasy (Manotick, CA)
- Ahmad Abdo (Ottawa, CA)
- Mahdi Parvizi (Kanata, CA)
- Lukas Jakober (Ottawa, CA)
Cpc classification
H03L7/1976
ELECTRICITY
H03J2200/11
ELECTRICITY
H03L7/093
ELECTRICITY
H03L7/087
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H03L7/087
ELECTRICITY
H03L7/099
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
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.
Claims
1. A circuit comprising: a phase rotator connected to a phase locked loop (PLL) circuit; an integral control loop between a clock signal and an input to the phase rotator; a proportional control loop between the clock signal and an output of the phase rotator; and an output signal from the phase rotator, the integral control loop, and the proportional control loop.
2. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a digital phase detector and a digital accumulator between the clock signal and each of the integral control loop and the proportional control loop.
3. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the integral control loop includes a second digital accumulator.
4. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the integral control loop provides a control signal based on numerical integration to drive the phase rotator.
5. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the integral control loop provides slow frequency compensation relative to the proportional control loop.
6. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the proportional control loop includes a digital gain block that drives a fine delay element connected to the output of the phase rotator.
7. The circuit of claim 6, further comprising a filter between the digital gain block and the fine delay element.
8. The circuit of claim 6, further comprising a divider between the phase rotator and the fine delay element.
9. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the PLL circuit is an external transmit PLL.
10. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the output signal is connected to an analog-to-digital converter (ADC).
11. The circuit of claim 10, wherein the ADC is in an optical transceiver.
12. A method comprising: receiving a clock signal; providing the clock signal to an integral control loop and a proportional control loop; providing a phase locked loop (PLL) output to a phase rotator and an output of the proportional control loop to the phase rotator; and delaying an output of the phase rotator based on an output of the proportional control loop.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the receiving is via a digital phase detector and a digital accumulator.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the integral control loop includes a second digital accumulator.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein the integral control loop provides a control signal based on numerical integration to drive the phase rotator.
16. The method of claim 12, wherein the integral control loop provides slow frequency compensation relative to the proportional control loop.
17. The method of claim 12, wherein the proportional control loop includes a digital gain block that drives a fine delay element connected to the output of the phase rotator.
18. The method of claim 17, further comprising filtering an output of the proportional control loop prior to the fine delay element.
19. The method of claim 17, further comprising a dividing the output of the phase rotator prior to the fine delay element.
20. The method of claim 12, wherein the PLL is from an external transmit PLL.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(17) Embodiments of the proposed solution provide systems, apparatus, clock circuits and signal processing methods indirectly controlling VCO of a PLL device via a feedback path in a PLL loop.
(18) Phase Rotator
(19) Some embodiments of the proposed solution relate to a system, apparatus, and a method for clock recovery at a receiver. With reference to
(20) A phase rotator 115 is configured to apply a phase shift correction in the feedback loop to reduce the frequency offset and/or phase misalignment between the transmitter clock signal 185 and the receiver clock signal 187. The phase rotator 115 provides filtered signal 155 as the feedback signal to the PLL device 100.
(21) Specifically, the PLL device 100 includes analog phase detector 110, for example an integrated circuit including functionality to determine a difference in phase between two input signals e.g., reference clock signal 105 and filtered signal 155 fed back from the VCO 140 output. The phase rotator based digital clock recovery provided allows the clock circuit 395 to lock to a locally received data signal generated by a remote transmitter PLL locked to a reference clock different from the reference clock (105) of the receiver PLL device 100.
(22) The digital phase detector 160 is employed in the clock circuit 395 to provide clock recovery in a receiver. The digital phase detector 160 includes hardware and/or software that implements functionality to determine an amount of phase difference between transmitter clock signal 185 and the receiver clock signal 187 which is a feedback copy of output signal 180. The clock circuit further includes a digital accumulator 165 coupled to the digital phase detector 160. The phase rotator 115 and the digital accumulator 165, using the amount of phase difference between the transmitter clock signal 185 and the receiver clock signal 187 (output signal 180), filter a portion of the amount of phase difference from another copy 246 of the output signal 180 (feedback divider not shown) to generate a filtered signal 155 which is provided to the analog phase detector 110.
(23) The signal path including the receiver clock signal 187 provided from the PLL device 100 to the digital phase detector 160, the digital phase detector 160, digital accumulator 165, phase rotator 115 and the filtered signal 155 provided as an input the analog phase detector 110 of the PLL device 100, implements a phase rotator digital PLL nested in the feedback loop of the analog PLL 100. The phase rotator digital PLL locks to the transmitter clock signal 185. As mentioned with reference to
(24) It is noted that the digital phase detector 160 itself is not a perfect device. In accordance with the proposed solution, digital phase detector error can be reduced through averaging, or integration, the result being understood to provide integral control.
(25) In particular, phase rotator 115 includes hardware providing functionality to adjust a frequency offset and/or phase misalignment between transmitter clock signal 185 and a receiver clock signal 187 (a copy of output signal 180). As such, phase rotator 115 includes one or more hardware components that include functionality to apply a predetermined amount of phase shift to feedback copy 246 of output signal 180 based on control signal 151.
(26) In an implementation a phase rotator includes a pair of variable gain amplifiers that apply predetermined weights to an in-phase (I) component and a quadrature (Q) component of an input signal, a feedback copy of output signal 180. For example, a phase rotator is configured to generate a pair of differential phase signals from its input signal that correspond to the I component (i.e., “I phase signal”) and the Q component (i.e., “Q phase signal”) of the input signal. In one or more embodiments, for example, the I phase signal and the Q phase signal are expressed using the following equations:
Q=A cos(k∫v(t)dt)=A cos kφ Equation 1
I=A sin(k∫v(t)dt)=A sin kφ Equation 2
(27) where A is the amplitude of an output signal from the phase rotator 115, such as filtered signal 155; k is a gain value in the phase rotator, v(t) is the voltage of the input signal, t is the time domain, φ is the phase shift applied to feedback signal 246 (output signal 180) by the phase rotator 115. The I phase signal and/or the Q phase signal may be generated within the phase rotator 115 for example by a resistor-capacitor (RC) polyphase network, frequency dividers, and/or a resistor-capacitor pairs. Furthermore, the phase rotator 115 can include an interpolator circuit that generates a linear summation of the I phase signal and the Q phase signal. The phase rotator 115 produces filtered signal 155 with the applied phase shift as its output signal.
(28) Keeping with
(29) In one or more implementations, the control signal 151 for a phase rotator 115 is based on a frequency offset and/or phase misalignment, typically averages thereof, between a transmitter clock signal 185 and an extracted receiver clock signal 187 (180). As noted above the transmitter clock signal 185 is embedded in the signal received over the link. For example, the transmitter clock signal 185 can be obtained using a Godard extraction algorithm. By way of a more specific example, the digital phase detector 160 includes a Godard digital phase detector that implements the Godard extraction algorithm. For example, in an optical transceiver, the transmitter clock signal 185 can be extracted from the “out-of-band” spectrum of the received signal by applying the Godard phase extraction process on the “out-of-band” frequency spectrum, i.e., in Godard bins of the upper sideband and lower sideband of the frequency spectrum of the received signal. For more information on extracting the transmitter clock signal 185 received within a signal spectrum, see D. Godard, “Passband Timing Recovery in an All-Digital Modem Receiver,” IEEE Trans. On Communications, Vol. 26, Issue:5, May 1978, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference. While applying a Godard extraction algorithm is one example for obtaining the transmitter clock signal 185, other timing recovery methods of transmitter clock signals 185 are also contemplated, such as a Gardner timing recovery method. Additional aspects of transmitter clock signal extraction from an input signal are presented in co-pending commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/795,676, filed Oct. 27, 2017, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
(30) For example, the control signal 151 provided to phase rotator 115 can be generated by a digital accumulator 165 based on multiple differences provided by the digital phase detector 160. The digital accumulator 165 can include hardware and/or software which provides functionality to store a value of at least one phase difference, for example, in a hardware register. In one or more implementations, the digital accumulator 165 is an integrated circuit which also includes functionality to store various measurements of the difference between a transmitter clock signal 185 and a receiver clock signal 187 (180).
(31) The number of phase differences stored in a time window, averaging of phase differences within the time window, weighting based on phase difference measurements, and phase step selection for the phase rotator 115 to apply can amount to the corresponding integral control provided via control signal 151.
(32) While employing the phase rotator 115 of the proposed solution has been described with respect to clock recovery, the apparatus, clock circuit 395 and signal processing method can also be employed for clock generation to reduce VCO/PLL jitter (not shown) wherein the transmitted clock signal 185 illustrated in
(33) Notably, selected components of PLL device 100 and notably frequency dividers 145, 147 illustrated in
(34) Look Up Table
(35) As it can be appreciated phase rotator 115 is not a perfect device in that the phase shift correction provided by the phase rotator 115 may introduce PLL noise, such as jitter, into the feedback loop of the PLL device 100.
(36) In one or more embodiments, the I phase signal and the Q phase signal suffer from an I-Q mismatch. For example, the I-Q mismatch may be the result of a feedback divider mismatch if a divider is used to generate the quadrature clocks or a buffer delay mismatch between the paths of the I phase signal and the Q phase signal. Specifically, the I-Q mismatch may produce various non-linearities within a feedback loop of a PLL device. Such non-linearities may generate PLL noise, such as jitter, into the extracted clock signal 187 (output signal 180) as described herein. Likewise, an arctan effect may result from phase interpolation within the phase rotator, and which may also produce various non-linearities within the feedback loop of a PLL device 100. For example, with linear phase interpolation, the coefficients of quadrature clock signals may be varied in a sinusoidal fashion. However, if the coefficients of the quadrature clock signals are varied in a linear fashion (e.g., A.sub.cos+A.sub.sin=1), the linear phase interpolation in the example may result in a non-linear phase interpolation function. Accordingly, the effect of the non-linear phase interpolation function may resemble an arctan function.
(37) In one or more implementations, one or more non-linear compensation methods are included in the clock circuit 395 using the phase rotator 115 and the PLL device 100 to account for the PLL noise for example as described below in the accompanying description. One or more components illustrated in
(38) In particular, compensation may be provided by a circuit combination, for example, coupled to the PLL device 100 that removes PLL noise based on differences between the transmitter 185 and reference clock signals 187. Such compensation is understood to provide second order control by low pass filtering. In one implementation, for example clock circuit 395 can include a lookup table to tune the phase shift correction of the phase rotator 115 to further reduce PLL noise.
(39) In one or more implementations, a lookup table component 270 is coupled to a phase rotator 115 in a clock circuit 395 to provide non-linear compensation. In particular, the lookup table component 270 includes hardware and/or software which provides functionality to pre-distort the phase shift provided by the phase rotator 115 based on various values obtained from the digital accumulator 165. For example, depending on the phase difference between the transmitter clock signal 185 and the receiver clock signal 187, the lookup table component 270 can determine a corresponding value of a control signal 251 that results in reduced PLL noise within the feedback loop of the PLL device 100. In one implementation, for example, the lookup table component 270 can moderate phase shifts applied by the phase rotator 115 to feedback signal 246. In one or more implementations, the phase shift values of the lookup table component 270 are based on experimental tests of phase rotator 115 operating within a feedback loop of a PLL device 100. For example, the tests can include phase rotator qualification during manufacturing or during the chip screening process.
(40) In one or more implementations, values of the lookup table component 270 are based on measurements of the phase step applied within the feedback loop of PLL device 100. For example, the values 251 of the lookup table component 270 can be obtained for each digital code of control signal 151 that is applied to the phase rotator 115. The measurements of the phase step are configured to discretize the integral non-linearity of the phase rotator 115, which can be cancelled using the lookup table component 270. In one or more implementations, measurements for the lookup table component 270 are obtained (after manufacture) only once and before the clock recovery process is employed, for example, at startup of the component/device (receiver) employing clock circuit 395.
(41) While phase rotator 115 of the proposed solution has been described with respect to clock recovery in
(42) Notably, more components of PLL device 100 and notably frequency dividers 145, 147 are illustrated in
(43) Delay Element
(44) In accordance with other implementations of the proposed solution, a delay element can be employed in the feedback loop of the PLL device for jitter removal.
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(46) A digital filter 370 and delay element 350 are operably connected to digital phase detector 360 to filter out noise from feedback signal 247 which is a copy of output signal 180 of the PLL device 100 obtained using feedback divider 145.
(47) The delay element 350 includes hardware and/or software that provides functionality to filter noise from feedback signal 246 (copy of output signal 180) using a digital filter 370. For example, the delay element 350 is a digitally programmable device which includes functionality to adjust the rising edge or falling edge of the feedback copy 246 of the output signal 180 within a predefined bandwidth range with a fine resolution. Thus, the delay element 350 is configured to remove at least a portion of signal noise resulting from the operation of the PLL device 100.
(48) In particular, in a transmitter the signal noise can include PLL error, such as jitter, produced by various components of the PLL device 100. Digital phase detector 360 is operably connected to a digital filter 370. In the transmitter clock circuit 495, the digital phase detector 360 determines a difference in phase between the reference signal 105 and feedback copy 247 of the output signal 180. As clock circuit 495 is employed for clock generation in a transmitter, digital phase detector 360 operates at the lower frequency of the reference clock signal 105.
(49) The digital filter 370 can include hardware and/or software providing functionality to filter the feedback signal 247. Digital filter 370 includes functionality to filter a signal output by the digital phase detector 360. For example, the digital filter 370 is an integrated circuit that includes functionality to store the difference in phase as various PLL error measurements 375, such as in hardware registers. Using the stored PLL error measurements 375, the digital filter 370 can include functionality to generate a control signal 353 for operating the delay element 350 on another copy of the output signal 180 for example feedback signal 246 in the PLL loop of the PLL device 100.
(50) Control signal 353 can be similar to control signal 151 described in
(51) However, other implementations are contemplated with other code sequences such as multi-bit code sequences (e.g., “1001”) that correspond to a specific amount of phase delay or an amount of phase advance to be applied to the feedback signal 246 by the delay element 350. In such implementations, the delay element 350 provides PLL error filtering that is independent of the frequency of the reference signal 105. For example, the quality of the reference signal 105 may be fixed by an availability of parts or a technology standard. Thus, the delay element 350 can remove PLL jitter within the output signal 180, without a changing the bandwidth of operation of the PLL device 100. In one or more implementations, the delay element 350 has a resolution as large as the peak-to-peak PLL jitter of the PLL device, which provides increased jitter suppression capability for the PLL device.
(52) In one or more implementations, the delay element 350 operates subject to the output of steady-state detector 157 illustrated in and described with reference to
(53) In one or more implementations, the digital phase detector 360 has a smaller resolution than a sampling rate resolution of the PLL device 100. For example, the digital phase detector 360 can include a bang-bang arbiter with a resolution approximately 50 femtoseconds or less, and a bandwidth range of a few picoseconds. The sampling rate of the PLL device can correspond to the frequency of the voltage-controlled oscillator 140 inside the PLL device 100 that is used to generate the output signal 180.
(54) In accordance with other implementations, the delay element 350 and the digital filter 370 can implement an analog time-domain filter in the PLL feedback loop. Accordingly, the delay element 350 and the digital filter 370 can remove various low frequency signals from the feedback signal 246 producing an analog filtered signal 355. Thus, the analog filtered signal 355 is provided as an input to an analog phase detector 110 in the PLL device 100 for producing output signal 180 with reduced PLL jitter. In some implementations, the delay element 350 can be an analog device itself; in such implementations an analog anti-imaging filter can be implemented using a DAC. Additional aspects employing an analog delay element in the feedback signal path are presented in co-pending commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/489,221, filed Apr. 17, 2017, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
(55) While the delay element 350 of the proposed solution has been described with respect to clock generation in a transmitter, the apparatus, clock circuit 495 and corresponding signal processing method can also be employed for clock extraction/recovery in a receiver (not shown) to track a transmitter clock signal 185 as received, wherein the copy of reference clock signal 105 provided to the digital phase detector 360 is replaced by transmitted clock signal 185. When clock circuit 495 is employed for clock recovery in a receiver, digital phase detector 360 operates at the higher frequencies of the transmitter clock signal 185 or of the feedback signal 247.
(56) Combination of Phase Rotator and Delay Element with Dual Digital Phase Detectors
(57) While
(58) Commonly assigned, U.S. Pat. No. 10,063,367, issued Aug. 28, 2018, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference, describes a clock circuit 595 employed in a receiver as illustrated in
(59) Delay element 350 is hardware and/or software including functionality to filter noise from filtered signal 155 using digital filter 370 to produce filtered signal 356 at its output. The delay element 350 can remove at least a portion of noise in the filtered signal 155 prefiltered by the phase rotator 115 resulting from the operation the phase rotator 115 and from the PLL device 100. Overall, the delay element 350 can remove PLL noise from the phase of the output signal 180 via filtered signal 155.
(60) In one or more implementations, the delay element 350 is coupled to a digital filter 370. Digital filter 370 includes functionality to use the difference in phase between a copy of reference signal 105 and a copy of filtered signal 155 obtained by digital phase detector 360. For example, digital filter 370 is an integrated circuit that includes functionality to store the difference in phase for example as various PLL noise measurements 375, for example in hardware registers. Using the stored PLL noise measurements 375 the digital filter 370 can include functionality to generate control signal 353 for operating the delay element 350 on filtered signal 155.
(61) For example, digital filter 370 can include a digital accumulator (not shown). Using the PLL noise measurements 375, the digital accumulator can include functionality to produce control signal 353 for operating the delay element 350.
(62) Notably, in a receiver clock recovery provided through digital phase detector 160, digital accumulator 165 and phase rotator 115 is decoupled from PLL jitter rejection/cancellation provided by digital phase detector 360, digital filter 370, and delay element 350. This combination of components in clock circuit 595 provides a higher order jitter rejection overall.
(63) As mentioned hereinabove, use of clock circuit 595 in a transmitter (not shown) includes providing another copy of reference clock signal 105 to digital phase detector 160 instead of transmitter clock signal 185, and employing appropriate feedback dividers for operation of the digital phase detector 160 at the frequency of the reference clock signal 105.
(64) While higher order jitter rejection is provided for a PLL device 100, the signal processing provided employs a large implementation area on a digital signal processing chip for example implementing dual digital phase detectors 160, 360, dual digital accumulators 165, 370, etc.
(65) VCO Emulation
(66) In accordance with the proposed solution, apparatus, clock circuit and jitter rejection methods are provided which emulate digitally the operation of a VCO with a digital accumulator followed by segmented controls providing proportional control and integral control functions in a PLL feedback loop. A combination of a phase rotator and an accumulator is employed to perform frequency tracking providing the integral control, and a digital fine delay element is employed to perform phase tracking providing the proportional control. Cascading the integral control function in the PLL loop provided by the phase rotator and proportional control function provided by the delay element provides 2.sup.nd order control in a PLL feedback loop.
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(68) A copy of control signal 651 is provided to drive a digitally controlled delay locked loop (DLL) component or a component capable of introducing 2Pi rotations in the feedback signal 246 in the feedback path of the PLL device 100. For example, a second digital accumulator 665, for example of “Ki×1/s” type, performs a second numerical integration providing control signal 151 for driving phase rotator 115 for example as described hereinabove. This integral control feedback control loop nested within the feedback loop of PLL device 100, is employed for slow frequency compensation which over time (over multiple signal feedback loop cycles) preferentially identifies the center frequency of reference clock signal 605 and, through the feedback loop of the PLL device 100, indirectly adjusts the oscillation frequency of the VCO 140 to match the frequency of reference clock signal 605. As mentioned hereinabove, components in this integral feedback control path are not perfect, some residual non-linearities can be corrected by optionally employing look up table (LUT) component 270. The integral control feedback control provides filtered feedback signal 655 which can have remaining low-frequency jitter (spurs) for example originating from the operation of the phase rotator 115.
(69) Another copy of control signal 651 is provided to a “Kp” component 670, for example a digital gain block such as a multiplier, which outputs digital control signal 653. Digital control signal 653 is employed to drive fine delay element 350. For example as described hereinabove, digital control signal 653 can include a digital bit pattern. Delay element 350 is employed to provide phase non-linearity correction by advancing or retarding a (raising or falling) transition of filtered signal 655, in time, to provide filtered feedback signal 656 to the PLL device 100, for example to (analog) phase detector 110. The phase non-linearity correction provides the proportional control. In some implementations, fine delay element 350 can include an analog device wherein an analog anti-imaging filter 675 (shown in dashed outline), for example a DAC converts digital signal 653 into an analog drive signal to drive such an analog fine delay element 350. Specific implementations can employ a voltage controlled fine/linear delay element 350 having a resolution of about 20 fs and a range of about 5 ps.
(70) With filtered signal 655 being provided as an input to fine delay element 350, residual non-linearity from the control path can be corrected via the fine proportional control path by applying a high-pass transfer function attenuating low frequency spurs.
(71) Notably, employing a single digital phase detector 160 for both the integral and proportional phase control paths reduces implementation area and power requirements in a component employing clock circuit 695.
(72) The 2nd order phase tracking loop operation of clock circuit 695 in the phase domain is illustrated with reference to
(73)
(74) Integration in the phase domain is performed 610 on detected phase differences between reference clock signal 605 and output signal copy 187 from PLL device 100 to provide control signal 651. A static offset of the VCO 140 is adjusted 620 indirectly to change the oscillation frequency of VCO 140 to match the frequency of reference clock signal 605. Control signal 651 is (digitally) filtered 630 to indirectly adjust a dynamic offset of the VCO 140 to correct the oscillation of VCO 140 to provide phase non-linearity correction. Summing 640 oscillation frequency adjustments attenuates oscillation frequency components in the oscillation of VCO 140 to provide phase non-linearity correction.
(75) As such, the method 600 performed by circuit 695 is understood to turn the control mechanism shown in
(76) The circuit template of clock circuit 695 illustrated in
(77) With reference to
(78) While the synchronized output signal 180 is illustrated to be employed (fed) to provide cadence to (drive) a DAC in a transmitter implementation (similar to illustration in FIG. 2A), in other applications (not illustrated) the synchronized output signal 180 can be employed to drive a clock tree.
(79) With specific reference to
(80) Employing the proposed solution to provide clock recovery for communication over a link can be appreciated as follows: From the perspective of a receiver, the jitter in the local receiver clock, present in the synchronized clock signal 180, is determined by the jitter properties of remote transmitter PLL (as detected locally from the received signal 185) and the jitter properties of the local receiver PLL (imperfect components). The remote and local jitter contributions can be addressed independently to achieve the best jitter reduction/suppression performance of the overall link. In other words, if the remote transmitter has very low jitter as detected in received signal 185 at the local receiver, the local receiver clock circuit 695 will track the transmitter clock as received and will further attenuate local receiver's clock intrinsic jitter to account for imperfect components in the local PLL loop. Employing the proposed signal processing method at least in the local receiver (with two independent remote transmitter and local receiver clock circuits): has a significant performance advantage in terms of jitter performance compared to legacy/traditional clock recovery schemes (see
(81) Additionally, by employing clock circuit 695 at least in the local receiver to provide 2.sup.nd order phase control as proposed herein, the fine resolution delay element used in the proportional control path also rejects (attenuates) low-frequency jitter (spurs) originating from the phase rotator (because the phase rotator follows a high-pass transfer function with respect to the clock recovery function) used in the integral control path.
(82) In one or more embodiments, the transmitter clock signal is an extracted clock signal from a SerDes link. In one or more embodiments, for example, the SerDes system is a PISO (Parallel Input, Serial Output) system that can include a parallel clock input, various data input lines, and various input data latches. As such, the SerDes system may use an internal or external PLL device to multiply the incoming parallel clock up to a specific frequency. In one or more embodiments, the SerDes system is a SIPO (Serial Input, Parallel Output) system. In a SIPO system, the receiver clock signal can be recovered from data obtained using a serial clock recovery technique as described herein.
(83) A receiver employing a single digital phase detector 160 in accordance with the proposed solution benefits from advantages of low power and low jitter clock recovery implementations which are insensitive to ppm differences between the remote transmitter and local receiver clocks. With reference to
(84) System analysis to ensure stability of the proposed solution was undertaken using low frequency crystals as reference clock sources with acceptable phase noise. High frequency generators were locked to the reference clock sources to drive sampling for the system analysis. Both time and frequency domain models were used to study acquisition and steady-state behaviors respectively. The stability analysis showed that the clock circuits and signal processing methods proposed herein have a good margin in terms of step/frequency responses providing better jitter performance compared to conventional systems and methods. The operation of clock circuit 695 can be successfully stabilized for a selection of parameters satisfying operational requirements with good margins. The frequency response in terms of the emulated VCO phase noise from Digital PLL output 655 is governed by a high-pass filter (see integral phase control path description hereinabove). The frequency response in terms of noise added by the phase rotator output through to the DPLL output 655 is bandpass (see proportional phase control path description hereinabove), and no poles of the closed loop phase control lie outside the unit circle in the complex plane. This confirms system stability.
(85) The proposed clock circuits, components and signal processing methods, based on the quantitative analysis and results presented herein, when implemented particularly, but not exclusively, in receiver components provide improved clock recovery performance which can also be understood as reducing a likelihood of cycle slips during clock extraction when compared to conventional clock extraction (
(86) The proposed clock circuits, components and signal processing methods presented herein provide a very small controllable clock recovery bandwidth when compared to conventional schemes. The fine clock recovery bandwidth control provided herein has high potential in flex-grid/grid-less system (liquid spectrum) applications as the clock recovery band (the outer band of a channel signal spectrum) is desensitized to adjacent channel energy (robust to neighboring channel interference). This advantage is twofold: it allows for more compact channel spacing, and reduces both clock jitter and overall bit error rate. In turn, these advantages can potentially enable richer and/or higher modulation formats to be employed over communications links.
(87) Embodiments may be implemented in a clock circuit of a computing system. Any combination of mobile, desktop, server, router, switch, embedded device, or other types of hardware may employ such a clock circuit. For example, as shown in
(88) The computer processor(s) 802 may be an integrated circuit for processing instructions. For example, the computer processor(s) may be one or more cores or micro-cores of a processor. The computing system 800 may also include one or more input devices 810, such as a touchscreen, keyboard, mouse, microphone, touchpad, electronic pen, or any other type of input device.
(89) The communication interface 812 may include an integrated circuit for connecting the computing system 800 to a network (not shown) (e.g., a local area network (LAN), a wide area network (WAN) such as the Internet, mobile network, or any other type of network) and/or to another device, such as another computing device.
(90) Further, the computing system 800 may include one or more output devices 808, such as a screen (e.g., a liquid crystal display (LCD), a plasma display, touchscreen, cathode ray tube (CRT) monitor, projector, or other display device), a printer, external storage, or any other output device. One or more of the output devices may be the same or different from the input device(s). The input and output device(s) may be locally or remotely connected to the computer processor(s) 802, non-persistent storage 804, and persistent storage 806. Many different types of computing systems exist, and the aforementioned input and output device(s) may take other forms.
(91) Software/firmware instructions in the form of computer readable program code to perform embodiments of the invention may be stored, in whole or in part, temporarily or permanently, on a non-transitory computer readable medium such as a CD, DVD, storage device, a diskette, a tape, flash memory, physical memory, or any other computer readable storage medium. Specifically, the software/firmware instructions may correspond to computer readable program code that, when executed by a processor(s), is configured to perform one or more embodiments of the proposed solution. For clarity, state machine logic may implement and/or include such and/or other instructions for implementing and/or may be configured to perform one or more embodiments of the proposed solution.
(92) The computing system or group of computing systems described in
(93) Based on a client-server networking model, sockets may serve as interfaces or communication channel end-points enabling bidirectional data transfer between processes on the same device. Following the client-server networking model, a server process (e.g., a process that provides data) may create a first socket object. Next, the server process binds the first socket object, thereby associating the first socket object with a unique name and/or address. After creating and binding the first socket object, the server process then waits and listens for incoming connection requests from one or more client processes (e.g., processes that seek data). At this point, when a client process wishes to obtain data from a server process an established connection informs the client process that communications may commence. Upon receiving a data request, the server process analyzes the request and gathers the requested data. Finally, the server process then generates a reply including at least the requested data and transmits the reply to the client process. The data may be transferred, more commonly, as datagrams or a stream of characters (e.g., bytes, bits, symbols, etc.)
(94) Shared memory refers to the allocation of virtual memory space in order to substantiate a mechanism for which data may be communicated and/or accessed by multiple processes. Other techniques may be used to share data, such as various data described in the present application, between processes without departing from the scope of the proposed solution. The processes may be part of the same or different application and may execute on the same or different computing system.
(95) The above description of functions present only a few examples of functions performed by the computing system of
(96) VCO Emulation with No Rx PLL
(97)
(98) The removal of the PLL device 100 provides lower power and smaller footprint, relative to the embodiments of
(99) While the proposed solution has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, would appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the proposed solution as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited by the attached claims.