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VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks,...

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VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012
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Page 1: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

VCO Design

Z. Dilli, Mar 2012

Page 2: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

VCO Design

Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Page 3: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

System Design

• VCO Source follower (external bias) Differential Amplifier (external bias) Inverter chain

• Simulations show a center frequency of around 1 GHz, instead of 433 MHz as designed in the referenced dissertation– No varactor parasitics considered; bias voltage unknown

• Around 4.3% tunability with certain assumptions about inductor parasitics

• Varactor trade-off: Too small reduces tunability range; too large prevents oscillation

Page 4: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

VCO-only Outputs

Cvaractor varying from 160 fF (f=1.0737 GHz) to 450 fF (f=1.0385 GHz)

Tuning range wider at lower bias currents (affects MOSFET capacitance)

Page 5: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

VCO-only Outputs

Ibias changing from <1 mA to >3 mA (by changing Vbias from 1 V to 3 V)

Page 6: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Source-follower and Self-biasing Differential Amplifier

Two source followers for the differential outputs of the VCO, designed not to load the VCO output with excess capacitance

Self-biasing DA increases output swing for the inverter chain operating more reliably

Single-ended output taken out of DA

Page 7: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

SF and SBDA operation

Cvaractor=160 fF, f=1.0737 GHz

Page 8: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Inverter Chain

Designed to drive a 1.5 pF load

This is difficult with a full swing with this CMOS technology (0.6 um minimum width) at > 100s of MHz frequencies

Page 9: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Inverter Chain Output to 0.3 pF Load

Page 10: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Inverter Chain Output to 1.5 pF Load

Page 11: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

VCO Layout

Page 12: VCO Design Z. Dilli, Mar 2012. VCO Design Adapted from Ryan J. Kier, Low Power PLL Building Blocks, Ph.D. Dissertation, U. of Utah, 2010.

Full Chip Layout


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