Voltage Controlled Oscillators

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Transcript Voltage Controlled Oscillators

SiGe BiCMOS 65-GHz BPSK Transmitter and
30 to 122 GHz LC-Varactor VCOs with up to
21% Tuning Range
Chihou Lee, Terry Yao, Alain Mangan, Kenneth Yau,
Miles Copeland*, Sorin Voinigescu
University of Toronto - Edward S. Rogers, Sr. Dept. of Electrical &
Computer Engineering
* Professor Emeritus, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Outline
• Motivation
• VCO and BPSK transmitter circuit topologies
• Design methodology for lowest phase noise
VCOs
• Experimental results
• Conclusions
Motivation
• Advanced communications (60-GHz radio)
and radar systems (77-GHz cruise control).
• Investigate a systematic VCO design
methodology focused on lowest phase noise.
Outline
• Motivation
 VCO and BPSK transmitter circuit topologies
• Design methodology for lowest phase noise
VCOs
• Experimental results
• Conclusions
Fundamental Mode VCO Topology
•
Differential Colpitts Configuration
Neg. Resistance  
f OSC
1

2π LBCEQ
gm
ω2C1C2
C1C2
, CEQ 
C1  C2
•
C2 implemented as accumulation-mode
nMOS varactor.
•
Cascode for improved isolation of output
from resonant tank, and power gain.
•
LEE & Resistive tail bias with low-pass filter
to reduce bias circuit’s noise contribution.
Push-Push VCO Topology
•
Active and passive components
operate at ½ output frequency
•
Similar topology as fundamentalmode VCO except output is
taken at Q2 & Q4’s base.
•
Intrinsically isolated output.
•
Allows differential tuning
(VTUNE+POS, VTUNE,-NEG).
VCO Schematics
35-GHz VCO (Fund.)
70-GHz VCO (Push-Push)
BPSK Transmitter Schematic
Outline
• Motivation
• VCO and BPSK transmitter circuit topologies
 Design methodology for lowest phase noise
VCOs
• Experimental results
• Conclusions
Designing for Lowest Phase Noise
VCO Design Parameters:
• VTANK – tank voltage swing
• QTANK – tank quality factor
• JBIAS – current density
• C1:C2 – capacitance ratio
• LB – base inductance
• IBIAS – bias current
Q TANK
ωL B

R
Simulation Test Circuit
1. Optimum C1:C2 Ratio
2. Optimum Current Density (JBIAS)
OPTIMUM JBIAS
OPTIMUM JBIAS = optimum noise
current density (Jopt) of cascode.
3. Optimum Bias Current (IBIAS)
3. Optimum Base Inductance (LB)
Smallest LB results in
Lowest Phase Noise
VCO Design Methodology
1.
Maximize quality factor (Q) of resonant tank.
2.
Bias transistors at optimum noise current density Jopt.
Show a simulated plot of
Jopt @ 40 GHz & fT,
fMAX for cascoded
transistor configuration
VCO Design Methodology (con’t)
4.
Choose smallest reproducible base inductance (LB).
5.
Sweep IBIAS to minimize phase
noise while choosing C1:C2 ratio
to maximize VTANK while
maintaining fosc.
6.
Add inductive emitter
degeneration LE.
[Li and Rein, JSSC 2003]
VCO Design Space Examined
13 VCOs & Oscillators fabricated to examine
the impact on phase noise of:
1. Base inductance (LB)
2. Accumulation-mode nMOS varactors versus. MIM
capacitors
3. Addition of LE
4. Operation on 2nd harmonic versus. operation on
fundamental.
Outline
• Motivation
• VCO and BPSK transmitter circuit topologies
• Design methodology for lowest phase noise
VCOs
 Experimental results
• Conclusions
Fabrication Technology
• Jazz Semiconductor’s commercial SBC18 0.18 m
BiCMOS process.
• Peak fT and fMAX
near 155 GHz.
NFmin extracted from measured y-parameters
[S. P. Voinigescu, et. al, JSSC 1997]
Varactor Q Characteristics
Microphotographs
Family of 13 VCOs: Fundamental-Mode: (8) 35 GHz, (2) 60 GHz,
Push-Push: (1) 70 GHz, (2) 120-GHz
Microphotographs (con’t)
65-GHz BPSK transmitter
35-GHz VCO Measurements
Averaged Spectral Plots for 35-GHz VCO
(LB = 100 pH, with LE):
(A) VCO
(B) Fixed Freq. Oscillator
35-GHz VCO Measurements (con’t)
Tuning and Output Power Characteristics:
Lowest Phase Noise Design Space
Impact of: 1. Base Inductance
2. Inductive Emitter Degeneration (LE)
60-GHz VCO Measurements
Averaged Spectral Plots:
(A) VCO
(B) Fixed Freq. Oscillator
60-GHz VCO Measurements (con’t)
Measurements over Temperature:
Push-Push VCO Measurements
Spectral Plots:
(a) 70-GHz VCO
(b) 120-GHz VCO
POUT > -14 dBm
POUT > -30 dBm
Push-Push VCO Measurements (con’t)
Tuning Characteristics:
Si-Based mm-wave VCO Comparison
L{foffset}
(dBc/Hz)
Tuning
Range
PDC
(mW)
POUT
(dBm)
FOM *
fT/fMAX
(26-GHz)
-87 at 100 KHz
15%
75
1.0
-177.5
~ 40/50 GHz (BJT)
(40-GHz)
-97 at 1 MHz
15%
17.3
-5.0
-171.7
0.13 m (SOI)
(43-GHz)
-110 at 1 MHz
26%
280
6.5
-184.7
~ 200 GHz (HBT)
(77-GHz)
-95 at 1 MHz
6%
930
14.3
-177.3
~ 200 GHz (HBT)
-85 at 1 MHz
4%
119
-4.0
-156.2
0.25 m CMOS
(150-GHz) pp
-85 at 1 MHz
23%
170
-5.0
-161.2
~ 220 GHz (HBT)
35-GHz Osc.
-112.7 at 1 MHz
N/A
193
4.0
-184.5
~ 155 GHz (HBT)
35-GHz VCO
-110.3 at 1 MHz
19%
188
4.0
-181.4
~ 155 GHz (HBT)
60-GHz Osc.
-104 at 1 MHz
N/A
244
4.0
-179.5
~ 155 GHz (HBT)
60-GHz VCO
-103 at 1 MHz
13%
240
4.0
-178.6
~ 155 GHz (HBT)
70-GHz VCO pp
-94 at 1 MHz
21%
128
> -14
< -156.8
~ 155 GHz (HBT)
Reference VCO
(63-GHz)
pp
*FOM = L{foffset} - 20log(fosc/foffset) + 10log(PDC/POUT)
pp
= push-push VCO
BPSK Transmitter Measurements
No DATA:
With DATA (231-1 PRBS):
BPSK Transmitter Meas. (con’t)
With DATA (27-1 PRBS pattern):
Outline
• Motivation
• VCO and BPSK transmitter circuit topologies
• Design methodology for lowest phase noise
VCOs
• Experimental results
 Conclusions
Conclusions
• Presented, with experimental validation, a
systematic VCO design methodology for lowest
phase noise.
• Compared to a MIM capacitor, accumulation-mode
nMOS varactors degrades phase noise by 1-2 dB.
• Inductive degeneration lowers phase noise by 3-4
dB.
• Operation on 2nd harmonic increases tuning range
by 50% - at expense of lower POUT
• First 65-GHz BPSK transmitter.
Acknowledgements
• Jazz Semiconductor, Gennum Corporation.
• Canadian Foundation for Innovation,
Micronet, Canadian Microelectronics
Corporation, NSERC.
• Marco Racanelli and Paul Kempf.