A Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer for Cellular and Short Range

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A Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer for Cellular and
Short Range Multi-standard Wireless Receiver
Deping Huang1, Jin Zhou1, Wei Li1, Ning Li1, Junyan Ren1,2, Member IEEE
1. State Key Laboratory of ASIC & System, Fudan University
2. Micro-/Nano-Electronics Science and Technology Innovation Platform, Fudan University
Shanghai 200433, China
Email: w-li@fudan.edu.cn
Abstract—This paper presents a Sigma-Delta fractional-N
frequency synthesizer for multi-standard receiver. The
synthesizer’s output range is 1.8~5.8GHz and covers the
standards
of
DCS1800,
WCDMA,
TD-SCDMA,
WLAN802.11a/b/g and Bluetooth. Frequency planning is
elaborately done to make sure the synthesizer meets
specifications of standards mentioned above. QVCO with a
proposed phase shifter is shown to have better phase noise
performance and more stable oscillation. Simulated phase noise
is -119dBc/Hz at 1-MHz offset from a 4.2GHz carrier. Its FOM
ranges from 181 to 187. The frequency synthesizer is fabricated
in TSMC 0.13μm CMOS process. Average power consumption
is 55.92mW.
I.
INTRODUCTION
One trend of wireless communication today is integration
of multiple communication standards into one chip. The
increasing availability of multi-mode cellular systems in the
market just illustrates this trend. Multi-standard radio, built in
a low-cost CMOS technology, has recently gained a lot of
interest. Simply inserting a new standalone radio into a mobile
handset for each communication standard is definitely
infeasible since the power and hardware consumption is
unaffordable to any mobile system. What we need is a flexible
multi-standard radio system which is characteristic of high
reconfigurability and adaptability. One challenge for this
system is the design of a frequency synthesizer that is able to
generate clean and stable LO signals fulfilling requirements of
different wireless communication standards. Previous works
[1] [2] have done a lot to design carrier generation system
whose output ranges cover major communication standards
like GSM, WCDMA, WLAN, Bluetooth, etc. This work
presents another frequency synthesizer which provides LO for
multi-standard receiver. The output range of the synthesizer
covers standards of DCS1800, WCDMA, TD-SCDMA,
Bluetooth, WLAN 802.11a/b/g. Common challenge when
designing multi-standard carrier generation system is trade-off
between wide output range and high power efficiency. This
problem can be tackled only by careful frequency planning for
the system. This paper firstly describes the idea behind the
frequency planning of the system. Then we present
implementation of different building blocks in the proposed Σ-
Δ Fractional-N frequency synthesizer. Section
simulation results.
II.
ARCHITECTURE AND FREQUENCY PLANNING
Frequency planning is the key to designing frequency
synthesizer for multi-standard receiver. That’s because the
performance of the receiver as well as its area and power
consumption is strongly influenced by it. And the planning is
also strongly correlated with the receiver’s topology. In our
case, this synthesizer is designed for a direct conversion
receiver. It is more desirable to separate the oscillator
frequency away from the RF frequency to avoid LO pulling.
In order to do this, combination of dividers and oscillator
working in multiple RF frequency can be adopted. However,
wide output frequency range may require wideband VCO
which is difficult to implement. To resolve this problem, more
than one oscillator can be used to increase the PLL’s tuning
range. Multiple oscillators will increase the die area. And
since oscillators have to work in a much higher frequency, it is
difficult for some processes to fabricate them or will consume
a huge amount of power even if they do. But the performance
of spur is good for this solution because divider not only
introduces no extra spurious tone but also improves the
suppression of spurs near the carrier by 6dB. What’s more,
divide by two circuit inherently generates quadrature signals
whose precision only depends on duty cycle of the input
signal. A combination of mixers and dividers following a
VCO working in a lower frequency is also a solution to wide
output range frequency synthesizer. It’s more feasible since
This work was sponsored by National Sci & Tech Major Projects of
China with grant number of 2009ZX03006-007 and National High Tech
R&D (863) Program of China with grant number of 2009AA01Z261.
978-1-4244-5309-2/10/$26.00 ©2010 IEEE
discusses the
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Fig. 1 Diagram of proposed multi-standard frequency synthesizer
the VCO is operating in a lower frequency. Less power is
consumed for the same reason. However, the performance of
spurious tones is suffered at the output of the mixer because of
mismatch and nonlinearity. The process we use is TSMC
0.13μm CMOS, it is not appropriate to operate at a high
frequency for VCO. So, combination of dividers and
SSBmixer is adopted to enable wideband output in our design.
The presented frequency synthesizer is capable of
generating receiver carriers for WCDMA, DCS1800, TDSCDMA, WLAN (802.11a/b/g) and Bluetooth standards. As
shown in Fig. 1, Σ-Δ Fractional-N PLL is adopted. FractionalN architecture allows an arbitrary output frequency resolution,
so it is appropriate for multi-standard receiver. Since direct
conversion topology is adopted, quadrature LO signal is
needed for complex signal processing. For the standards of
WCDMA, GSM, TD-SCDMA, 802.11 b/g and Bluetooth,
quadrature LO is generated by a divide by two circuit
following the QVCO. Because their LO frequencies are
relatively low, it is still plausible to generate frequency which
is twice the RF frequency. What’s more, standards like
WCDMA, GSM, TD-SCDMA and Bluetooth have stringent
requirement on LO phase noise and spur performances. It is
unacceptable to generate their carriers by a mixer. Paralleling
to the divide by two path is the path of divide by four
cascading a harmonic rejection SSBmixer [3] (HRSSBmixer). This path is responsible for carrier generation for
802.11a. WLAN 802.11a using Orthogonal Frequency
Division Multiplexing (OFDM) has large bandwidth. As a
result, the LO phase noise requirement is set by the integral
noise. The specification for spurious tones is loosened and that
enables SSBmixer’s output as LO signal for this standard. HRSSBmixer is used to carry out single side band up-conversion,
so no filter is needed to reject the unwanted side band
generated in the process of mixing. In order to realize the
quadrature output, two HR-SSBmixers are needed. And each
input should be quadrature in order to generate outputs with
correct phase relation. So QVCO is used in this synthesizer for
the purpose of providing quadrature input for the HRSSBmixers. Harmonic rejection SSBmixer is used to suppress
spurious tones resulting from the third and fifth harmonic of
the divide by four circuit’s output. 45 degree spaced clocks for
the HR-SSBmixer are provided by divide by four circuit.
Performance of image rejection and harmonic rejection of the
HR-SSBmixer is strongly influenced by mismatch between
transistors in the circuit itself as well as mismatch between the
inputs. In order to generate precise quadrature signal, dummy
circuits are often added to balance the load of VCO buffer. In
our case, divide by 2 circuit and divide by 4 circuit are
designed to load the VCO buffer equally.
see, the oscillator does not operate in the same frequency as
the output, as a result of which, LO pulling is avoided.
According to the phase noise and spur specifications of
different standards, outputs are allocated in different places.
The object is to achieve an optimized tradeoff between
performance and consumptions of hardware and power.
III.
CIRCUIT DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION
A. QVCO
Quadrature VCO consisting of two cross-coupled LC
oscillator cores is used in this frequency synthesizer. HRSSBmixer uses the quadrature signals to carry out single side
band up-conversion and provides LO for 802.11a.
Conventional cross-coupled quadrature oscillator has not been
widely used because of its poor phase noise performance. Two
LC VCOs are coupled and LC tanks operate away from
resonance frequency. As a result of which, phase noise
performance is destroyed due to that the optimal quality factor
of the LC tank is not reached [4]. What’s more, coupling
transistors will contribute additional noise to the output. And
oscillator becomes more sensitive to AM-PM conversion
because of the coupling mechanism.
Since outputs of the QVCO serve as inputs of HRSSBmixer, the phase relation of the quadrature outputs should
be clearly determined in order to carry out correct single side
band up-conversion. However, in conventional quadrature
VCO, the phase relation is not deterministic due to the
bimodal oscillation effect [5]. This effect shows that
conventional quadrature LC oscillator may exhibit two stable
oscillation states at different operating frequencies. The
oscillation state here means different lead-lag phase relations
of the outputs.
In order to solve the two problems mentioned above, phase
shifters can be introduced [4]. The bottom line is that phase
shifter is added in the coupling stage and therefore no phase
shift from the tank is required to meet Barkausen’s phase
criteria. What’s more, QVCO will stay away from bimodal
oscillation boundaries if a sufficient phase shift is maintained
[5]. Design of the phase shifter is nontrivial. It should not be
too complicate in case too much power is consumed and it
should not de-Q the tank. The proposed phase shifter used in
the QVCO is shown in Fig.2. We split the tail current source
of coupling transistors and add a parallel R-C network
between source terminals of coupling transistors. In this way,
the resistors in the phase shifter consume no dc voltage drop
which is appropriate for low power voltage situation. Since it
Table 1 lists the relations between oscillator frequency and
outputs of the frequency synthesizer respectively. As we can
TABLE I. Frequency Planning
Standards
WCDMA
FDD-RX
Bluetooth
RX
WLAN
a
802.11
b
g
TD-SCDMA
RX
DCS1800
RX
fmin~fmax(MHz)
2110~2117
2400~2483
5015~5850
2400~2484
2400~2484
2300~2400
1805~1880
Relation
fvco/2
fvco/2
5fvco/4
fvco/2
fvco/2
fvco/2
fvco/2
Fig. 2 QVCO with proposed phase shifter
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is not directly connected to the tank, quality factor of the tank
is not affected. Phase shifter can align current and voltage in
each tank. Therefore, the optimal quality factor of the LC tank
can be reached. Insertion of a phase shifter also moves the
QVCO operation away from the unstable boundary and
eliminates bimodal oscillation. Another benefit of introducing
phase shifter is that it greatly decouples phase accuracy and
phase noise performance of the oscillator. Because it desensitizes the QVCO to mismatch from tail current and tank
quality factor [6].
Transconductance of the coupling transistors can be
written as
G mc =
1+sR s Cs
gm
1+g m R s 1+sR s Cs /(1+g m R s )
(1)
There are one pole and one zero in the transconductance.
The zero frequency is ωz=1/RsCs and the pole frequency
isωp≈gm/Cs. The zero results in a phase-lead to the
transconductance. Ideally, the phase shift should be 90 degree
at the frequency of oscillation to align current and voltage of
the tank. However, this requires that the pole frequency at
least 100 times of the zero frequency which means
ωp/ωz≈gmRs=100. Resistor degeneration will make coupling
transconductance at resonance frequency so small that the
phase accuracy of the quadrature outputs of QVCO is
degraded. In fact, phase shift up to 50 degree is already
enough to increase the effective tank quality factor and reduce
the phase noise.
The proposed QVCO uses all-PMOS device considering
its lower flicker noise than NMOS. Oscillator’s output range is
from 3.5GHz to 5GHz. The tail currents are adaptively
controlled by Automatic Frequency Control (AFC) circuit to
keep the oscillation magnitude constant and equal to the
optimize level in which phase noise performance is the best.
Binary weighted switched capacitor bank is used to divide the
total oscillator output range up to 64 sub-ranges. The capacitor
bank is also controlled by the AFC. Varactors biased in
different points are connected in parallel to linearize the
transfer curves of the QVCO. AM-PM up-conversion phase
noise can be minimized and effective voltage range in
oscillator’s control line is enlarged.
counter. Divide by 4 is implemented by the first two stages of
programmable divider and current mode logic (CML) to
CMOS logic transfer circuit. Programmable divider is
composed of cascading divide by 2/3 modules. The first two
stages are controlled to divide by 2 only when AFC is enabled.
C. Programmable Divider
As shown in Fig. 3, the programmable divider, based on
[8], consists of 7 divide by 2/3 cells. The first two stages are
implemented by CML while the last five stages are
implemented by TSPC logic. The divider should be with a
programmable range from 75 to 124 according to the
frequency of VCO and the frequency of reference.
Considering the third order sigma-delta modulator, the divider
should be programmable from 72 to 128. The presented
divider provides division ratio from 26~28-1. For fractional-N
frequency synthesizer, programmable divider is controlled by
sigma-delta modulator. So it is important to correctly update
the divide value every reference cycle without causing
interference to the operation of programmable divider [9].
Based on the idea of [9], we add additional logic generating
output enable signal for sigma-delta modulator. Instead of
using fout of all divide by 2/3 cells to generate the enable signal
for the modulator as [9], we only use the last six stages. In this
way, additional power-hungry logic transfer buffer can be
avoided. Timing analysis find that delaying the enable signal
for a certain time also satisfies the timing requirement to
update division ratio correctly.
There is a problem existing in this divider. No logic is
taking care of dynamic switching from 6 cells to 7 cells. The
timing of programmable divider and sigma-delta modulator
will be ruined. Simulation shows that PLL cannot be locked
in this situation. This problem is being solved in a new version
of the frequency synthesizer.
B. AFC
In order to increase the VCO’s tuning range and reduce
VCO gain, switched capacitor bank is used in the resonator.
AFC technique should be used to ensure that proper transfer
curve of the VCO is selected. Each time a new division ratio
of the synthesizer is programmed, the AFC will be enabled.
Division-ratio-based AFC [7] is adopted in this design. Output
of the VCO is first divided by 4 and then inputted to the
Fig. 4 Layout of the synthesizer and its settling behavior
Fig .5 Phase noise performance
Fig. 3 Programmable divider
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QVCO without phase shifter
In order to validate that phase shifter improves QVCO’s
performance. Simulation is done to the proposed circuit and
two circuits in Fig. 6. Fig. 6 (a) is a conventional QVCO. In
Fig.6 (b), two LC oscillators couple in “in phase” style. LC
tank in Fig.6 (b) operate in its resonance frequency. It cannot
generate quadrature signals and can be seen as two parallel
connected oscillators. Transistors, bias currents and LC tank
are all identical in these three circuits. Fig. 7 gives the phase
noise comparison result. With phase shifter, phase noise
performance is improved by about 3~4dB. At some frequency
offset, it is even better than parallel connected LC-VCO. We
also find that the proposed QVCO operates closer to the LC
tank resonance freuqncy (Fig. 6(b)) while conventional QVCO
(Fig. 6 (a)) operates 115MHz away from it. This means the
proposed QVCO has a larger effective quality factor. The
resulted FOM ranges from 181dB to 187dB across the output
range. Fig. 8 shows the Monte Carlo simulation results.
Coupling factor equal 0.5 for conventional QVCO. Because of
0
Phase noise (dBc/Hz)
-60
Fig5(b)-fosc=3.944GHz
100K
1M
10M
100M
90.1
90.15
90
90.05
89.9
89.75
89.95
Samples
90.3
90.43
90.18
90.05
89.8
89.93
89.68
89.55
0
89.3
[2]
[5]
-180
10K
50
0
output phase relation(°)
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
[1]
[8]
Offset Frequency (Hz)
100
A Σ-Δ Fractional-N frequency synthesizer generating
carriers for cellular and short range wireless communication
standards is presented. Through careful frequency planning
and circuit design, the system is implementable on chip in
0.13μm CMOS process. By adding phase shifter to the QVCO,
the synthesizer shows improved performance in phase noise.
Although confined to several standards in this version, this
system can be extended to cover more standards by simply
adding dividers.
-160
1K
150
50
V.
-120
100
200
the source degeneration, proposed QVCO’s coupling factor is
smaller. PSS large signal simulation finds that its coupling
factor is 0.28. However, its standard deviation of output phase
is better than that of conventional QVCO, which means phase
accuracy of proposed QVCO is less sensitive to mismatch.
-100
-140
150
Fig. 8 Monte Carlo simulation results
[7]
-80
200
output phase relation(°)
Fig4-fosc=3.935GHz
-40
250
100
[6]
Fig 5(a)-fosc=4.059GHz
μ=90.001
σ=59.7504m
N=1000
300
89.8
250
[4]
-20
μ=90.0019
σ=193.893m
N=1000
300
[3]
(a)
(b)
Fig. 6 Oscillators coupled to operate (a) in quadrature (b) in phase
350
89.43
The proposed frequency synthesizer is implemented in
TSMC 0.13μm CMOS process. All circuit blocks have been
integrated on chip. Layout of the die is shown in Fig.4. The
chip area is about 1.86 × 1.8 mm2 with active core of 1.85
mm2. Bandwidth of the PLL is about 90 kHz; and the
reference frequency is 40MHz. Power consumed by the core
circuits is 1.2V × 46.6mA. As shown in Fig. 4, it takes less
than 50μs for PLL to settle. The AFC time is only about 6μs.
Simulation shows that image rejection ratio and third
harmonic rejection ratio of HR-SSBmixer are 56dB and 64dB
respectively. The circuit does well in image rejection and
harmonic rejection since layout work is properly done. Phase
noise simulation of the synthesizer is done at the output of
QVCO. Fig.5 shows the phase noise result when oscillator
working at the frequency of 4.2GHz. The phase noise is 119dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset frequency. Simulation is also
carried out at the output of divide by 2 and HR-SSBmixer.
Specifications of all standards can be met.
QVCO with phase shifter
350
89.85
SIMULATION RESULTS
Samples
IV.
[9]
Fig. 7 Phase noise comparison
2074
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