Publication | Open Access
An Adaptive Pre-Distortion Technique to Mitigate the DTC Nonlinearity in Digital PLLs
139
Citations
26
References
2014
Year
Adaptive FilterEngineeringDigital PllsClock RecoveryData ConverterMixed-signal Integrated CircuitComputer EngineeringDigital FilterNonlinear Signal ProcessingDigital Circuit DesignDtc NonlinearityDtc LinearityPower ConsumptionSignal ProcessingAdaptive Pre-distortion TechniqueAnalog-to-digital Converter
Digital fractional-N phase-locked loops (PLLs) are an attractive alternative to analog PLLs in the design of frequency synthesizers for wireless applications. However, the main obstacle to their full acceptance in the wireless-systems arena is their higher content of output spurious tones, whose level is ultimately set by the nonlinearity of the time-to-digital converter (TDC). The known methods to improve the linearity of the TDC either increase its dissipation and phase noise or require slow foreground calibrations. By contrast, the class of digital PLLs based on a one-bit TDC driven by a multibit digital-to-time converter (DTC) substantially reduces power dissipation and eliminates the TDC nonlinearity issues. Although its spur performance depends on DTC linearity, the modified architecture enables the application of a background adaptive pre-distortion which does not compromise the PLL phase-noise level and power consumption and is much faster than other calibration techniques. This paper presents a 3.6-GHz digital PLL in 65-nm CMOS, with in-band fractional spurs dropping from -39 to -52 dBc when the pre-distortion is enabled, in-band phase noise of -103 dBc/Hz and power consumption of 4.2 mW.
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