TY - GEN
T1 - A - 247.4dB Jitter-FoM Ring-VCO-based SSPLL with Discrete-Time Phase Noise Cancellation and Adaptive Gain Mismatch Adjustment
AU - Li, Zhen
AU - Zheng, Mingxuan
AU - Yang, Fan
AU - Quan, Xing
AU - Du, Yongqian
AU - Zhao, Xiaodong
AU - Cui, Yuanyuan
AU - Zhang, Xunying
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 IEEE.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - With the rapid growth of communication data rates, increasingly stringent jitter performance requirements are imposed on clock signals. Clock generators incorporating ring-VCO (RVCO) based phase-locked loops (PLLs) have garnered significant attention due to their numerous advantages, including wide tuning range, compact chip area, and the capability to generate multi-phase output. However, the inherently poor phase noise of RVCOs has emerged as a bottleneck of RVCO PLLs. The injection-locked technique can effectively suppress the phase noise in RVCOs by aligning phase cycles to eliminate accumulated jitter [1-3]. However, it requires complex calibration to avoid performance degradation due to process, voltage, and temperature (PVT), as depicted in Fig. 1 (top-left). Phase noise cancellation (PNC) technology is another solution to reduce the jitter contributed by RVCOs [4-8]. [4] proposes a subsampling phase-locked loop (SSPLL) with feedforward PNC (FPNC) technology. It extracts noise through the sub-sampling phase detector (SSPD) and cancels it in feed-forward path outside SSPLL loop, significantly suppressing the phase noise of RVCO without affecting SSPLL loop, as shown in Fig. 1 (top-right). However, the noise cancellation block (NCB) limits the power consumption and operating frequency of the SSPLL, and the gain of the NCB needs to be manually calibrated. Fig. 1 (bottom-left) illustrates a calibration-free SSPLL with open-loop discrete-time phase-noise cancellation [5]. Although the issue of manual calibration has been resolved, it still faces power consumption limitation of NCB in high frequency.
AB - With the rapid growth of communication data rates, increasingly stringent jitter performance requirements are imposed on clock signals. Clock generators incorporating ring-VCO (RVCO) based phase-locked loops (PLLs) have garnered significant attention due to their numerous advantages, including wide tuning range, compact chip area, and the capability to generate multi-phase output. However, the inherently poor phase noise of RVCOs has emerged as a bottleneck of RVCO PLLs. The injection-locked technique can effectively suppress the phase noise in RVCOs by aligning phase cycles to eliminate accumulated jitter [1-3]. However, it requires complex calibration to avoid performance degradation due to process, voltage, and temperature (PVT), as depicted in Fig. 1 (top-left). Phase noise cancellation (PNC) technology is another solution to reduce the jitter contributed by RVCOs [4-8]. [4] proposes a subsampling phase-locked loop (SSPLL) with feedforward PNC (FPNC) technology. It extracts noise through the sub-sampling phase detector (SSPD) and cancels it in feed-forward path outside SSPLL loop, significantly suppressing the phase noise of RVCO without affecting SSPLL loop, as shown in Fig. 1 (top-right). However, the noise cancellation block (NCB) limits the power consumption and operating frequency of the SSPLL, and the gain of the NCB needs to be manually calibrated. Fig. 1 (bottom-left) illustrates a calibration-free SSPLL with open-loop discrete-time phase-noise cancellation [5]. Although the issue of manual calibration has been resolved, it still faces power consumption limitation of NCB in high frequency.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034870406
U2 - 10.1109/A-SSCC67472.2025.11349583
DO - 10.1109/A-SSCC67472.2025.11349583
M3 - 会议稿件
AN - SCOPUS:105034870406
T3 - 2025 IEEE Asian Solid-State Circuits Conference, A-SSCC 2025 - Proceedings
SP - 292
EP - 294
BT - 2025 IEEE Asian Solid-State Circuits Conference, A-SSCC 2025 - Proceedings
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
T2 - 2025 IEEE Asian Solid-State Circuits Conference, A-SSCC 2025
Y2 - 2 November 2025 through 5 November 2025
ER -