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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A general theory of phase noise in electrical oscillators

Ali Hajimiri, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1998 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 2, pp 179-194
TLDR
In this paper, a general model is introduced which is capable of making accurate, quantitative predictions about the phase noise of different types of electrical oscillators by acknowledging the true periodically time-varying nature of all oscillators.
Abstract
A general model is introduced which is capable of making accurate, quantitative predictions about the phase noise of different types of electrical oscillators by acknowledging the true periodically time-varying nature of all oscillators. This new approach also elucidates several previously unknown design criteria for reducing close-in phase noise by identifying the mechanisms by which intrinsic device noise and external noise sources contribute to the total phase noise. In particular, it explains the details of how 1/f noise in a device upconverts into close-in phase noise and identifies methods to suppress this upconversion. The theory also naturally accommodates cyclostationary noise sources, leading to additional important design insights. The model reduces to previously available phase noise models as special cases. Excellent agreement among theory, simulations, and measurements is observed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Low Phase Noise Quadrature VCO Using Symmetrical Tail Current-Shaping Technique

TL;DR: In this paper, a new symmetrical tail current-shaping technique was proposed to improve the phase noise of a quadrature voltage-controlled oscillator (QVCO).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A novel methodology for the design of LC tank VCO with low phase noise

TL;DR: An optimum channel length of MOS transistors is indicated for a cross-coupled LC tank VCO with the lowest phase noise, and an best FOM value of 186 is achieved compared to the reported 2 GHz VCO.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Low-voltage, low-power and low phase noise 2.4 GHz VCO for medical wireless telemetry

TL;DR: In this paper, the design and simulation results of low-voltage and low-power LC VCO is presented. And the effect of the common-source inductor is also emphasized from the power consumption point of view, and the simulated performance characteristics are: power consumption of 41 /spl mu/W; phase noise of -123 dBc/Hz, -129.5 dBc /Hz, and -133.1 dB/Hz at offsets of 1 MHz, 2 MHz and 3 MHz, respectively; frequency tuning range of 18%.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Time-Variant Analysis of Fundamental $1/f^{3}$ Phase Noise in CMOS Parallel $LC$ -Tank Quadrature Oscillators

TL;DR: A rigorous time-variant analysis of the 1/f MOS device noise upconversion into1/f phase noise for two of the most popular parallel-coupled quadrature CMOS harmonic oscillators proves that the two topologies display remarkably different sensitivities to the low-frequency noise sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low-power voltage-controlled oscillators in 90-nm CMOS using high-quality thin-film postprocessed inductors

TL;DR: This paper demonstrates a thin-film WLP technology on top of a 90-nm RF CMOS process with one 15-GHz and two low-power 5-GHz voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) using a high-quality WLP or above-IC inductor.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A study of phase noise in CMOS oscillators

TL;DR: In this paper, the phase noise in two inductorless CMOS oscillators is analyzed and a new definition of phase noise is defined, and two prototypes fabricated in a 0.5/spl mu/m CMOS technology are used to investigate the accuracy of the theoretical predictions.
Book

Cyclostationarity in Communications and Signal Processing

TL;DR: This book brings together the latest work in the field by the foremost experts and presents it in a tutorial fashion, instrumental in furthering progress in understanding and using cyclostationarity in all fields where it arises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of phase and frequency instabilities in precision frequency sources: Fifteen years of progress

J. Rutman
TL;DR: A broad review of phase and frequency instability characterization can be found in this paper, including both classical widely used concepts and more recent less familiar approaches, including transfer functions that link frequency-domain and time-domain parameters.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (10)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "A general theory of phase noise in electrical oscillators - solid-state circuits, ieee journal of" ?

In this paper, a general model for phase noise is proposed, which is capable of making accurate, quantitative predictions about the phase noise of different types of electrical oscillators by acknowledging the true periodically time-varying nature of all oscillators. 

A sinusoidal current of 100 A at 50 MHz injected at the drain node of one of the buffer stages results in two equal sidebands, 46 dB below carrier, in the power spectrum of the differential output. 

Since the asymmetry is due to the voltage dependent conductance of the load, reduction of the upconversion might be achieved through the use of a perfectly linear resistive load, because the rising and falling behavior is governed by an RC time constant and makes the individual waveforms more symmetrical. 

One important reason is that much of the noise in a practical oscillator arises from periodically varying processes and is therefore cyclostationary. 

The semi-empirical model proposed in [1]–[3], known also as the Leeson–Cutler phase noise model, is based on an LTI assumption for tuned tank oscillators. 

Note that the generalized approach presented here is capable of calculating the fitting parameters used in (3), ( and ) in terms ofcoefficients of ISF and device noise corner, .Several design implications emerge from (18), (21), and (24) that offer important insight for reduction of phase noise in the oscillators. 

Using the above effective noise current power, the phase noise in the region of the spectrum can be calculated as(6)Note that the factor of 1/2 arises from neglecting the contribution of amplitude noise. 

In particular, if the impulse is applied at the peak of the voltage across the capacitor, there will be no phase shift and only an amplitude change will result, as shown in Fig. 4(a). 

It was first observed in the context of supply noise rejection [15], [16] that using more linear loads can reduce the effect of supply noise on timing jitter. 

As can be seen, the phase noise corner due to internal noise sources is not equal to the device noise corner, but is smaller by a factor equal to .