IEEE Open Journal of the Solid-State Circuits Society (Jan 2024)

Millimeter-Wave All-Digital Phase-Locked Loop Using Reference Waveform Oversampling Techniques

  • Teerachot Siriburanon,
  • Chunxiao Liu,
  • Jianglin Du,
  • Robert Bogdan Staszewski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/OJSSCS.2024.3493803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4
pp. 212 – 225

Abstract

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This article proposes an mm-wave fractional-N all-digital phase-locked loop (ADPLL) employing a reference-waveform oversampling (ROS) phase detector (PD) that increases its effective rate four times, consequently improving jitter at lower power consumption while using a low-frequency reference of 50 MHz. The passive oversampling PD utilizes a zero-forcing technique for voltage-domain presetting and compensation for both the fractional phase and reference spurs induced by imperfections in the reference waveform and reference-waveform oversampling PD (ROS-PD). The ROS-PD eliminates the conventional power-hungry low-noise buffer for the reference input and reduces the PD noise by increasing the loop correction speed. This promotes low jitter and high efficiency in advanced mm-wave PLLs without relying on the increase of the reference clock frequency to several hundred MHz. The imperfections in the reference waveform and ROS-PD, i.e., harmonic distortion, differential path mismatches, and other nonideality factors, can be programmably compensated by the proposed digital manifold calibration scheme, resulting in low reference spurs. A class-F3 oscillator is used to generate a ~10-GHz signal for the feedback divider along with its third harmonic for the harmonic extractor to generate the ~30-GHz output. The proposed ADPLL is implemented in TSMC 28-nm LP CMOS. The prototype generates a 24–31-GHz output carrier with rms jitter of 237 fs while consuming only 12 mW. This corresponds to a state-of-the-art ADPLL ${\mathrm {FoM}}_{\text {jitter-N}}$ of −269 dB in a fractional-N mode. Using a comprehensive digital calibration, the reference spurious tones can be reduced from −33 to −65 dBc.

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