A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS

Under the influence of increasing demand for high-data-rate communication systems such as 60GHz band applications, the requirements of PLLs keep getting higher. In a mm-Wave direct-conversion transceiver, the quadrature LO signal generation is challenging. The conventional techniques to generate qua...

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Main Authors: Yi, Xiang, Boon, Chirn Chye, Liu, Hang, Lin, Jia Fu, Ong, Jian Cheng, Lim, Wei Meng
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/105598
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16605
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ISSCC.2013.6487767
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1055982019-12-06T21:54:16Z A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS Yi, Xiang Boon, Chirn Chye Liu, Hang Lin, Jia Fu Ong, Jian Cheng Lim, Wei Meng School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (2013 : San Francisco, California, US) DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Under the influence of increasing demand for high-data-rate communication systems such as 60GHz band applications, the requirements of PLLs keep getting higher. In a mm-Wave direct-conversion transceiver, the quadrature LO signal generation is challenging. The conventional techniques to generate quadrature LO signals suffer from many problems. The method of using a divide-by-2 divider after a VCO with double LO frequency is popular in multi-GHz designs, but it is difficult to be realized at mm-Wave frequencies. Employing passive RC complex filters is another way to generate quadrature signals, but high power is required to compensate its loss. The conventional parallel-coupled QVCO seems to be a good choice for mm-Wave application. However, the approach suffers from poor phase noise. This work presents a fully integrated 57.9-to-68.3GHz frequency synthesizer, which employs an in-phase injection-coupled QVCO (IPIC-QVCO) to produce low-phase-noise quadrature signals with low power. 2013-10-18T04:10:15Z 2019-12-06T21:54:16Z 2013-10-18T04:10:15Z 2019-12-06T21:54:16Z 2013 2013 Conference Paper Yi, X., Boon, C. C., Liu, H., Lin, J. F., Ong, J. C., & Lim, W. M. (2013). A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS. 2013 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/105598 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16605 http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ISSCC.2013.6487767 en
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Yi, Xiang
Boon, Chirn Chye
Liu, Hang
Lin, Jia Fu
Ong, Jian Cheng
Lim, Wei Meng
A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
description Under the influence of increasing demand for high-data-rate communication systems such as 60GHz band applications, the requirements of PLLs keep getting higher. In a mm-Wave direct-conversion transceiver, the quadrature LO signal generation is challenging. The conventional techniques to generate quadrature LO signals suffer from many problems. The method of using a divide-by-2 divider after a VCO with double LO frequency is popular in multi-GHz designs, but it is difficult to be realized at mm-Wave frequencies. Employing passive RC complex filters is another way to generate quadrature signals, but high power is required to compensate its loss. The conventional parallel-coupled QVCO seems to be a good choice for mm-Wave application. However, the approach suffers from poor phase noise. This work presents a fully integrated 57.9-to-68.3GHz frequency synthesizer, which employs an in-phase injection-coupled QVCO (IPIC-QVCO) to produce low-phase-noise quadrature signals with low power.
author2 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
author_facet School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Yi, Xiang
Boon, Chirn Chye
Liu, Hang
Lin, Jia Fu
Ong, Jian Cheng
Lim, Wei Meng
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Yi, Xiang
Boon, Chirn Chye
Liu, Hang
Lin, Jia Fu
Ong, Jian Cheng
Lim, Wei Meng
author_sort Yi, Xiang
title A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
title_short A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
title_full A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
title_fullStr A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
title_full_unstemmed A 57.9-to-68.3GHz 24.6mW frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled QVCO in 65nm CMOS
title_sort 57.9-to-68.3ghz 24.6mw frequency synthesizer with in-phase injection-coupled qvco in 65nm cmos
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/105598
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16605
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ISSCC.2013.6487767
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