Sweden
Cover image:The cover image illustrates a sine-shaped "wordle" of the thesis.Printed by LiU-Tryck, Linköping University Linköping, Sweden, 2014 iii
AbstractEver increasing demand for high speed transmission of large data between the electronic devices within a wireless personal area network has been motivating the development of the appropriate wireless standards. Ultra-wideband (UWB) communication employs the unlicensed frequency spectrum of 3.1 -10.6 GHz and utilizes a low average transmit power to offer the potential for high data rates in short range wireless links. WiMedia specification for UWB employs a frequency hopping scheme which requires a very fast hopping speed of 9.47 ns. Also, the strong interferers from the coexisting wireless technologies put stringent requirements on synthesizer's sideband spurs. Satisfying such challenging requirements using conventional frequency synthesis approaches is impractical and demands for exploration, analysis and design of new synthesizer architectures.Essential characteristics of a delay-locked loop (DLL), such as its first-order loop stability, relatively wide loop bandwidth, and low jitter accumulation, make DLL-based architectures attractive candidates for fast switching and low phase noise frequency synthesis applications. However, as an edge-combiner (EC) is required to produce different frequencies than that of the reference clock, any misalignment in equallyspaced DLL output edges will generate an erroneous periodicity, resulting in reference sideband spurs at the output spectrum of the frequency synthesizer.This thesis investigates the opportunities and challenges of employing DLL-based architectures to synthesize carrier frequencies for wireless applications, specifically UWB communication. The dissertation has contributed to two aspects of the topic; mathematical modeling and analysis, as well as circuit design and implementation.A comprehensive behavioral model of the harmonic spur levels in edge-combining DLL-based frequency synthesizers is developed which includes the effects of the stagedelay mismatch, the static phase error of the locked-loop, and the duty cycle distortion iv of the reference clock. Utilizing Fourier series representation of the DLL output phases, an analytical expression for synthesizer's spur levels is derived. Applying Taylor series approximations and moment methods to the analytical formula, closed-form expressions are obtained for the probability density function and mean value of the harmonic spur magnitudes. Finally, a Monte Carlo-free spur-aware design flow is introduced which significantly accelerates the iterative design procedure of the synthesizer. Accuracy and robustness of the prediction method against wide-range values of the non-idealities are investigated and verified through Monte Carlo simulations of the synthesizer's behavioral and transistor-level model in a 65-nm CMOS process.Three DLL-based architectures are developed and designed. In the first architecture, fast hopping frequency synthesis is achieve...