Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6546059
-
Patent Number
6,546,059
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, December 28, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, April 8, 200321 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 375 215
- 375 294
- 375 327
- 327 147
- 327 148
- 327 156
- 327 157
- 327 552
- 327 554
- 327 560
- 327 561
- 331 17
- 331 25
- 331 36 R
- 331 36 C
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A loop filter in the phase-locked loop includes a capacitor having a specific capacitance value. The loop filter also includes an amplifier coupled to a node of the capacitor. The amplifier amplifies a signal at the node in a way that increases the equivalent capacitance value without physically changing the capacitor.
Description
BACKGROUND
This disclosure relates to phase-locked loops and more specifically, to a loop filter used in a phase-locked loop.
A phase-locked loop (PLL) is often used in designing a precise clock for a system. The PLL takes advantage of negative feedback to constantly adjust the frequency and phase of an oscillator that may change or drift.
FIG. 1
is a simplified block diagram of the PLL. The PLL includes a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO)
100
, a phase and frequency detector
102
, and a feedback frequency divider
104
. The VCO
100
often takes a voltage
106
as its control input and outputs a signal
108
whose frequency is based on the value of the input voltage
106
. The phase and frequency detector
102
operates in reverse. It takes two signals
109
,
110
as its inputs and outputs a voltage
106
based on the difference between the frequencies of the two signals
109
,
110
.
A PLL in a computer system, for example, receives a reference frequency source
110
, such as an external bus clock, and a feedback frequency
109
from the VCO as inputs to the phase and frequency detector
102
. The feedback signal
109
frequency is the VCO output frequency divided by the feedback frequency divider
104
. The output from the phase and frequency detector
102
is then used to control the VCO
100
. When the PLL is locked, the frequency and phase of the reference signal
110
and of the feedback signal
109
are equal. The VCO output
108
frequency is N times the frequency of the reference signal
110
(N is the dividing ratio of the feedback frequency divider
104
). If the VCO
100
starts to drift, the phase and frequency detector
102
detects and corrects the discrepancy.
The output of the PLL circuit can then be used to clock a processor, such as a central processing unit (CPU). Due to the feedback frequency divider
104
, the CPU clock has a significantly higher frequency than the bus clock.
In a preferred design for the PLL, charge pumps and a loop filter are coupled between the frequency comparator
102
and the VCO
100
to control the VCO output frequency. The charge pumps feed pulses of current to a capacitor in the loop filter. The current pulse charges and discharges the loop filter capacitor.
SUMMARY
A loop filter in the phase-locked loop includes a capacitor having a first capacitance. The loop filter also includes an amplifier coupled to a node of the capacitor. The amplifier amplifies a signal at the node in a way that increases the first capacitance without physically changing the capacitor.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Different aspects of the disclosure will be described in reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1
is a simplified block diagram of a phase-locked loop (PLL);
FIG. 2
is a block diagram of the PLL that includes a loop filter;
FIG. 3
shows timing diagrams of output signals from a phase detector;
FIG. 4
is a simplified schematic diagram of a charge pump;
FIG. 5
is a simplified schematic diagram of a conventional loop filter;
FIG. 6
is a simplified schematic diagram of an adaptive integrated loop filter; and
FIG. 7
is a block diagram of a computer system having an adaptive integrated PLL loop filter.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
A phase-locked loop (PLL) circuit, shown in
FIG. 2
, includes a phase detector
200
, one or more charge pumps
202
, a loop filter
204
, a divide-by-N frequency divider
206
, and a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO)
208
. The frequency divider
206
is attached to the feedback loop. The divider
206
allows the PLL output frequency to be N times the reference frequency. Therefore, the VCO
208
is tuned by the PLL to be an N-multiple of the reference frequency.
A phase detector
200
is a digital, edge-sensitive comparator. The phase detector
200
receives two signals, a reference frequency and a feedback frequency (frequency divided VCO output). The detector
200
measures the phase or frequency offset between the two signals, which is equivalent to a time skew (ΔT
err
)
300
in FIG.
3
. The phase detector
200
outputs two voltages, UP and DOWN voltages. The UP voltage pulses logic high, at
302
, when the VCO output
210
lags behind the reference input
212
in phase or frequency. The DOWN voltage pulses logic high when the VCO output leads the reference input in phase or frequency. The UP and DOWN voltage pulses are converted to current pulses by the charge pumps
202
.
A charge pump
400
, shown in
FIG. 4
, is a tri-state switch designed to charge and discharge a capacitor in the loop filter
204
. The charge pump
400
feeds pulses of current (ΔI
CH
)
402
to the capacitor in response to UP and DOWN voltage pulses. The capacitor is charged when the UP voltage is pulsed logic high and is discharged when the DOWN voltage is pulsed logic high. The duration of the current pulse is proportional to the phase error or time skew (ΔT
err
)
300
.
The loop filter
204
is a low-pass filter that filters an error signal coming from the phase detector
200
. The filter
204
converts the current pulses at the output of the charge pump
400
to a VCO control voltage. This results in an output voltage of the loop filter
204
that rises or falls depending on the direction of the phase or frequency difference. The filter
204
is designed to correctly set the bandwidth and the damping factor of the PLL. The resultant output voltage (V
cntl
) controls the VCO
208
by increasing or decreasing the output frequency
210
.
FIG. 5
shows a simplified schematic diagram of a conventional integrated loop filter
500
. Two identical charge pumps
202
drive the filter
500
. The first pump drives the loop filter capacitor C. A voltage, ΔV
c
developed on the capacitor
502
is represented by equation:
where Δt
err
is the instantaneous phase error and ΔI
CH
is the charge current provided by the first charge pump.
When the capacitor
502
is charged, a unity gain amplifier
504
is used as a buffer to repeat the capacitor voltage to its output. The second charge pump drives the loop filter resistor R. Thus, a voltage drop across the loop filter resistor
506
is:
Δ
V
R
=R·ΔI
CH
. [2]
A resultant VCO control voltage
508
is:
Therefore, the control voltage
508
is a function of the loop filter capacitor
502
and resistor
506
, the time skew (ΔT
err
) between the reference frequency and the feedback frequency, and the charge pump current (ΔI
CH
).
Disadvantages of having the control voltage
508
depend on the loop filter capacitor
502
include the capacitor
502
occupying a large portion of the physical area of the PLL. In some embodiments, the loop filter capacitor
502
is approximately 200 to 1000 pico-Farads. The capacitance area can occupy approximately 40% to 70% of the PLL area. Furthermore, the next generation PLLs may require even larger percentages of the PLL area. In other embodiments, a large loop filter capacitor
502
, on the order of about few hundred pico-Farads, also causes high leakage current. An increase in the leakage current may cause other performance and functional degradations, such as ripples on the VCO control voltage
508
. The ripples, in turn, cause jitters on the VCO frequency.
A simplified schematic diagram of the adaptive integrated loop filter
600
according an embodiment of the present invention, shown in
FIG. 6
, addresses some of the above-described disadvantages. In the modified design
600
, the gain of the amplifier
602
can be controlled. The voltage at the output of the amplifier
602
is changed to:
The VCO control voltage
604
is changed to:
In one embodiment, the gain of the amplifier
602
, g, is adjusted to be less than one. Accordingly, the capacitance gain has the effect of increasing the value of the loop filter capacitor
606
, in equations [4] and [5], without physically changing the capacitor value. The effective capacitance becomes kC, where k=1/g. Since g is less than one, k is more than one. Therefore, the effective capacitance kC is larger than C.
For example, if the amplifier gain is set to 0.5, the effective capacitance value is doubled to 2C. Thus, in on embodiment, approximately 50% of the physical area can be saved with a same capacitor value as compared to the conventional amplifier. For such an example, the loop filter
600
may occupy only about 20% to 35% of the PLL physical area instead of the 40% to 70% occupied by the fixed unity gain amplifier
504
. Further, by allowing the gain of the amplifier
602
to be controllable, the PLL parameters, such as a damping factor and loop bandwidth can be easily adjusted. For example, the loop bandwidth and damping factor are affected by the feedback frequency dividing factor N. When N is set (in order to set the CPU clock frequency), the gain of the amplifier
602
is also set to obtain the desired values for loop bandwidth and dumping factor.
FIG. 7
is a block diagram of a computer system
700
. In one embodiment, the computer system
700
includes a PLL
702
having an adaptive integrated loop filter
600
. The PLL
702
receives a bus clock
704
from a bus system
706
. A phase detector in the PLL
702
compares the bus clock signal
704
with a feedback frequency from the VCO. The feedback frequency locks the output of the VCO to the exact multiple frequency of the bus clock
704
.
The output of the PLL
710
is used as a clock source for a processor
712
. The processor
712
is then able to interface with other components of the computer system
700
, such as a memory
714
and I/O devices
716
. Synchronized clocks in the processor
712
and the bus system
706
enable data in the processor
712
, the memory
714
, and the I/O devices
716
to be transferred and shared across the bus system
706
with minimal data latency or data loss.
Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the gain amplifier
602
can be configured as a multistage amplifier having a plurality of op-amps. The amplifier gain can be controlled to provide an optimal effective capacitance value for the loop filter capacitor. Further, PLLs can be used in applications other than the computer system described in FIG.
7
. For example, they can be used in data communication systems, local area networks, and data storage applications.
Claims
- 1. A phase-locked loop circuit comprising:a phase detector to measure a phase or frequency offset between two input signals, said phase detector generating output pulses corresponding to said phase or frequency offset; a charge pump receiving said output pulses, said charge pump providing a charge signal corresponding to said output pulses; and a loop filter including: a capacitor having a first capacitance, said capacitor configured to receive said charge signal, said capacitor providing an output signal, an amplifier to receive said output signal and a gain control signal that makes an amplifier gain of said amplifier controllable, said gain control signal increasing said first capacitance by adjusting said amplifier gain; and a voltage-controlled oscillator configured to adjust its output frequency in response to said amplified control voltage.
- 2. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising:a resistor in said loop filter, said resistor coupled to said amplifier, said resistor, in conjunction with said capacitor, filtering said charge signal.
- 3. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising;a gain control element in said loop filter, said gain control element providing said control signal.
- 4. The circuit of claim 3, wherein said amplifier gain is adjusted to less than one.
- 5. A computer system comprising:a processor; a memory configured to store data; input/output (I/O) devices to send and receive data from the processor and the memory; a bus system coupled to said processor, memory, and I/O devices, said bus system facilitating transfer of data between these devices; and a phase-locked loop coupled to said processor and said bus system, said phase-locked loop providing clocks to enable data synchronization, said phase-locked loop including a loop filter having a capacitor having a first capacitance, said capacitor configured to receive said charge signal, said capacitor providing an output signal, and an amplifier to receive said output signal and a gain control signal that makes an amplifier gain of said amplifier controllable, said gain control signal increasing said first capacitance by adjusting said amplifier gain.
- 6. The system of claim 5, wherein gain of said amplifier is adjustable to less than one.
US Referenced Citations (9)