Delay circuit with current steering output symmetry and supply voltage insensitivity

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6690242
  • Patent Number
    6,690,242
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, January 29, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 10, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
A circuit for providing a symmetrical output signal to a communication system. The circuit includes an input circuit (22 and 24) for receiving an input signal and a symmetry circuits (205 and 210) advantageously configured to provide an output signal exhibiting a symmetrical rising and falling edge waveform in response to the received input signal. An integrated power source (Is) provides current to a common node (N1) in which current is advantageously steered to each half circuit (22, 205 and 24, 210) to reduce voltage variation on the common node during voltage transition of the input signal, hence, reducing current fluctuation from the current source.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Technical Field of the Invention




The present invention relates generally to the field of integrated circuits and, more particularly, to oscillator delay cells.




2. Description of Related Art




Controlled ring oscillators are common building blocks in most communication systems, especially in applications such as phase locked loops, clock generations and clock distributions. The frequency of operation, jitter or phase noise, tuning range and frequency stability with temperature, supply voltage variation are typical characteristics which must be considered when designing oscillators. Differential ring oscillators, in particular, offer a key advantage of being integratable on a chip without external components, which becomes very important for applications where space is very limited. LC oscillator or crystal oscillators generally provide low jitter or phase noise, but also generally require external chip components. Some disadvantages of typical CMOS differential ring oscillators include a relatively lower phase noise performance and the increased sensitivity to supply voltage change when compared to LC oscillator or a crystal oscillator.




In general, a differential ring oscillator is comprised of several cascaded stages of identical differential delay cells connected in such a manner as to provide an effective phase inversion allowing oscillation. Typically, these stages are used to provide the instability and feedback necessary for oscillation. The amount of jitter or phase noise in a ring oscillator is determined by the nature of the differential delay cells and the biasing tail currents, particularly in a low power application. To reduce the overall jitter and phase noise of a ring oscillator, care must be taken to ensure that each differential delay cell contributes minimal noise. Furthermore, the device noise of each tail current transistor is also a considerable source of jitter, particularly, in extra low power applications.




Therefore, there is a need for a differential delay cell which reduces or eliminates phase, jitter, and/or flicker noise for use in ring oscillators, PLL, DLL, and other communication systems, in low power applications.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention achieves technical advantages as a circuit for providing a symmetrical signal to a communication system which can be integrated in oscillator type circuits, for example. In one embodiment, the circuit includes a pair of half circuits having respective inputs for receiving a differential signal pair, and a pair of symmetry circuits coupled to the half circuits and advantageously configured to provide an output signal exhibiting a symmetrical waveform in response to the received differential input signal. The circuit further enables current steering to each half circuit to advantageously reduce voltage variation on a common node, hence, reducing current fluctuation from a current source.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




For a more complete understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:





FIG. 1

illustrates a block diagram of a differential current steering delay cell in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 2A

illustrates a circuit diagram of a differential current delay cell in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention; and





FIG. 2B

illustrates a circuit diagram of a differential current delay cell in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The numerous innovative teachings of the present application will be described with particular reference to the presently preferred exemplary embodiments. However, it should be understood that this class of embodiments provides only a few examples of the many advantageous uses and innovative teachings herein. In general, statements made in the specification of the present application do not necessarily delimit any of the various claimed inventions. Moreover, some statements may apply to some inventive features, but not to others.




Oscillators may occur in many forms. The simplest form of an oscillator is an amplifier with positive feedback. This type of oscillator is one which generates a signal where the output voltage oscillates, meaning that it swings up and down in a regular pattern or wave such as a sine wave, for example. A ring type oscillator generally includes a plurality of stages or differential delay cells connected in a ring configuration as is known in the art. In operation, the outputs of the first differential delay cell act as inputs to the next delay cell, and so on.




By studying the impulse response of an oscillator it can be seen that upconversion of 1/∫ noise can be managed by designing a differential cell which operates to give a symmetrical rising and falling waveform on the outputs of the individual delay cells. For a more detailed discussion of noise in oscillators, reference can be made to, A. Hajimiri and T. H. Lee, “A general theory of phase noise in electrical oscillators,” IEEE JSSC, 33(2): 179-194, 1998 and A. Hajimir, S. Limatyrakis, and T. H. Lee, “Jitter and phase noise in ring oscillator,” IEEE JSSC, 34(6): 790-804, 1999, the descriptions of which are incorporated herein by reference.




Referring now to

FIG. 1

there is illustrated a block diagram of a differential current steering delay cell


100


, in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, including an inverting delay cell


120


and a symmetry cell


110


. The inverting delay cell


120


is operable to receive a differential input signal (input


1


and input


2


) and outputs inverted delayed signals (output


1


and output


2


) in response to the received input signal in which output


1


corresponds to input


1


and output


2


corresponds to input


2


. In operation, assuming the first differential input signal input


1


is logic high and the second differential input signal input


2


is logic low, positive output signal output


1


is low and negative output signal output


2


is high. There is a propagation delay time between the input signals input


1


and input


2


and the output signals output


1


and output


2


. Assuming the first differential input signal input


1


is low and the second differential input signal input


2


is high, the positive output signal output


1


becomes high and the negative output signal output


2


becomes low, and there is again a propagation delay time between the input and output signals.




A typical technique for noise reduction is to increase the supply current, however, low power designs simply cannot supply the larger noise reduction currents necessary for this method of noise reduction. The symmetry cell


110


can operate to reduce noise in low power designs for a given supply current.




The symmetry cell


110


is electrically coupled to the inverting delay cell


120


forming an integrated pair of circuits connected at a common mode node. The circuit pair includes an input for receiving a differential input signal (input


1


and input


2


) and an output for outputting a delayed differential signal (output


1


and output


2


) responsive to the input signal. The symmetry cell


110


is configured to provide symmetry to the rising and falling edges of the differential output signal (output


1


and output


2


) waveform produced by the delay cell


120


. A symmetrical waveform advantageously reduces or eliminates the low-frequency-noise (1/∫) upconversion in a time-varying phase-noise model.




Additionally, the symmetry cell


110


is configured to advantageously steer the current into the circuit pair to reduce the voltage variation on the common mode node. Reduced voltage variation on the common mode node consequently reduces kickback which operates to reduce or eliminate noise (i.e., current variance) from a transistor type current source.




Referring now to

FIG. 2A

there is illustrated an example of the circuit pair of

FIG. 1

in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, including input circuits


22


and


24


respectively coupled to symmetry output circuits


205


and


210


. Thus, the circuit pair of

FIG. 1

is partitioned into half circuits


22


,


205


and


24


,


210


, each half circuit including half (


22


or


24


) of the delay cell and half (


205


or


210


) of the symmetry cell. Input circuits


22


and


24


are coupled to respective inputs (corresponding to input


1


and input


2


in

FIG. 1

) for receiving differential signals V


inp


and V


inm


and output circuits


205


and


210


are coupled to respective outputs (corresponding to output


1


and output


2


in

FIG. 1

) for providing differential signals V


outm


and V


outp


. Additionally, input circuits


22


and


24


are connected to voltage supply VDD through current source I


s


. The current source I


s


can be, for example, a transistor configured to supply a tail current in the micro-ampere range with its source connected to the voltage supply VDD, its drain connected to common mode node N


1


, and gated by a separate control signal (not explicitly shown.




Regarding input circuit


22


, the source of transistor MP


1


is connected at common mode node N


1


which is a shared node of current source I


s


. The gate of MP


1


is connected to differential input V


inp


and the drain of transistor MP


1


is connected to the drain of transistor MN


1


at node N


2


. The source of MN


1


is connected to ground (or power supply) and its gate is coupled to differential input V


inp


. For input circuit


24


, the source of transistor MP


3


is also connected at N


1


. The gate of MP


3


is connected to differential input V


inm


and the drain of transistor MP


3


is connected to the drain of transistor MN


3


at node N


3


. The source of MN


3


is connected to ground and its gate is coupled to differential input V


inm


.




The parallel symmetry output circuits


205


and


210


are connected to the common mode node N


1


. More specially, for symmetry output circuit


205


, the source of transistor MP


2


is connected to node N


1


. The drain and gate of MP


2


are connected to node N


2


. The drain and gate of MN


2


are also connected to node N


2


and its source is connected to ground. One of the symmetrical differential output signals (V


outm


) is provided at node N


2


.




For symmetry output circuit


210


, the source of transistor MP


4


is connected to common mode N


1


. The drain and gate of MP


4


are connected to node N


3


. The drain and gate of transistor MN


4


are also connected to node N


3


and its source is connected to ground. The other symmetrical differential output signal (V


outp


) is provided at node N


3


. There is a propagation delay time between the input signals V


inp


and V


inm


and the corresponding responsive output signals V


outm


and V


outp


. In at least one embodiment, transistors MP


1


, MP


2


, MP


3


, MP


4


, MN


1


, MN


2


, MN


3


, and MN


4


are metal-oxide semiconductor (MOS) transistors. Further, in at least one embodiment, MP


1


, MP


2


, MP


3


and MP


4


are p-channel MOS transistors and MN


1


, MN


2


, MN


3


, and MN


4


are n-channel MOS transistors all of which can be integrated as a complementary MOS device.




Jitter and/or phase noise caused by the up-conversion of the low frequency component of the noise is reduced or eliminated by sizing the transistors to enable output signals V


outm


, and V


outp


with respective waveforms exhibiting symmetrical rising and falling edges. The rising and falling edge on each of the outputs can be symmetrically shaped by choosing equal sizes for the corresponding transistors.




In operation when the input signal level is between a minimum (min) and a midpoint [(max−min)/2+min], the transistors MP


1


and MN


2


are conducting and the gain is determined approximately by gmp


1


/gmn


2


(gmp


1


is the transconductance of MP


1


and gmn


2


is the transconductance of MN


2


). When the signal level is between the midpoint and maximum (max), transistors MN


1


and MP


2


are conducting and the gain is determined approximately by gmn


1


/gmp


2


(gmn


1


is the transconductance of MN


1


and gmp


2


is the transconductance of MP


2


). The size of the transistors are advantageously selected so that these two gains are similar, therefore, the rising and falling edges of the output signal are approximately symmetrical. The same explanation holds for the other half of the circuit (MN


3


, MN


4


, MP


3


and MP


4


). Note, for example, that when MN


1


and MP


1


are sized to have approximately the same transconductance, and MN


2


and MP


2


are sized to have approximately the same transconductance, then gmn


1


/gmp


2


≈gmp


1


/gmn


2


. The gain is, in some embodiments, selected to be as low as possible while guaranteeing the oscillation.




The output voltage swing, of the differential current steering delay cell, is advantageously limited, enabling a limited oscillation magnitude which also enables an oscillation frequency that is insensitive to supply voltage variations. By applying the diode-connected transistors (MN


2


and MP


2


; MN


4


and MP


4


) the output magnitude is limited to the gate-to-source voltage, V


gs


, of the transistors which are not supply dependent. Therefore, the output magnitude and the oscillation frequency are insensitive to the supply voltage. For example, in an operating voltage range of approximately 1.1 to approximately 1.5, simulation results show that for a voltage variation of 10 mV, the oscillation magnitude and oscillation frequency exhibit little or no variations.




Additionally, transistors MP


2


and MP


4


(which are connected to the common mode node N


1


) advantageously steer current into each half circuit of the differential delay cell, reducing the voltage variation on N


1


and, thereby, reducing the kickback from the delay cell to the current source I


s


. Consequently, current source fluctuation or noise is reduced.




Kickback from the delay cell causes a modulation of the drain-source voltage (V


ds


) of a transistor current source which, thereby, modulates the current supplied to the delay cell. Delay cells which enable a more constant supply current throughout the period of oscillation further improves the phase-noise characteristics of, for example, an oscillator or clock generator employing the differential delay cell.




In accordance with the present invention, when the input signal level (V


inp


) is between the minimum and midpoint, the transistor MP


1


and MN


2


conduct on one side and MN


3


and MP


4


conduct on the other side (since this is a differential circuit, the other input (V


inm


) will be between the midpoint and maximum). During this phase, transistors MN


1


, MP


2


, MP


3


, and MN


4


are off. When signal level V


inp


is between the midpoint and maximum, transistor MN


1


and MP


2


conduct on one side and MP


3


and MN


4


conduct on the other side, and transistors MP


1


, MN


2


, MN


3


, and MP


4


are off during this phase.




To further illustrate, suppose MP


2


and MP


4


are not used, during the transition from MP


1


conducting (MP


3


off) to MP


3


conducting (MP


1


off), the circuit is not fully conducting. Since there is no flow path for the full tail current, the tail current is reduced by modulating the V


ds


which in turn disadvantageously modulates the voltage on N


1


. By adding MP


2


and MP


4


, even during the signal voltage transition, the current can flow through either MP


2


or MP


4


depending on the transition direction, thus advantageously reducing the tail current variation and hence the voltage on N


1


. For example, during the transition when MP


1


is off and MP


3


starts to conduct, the current can flow through MP


2


. So MP


2


and MP


4


act to steer the current into each half circuit and make the transition smoother to reduce the voltage variation on N


1


.





FIG. 2B

illustrates another embodiment of a differential current steering delay cell


250


in accordance with the present invention. The transistor circuit arrangement is similar to that of

FIG. 2A

except for the removal of current source I


s


and the addition of the current sink I


sk


between the input circuits


22


and


24


, symmetry output circuits


205


and


210


, and ground. All other aspects operate similar to the above description for FIG.


2


A.




Although a preferred embodiment of the method and system of the present invention has been illustrated in the accompanied drawings and described in the foregoing Detailed Description, it is understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments disclosed, but is capable of numerous rearrangements, modifications, and substitutions without departing from the spirit of the invention as set forth and defined by the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. An apparatus for providing an output signal waveform responsive to an input signal waveform, comprising:an input adapted to receive said input signal waveform; an output adapted to output said output signal waveform; a delay circuit coupled between said input and said output; and a symmetry circuit coupled to said delay circuit and cooperable therewith to produce a gain characteristic between said input and said output that provides said output signal waveform with approximately symmetrical rising and falling edges, wherein said delay circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said input, and wherein said symmetry circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said output, wherein said gain characteristic is determined by one of a ratio of a transconductance of said delay circuit first MOS transistor and said symmetry circuit second MOS transistor and a further ratio of a transconductance of said delay circuit second MOS transistor and said symmetry circuit first MOS transistor, and wherein said MOS transistors associated with said ratio are sized to provide approximately equal transconductance and said MOS transistors associated with said further ratio are sized to provide approximately equal transconductance.
  • 2. An apparatus for providing an output signal waveform responsive to an input signal waveform, comprising:an input adapted to receive said input signal waveform; an output adapted to output said output signal waveform; a delay circuit coupled between said input and said output; and a symmetry circuit coupled to said delay circuit and cooperable therewith to produce a gain characteristic between said input and said output that provides said output signal waveform with approximately symmetrical rising and falling edges, wherein said delay circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said input, and wherein said symmetry circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said output, and wherein said delay circuit first MOS transistor includes a gate coupled to said input, a source coupled to a common node, and a drain coupled to said output, and said delay circuit second MOS transistor includes a gate coupled to said input, a source coupled to a power supply and a drain coupled to said output, and wherein said symmetry circuit first MOS transistor includes a source coupled to said common node and a gate and drain coupled to said output, and said symmetry circuit second MOS transistor includes a source coupled to said power supply and a gate and drain coupled to said output.
  • 3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein said gain characteristic is determined by said ratio and said further ratio, and wherein said ratio is determinative when said input signal waveform is between a minimum voltage and a midpoint voltage and said further ratio is determinative when said input signal waveform is between said midpoint voltage and a maximum voltage.
  • 4. The apparatus of claim 2 further including a current source coupled to said delay circuit and said symmetry circuit at a common node and operable to supply a current.
  • 5. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein said delay circuit and said symmetry circuit are further cooperable to provide said output signal waveform with a magnitude that is insensitive to a variaton in operating voltage for said delay circuit and said symmetry circuit.
  • 6. An apparatus for providing an output signal waveform responsive to an input signal waveform, comprising:an input adapted to receive said input signal waveform; an output adapted to output said output signal waveform; a delay circuit coupled between said input and said output; and a symmetry circuit coupled to said delay circuit and cooperable therewith to produce a gain characteristic between said input and said output that provides said output signal waveform with approximately symmetrical rising and falling edges, wherein said delay circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said input, and wherein said symmetry circuit comprises a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor coupled to said output, wherein said gain characteristic is determined by one of a ratio of a transconductance of said delay circuit first MOS transistor and said symmetry circuit second MOS transistor and a further ratio of a transconductance of said delay circuit second MOS transistor and said symmetry circuit first MOS transistor, and wherein said MOS transistors are sized to provide approximately equal gain for each of said ratios.
Parent Case Info

This application claims the benefit of provisional application No. 60/343,115 filed Dec. 12, 2001.

US Referenced Citations (3)
Number Name Date Kind
6348839 Aramaki Feb 2002 B1
6469585 Dai et al. Oct 2002 B1
20010002115 Hwang et al. May 2001 A1
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
Ali Hajimiri, Sotirios Limotyrakis, and Thomas H. Lee, “Jitter and Phase Noise in Ring Oscillators,” IEEE Journal Of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 34, No. 6, pp. 790-804, Jun. 1999.
Ali Hajimiri, “A General Theory of Phase Noise in Electrical Oscillators,” IEEE Journal Of Solid-State Circuits, vol 33, No. 2, pp. 179-194, Feb. 1998.
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/343115 Dec 2001 US