The present invention relates to an electronic circuit, such as an oscillator circuit, comprising a tuning circuit.
In for example cellular communications equipment, such as mobile phones (or other wireless devices) and radio base stations, oscillator circuits are used to generate local-oscillator (LO) signals for transceiver circuits. The oscillator circuit is typically part of a frequency synthesizer, such as a phase-locked loop (PLL), in which the oscillator is tuned to generate the correct frequency. An example of such a PLL is an all-digital PLL (ADPLL) which uses a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO) circuit.
One common solution for a high frequency oscillator utilizes a cross coupled common source core, and a tunable tank circuit comprising a fixed metal inductor and a variable capacitor. The variable capacitor may be implemented with a back-to-back connected pair of MOS varactors. An example of this is presented in A. I. Hussein, S. Saberi and J. Paramesh, “A 10 mW 60 GHz 65 nm CMOS DCO with 24% tuning range and 40 kHz frequency granularity,” Custom Integrated Circuits Conference (CICC), 2015 IEEE, San Jose, Calif., 2015, pp. 1-4. In a DCO circuit, the variable capacitor may be implemented with a plurality of such pairs of MOS varactors connected in parallel, forming a capacitor bank. Each pair of MOS varactors may be controlled with a single-bit control signal, determining a control voltage of that pair of MOS varactors to be either a first voltage or a second voltage depending on the value of the single-bit control signal. The capacitor bank would thus be controlled by multiple such single-bit control signals, forming a multi-bit tuning word.
In for instance future fifth generation (5G) cellular systems, it is suggested to make use of relatively high frequency ranges, such as in the order of 20-40 GHz. In such applications, the frequency synthesizer may need to provide a relatively wide frequency tuning range, and may also need to provide relatively high spectral purity. It should be noted that other circuits than oscillators, such as filters, may require tuning as well.
The inventor has realized that an improved controllability of an oscillator circuit can be obtained by providing controllable voltages at both the gate nodes and the drain/source nodes of the MOS varactors. For example, this allows the use of different capacitance tuning steps in different frequency ranges. This, in turn, enables controllability of the frequency tuning steps of the oscillator in different frequency ranges. For example, the oscillator can be controlled to have a relatively constant frequency tuning step over a number of different frequency ranges. This tuning technique can be applied to other tunable circuits which utilizes tunable MOS varactors for their tunability as well, such as but not limited to filter circuits.
According to a first aspect, there is provided a differential electronic circuit comprising a tuning circuit connected between a first circuit node and a second circuit node of the electronic circuit. The tuning circuit comprises at least one controllable circuit. Each controllable circuit comprises a first MOS transistor having its drain and source connected to a common node of the controllable circuit and its gate connected to a first internal node of the tuning circuit and a second MOS transistor having its drain and source connected to the common node of the controllable circuit and its gate connected to a second internal node of the tuning circuit. The tuning circuit comprises a first capacitor operatively connected between the first circuit node and the first internal node of the tuning circuit and a second capacitor operatively connected between the second circuit node and the second internal node of the tuning circuit. Furthermore, the tuning circuit comprises a control circuit configured to provide a variably controllable bias voltage to the first and the second internal nodes of the tuning circuit and, to each controllable circuit, a digitally controllable tuning voltage to the common node of the controllable circuit.
The control circuit may comprise a digital-to-analog converter configured to generate the variably controllable bias voltage.
The electronic circuit may comprise a first resistor connected between the first internal node of the tuning circuit and an output of the digital-to-analog converter and a second resistor connected between the second internal node of the tuning circuit and the output of the digital-to-analog converter.
In some embodiments, the digitally controllable tuning voltage is controllable via a single bit.
In some embodiments, the at least one controllable circuit is a single controllable circuit. In other embodiments, the at least one controllable circuit is a plurality of controllable circuits.
The electronic circuit may comprise a plurality of tuning circuits connected in parallel.
The electronic circuit may be an oscillator circuit. The oscillator circuit may be a digitally-controlled oscillator.
According to a second aspect, there is provided an electronic apparatus comprising the electronic circuit of any preceding claim. The electronic apparatus may be a communication apparatus. The communication apparatus may for instance be a wireless device configured to operate in a cellular communications system or a base station configured to operate in a cellular communications system.
According to a third aspect, there is provided a method of controlling the electronic circuit of the first aspect, wherein the electronic circuit in this case is an oscillator circuit. The method comprises selecting a frequency range in which the oscillator circuit is to operate among a plurality of frequency ranges in which the oscillator circuit is capable of operating. Furthermore, the method comprises setting the variably controllable bias voltage based on the selected frequency range. Moreover, the method comprises controlling the digitally controllable tuning voltages of the controllable circuits to tune the frequency of the oscillator circuit within the selected frequency range.
In some embodiments, for a first frequency range and a second frequency range, having a higher center frequency than the first frequency range, setting the variably controllable bias voltage comprises setting the variably controllable bias voltage such that an absolute capacitance tuning step size of the tuning circuit, when changing the digitally controllable tuning voltage of a controllable circuit from a first voltage level to a second voltage level, is higher for the first frequency range than for the second frequency range.
The electronic circuit of the first aspect or the electronic apparatus of the second aspect may comprise control circuitry configured to perform the method of the third aspect.
Further embodiments are defined in the dependent claims. It should be emphasized that the term “comprises/comprising” when used in this specification is taken to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, or components, but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components, or groups thereof.
Further objects, features and advantages of embodiments of the invention will appear from the following detailed description, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The radio base station 2 and wireless device 1 are examples of what in this disclosure is generically referred to as communication apparatuses. Embodiments are described below in the context of a communication apparatus in the form of the radio base station 2 or wireless device 1. However, other types of communication apparatuses can be considered as well, such as a WiFi access point or WiFi enabled device.
Throughout this disclosure, the oscillator circuit 25 is used as an example for the application of a tuning circuit. It should be noted, however, that the tuning circuit according to embodiments may be used also in other types of tunable electronic circuits that rely on tuning a capacitance for tunability, such as filters with tunable capacitors. The tuning circuits and electronic circuits, such as oscillators, described herein can be beneficially integrated on an integrated circuit. Furthermore, the communication apparatuses 1 and 2 are used as examples herein, but said electronic circuit may be comprised in other types of electronic apparatuses as well.
Furthermore, according to the embodiment illustrated in
The control circuit 18 is also configured to provide a digitally controllable tuning voltage to the common node 156 of the controllable circuit 150. It should be noted that the terms “bias voltage” (provided to the internal nodes 158 and 160) and “tuning voltage” (provided to the common node 156) are used as labels in this context to identify and separate the two voltages in the text and not confuse them with each other. However, they both serve to bias and to tune the capacitance of the tuning circuit 140.
According to some embodiments, the tuning voltage is controlled via a single digital control bit, referred to in the following as the tuning bit, and can thus adopt one of two possible values, one ‘high’ voltage (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘1’) and one low' voltage (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘0’). The tuning circuit 140 thus effectively has two states, which we can refer to as a ‘1’-state (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘1’), providing a first capacitance between the circuit nodes 110 and 112, and a ‘0’-state (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘0’) providing a second capacitance between the circuit nodes 110 and 112. We refer to the difference between the first and second capacitance values as the unit capacitance step ΔC. The bias voltage gives a further degree of control over the tuning circuit 140. By varying the bias voltage, the unit capacitance step ΔC can be varied. It should be noted that when MOS transistors 152 and 154 are NMOS transistors, the second capacitance is higher than the first capacitance, and thus ΔC is negative. If PMOS transistors are used instead, then the first capacitance would be higher than the second capacitance, and thus ΔC would be positive.
In
According to some embodiments, similar to what is described above, each of the individual tuning voltages is controlled via an individual single digital control bit, again referred to as tuning bit, and can thus adopt one of two possible values, one ‘high’ voltage (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘1’) and one low' voltage (e.g. when the tuning bit is ‘0’). Together, these individual tuning bits form a multibit tuning word of the tuning circuit. Similar to the embodiment described above with reference to
More generally, as outlined above, above, a differential electronic circuit 25 (which may be an oscillator, but also some other kind of tunable electronic circuit) may comprise one or more tuning circuits 140-i, as described above, each connected between a first circuit node 110 and a second circuit node 112 of the electronic circuit 25.
In some embodiments, the variably controllable bias voltage is a digitally controllable bias voltage. According to some such embodiments, the control circuit 180 may comprise a digital-to-analog converter configured to generate the variably controllable bias voltage from a digital control word. Any type of digital-to-analog converter may be used for this purpose. A relatively simple and efficient implementation can be obtained using a resistor-string digital-to-analog converter, which is illustrated with an example in
Switches 211-218, effectively forming a multiplexer, are connected between the interconnecting nodes between the resistors and the output 182. Switch 211 is connected to the node between resistors 201 and 202. Switch 212 is connected to the node between resistors 202 and 203. Switch 213 is connected to the node between resistors 203 and 204. Switch 214 is connected to the node between resistors 204 and 205. Switch 215 is connected to the node between resistors 205 and 206. Switch 216 is connected to the node between resistors 206 and 207. Switch 217 is connected to the node between resistors 207 and 208. Switch 218 is connected to the node between resistors 208 and 209. An N-bit digital-to-analog converter has 2′ different input words and voltage levels. The digital-to-analog converter in
Implementing control logic for such functionality is a straight-forward task for a person skilled in electronic design and is not further discussed herein. It should be noted that the three-bit digital-to-analog converter is merely an example. The number of bits may be selected depending on the requirements of the particular implementation.
It should be noted that the example illustrated above with reference to
According to some embodiments, the oscillator circuit 25 is a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO). Such DCOs may beneficially be comprised in a digitally controlled frequency synthesizer, such as a digital PLL.
A method of controlling the oscillator 25 is described below with reference to
It follows that
Let ωn denote the angular frequency for a given capacitance Cn. The corresponding change, or unit step, in angular frequency, Δω, when C is changed with a unit capacitance step ΔC from Cn, to Cn+ΔC, is
Hence, for a fixed ΔC, the unit step in angular frequency Δω depends on the angular frequency. Hence, for a relatively wide tuning range for the oscillator 25, the unit step in angular frequency Δω may be considerably different in one end of the tuning range than in the other. In some applications, it may be desirable to have approximately the same Δω over the whole tuning range. For example, the overall tuning range may be divided into a number of frequency ranges in which the oscillator circuit 25 is capable of operating. Such frequency ranges may e.g. correspond to different communication frequency bands which the oscillator circuit 25 could be tuned to. Alternatively, the frequency ranges may be sub ranges of a larger frequency range. The larger frequency range may correspond to communication frequency band within which the oscillator circuit 25 could be tuned to operate in. It may be desirable to have the same Δω for all those frequency ranges. Alternatively, it may be desirable to be able to control Δω individually for the different frequency ranges. Both these options are made possible by means of the variably controllable bias voltage described herein, through which it is possible to control ΔC, and thereby to control Δω. How to control ΔC as a function of angular frequency ω to obtain a desired Δω can be derived from Eq. 3. For example, to obtain a relatively constant Δω over the whole tuning range, ΔC should vary proportionally with ω−3. The value of ΔC can also be derived in terms of the inductance L and capacitance C. It can be derived from Eq. 3 that
|ΔC|=2|Δω|L1/2C3/2 Eq. 4
Equivalently, if frequency f is preferred over angular frequency ω=2πf,
|ΔC|=4π|Δf|L1/2Cn3/2 Eq. 5
What bias voltage to use to obtain a certain ΔC can e.g. be derived using transistor-level 30 computer simulations, for instance as shown below with reference to
Qualitatively speaking, by means of the variably controllable bias voltage, it is thus possible to, in some embodiments, to obtain a relatively fine, or small, frequency tuning step for fine tuning at higher frequencies, while at the same time maintain a relatively wide frequency tuning range for fine tuning at lower frequencies.
An embodiment of the method of controlling the oscillator circuit 25 is shown in
on ω3, which, for a fixed ΔC, would give increasingly larger Δω for increasing ω, |ΔC| can be selected higher for the first frequency range than for the second frequency range. For example, as mentioned above, ΔC can be selected inversely proportional to the cube of the center frequency of the frequency range.
A flowchart of step 320 illustrating this is shown in
It should be noted that the variably controllable bias voltage may be set (e.g. in step 380A or 380B) by first setting it to an initial value, e.g. based on a table look-up or a previously used value stored in a memory. The variably controllable bias voltage may then be calibrated to obtain a desired step size, e.g. for Δω or ΔC.
It should also be noted that even though the example mentions two frequency ranges 360 and 370, this does not exclude that there are more than two frequency ranges in some embodiments. For example, there may be a third frequency range (not shown) with center frequency f3, where f1<f3<f2. If this third frequency range should be used, the variably controllable bias voltage may be set such that ΔC=ΔC3, where |ΔC1|>|ΔC2|.
The present invention has been described above with reference to specific embodiments. However, other embodiments than the above described are possible within the scope of the 25 disclosure. The different features and steps of the embodiments may be combined in other combinations than those described.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/052997 | 2/10/2017 | WO | 00 |