The invention relates to the field of frequency synthesis. More particularly, the invention relates to the field of direct digital synthesis (DDS).
Direct digital synthesis (DDS) is an important frequency synthesis means that provides low cost synthesis with ultra fine resolution. A basic DDS system as shown in
where ƒclk is the DDS sample clock frequency. According to
where A is the full-scale output magnitude of the DAC and t=Tclk·i. While pure sinusoidal waveform is desired at the DDS output, spurious tones can also occur mainly due to the following nonlinear process:
(1) In order to reduce the look-up table ROM size, the phase word is normally truncated before being used as the ROM addresses. This truncation process introduces quantization noise, which can be modeled as a linear additive noise to the phase of the sinusoidal wave.
(2) The ROM word length is normally limited by the finite number of bits of the available DAC. In another word, the sinusoidal waveform can be expressed only by words with finite length, which intrinsically contains quantization error additive to the output amplitude.
Since the FCW can be stepped by unity, the resolution of the DDS is given as ƒclk/2N. A DDS can achieve a very fine resolution if the accumulator size N is large. For example, if a 32-bit accumulator is used, and the DDS operates at clock frequency of 100 MHz, its resolution is 0.0233 Hz. However, fine resolution relies on a large number of accumulator bits, which corresponds to a long phase word. Note that the ROM size is proportional to the addressing range 2N. As a result, a large ROM look-up table is required. In order to reduce the ROM size while keeping a fine step size, only the most significant P bits of the phase word are used to address the ROM. This truncation at the accumulator output causes a quantization error that will be discussed later. The ROM size is equal to 2P·D, where D is the number of amplitude bits and is determined by the number of DAC input bits. While increasing the number of phase bits is always feasible, increasing the number of DAC input bits is limited by the semiconductor technology. Even if the desired number of DAC bits can be implemented using an available technology, adding bits is costly due to large increases in die size and power consumption. Therefore, the goal of DDS design is to minimize the phase truncation error such that the DDS output noise is dominated by the DAC quantization noise.
An additional DDS is shown in
Considering the quantization errors due to phase truncation ep1 and amplitude truncation (finite ROM word length) eA1 and assuming the phase quantization error is small relative to the phase, the ideal DDS output given in (2) shall be modified as:
Thus, the phase error is amplitude modulated on the quadrature signal with respect to the desired signal output. Eq. (3) provides a simple model for the prior art DDS output and its associated quantization errors. The following models the DDS phase truncation errors by analyzing its time sequence.
The phase truncation process introduces quantization noise, which can be modeled as a linear additive noise to the phase of the sinusoidal wave. At time step n, the N-bit phase word at the output of the N-bit phase accumulator is updated as:
Φ[n+1]=(Φ[n]+FCW)mod2N (4)
where Φ[n] represents the phase at time step n, and AmodB represents taking the integer residue of A modulo B. For example, 26 mod16=10. To reduce the ROM size, only the P most significant bits (MSB) of the accumulator output are used to address the look-up table. Truncating the N-bit phase word into P-bits causes a truncation error Ep expressed as:
Ep[n+1]=(Ep[n]+R)mod2N-P (5)
where R is the least significant (N-P)-bits of the FCW value given by:
where └ ┘ denotes the truncation to keep the integer part. Hence, the output amplitude of the NCO can be expressed as:
where S[n] is the amplitude at time step n. This can be compared to the ideal sinusoidal waveform s(t) given by (2). For small truncation error, the above equation becomes:
The first term gives the desired sinusoidal output and second term is the error introduced by phase truncation. As shown, the phase truncation error gives an amplitude-modulated term on the quadrature output. The phase error sequence represented by the truncated N-P bits satisfies the condition that |Ep[n]|<2N-P.
A direct digital synthesis (DDS) circuit utilizes high order delta-sigma interpolators to remove frequency, phase and amplitude domain quantization errors. The DDS employs an n-bit accumulator operative for receiving an input frequency word (FCW) representing the desired frequency output and converts the frequency word to phase information based upon the clock frequency of the DDS. A high-order delta-sigma interpolator is configured in frequency, phase or amplitude domain to noise-shape the quantization errors through a unit defined by the transfer function of 1−(1−z−1)k in either a feedforward or feedback manner. The delta-sigma interpolator of any order can be implemented using a single-stage pipelined topology with noise transfer function of (1−z−1)k. The DDS circuit also includes digital-to-analog converters (DACs) that convert the outputted sine and cosine amplitude words to analog sinusoidal quardrature signals; and deglitch analog low-pass filters that remove the small glitches due to data conversion.
A direct digital synthesis (DDS) architecture and method to remove phase and amplitude quantization errors utilizing an n-bit accumulator operative for receiving an input frequency word representing the desired frequency output and for converting the frequency word to phase information based upon the clock frequency of the DDS. A high-order delta-sigma interpolator which takes the (n-p)-bit truncated frequency error word as its input and processes it through a unit defined by the transfer function of 1−(1−z−1)k. A high-order delta-sigma interpolator which takes the (n-p)-bit phase truncation error word as its input and processes it through a unit defined by the transfer function of 1−(1−z−1)k. A sin/cos loop-up table which can be addressed using the phase word. High-order delta sigma interpolators, which take the (L-D)-bit sin and cos truncation error words as the inputs and process them through delay units defined by the transfer function of 1−(1−z−1)j. Digital-to-analog converters (DACs) that convert the sin and cos amplitude words to analog sinusoidal quardrature signals; and deglitch analog low-pass filters that remove the small glitches due to data conversion and also filter the quantization noises that have been shifted to higher frequency band by delta-sigma interpolators.
a and 1b illustrate a block diagram of a DDS of the prior art.
It is shown that the phase truncation process associated with the conventional DDS architecture introduces quantization error. This work proposes novel delta-sigma modulators that can be used to reduce the quantization noise and spurious tones of the DDS. Delta-sigma modulations are proposed to be implemented in frequency, phase, and/or amplitude domains in DDS. The frequency domain delta-sigma modulation gains advantages of increased dynamic range due to constant input and reduced accumulator size due to frequency control word truncation in frequency domain. The following noise shaping technique can be used to either increase the DDS resolution for high performance applications or to reduce the ROM size for low cost applications. Using the delta-sigma interpolator to remove the phase truncation error, we can build larger accumulator (e.g., n>32 bits) to achieve finer resolution with low quantization noise. Alternatively, without degrading the output spectral purity, we can truncate even more phase bits to obtain smaller ROM size.
In
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a and 3b illustrate the DDS architecture with a kth order phase domain ΔΣ noise shaper to reduce the phase truncation error.
Various delta-sigma topologies can be used to reduce the phase truncation errors in the proposed DDS architecture. Without losing the generality, we illustrate in
It can be seen that the phase error Ep is high-pass filtered by the delta-sigma interpolator before the phase-to-amplitude conversion via the look-up table. It greatly reduces the close-in phase noise and de-correlates the phase truncation error. Thus, the spurious components at the DDS output are greatly reduced or eliminated.
a and 4b illustrate a DDS architecture with a kth order frequency domain ΔΣ noise shaper to reduce the phase truncation error.
Similar to phase domain delta-sigma noise shaping, we propose in
It can be seen that the frequency error Eƒ is high-pass filtered by the delta-sigma interpolator before the phase accumulation. It greatly reduces the close-in phase noise and de-correlates the phase truncation error. Thus, the spurious components at the DDS output are greatly reduced or eliminated. Truncating the frequency control word before the phase accumulation also reduces the phase accumulator size. With the same accumulator size of N=32, the prior art DDS achieves ƒclk/232 step size, while the proposed DDS with 64-to-32 bit frequency word truncation and a frequency domain delta-sigma noise shaper can achieve ƒclk/264 step size.
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It can be seen that both phase truncation error ep and amplitude truncation error eA are high-pass filtered by the sigma-delta interpolators 102 and 110, and removed by the deglitch filters 116. The final output 118 after the deglitch filter is thus given by:
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The implementations of the high-order pipelined single-stage delta-sigma modulators used in the proposed DDS are herein presented. Conceptually, if a block is inserted with transfer function of H(z)=1−He(z) in an accumulator as shown in
Y(z)=X(z)+A(z)H(z)−A(z)=X(z)−E(z)He(z) (14)
where Y(z) is taken from p-bits of MSB of the adder output B(z) and A(z) is obtained from the rest of (n+1−p) bits of MSB of the adder output B(z). It is evident that the input signal X(z) is not affected by the modulator, while the quantization noise E(z), which is truncated word A(z), is filtered by the noise transfer function (NTF) He(z). If the NTF He(z) is the high-pass transfer function of (1−z−1)m, namely, the feedback transfer function H(z)=1−(1−z−1)m, the single-stage modulator is equivalent to a multi-stage noise shape (MASH) modulator with Y(z)=X(z)−E(z)(1−z−1)m. If input frequency word X(z) has n bits, B(z) should have (n+1) bits to protect the carry-out and A(z)H(z) cannot exceed n bits. The modulator output Y(z) can be of any number of bits, offering flexibility in choosing number of output bits. However, the maximum number of bits for A(z)H(z) should be carefully calculated to prevent overflow of the adder.
The conceptual single-stage sigma-delta modulator conceived in
For m=3, H(z)=1−(1−z−1)3=z−1(3−3z−1+z−2). The implementation of the 3rd order single-stage ΣΔ modulator is given in
The implementation of the fourth-order and fifth-order single-stage sigma-delta modulators are illustrated in
The proposed single stage ΣΔ modulators are stable if the number of outputs bits is equal to or larger than the order of the modulator k. If another type of ΣΔ modulator is used for noise shaping, its stability needs to be carefully analyzed. ΣΔ modulators are non-linear systems and their stability analysis is different from linear system analysis. Instability occurs when the input amplitude or the frequency of the ΣΔ modulator exceed a certain value depending on the modulator structure. Under unstable conditions, low frequency signal swing between the minimum and maximum amplitude occurs at the quantizer input. As a result, the quantizer output is saturated (overloaded) and the ΣΔ modulator can no longer track the input signal. For a single-bit quantizer, the saturated quantizer output corresponds to long sequences of ones followed by long sequences of zeros also called limit cycles. It is very difficult for the modulator to get out of the saturated state hence the ΣΔ modulator becomes unstable.
To verify the performance of the proposed DDS with high-order ΣΔ modulators,
a illustrates the spectrum plot after the deglitch filter in a conventional DDS, while
The present invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments incorporating details to facilitate the understanding of the principles of construction and operation of the invention. Such reference herein to specific embodiments and details thereof is not intended to limit the scope of the claims appended hereto. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made in the embodiment chosen for illustration without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application is based on and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of the co-pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application, Ser. No. 60/590,287, filed Jul. 22, 2004, and entitled “HIGH-ORDER DELTA-SIGMA NOISE SHAPING IN DIRECT DIGITAL FREQUENCY SYTHESIS”. The U.S. Provisional Patent Application, Ser. No. 60/590,287, filed Jul. 22, 2004, and entitled “HIGH-ORDER DELTA-SIGMA NOISE SHAPING IN DIRECT DIGITAL FREQUENCY SYTHESIS” is also hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60590287 | Jul 2004 | US |