This invention relates in general to L-C resonant circuits, and, more particularly, to an L-C resonant circuit with an adjustable resonance frequency and a method of adjusting the resonance frequency of an L-C resonant circuit.
The demand for transmitters and receivers of greater and greater data rates is forcing manufacturers to realize devices capable of working at higher frequencies with a broad range of adjustment of the frequency. Typically, these devices include an L-C resonant circuit, such as that depicted in
In order to fully exploit the advantages of working at a high frequency, it should be possible to tune these devices, i.e. to adjust the resonance frequency of the L-C resonant circuit. This may be done by including in the resonant circuit a plurality of inductors singularly connectable to the capacitor through selection switches, or by varying the capacitance through varactors.
The main limitation of monolithic implemented resonator-based circuits (e.g. L-C oscillators, filters) is a generally limited tuning range.
The resonant frequency variation attainable by integrated variable capacitors (i.e. MOS or PN junction varactors) is usually limited to about 20-30% for applications in the 1-10 GHz range. This restriction results from design trade-offs between tuning range, noise, phase accuracy (if quadrature is required) and power consumption. Process scaling toward the nanometer scale and the low supply voltage sources of portable applications like wireless devices, makes the problems in using integrated L-C circuits tuned in such a way more severe.
A different tuning approach can be followed based on a configuration with switched inductors. However, this approach is rarely followed because of the finite resistance of the selection switch when conducting worsens the quality factor figure of the resonant circuit.
An L-C resonant circuit the resonance frequency of which may be adjusted without encountering the above noted limitations and drawbacks has now been found.
Differently from known approaches, the L-C resonant circuit of this invention may not use varactors or inductors connectable in the L-C tank circuit through selection switches for varying the resonance frequency.
According to this invention, the resonance frequency is adjusted through a second inductor magnetically coupled with the first inductor that is electrically coupled in parallel (or in series) to the capacitor of the L-C tank circuit in order to achieve the parallel (or series) resonance.
According to this method, the resonance frequency is adjusted by sensing the current flowing through the first inductor and by forcing through the second inductor a bias current that is a scaled and/or out of phase replica of the sensed current.
Preferably, the L-C tank circuit comprises a capacitor connected electrically in parallel to the secondary winding of a transformer providing the inductor of the L-C tank circuit, the primary winding of which is the second inductor that is magnetically coupled to the inductor of the L-C tank circuit.
More precisely, this invention may provide a method of adjusting the resonance frequency of an L-C resonant circuit and an L-C resonant circuit with adjustable resonance frequency, comprising a capacitor and a first inductor connected electrically in parallel or in series, a second inductor magnetically coupled with the first inductor, and a control circuit sensing a signal representing a first AC current flowing through the first inductor and forcing through the second inductor a second AC current that is a scaled and/or outphased replica of the first AC current for setting the resonance frequency of the L-C circuit at a desired value.
The invention will be described referring to the attached drawings, wherein:
The resonance frequency of the L-C tank may be adjusted by controlling the AC current i2 flowing in the second inductor L2. By regulating the phase and/or the amplitude of the AC bias current forced through a primary winding it is possible to vary the resonance frequency of the L-C tank circuit.
Differently from known resonating circuits wherein transformers are commonly used only to achieve better phase noise figures, according to the method, a scaled and/or outphased replica current of the current flowing through the secondary winding L1 is forced through the primary winding L2 in order to vary the resonance frequency.
A mutual magnetic coupling M exists between the two windings. Usually, the strength of the coupling is represented by the pure number k, the value of which ranges between 0 and 1:
From basic circuit inspection the following equation can be written in the time domain:
Considering i1(t) and i2(t) as linearly dependent variables, in such a way that equation (3) is satisfied
i2(t)=α·i1(t) (3)
equation (2) can be rewritten in terms of the voltage V1(t).
The differential equation (4) can be solved with respect to the voltage V1(t)
V1(t)=A cos(2πf0t+Φ) (5)
where the constants A and Φ depends on the Cauchy conditions and f0, the resonance frequency, is given by:
The resonance frequency depends on α, i.e. the ratio between the currents flowing in the secondary and primary coils respectively. The parameter α is a real number that can have positive (in-phase i1(t) and i2(t)), or negative (out-of-phase i1(t) and i2(t)) real part. These options make it possible to obtain resonance frequencies lower or higher than the stand-alone L1C1 tank resonance frequency.
A similar analysis, leading to the same results, can be made in the frequency domain. This technique can lead, in principle, to a very large tuning range. Simulations (Spectre-Momentum) performed for a CMOS 65 nm prototype show a tuning range in excess of 100%, from 3 GHz to 8 GHz.
An effective tuning method based on the above approach may be implemented in a resonating circuit, for example in the L-C oscillator of
The AC voltage V1(t) is sensed to generate the current i2(t) through a transconductance amplifier gm. The gain of this amplifier determines the magnitude of i2(t), and thus the resonance frequency of the L-C tank. Supposing that V1(t) and i1(t) are shifted by 90° (because, in the domain of the Laplace transform, V1(s)=j2πf0L1i1(s)), a phase shifter is inserted in the feedback loop to fix a pre-established phase relation between i1(t) and i2(t).
The active circuit may be as shown a relatively common functional block that is normally used to restore losses and to maintain a stable oscillation (i.e. negative resistance positive feedback latch). Its architecture is well known in the art and therefore it will not be described in detail.
In this way the resonance frequency is given by the following expression:
Of course, this is only an example of implementation. The resonance frequency can be tuned not only by varying the amplitude of i2, as in the circuit of
Another sample application is a quadrature oscillator. Quadrature VCOs, such as the one depicted in
In this embodiment, the transformers are used to couple a number (two or more) of oscillators to obtain a ring oscillator behavior, where many (four or more) output phases are available.
Differently from known architecture, such as those disclosed in the articles by A. Mazzanti, F. Svelto “A 1.8-GHz Injection-Locked Quadrature CMOS VCO With Low Phase Noise and High Phase Accuracy”, IEEE Transactions on circuits and systems—I: Regular papers, Vol. 53, No. 3, March 2006, and A. Rofougaran, J. Rael, M. Rofougaran, A. Abidi “A 900 MHz CMOS LC-Oscillator with Quadrature Outputs, 1996 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference, Feb. 10, 1996, pages 392-393, Paper SP 24.6, wherein such a ring structure is realized with active devices (MOS or bipolar junction transistors), in the circuit of this invention depicted in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VA2007A0009 | Jan 2007 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7098737 | Fujimoto et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080174378 A1 | Jul 2008 | US |