Claims
- 1. An oscillator circuit comprising:
an oscillator having a resonant frequency; an input signal having a frequency about equal to or less than the resonant frequency and having a phase; and a coupler which couples the input signal to an oscillating signal in the oscillator to cause a phase shift of the oscillating signal toward the phase of the input signal.
- 2. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the resonant frequency is about equal to an integer multiple of the frequency of the input signal.
- 3. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 2 wherein the input signal has a pulse duration less than or equal to a pulse duration of the oscillating signal.
- 4. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 3 wherein the oscillating signal is gated by the input signal to stop the oscillator.
- 5. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 3 wherein the input signal comprises a reference clock and a delayed version of the reference clock.
- 6. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 3 further comprising a pulse generator which generates the input signal from a reference clock.
- 7. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 3 wherein each active edge of the input signal moves the phase of the oscillating signal only part of the distance needed to align it with the input signal.
- 8. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the frequency of the input signal is about equal to the resonant frequency.
- 9. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 8 wherein the oscillator filters the input signal.
- 10. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 9 wherein the oscillator filters pulse width variations of the input signal.
- 11. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 9 in combination with an input oscillator which generates the input signal from a reference clock, the oscillator circuit filtering jitter from the reference clock.
- 12. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 9 wherein the coupler provides a filtering time constant which is greater than a cycle time of the input signal.
- 13. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 8 wherein the oscillator amplifies the input signal.
- 14. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 having selective coupling of at least one input signal with at least one oscillating signal to provide phase interpolation.
- 15. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 14 wherein injection signals of multiple phases are selectively coupled to an oscillating signal of the oscillator.
- 16. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 14 wherein an input signal is selectively coupled to oscillating signals of multiple phases.
- 17. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 14 wherein the coupler comprises N digitally adjustable resistors coupled to N oscillating signal phases.
- 18. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 17 wherein at most two resistors couple the input signal at any one time.
- 19. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 18 wherein the conductance of the resistors is varied to interpolate between phases.
- 20. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 17 wherein the resistors comprise NFETs.
- 21. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 20 wherein the resistors comprise segmented NFETs.
- 22. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 17 wherein the resistors comprise transmission gates.
- 23. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 22 wherein the resistors comprise segmented transmission gates.
- 24. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a reference delay.
- 25. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a phase comparator.
- 26. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a replica oscillator.
- 27. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 26 wherein the replica oscillator is controlled by a phase locked loop.
- 28. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 26 wherein the replica oscillator is controlled by a delay locked loop.
- 29. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the oscillator is a ring oscillator.
- 30. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 29 wherein the ring oscillator is a differential oscillator.
- 31. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the ring oscillator comprises inverter delay elements.
- 32. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the coupler comprises a partial NAND gate.
- 33. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the coupler comprises a partial NOR gate.
- 34. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the ring oscillator comprises three stages.
- 35. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the ring oscillator comprises two stages.
- 36. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the coupler comprises a conductance between phases of the ring oscillator.
- 37. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 36 wherein the conductance comprises an FET.
- 38. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 36 wherein the conductance comprises a transmission gate.
- 39. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 30 wherein the ring oscillator comprises source coupled stages.
- 40. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the oscillator is an LC oscillator.
- 41. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the coupler comprises an inverter.
- 42. An oscillator circuit as claimed in claim 1 wherein the coupler comprises a resistor.
- 43. A method of providing an oscillating signal comprising:
generating the oscillating signal in an oscillator, the oscillator having a resonant frequency; and coupling an input signal, having a frequency about equal to or less than the resonant frequency and having a phase, to an oscillating signal in the oscillator to cause a phase shift of the oscillating signal toward the phase of the input signal.
- 44. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein the resonant frequency is about equal to an integer multiple of the frequency of the input signal.
- 45. A method as claimed in claim 44 wherein the input signal has a pulse duration less than or equal to a pulse duration of the oscillating signal.
- 46. A method as claimed in claim 45 wherein the oscillating signal is gated by the input signal to stop the oscillator.
- 47. A method as claimed in claim 45 wherein the input signal comprises a reference clock and a delayed version of the reference clock.
- 48. A method as claimed in claim 45 further comprising generating the input signal from a reference clock in a pulse generator.
- 49. A method as claimed in claim 45 wherein each active edge of the input signal moves the phase of the oscillating signal only part of the distance needed to align it with the input signal.
- 50. A method as claimed in claim 45 wherein the frequency of the input signal is about equal to the resonant frequency.
- 51. A method as claimed in claim 50 wherein the oscillator filters the input signal.
- 52. A method as claimed in claim 51 wherein the oscillator filters pulse width variations of the input signal.
- 53. A method as claimed in claim 51 further comprising generating the input signal in an input oscillator from a reference clock, the oscillator filtering jitter from the reference clock.
- 54. A method as claimed in claim 51 wherein the coupler provides a filtering time constant which is greater than a cycle time of the input signal.
- 55. A method as claimed in claim 50 wherein the oscillator amplifies the input signal.
- 56. A method as claimed in claim 43 comprising selectively coupling at least one input signal with at least one oscillating signal to provide phase interpolation.
- 57. A method as claimed in claim 56 wherein injection signals of multiple phases are selectively coupled to an oscillating signal of the oscillator.
- 58. A method as claimed in claim 56 wherein an input signal is selectively coupled to oscillating signals of multiple phases.
- 59. A method as claimed in claim 56 wherein coupling is through digitally adjustable resistors coupled to N oscillating signal phases.
- 60. A method as claimed in claim 59 wherein at most two resistors couple the input signal at any one time.
- 61. A method as claimed in claim 60 wherein the conductance of the resistors is varied to interpolate between phases.
- 62. A method as claimed in claim 59 wherein the resistors comprise NFETs.
- 63. A method as claimed in claim 62 wherein the resistors comprise segmented NFETs.
- 64. A method as claimed in claim 59 wherein the resistors comprise transmission gates.
- 65. A method as claimed in claim 64 wherein the resistors comprise segmented transmission gates.
- 66. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a reference delay.
- 67. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a phase comparator.
- 68. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein a free running frequency of the oscillator is controlled by a replica oscillator.
- 69. A method as claimed in claim 68 wherein the replica oscillator is controlled by a phase locked loop.
- 70. A method as claimed in claim 68 wherein the replica oscillator is controlled by a delay locked loop.
- 71. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein the oscillator is a ring oscillator.
- 72. A method as claimed in claim 71 wherein the ring oscillator is a differential oscillator.
- 73. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the ring oscillator comprises inverter delay elements.
- 74. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the coupler comprises a partial NAND gate.
- 75. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the coupler comprises a partial NOR gate.
- 76. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the ring oscillator comprises three stages.
- 77. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the ring oscillator comprises two stages.
- 78. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the coupler comprises a conductance between phases of the ring oscillator.
- 79. A method as claimed in claim 78 wherein the conductance comprises an FET.
- 80. A method as claimed in claim 78 wherein the conductance comprises a transmission gate.
- 81. A method as claimed in claim 72 wherein the ring oscillator comprises source coupled stages.
- 82. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein the oscillator is an LC oscillator.
- 83. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein the coupler comprises an inverter.
- 84. A method as claimed in claim 43 wherein the coupler comprises a resistor.
- 85. An oscillator circuit comprising:
oscillator means having a resonant frequency; an input signal having a frequency about equal to or less than the resonant frequency and having a phase; and coupler means which couples the input signal to an oscillating signal in the oscillating means to cause a phase shift of the oscillating signal toward the phase of the input signal.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/269,984, filed on Feb. 20, 2001.
[0002] The entire teachings of the above application are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60269984 |
Feb 2001 |
US |