The disclosure relates to a Digital Delta-Sigma Modulator for use in a Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer system and method.
A frequency synthesizer is an essential component of wireless communication systems. An indirect frequency synthesizer based on a phase-locked loop produces an output frequency that is locked to a precise reference. In this application, the output frequency will be referred to as the VCO frequency, denoted fVCO. The reference frequency, corresponding to that at the reference input of the phase detector, is denoted fPD.
In an integer-N frequency synthesizer, the relationship between the output and reference frequencies is:
f
VCO
=N
0
f
PD,
where the division ratio N0 is a positive integer. The frequency resolution is given by fres=fPD.
An error signal is produced by the phase detector with a period of 1/fPD. This produces a so-called reference spur. To attenuate the reference spur, the bandwidth of the loop filter is made much less than fPD. This low bandwidth has two important consequences:
1) the transient response of the loop is relatively slow, and
2) the energy storage elements in the loop filter are physically large.
An improved solution is the so-called fractional-N frequency synthesizer, in which the average division ratio in the feedback path is a fractional number. For the same frequency resolution fres, a larger value of fPD, and consequently a larger loop bandwidth, can be used. This has the advantages of a faster transient response and a physically smaller loop filter.
An integer-N synthesizer has a fixed division ratio N0 in the feedback path between the VCO and the phase detector. By contrast, in a fractional-N frequency synthesizer as disclosed by T. Riley, “Frequency synthesizers having dividing ratio controlled by sigma-delta modulator,” U.S. Pat. No. 4,965,531, Oct. 23, 1990, shown in
where M1 is called the modulus of the DDSM. For ease of implementation, M1 is typically a large power of two, N0 and N1 are positive integers, and N1<M1.
The frequency resolution is defined by:
in this case. For the same value of fPD, the frequency resolution of the fractional N synthesizer is improved by a factor of M1 compared to the integer-N architecture.
Advanced frequency synthesizers need fPD to be large for fast switching and low phase noise. Furthermore, they require a small frequency step for high resolution. In any given technology, there is a maximum frequency at which the MMD can be updated; the larger the modulus, the smaller this frequency is. Hence a problem with fractional synthesizers is that the implementation technology imposes an upper bound on the update frequency fPD and therefore the modulus and the resolution.
It is therefore an object of the disclosure to provide a new modulator design for increasing the frequency at which the MMD can be updated and thereby improving the performance of a fractional synthesizer system and method.
Accordingly there is provided a digital modulator system for use in a fractional-N frequency synthesizer, said system comprising:
In one embodiment said first or second modulator comprises a digital delta-sigma modulator.
In one embodiment said first modulator comprises pipelined logic, such that said pipelining of the modulators, the digital signal, and the combination logic allows higher operation speed of said digital modulator system.
In one embodiment the system comprises nested pipelining adapted to split the bus signal more than two times.
In one embodiment the combination of bus-splitting and pipelining in the modulator system is configured to provide an output signal to maximize the update rate of a multimodulus divider of said fractional-N frequency synthesizer. It will be appreciated that fractional-N frequency synthesizer with higher fPD facilitated by pipelined bus-splitting DDSM. It will be further appreciated that a fractional-N frequency synthesizer with higher fPD is facilitated by pipelined bus-splitting DDSM.
In another embodiment the invention provides a new fractional-N frequency synthesizer which uses a combination of bus-splitting and pipelining to allow the controller of the multi-modulus divider to operate at a higher update rate and/or with a larger word length than would otherwise be possible. This offers at least two advantages over state of the art solutions, namely: (a) a higher update rate enables the use of a higher reference frequency, resulting in a smaller loop filter, a smaller division ratio, and therefore lower phase noise; (b) a larger word length enables the use of a larger modulus, resulting in higher frequency resolution.
In one embodiment there is provided a digital modulator system for use in a fractional-N frequency synthesizer, said system comprising:
In another embodiment there is provided is provided a digital modulator system for use in a fractional-N frequency synthesizer, said system comprising:
In a further embodiment A fractional-N frequency synthesizer comprising a digital modulator system, said system comprising:
In another embodiment there is provided a fractional-N frequency synthesizer comprising a digital modulator system, wherein the system comprises a first and a second modulator configured with a bus-splitting function and a pipelining function to allow the controller of a multi-modulus divider to operate.
There is also provided a computer program comprising program instructions for causing a computer program to carry out the above method which may be embodied on a record medium, carrier signal or read-only memory.
The invention will be more clearly understood from the following description of an embodiment thereof, given by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:—
a, b, and c illustrate implementations of the DDSM1, DDSM2, and DDSM3 configurations;
a, b, and c illustrate prior art block diagrams of pipelined first-, second-, and third-order MASH DDSMs, labeled pDDSM1, pDDSM2, and pDDSM3, respectively;
A fractional-N frequency synthesizer generates a frequency fVCO which is a rational multiple of a precise reference frequency (fPD). The smallest frequency step (fres=fPD/M1) is determined by the modulus (M1) of the digital delta-sigma modulator (DDSM) which controls the divider in the feedback path of a phase-locked loop: the larger the modulus, the smaller the frequency step.
The DDSM must perform a number of computations per clock cycle. The speed at which the DDSM can be clocked (denoted fDDSM) is determined by the time taken to complete the slowest step in the computation, typically the addition of two binary words. In a typical DDSM, the modulus M1 is related to the bus width N by:
M
1=2N
The time taken to complete the addition of two N-bit words can be made to scale almost linearly with N. Thus, the maximum frequency at which the DDSM can be clocked is determined by the inherent speed of the technology (fmax) and the bus width N.
All of the computation in the DDSM in a frequency synthesizer that is required to calculate the next update of the multi-modulus divider must be completed within one cycle of the DDSM's clock. The maximum clock frequency of the DDSM is fPD. Thus,
Advanced frequency synthesizers need fPD to be large for fast switching and low phase noise; they also require a small frequency step (equivalently, large N) for high resolution. Note, however, that the upper bound on fPD scales as 1/N.
The modulator of the present invention relaxes the dependence of fDDSM on the modulus M1, permitting a higher value of fPD and/or a higher value of modulus (and consequently a smaller fres) in a given technology than the state of the art solution. By replacing a conventional DDSM with the pipelined bus-splitting DDSM herein described, this invention can improve the performance of every existing fractional-N frequency synthesizer.
Y(z)=STF(z)X(z)+NTF(z)Eq3(z) (1)
where X(z), Eq3 (z), STF(z) and NTF(z) are the z-transforms of the input signal, the quantization noise and the signal and noise transfer functions, as shown in a publication by K. Hosseini and M. Kennedy, Minimizing Spurious Tones in Digital Delta-Sigma Modulators, Springer, 2011.
A popular implementation of the DDSM3 configuration is the Multi stage noise Shaping (MASH) architecture shown in
The power spectrum of the output, shown in
The idea of bus-splitting as described in a paper by B. Fitzgibbon, M. Kennedy, and F. Maloberti, “Hardware reduction in digital delta-sigma modulators via bus-splitting and error masking—Part I: Constant input,” IEEE Trans. Circuits and Systems—Part I: Regular Papers, vol. 58, no. 9, pp. 2137-2148, September 2011 (and further developed in B. Fitzgibbon, M. P. Kennedy and F. Maloberti. Hardware Reduction in Digital Delta-Sigma Modulators via Bus-Splitting and Error Masking—Part II: Non-constant Input. IEEE Trans. Circuits and Systems-Part I, vol. 59, no. 9, pp. 1980-1991, September 2012) shows that the shaped quantization noise produced by lower order auxiliary DDSMs that preprocess the LSBs of a digital signal before applying in to a main DDSM can be masked by the shaped quantization noise of the latter. The inventors found that instead of passing a signal directly through a (primary) DDSM with a wide bus, the signal x is pre-processed by first passing its least significant bits (LSBs) through a secondary DDSM, thereby reducing the word length of the signal applied to the primary DDSM. If the shaped quantization noise added by the secondary DDSM is spectrally masked by the shaped quantization noise added by the primary DDSM, then the overall system performance is not degraded. However, the bus width of the primary DDSM is reduced, thereby allowing it to be clocked at a higher speed. In the frequency synthesizer application, this enables a higher update rate for the multi-modulus divider.
It will be appreciated that the bus can be split more than once. When the bus is split multiple times, this is called nested bus-splitting.
The output Y (z) in this case is defined by:
where STF(z) and NTF(z) are the same z-transforms of the signal and noise transfer functions as before, and NTF1 (z) and NTF2 (z) are the noise transfer functions of the DDSM1 and DDSM2, respectively.
In the case where DDSM1, DDSM2, and DDSM3 are of the form shown in FIGS. 4,a, b and c, respectively, the output Y (z) is given by:
The power spectrum of the output, shown in
The system provides a pipelined bus-splitting DDSM. Although bus-splitting alone reduces the bus width and thereby facilitates an increased update rate of the DDSM, the combination of employing pipelining allows even higher operation speeds. The output Y(z) of a typical pipelined 1th order DDSM is defined by:
In order to maximize the rate at which the output Y of the DDSM is updated in the frequency synthesizer application, the bus-splitting DDSM is pipelined, as shown in
The design example, as shown in
The speed bottleneck in a fractional-N frequency synthesizer is frequently the time required by the DDSM in the divider controller to calculate and update the division ratio. The update rate is inversely proportional to the bus width of the modulator. The throughput of a DDSM can be maximized by exploiting a combination of bus-splitting and pipelining. Bus-splitting reduces the bus width, thereby enabling a higher update rate. Pipelining maximizes the throughput, albeit increasing the latency. In frequency synthesis applications, latency is less important than update rate.
By increasing the update rate, a larger reference frequency fPD can be used. This has advantages in terms of the size of the loop filter and the noise performance of the system. If a higher reference frequency is not required, the extra speed can be used to increase the effective bus width of the DDSM, thereby increasing the frequency resolution.
The embodiment described herein comprises an integrated circuit. Although it will be appreciated that the system can be applied to all DDSM architectures including EFM and SQ-DDSM, the greatest speed advantage found to date is in MASH architectures. All orders of modulator (not just third order) can be used to implement the invention.
It will be further appreciated to the skilled person in the art that all variants of bus-splitting (not just 1-2-3, e.g. 1-3, 2-3), variants of clocking schemes (e.g. DDMs clocked at different rates), variants of pipelining (not just every stage), variants of adder (not just ripple carry), variants of DDSM (not just power of 2 modulus) as well as modifications to increase the spur performance of the modulator, including dither, setting initial conditions, and architectural modification, can be used in order to bring the invention into effect.
The embodiments in the invention described with reference to the drawings comprise a computer apparatus and/or processes performed in a computer apparatus. However, the invention also extends to computer programs, particularly computer programs stored on or in a carrier adapted to bring the invention into practice. The program may be in the form of source code, object code, or a code intermediate source and object code, such as in partially compiled form or in any other form suitable for use in the implementation of the method according to the invention. The carrier may comprise a storage medium such as ROM, e.g. CD ROM, or magnetic recording medium, e.g. a memory stick or hard disk. The carrier may be an electrical or optical signal which may be transmitted via an electrical or an optical cable or by radio or other means.
In the specification the terms “comprise, comprises, comprised and comprising” or any variation thereof and the terms include, includes, included and including” or any variation thereof are considered to be totally interchangeable and they should all be afforded the widest possible interpretation and vice versa.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments hereinbefore described but may be varied in both construction and detail.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61653754 | May 2012 | US |