The disclosed technology relates to electronic oscillators and, more particularly, to voltage controlled oscillators with low harmonic output.
A voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) is an electronic oscillator whose oscillation frequency is controlled by a tuning voltage. The tuning voltage determines the oscillation frequency. VCOs may be used, for example, in phase locked loops, function generators and frequency synthesizers.
Voltage controlled oscillators generate an oscillator output at a desired frequency, termed the fundamental frequency, that is a function of the tuning voltage. Because VCOs are non-linear devices, the oscillator output includes harmonics of the fundamental frequency. The second harmonic at twice the fundamental frequency typically has the greatest output power of the harmonics. In most cases, the second harmonic is unwanted and is preferably much lower in output power than the fundamental frequency.
Voltage controlled oscillators may have various ranges of output frequencies. Some may be narrow band, whereas others are relatively wide band. An octave bandwidth VCO provides output fundamental frequencies in which the stop frequency is twice the start frequency. Second harmonics may be particularly problematic in the case of octave bandwidth VCOs.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide voltage controlled oscillators in which harmonics are suppressed.
The inventors have recognized that the second harmonic can be suppressed in the output of a voltage controlled oscillator by providing a tunable filter at the output of the VCO. The tunable filter has a frequency characteristic which suppresses the second harmonic in the output of the VCO. The frequency characteristic of the tunable filter is selected to minimize attenuation of the fundamental frequency. Further, the tunable filter has a tunable frequency characteristic that may be controlled by the tuning voltage of the VCO. As a result, the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter tracks the VCO and in particular tracks the second harmonic in the output of the VCO. As a result, the second harmonic is substantially attenuated over the tuning range of the VCO.
In accordance with embodiments, an oscillator apparatus comprises: a voltage controlled oscillator that generates an oscillator output including a fundamental frequency, wherein the fundamental frequency is a function of a tuning voltage; and a tunable filter that receives the oscillator output and provides a filtered oscillator output, wherein the tunable filter has a frequency characteristic that suppresses a harmonic of the fundamental frequency, the frequency characteristic being a function of the tuning voltage.
In some embodiments, the harmonic suppressed by the tunable filter is a second harmonic of the fundamental frequency.
In some embodiments, the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter tracks the fundamental frequency of the oscillator output.
In some embodiments, the tunable filter has relatively low attenuation at the fundamental frequency of the oscillator output and relatively high attenuation at the harmonic of the fundamental frequency.
In some embodiments, the tunable filter includes a voltage controlled capacitor that is controlled based on the tuning voltage. The tunable filter may include a varactor diode responsive to the tuning voltage.
In some embodiments, the tunable filter includes a fixed capacitor, a variable capacitor and an inductor coupled in series between an output of the voltage controlled oscillator and a reference voltage.
In some embodiments, the voltage controlled oscillator is tunable over an octave frequency range.
In some embodiments, the voltage controlled oscillator includes a first varactor diode and the tunable filter includes the second varactor diode, and the first and second varactor diodes have matched tuning characteristics.
In some embodiments, the tunable filter has T-type circuit topology.
In some embodiments, the voltage controlled oscillator includes a first series LC resonator that establishes the fundamental frequency and the tunable filter includes a second series LC resonator that tracks the harmonic of the fundamental frequency.
In some embodiments, the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter is a notch-type frequency characteristic. In other embodiments, the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter is a low pass frequency characteristic.
In accordance with further embodiments, a method for generating a filtered oscillator output comprises: generating, with a voltage controlled oscillator, an oscillator output at a fundamental frequency, the oscillator output including a harmonic of the fundamental frequency; suppressing, with a tunable filter, the harmonic of the fundamental frequency in the oscillator output; and controlling the fundamental frequency of the voltage controlled oscillator and a frequency characteristic of the tunable filter so that the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter tracks the harmonic of the fundamental frequency as the fundamental frequency is varied.
For a better understanding of the disclosed technology, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which are incorporated herein by reference and in which:
A schematic block diagram of a conventional voltage controlled oscillator is shown in
One example of a voltage controlled oscillator is an octave bandwidth voltage controlled oscillator in which the highest frequency is twice the lowest frequency. The operation of an octave bandwidth VCO is illustrated in
The second harmonic in dB is calculated as the difference between the fundamental frequency power and the second harmonic power. This difference should be as large as possible.
A schematic block diagram of an oscillator apparatus in accordance with embodiments is shown in
The tunable filter 60 has a frequency characteristic that tracks the second harmonic in the oscillator output 16 as the tuning voltage varies. In general, the tunable filter 60 is configured to attenuate the second harmonic and to minimize attenuation of the fundamental frequency. As a result, the filtered oscillator output 62 includes the fundamental frequency of the VCO 10 with little attenuation and includes an attenuated second harmonic as compared with the oscillator output 16.
A schematic diagram of tunable oscillator 12 in accordance with embodiments is shown in
A series LC resonator 90 is coupled between the base of transistor 70 and ground. The series LC resonator 90 includes an inductor 92, a fixed capacitor 94 and a variable capacitor 96 connected in series. The tuning voltage is supplied through a choke inductor 100 to variable capacitor 96, which may be implemented an a varactor diode.
A negative resistance looking into the base of transistor 70 is a function of the transconductance of transistor 70, the values of capacitors 80 and 82 and frequency. If the magnitude of this negative resistance exceeds the losses of series LC resonator 90, oscillation can occur at a frequency that is a function of the values of inductor 92, fixed capacitor 94 and variable capacitor 96. Tunability of the frequency of oscillation is achieved by varying the capacitance of variable capacitor 96 by changing the applied reverse bias across the terminals of the varactor diode. The tuning voltage applied to variable capacitor 96 thus controls the frequency of oscillation.
A schematic diagram of buffer 14 in accordance with embodiments is shown in
Buffer 14 is utilized to provide stable output power at the load. The buffer 14 also enhances the isolation between tunable oscillator 12 and the load. This minimizes oscillator frequency variation with changes in the load impedance, for example, frequency pulling. It will be understood that a variety of different buffer configurations may be utilized, including common base/gate and cascode circuit topologies.
A schematic diagram of tunable filter 60 in accordance with embodiments is shown in
The filter circuit 150 has a resonant frequency established by capacitor 152, the variable capacitor 154 and the inductor 156, which provides low impedance to ground at the second harmonic frequency. The resonant frequency of the filter circuit 150 is tunable in accordance with the tuning voltage.
As shown in
The VCO 10 and the tunable filter 60 are configured so that the tuning voltage causes the frequency characteristic of the tunable filter to track the second harmonic of the fundamental frequency of the VCO 10 as the VCO 10 is tuned. In some embodiments, this is achieved by matching the tuning characteristics of the series LC resonator 90 in tunable oscillator 12 and the filter circuit 150 in tunable filter 60, with appropriate adjustments for the difference between the fundamental frequency of VCO 10 and the second harmonic frequency. In particular, the resonant frequency of filter circuit 150 may be twice the resonant frequency of series LC resonator 90 and may track the resonant frequency of series LC resonator 90 over the frequency range of interest. In some implementations, the varactor diode of series LC resonator 90 and the varactor diode of filter circuit 150 may have matched tuning characteristics and, in some cases, may be fabricated on the same semiconductor die.
The tunable filter 60 has been described as suppressing the second harmonic of the fundamental frequency of VCO 10. However, this is not a limitation. In embodiments, the tunable filter 60 may be configured to suppress any harmonic of the fundamental frequency and may be configured to suppress one or more harmonics of the fundamental frequency.
An example of a frequency characteristic of the tunable filter 60 at different tuning voltages is illustrated in
The tunable filter 60 has been described as including a series LC resonator having a notch frequency characteristic. However, this is not a limitation. In other embodiments, the tunable filter may have a low pass frequency characteristic. In further embodiments, the tunable filter 60 may have a different filter topology, with a frequency characteristic that suppresses the harmonic of interest.
In some embodiments, a higher order tunable filter may be utilized. The higher order tunable filter may have a broader band than the series LC resonator to compensate for tuning inaccuracies. In some embodiments, the tunable filter may be connected in parallel with the load, as in the case of
Having thus described at least one illustrative embodiment of the invention, various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description is by way of example only and is not intended as limiting. The invention is limited only as defined in the following claims and the equivalents thereto.