Fast-Locking, High Sensitivity Tuned-IF Radio Receiver Achieved with a 7-GHz Synthesizer INTRODUCTION Phase noise is a measure of the purity of the LO signal. It is ascertained by taking the ratio of the output fundamental power to the noise power in a 1-Hz bandwidth at a given offset from the carrier. The result is expressed in dBc/Hz. Spurious frequency elements (spurs) can occur in the output due to internal switching in the synthesizer. In an integer-N synthesizer, they are generally due to the phase-frequency detector (PFD) frequency; in a fractional-N device, they can be a result of the nature of the synthesizer architecture. In an integer-N phase-locked loop (PLL), they are called reference spurs. Lock time refers to the time it takes to switch the output from one frequency to anotheran important specification in many systems. In general, we say that the output is switchedor has lockedto the new frequency when it has settled to within a certain percentage, or parts per million (ppm), of the final desired frequencyor has locked to within a specified number of degrees of the final phase. Traditional Receiver Implementation In Figure 1, the RF input is applied to an RF filter, followed by a low-noise amplifier (LNA). The signal is then mixed down to the intermediate frequency (IF) by a mixer with a tuned LO input. Additional filtering follows, and a final mixer, using a single-frequency LO, takes the fixed IF down to baseband. The tuned-RF LO starts with a clean and stable reference frequency, followed by an ADF4106 PLL synthesizer and a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO). The reference is provided by a temperature-controlled (TCXO), voltage-controlled (VCXO), or oven-controlled (OCXO) crystal oscillator. The PLL synthesizers R-divider conditions this reference to a value equal to the channel spacing in integer-N systemsor a multiple of the channel spacing in fractional-N systems. The PFD compares the loop output, FVCO, divided by N, with the output of the R-divider, and the loop drives the PFD output toward zero by driving the VCO to make FVCO = FPFD × N. N is varied to vary the LO output frequency, thus tuning the radio. Phase noise of the LO depends on a number of factors: reference noise; noise in the synthesizer (R-divider, The phase noise of the LO (dB) can be described by the general equation: PN = PNSYNTH + 20 log N + 10 log FPFD where: *For a more detailed explanation, please see Design a Direct 6-GHz Local Oscillator with a New, Wideband, Integer-N, PLL Synthesizer in Analog Dialogue, Volume 35, No. 6, November-December, 2001.. The level of reference spurs depends on: the PFD design, leakage in the charge pump section of the PFD, the PLL loop bandwidth, and VCO sensitivity. The lock time depends on: the PFD frequency and the PLL loop bandwidth. In the receiver, with the IF chosen as 230 MHz, the tuned RF has to go from 2035 MHz to 2110 MHz (using high-side injection), in 200-kHz steps. Using an integer-N architecture to do this, a PFD frequency of 200 kHz is needed and the N value would vary from 10175 (2035 MHz) to 10550 (2110 MHz). Using the best commercially available components (ADF4106 PLL synthesizer), the expected in-band phase noise in this system would be 85.6 dBc/Hz. Typical reference spurs in such a system would be 88 dBc at 200 kHz and 90 dBc at 400 kHz.
Figure 1. Block diagram of a traditional superheterodyne receiver. Using a loop bandwidth of 20 kHz, typical lock time to 10 degrees of phase error would be 250 µs. Alternative Receiver Implementation Fixed RF
Figure 2. Alternative receiver block diagram The phase noise of the RF LO will be: The reference spurs will occur at 6.4 MHz offset from the carrier and will be very small (< 90 dBc), because (a) there will be 12 dB of attenuation due to the divide-by-4 circuit, and (b)since this is a fixed-frequency LOthe loop bandwidth can be made low (say 20 kHz). A simple 20-dB/decade attenuation will give even further attenuation of the spurs. There will be no spurs at 200 kHz, 400 kHz, 600 kHz, and 800 kHz; and lock time is not an issue, since no tuning occurs in the fixed-RF section. Tuned IF The worst-case phase noise of the tuned IF will be: Reference spurs will occur at a 3.2-MHz offset from the carrier. By choosing a loop bandwidth of 500 kHz, the spurs at 3.2 MHz will be below 90 dBc. In a DCS system, the important frequencies for spur reduction are With the loop bandwidth set at 500 kHz and the PFD frequency at 3.2 MHz, phase lock to within 10 degrees will occur in less than 10 µs. The frequency lock response is shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Lock time for the tuned IF. Filtering Considerations In Figure 1, the RF filter that precedes the LNA rejects the very strong out-of-band interferers. The IF filter can be narrow-band (200 kHz in GSM) to reject the in-band interferers. In Figure 2, the RF filter is the same as in Figure 1. However, the IF filter of Figure 2 cannot be narrow-band. It must pass the full band, since tuning has yet to occur. This means that the in-band interferers will have to be filtered later in the chain, as part of the baseband processing. Several IF-to-baseband receivers are available from ADI. These include the AD6650, AD6652, AD9870, and AD9874. They should be carefully considered when analyzing the architecture of Figure 2. CONCLUSION The example used in this proposal is for an integer-N PLL, the ADF4107, but the configuration is not limited to this. It is also quite feasible to realize similar gains using this configuration with a fractional-N architecture. REFERENCES Couch, L. W., Digital and Analog Communications Systems. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1990. Vizmuller, P., RF Design Guide, Artech House, 1995. Best, R. L., Phase-Locked Loops: Design, Simulation and Applications, 3rd edition, McGraw Hill, 1997. Bannerjee, Dean, PLL Performance, Simulation and Design, National Semiconductor Website. Analog Devices, Inc. Data Sheet for ADF4107. Hittite Microwave Corporation. Data Sheet for
HMC362S8G Goldberg, Bar-Giora, Digital Frequency Synthesis Demystified, LLH, 1999. Phase-Locked-Loop (PLL) RF Frequency SynthesizersSingle
For additional synthesizer types or an updated chart, see http://www.analog.com/analog_root/static/pdf/RFComms/SelectionGuides/phase.pdf Copyright 1995- Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. |