Integrated oscillators with octave frequency tuning range (FTR) are desirable for wireless transceivers supporting multiple frequency bands. In this paper, we describe a wide-FTR CMOS voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) based on… Click to show full abstract
Integrated oscillators with octave frequency tuning range (FTR) are desirable for wireless transceivers supporting multiple frequency bands. In this paper, we describe a wide-FTR CMOS voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) based on a novel area-efficient series resonator mode-switching scheme that preserves resonator quality factor $Q$ across the entire octave tuning range. This allows the CMOS VCO to simultaneously achieving wide FTR, area efficiency, and low phase noise, demonstrating state-of-the-art figure of merit (FoM) for > 10-GHz octave-tuning range VCOs. We also analyze the relationship between $Q$ and FTR across common resonator band-switching schemes, quantifying performance limits and highlighting the benefits of using mode-switching for wide-FTR VCOs. The proposed approach is demonstrated through a 6.4–14-GHz (74.6% FTR) VCO implemented in 65-nm CMOS that achieves 186–188-dB VCO FoM, demonstrating good FoM across the entire FTR. The scalability of this approach toward achieving even larger FTR is also demonstrated by a triple-mode 2.2–8.7-GHz (119% FTR) CMOS VCO. Area efficiency of the proposed mode-switching scheme is demonstrated by the state-of-the-art 197-dB FoM area achieved by the 14-GHz VCO.
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