Abstract: A mixed-domain circuit has a differential pair of Digital-to-Time Converters (DTCs), one receiving a reference clock and the other receiving a feedback clock. A Time-to-Digital Converter (TDC) compares outputs from the differential pair of DTCs and generates a digital error value that controls a digital loop filter that controls a Digitally-Controlled Oscillator (DCO) that generates an output clock. A Multi-Modulus Divider (MMD) generates the feedback clock. An accumulated modulation from a delta-sigma modulator is compared to the digital error value by a Least-Mean Square (LMS) correlator to adjust supply voltage or current sources in the pair of DTCs to compensate for errors. A capacitor in each DTC has a charging time adjusted by the accumulated modulation. The DTC can be reduced to a Time-to-Voltage Converter (TVC) and the analog voltages on the capacitors input to an Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) to generate the digital error value.
Abstract: A feedback divider in a mixed-signal circuit is modulated by a frequency control word controlling a delta-sigma modulator. An accumulated quantization error from the delta-sigma modulator is compared to a residual error in the circuit by a Least-Mean Square (LMS) correlator for gain calibration to adjust for linear errors. Upper bits of the accumulated quantization error access a lookup table to find two outputs of the compensation function that are interpolated between using lower bits of the accumulated quantization error. The interpolated result is an adjustment subtracted from the loop to compensate for non-linear errors. A set of orthogonal kernels is generated from the accumulated quantization error and calibrated using another LMS correlator and inverse transformed to generate updates to the non-linear compensation function in the lookup table. The kernels can be Walsh Hadamard (WH) and the inverse transformer an inverse WH transformer.
Abstract: A feedback divider in a mixed-signal circuit is modulated by a frequency control word controlling a delta-sigma modulator. An accumulated quantization error from the delta-sigma modulator is compared to a residual error in the circuit by a Least-Mean Square (LMS) correlator for gain calibration to adjust for linear errors. Upper bits of the accumulated quantization error access a lookup table to find two outputs of the compensation function that are interpolated between using lower bits of the accumulated quantization error. The interpolated result is an adjustment subtracted from the loop to compensate for non-linear errors. A set of orthogonal kernels is generated from the accumulated quantization error and calibrated using another LMS correlator and inverse transformed to generate updates to the non-linear compensation function in the lookup table. The kernels can be Walsh Hadamard (WH) and the inverse transformer an inverse WH transformer.
Abstract: A feedback divider in a mixed-signal circuit is modulated by a frequency control word controlling a delta-sigma modulator. An accumulated quantization error from the delta-sigma modulator is compared to a residual error in the circuit by a Least-Mean Square (LMS) correlator for gain calibration to adjust for linear errors. Upper bits of the accumulated quantization error access a lookup table to find two outputs of the compensation function that are interpolated between using lower bits of the accumulated quantization error. The interpolated result is an adjustment subtracted from the loop to compensate for non-linear errors. A set of orthogonal kernels is generated from the accumulated quantization error and calibrated using another LMS correlator and inverse transformed to generate updates to the non-linear compensation function in the lookup table. The kernels can be Walsh Hadamard (WH) and the inverse transformer an inverse WH transformer.