B
Bill Sloman
Guest
On Tuesday, 18 November 2014 09:53:51 UTC+11, Tom Swift wrote:
A DDS with a programmable modulus divider can divide by any arbitrary integer
http://www.analog.com/static/imported-files/data_sheets/AD9915.pdf
> so you are stuck with an 80KHz pll loop.
Not true. The DDS synthesises a sine wave as a succession of analog voltages. Classically this produces a staircase approximation to the sine wave, but for a fixed frequency application you can integrate the steps and get a straight line approximation (which is a lot closer, so the imperfections are correspondingly smaller).
At one point in my career I approximated an hyperbola with a succession of exponential sections, which is a trick that you could also use to get an even better approximation to a sine wave.
And you are only stuck with an 80kHz pll if you insist on used John Larkin's bang-bang phase detector - any phase detector that generates an error signal that is more or less linearly related to phase error can work fine at 10MHz - particularly with a DDS source you get only small deviations over the 12.5usec when the two sources aren't perfectly coincident, and you can filter the deviations down to noise level before they get to anywhere where they matter.
If the base oscillator is dead stable - as a good SAW oscillator is - it's stability will dominate the short term noise. The phase locked loop is going to be designed just to cope with the frequency drifts of the SAW oscillator (which are going to be slow) so it will have a bandwidth of no more than a few Hz.
If the SAW clocks a good DDS you are home and hosed.
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
"dougfgd@gmail.com" <dougfgd@gmail.com> wrote:
This is the first time I have returned in 10 years after nasty
infections put me off. A pll controlled SAW vco referenced to a bulk
crystal will give lowest noise floor outside the loop -170dbc
possible as the saw can run at a high level. dougfgd at
frequencyprecision.com
Sure, but how do you lock 155.52 to 10? A DDS won't give the exact ratio,
A DDS with a programmable modulus divider can divide by any arbitrary integer
http://www.analog.com/static/imported-files/data_sheets/AD9915.pdf
> so you are stuck with an 80KHz pll loop.
Not true. The DDS synthesises a sine wave as a succession of analog voltages. Classically this produces a staircase approximation to the sine wave, but for a fixed frequency application you can integrate the steps and get a straight line approximation (which is a lot closer, so the imperfections are correspondingly smaller).
At one point in my career I approximated an hyperbola with a succession of exponential sections, which is a trick that you could also use to get an even better approximation to a sine wave.
And you are only stuck with an 80kHz pll if you insist on used John Larkin's bang-bang phase detector - any phase detector that generates an error signal that is more or less linearly related to phase error can work fine at 10MHz - particularly with a DDS source you get only small deviations over the 12.5usec when the two sources aren't perfectly coincident, and you can filter the deviations down to noise level before they get to anywhere where they matter.
The multiplier to 155.52 is
1,944, which means a very loose loop. It will wander all over the place
unless it is stablilized in temperature, supply voltage and DC Error
voltage. Even then, it is going to be tough to get down to picosecond
level at 155.52 MHz. Very tough. 1e-12/1,944=5.144e-16 just for base
stability, not counting jitter. Also difficult to do at 80 KHz:
12.5e-6/1e-12=12,500,000. No loop can do that.
If the base oscillator is dead stable - as a good SAW oscillator is - it's stability will dominate the short term noise. The phase locked loop is going to be designed just to cope with the frequency drifts of the SAW oscillator (which are going to be slow) so it will have a bandwidth of no more than a few Hz.
AFAIK, nobody makes a lockable SAW with low phase noise, and I'm not sure
about an oven, but I don't ...
If the SAW clocks a good DDS you are home and hosed.
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney