Oscillator stabilization through feedback with slow wave structures
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Pontón Lobete, María Isabel



Fecha
2020-06Derechos
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Publicado en
IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 2020, 68(6), 2358-2373
IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium (IMS), Boston, USA, 2019
Editorial
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Oscillator
Phase-noise
Slow-wave structure
Stability
Resumen/Abstract
This article presents a new formulation to predict the steady-state, stability, and phase-noise properties of oscillator circuits, including either a self-injection network or a two-port feedback network for phase-noise reduction. The additional network contains a slow wave structure that stabilizes the oscillation signal. Its long delay inherently gives rise to multivalued solutions in some parameter intervals, which should be avoided for a reliable operation. Under a two-port feedback network, the circuit is formulated extracting two outer-tier admittance functions, which depend on the node-voltage amplitudes, phase shift between the two nodes, and excitation frequency. Then, the effect of the slow wave structure is predicted through an analytical formulation of the augmented oscillator, which depends on the numerical oscillator model and the structure admittance matrix. The solution curves are obtained in a straightforward manner by tracing a zero-error contour in the plane defined by the analysis parameter and the oscillation frequency. The impact of the slow-wave structure on the oscillator stability and noise properties is analyzed through a perturbation method, applied to the augmented oscillator. The phase-noise dependence on the group delay is investigated calculating the modulation of the oscillation carrier. The various analysis and design methods have been applied to an oscillator at 2.73 GHz, which has been manufactured and measured, obtaining phase-noise reductions of 13 dB, under a one-port load network, and 18 dB, under a feedback network.
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