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International Journal of Modern Trends in Engineering

and Research
www.ijmter.com
e-ISSN No.:2349-9745, Date: 2-4 July, 2015

Design of Voltage Controlled Oscillator using Cadence tool

Sudhir D. Surwase 1, Dr. A.B. Nandgaonkar 2


1
Department of Electronics & Telecommunication, Dr. BabasahebAmbedkar Technological
University, Lonere, India. [email protected]
2
Department of Electronics& Telecommunication, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Technological
University, Lonere, India. [email protected]

Abstract- This paper presents the design of voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) based on ring
oscillator. The VCO is designed for a frequency synthesizer module that generates local oscillation
(LO) frequencies over a large bandwidth, targeting a multi-band acquisition system. The goal is a
wide operating frequency tuning range of 500MHz – 5GHz in the VCO with low power
consumption, -143 dBc/Hz@500MHz phase-noise performance and a good linearity for the
frequency and control voltage characteristics. Simulation results verify the theoretical development
and measurement results validate the design.

Keywords- Cadence; Virtuoso; Noise Margin; 180 nm technology; Voltage-Controlled Oscillator


(VCO).

I. INTRODUCTION
One of the key blocks in a communication system is the frequency synthesizer which is done
mostly by using phase-locked loop (PLL) systems. A PLL system is composed of a phase
detector, low pass filter and a voltage controlled oscillator as in Fig. 1.

Fig 1. A typical PLL system


The action of the feedback in the loop causes the output frequency to be N times the reference
input frequency of In(t) , usually a very stable, lower-frequency crystal oscillator. The spectral
purity of the synthesized signal will largely depend on the quality of the VCO signal [1]. In
actual communication systems there is a clear trend towards the full integration of the system
into a single die for reasons of low cost and power consumption [2]-[4]. Since most of the CMOS
transceivers incorporate the VCO active circuitry on the die, they are designed in a frequency
range for which an external LC tank is avoided.On the other hand, large time constants required
for the loop filter generally lead to large external capacitors. As an alternative, a ring oscillator

@IJMTER-2015, All rights Reserved 1282


International Journal of Modern Trends in Engineering and Research (IJMTER)
Volume 2, Issue 7, [July-2015] Special Issue of ICRTET’2015

can be integrated in a standard CMOS process without any extra processing steps because it does
not require any passive resonant element. In addition, when the ring oscillator is employed for a
VCO the desired wide operating-frequency range can be easily obtained but with the drawback of
poorer phase-noise performance than the LC tank oscillator because of its low effective quality
factor [5].

Design specification

Schematic capture

Simulation

Layout & DRC

Extraction & LVS

Post-layout simulation

Fig 2. Cadence flow

II. CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION


Ring oscillator is cascaded combination of delay stages, connected in a close loop chain [6]. The
ring oscillator designed with a chain of delay stages has created great interest because of their
numerous useful features. These attractive features are: (i) It can achieve its oscillations at low
voltage, (ii) It can be easily designed with the state-of-art integrated circuit technology (CMOS,
BiCMOS), (iii) It can be electrically tuned, (v) It can provide wide tuning range, (iv) It can
provide high- frequency oscillations with dissipating low power, and (vi) It can provide
multiphase outputs because of their basic structure [7]. To increase the frequency of oscillation,
two methods are commonly used. Firstly, the applied voltage may be increased. Secondly,
making the ring from a smaller number of inverters results in a higher frequency of oscillation
given certain power consumption.
The VCO consist of three stage inverter which is designed by using one NMOS and one PMOS
transistor. PMOS transistor work as pull-up network and NMOS transistor is connected to pull
down network. One more NMOS connecting to each of inverter with Vbias, In this combination,
PMOS transistor connected to power supply and NMOS transistor connected to be ground.
Inverter schematic & it’s working region given as

ID = 0 (off │VGS│< │VTH │) (1)

ID = μ.COX*W/L[(VGS –VTH)VDS - V2DS/2] (triode: │VDS│<│VGS│─│VTH │) (2)

ID = μ.COX*W/2L (VGS –VTH)2 (Saturation: VDS ≥ VGS ─VTH) (3)

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International Journal of Modern Trends in Engineering and Research (IJMTER)
Volume 2, Issue 7, [July-2015] Special Issue of ICRTET’2015

Fig 3. Schematic of VCO

III. DESIGN METHODOLOGY

3.1. Running the Cadence tools


We should be able to run the Cadence tools. Never run Cadence from your root directory, it
creates many extra files that will clutter your root. Instead please create a directory (e.g. cadence)
and start Cadence there by typing:
#Mkdir cadence
# cd cadence
# icfb &
3.2. Schematic capture

Fig 4. Schematic diag. of Ring oscillator using cadence tool.

The resulting schematic drawing must accurately describe the main electrical properties of all
components and their interconnections. Also included in the schematic are the power supply and
ground connections as well as all "pins" for the input and output signals of your circuit. This
information is crucial for generating the corresponding netlist which is used in later stages of the
design. The generation of a complete circuit schematic is therefore the first important step of the
design flow.
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International Journal of Modern Trends in Engineering and Research (IJMTER)
Volume 2, Issue 7, [July-2015] Special Issue of ICRTET’2015

IV. SIMULATION AND MEASUREMENT RESULTS


4.1. Pss and pnoise analysis

Fig 5. Chosing pss and pnoise analysis

Periodic Steady-State (PSS) analysis is a large-signal analysis that directly computes the periodic
steady-state response of a circuit With PSS simulation times are independent of time constants of
the circuit, so pss can quickly compute the steady state response of the circuit with long time.
Periodic Noise analysis (Pnoise) are similar tothe Spectre AC, SP, XF, and Noise analyses, but
we can apply them to periodically drivencircuits that exhibit frequency conversion.

4.2.Transient response

Fig 6. Transient response(ns)

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International Journal of Modern Trends in Engineering and Research (IJMTER)
Volume 2, Issue 7, [July-2015] Special Issue of ICRTET’2015

4.3.VCO Layout

Fig 7. Proposed VCO Layout

CONCLUSIONS
Ring oscillators are basic building blocks of complex intergrated circuit. They are mainly used as
clock generating circuits. Many different types of ring oscillators are presented in literatues[8-9].
They differ in respect to architechtural, realisiation of inverter stages. In this paper we have
considered realisation of ring oscillator based on four different types of single-ended inverters.
The simulation was performed using Cadence virtuoso spectre rhel 6.1 version and library model
is 180gpdk CMOS techonoly.
REFERENCES
[1] W. F. Egan, “Frequency Synthesis by Phase Lock”, New York: Wiley, 1981.
[2] K. Irie, H. Matsui, T. Endo, K. Watanabe, T. Yamawaki, M.Kokubo, and J. Hildersley, “A 2.7-V GSM RF
transceiver IC”, inISSCC Dig. Tech. Papers, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 1997, pp. 302–303.
[3] S. Heinen, K. Hadjizada, U. Matter, W. Geppert, T. Volker, S.Weber, S. Beyer, J. Fenk, and E. Matschke, “A
2.7-V 2.5-GHz bipolar chipset for digital wireless communication,” in ISSCC Dig.Tech. Papers, San Francisco,
CA, Feb. 1997, pp. 306–307.
[4] G. C. Dawe, J.-M. Mourant, and A. P. Brokaw, “A 2.7-V DECT RF transceiver with integrated VCO”, in
ISSCC Dig. Tech. Papers, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 1997, pp. 308–309.
[5] E. Fabris, L. Carro, S. Bampi, An Analog Signal Interface withConstant Performance for SOCs. Proceedings of
ISCAS 2003, vol.1, pp: 773-776, 2003.
[6] Rui Tao, Manfred Berroth, “5 GHz voltage controlled ring oscillator using source capacitively
coupled current amplifier”. IEEE 2003.
[7] L. S. Yeop, S. Amakawa, N. Ishihara, and K. Masu, “Low- phase noise wide-frequency-range ring-
VCO-based scalable PLL with sub harmonic injection locking in 0.18 m CMOS,” IEEE International
Microwave Symposium Digest, May 2010, pp. 1178-1181.
[8] L. SUN AND T. A. KWASNIEWSKI, A 1.25-GHz 0.35- m monolithic CMOS PLL based on a multiphase ring
oscillator, IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 36, (2001), 910-916.
[9] J. SAVOJ AND B. RAZAVI, A 10-Gb/s CMOS clock and data recovery circuit with a half-rate linear
phadetector, IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 36, (2001), 761-767.

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