Abstract
A feedback edge combiner is proposed for the duty-cycle corrector (DCC) of a delay locked loop (DLL) to increase the range of allowed input duty cycle. The feedback edge combiner generates the rising edge of a DCC output at the rising edge of an input clock. It generates the falling edge of the DCC output at the rising edge of a feedback clock that is a half-period-delayed signal of the DCC output. A dual-delay-line digitally controlled delay line (DCDL) is used for seamless boundary switching. The chip area of the DCDL is reduced by around 46% by employing the architecture of two short coarse delay lines followed by a fine phase mixer (FPM) and a long coarse delay line in series instead of the architecture of two long coarse delay lines followed by an FPM. The measurements on the chip fabricated in the 65-nm CMOS show the allowed input duty cycle in the range from 20% to 80%; root-mean-square and peak-to-peak jitters of 2.69 and 14.0 ps, respectively, at 2 GHz and 1.2 V; and the operating frequency range from 0.12 to 2.0 GHz at 1.2 V. The measured power consumption is 3.3 mW/GHz at 1.2 V. The chip area is 0.059 mm 2.
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More From: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems II: Express Briefs
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