Abstract

PurposeMultiphase and quadrature voltage-controlled oscillators (QVCOs) play key roles in modern communication systems and their phase noise performance affects the performance of the overall system. Different studies are devoted to efficient quadrature signals generation. This paper aims to present a new low-phase noise superharmonic injection-locked QVCO.Design/methodology/approachThe proposed QVCO is comprised of two identical inductor-capacitor circuit (LC)-voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) in which second harmonics, with 180° phase shift, are injected from one core VCO to the gate of tail current source of the other VCO via a coupling capacitor. Using second harmonics with high amplitude will switch the tail from the inversion to the accumulation, and therefore, flicker noise is reduced. Also, because of the use of lossless and noiseless coupling elements, that is, coupling capacitors, and also because of the existence of an inherent high-pass filter, the proposed LC-QVCO has a good phase noise performance.FindingsThe introduced technique is designed and simulated in a commercial 0.18 µm radio frequency complementary metal oxide semiconductor (RF-CMOS) technology and 10 dB improvement of close-in phase noise is achieved (compared to the conventional method). Simulation results show that the phase noise of the proposed QVCO is −130.3 dBc/Hz at 3 MHz offset from 5.76 GHz center frequency, while the total direct current (DC) current drawn from a 0.9-V power supply is 4.25 mA (figure of merit = −190.2 dBc). Monte Carlo simulation results show that the figure of merit of the circuit has a Gaussian distribution with mean value and standard deviation of −189.97 dBc and 0.183, respectively.Originality/valueThis technique provides a new simple but efficient superharmonic coupling and noise shaping method that reduces close-in phase noise of superharmonic multiphase VCOs by switching of tail transistors with 2 ω0 (second harmonic of oscillation frequency). No extra devices such as area-consuming transformer or additional power-hungry oscillator are used for coupling.

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