Abstract

Highly stable, low phase noise microwave oscillators are essential for various applications. An optoelectronic oscillator (OEO) can overcome the short-term phase noise limitation of pure electronic oscillators at high oscillation frequency. Nonetheless, the long-term frequency stability should be addressed. To stabilize the frequency of OEO, a phase-locked loop (PLL) is widely used to synchronize the OEO to a stable reference. However, due to the narrow free-spectral-range (FSR) of the oscillation cavity of the OEO, the pull-in range of the PLL is limited. It is challenging to acquire phase-locking at startup and phase-relocking when mode-hopping of OEO occurs. Here, by using an automatic frequency calibration (AFC) assisted PLL, we attain a highly stable 10 GHz phase-locked OEO with robust phase-locking at startup and phase-relocking when mode-hopping of OEO occurs, for the first time. With the use of a fast digitally-controlled frequency shifter and a real-time frequency error detection unit in the AFC loop, the phase-locking and phase-relocking time are below 120 ms. Furthermore, it shows the phase noise of -135 dBc/Hz at 10 kHz offset, side-mode suppression ratio (SMSR) of 128 dBc, and Allan deviation of 4.8×10-11 at 5000 s for the phase-locked OEO. We thoroughly investigate the dynamics of the automatic frequency calibration, the phase-locking process, the phase-relocking after OEO mode-hopping, the system under vibration, and the frequency switching. Our approach is promising to generate a highly stable, low phase noise, and determinate frequency microwave signal, which can be used as a low phase noise reference for a microwave frequency synthesizer and high performance sampling clock for a data conversion system.

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