Abstract
Determining the loop noise bandwidth and the coherent integration time is essential and important for the design of a reliable digital phase-locked loop (DPLL) in global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receivers. In general, designers set such parameters approximately by utilizing the well-known fact that the DPLL is stable if the normalized bandwidth, which is the product of the integration time and the noise bandwidth, is much less than one. However, actual limit points are not fixed at exactly one, and they vary with the loop filter order and implementation method. Furthermore, a lower limit on the normalized bandwidth may exist. This paper presents theoretical upper and lower limits for the normalized bandwidth of DPLL in GNSS receivers. The upper limit was obtained by examining the stability of DPLL with a special emphasis on the digital integration methods. The stability was investigated in terms of z-plane root loci with and without the consideration of the computational delay, which is a delay induced by the calculation of the discriminator and the loop filter. The lower limit was analyzed using the DPLL measurement error composed of the thermal noise, oscillator phase noise, and dynamic stress error. By utilizing the carrier-to-noise density ratio threshold which indicates the crossing point between the measurement error and the corresponding threshold, the lower limit of the normalized bandwidth is obtained.
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