1-2hit |
This paper introduces low-power and small area injection-locking clock and data recovery circuit (CDR) for the wireline and wireless proximity link. By using signal conversion from differential input to common-mode output, the newly proposed edge detector can eliminate the usually used delay line and XOR-based edge detector, and provided low power operation and a small circuit area. The CDR test chip fabricated in a 65-nm CMOS process consumes 30mW from a 1.2- V supply at 12.5Gbps. The fabricated CDR achieved a BER lower than 10-12 and the recovered clock had an rms jitter of 0.87ps. The CDR area is 0.165mm2.
Kaoru KOHIRA Naoki KITAZAWA Hiroki ISHIKURO
This paper presents a modulation scheme for impulse radio that uses the first sidelobe for transmitting a non-return-to-zero baseband signal and the implementation of a dual frequency conversion demodulator. The proposed modulation technique realizes two times higher frequency efficiency than that realized by binary phase-shift keying modulation and does not require an up-converter in the transmitter. The dual frequency conversion demodulator compensates for the spectrum distortion caused by the frequency response of the circuits and channel. The effect of frequency compensation is analytically studied. The fabricated demodulator test chip of 65 nm CMOS achieves clock and data recovery at 5.7 Gbps with a power consumption of 24 mW.