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Author

B.M. Helal

Bio: B.M. Helal is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Jitter & Time-to-digital converter. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 361 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a mostly digital multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) architecture that leverages a new time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a correlated double-sampling technique to achieve sub-picosecond jitter performance.
Abstract: This paper presents a mostly digital multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) architecture that leverages a new time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a correlated double-sampling technique to achieve subpicosecond jitter performance. The key benefit of the proposed structure is that it provides a highly digital technique to reduce deterministic jitter in the MDLL output with low sensitivity to mismatch and offset in the associated tuning circuits. The TDC structure, which is based on a gated ring oscillator (GRO), is expected to benefit other PLL/DLL applications as well due to the fact that it scrambles and first-order noise shapes its associated quantization noise. Measured results are presented of a custom MDLL prototype that multiplies a 50 MHz reference frequency to 1.6 GHz with 928 fs rms jitter performance. The prototype consists of two 0.13 mum integrated circuits, which have a combined active area of 0.06 mm2 and a combined core power of 5.1 mW, in addition to an FPGA board, a discrete DAC, and a simple RC filter.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A pulse injection-locked oscillator (PILO) that provides low jitter clock multiplication of a clean input reference clock using a mostly-digital feedback circuit that provides continuous tuning of the oscillator such that its natural frequency is locked to the injected frequency.
Abstract: This paper introduces a pulse injection-locked oscillator (PILO) that provides low jitter clock multiplication of a clean input reference clock. A mostly-digital feedback circuit provides continuous tuning of the oscillator such that its natural frequency is locked to the injected frequency. The proposed system is demonstrated with a prototype consisting of a custom 0.13 mum integrated circuit with active area of 0.4 mm2 and core power of 28.6 mW, along with an FPGA, a discrete DAC and a simple RC filter. Using a low jitter 50 MHz reference input, the PILO prototype generates a 3.2 GHz output with integrated phase noise, reference spur, and estimated deterministic jitter of 130 fs (rms), -63.9 dBc, and 200 fs (peak-to-peak), respectively.

101 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a mostly digital multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) architecture that leverages a new time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a correlated double-sampling technique to achieve sub-picosecond jitter performance.
Abstract: This paper presents a mostly digital multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) architecture that leverages a new time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a correlated double-sampling technique to achieve subpicosecond jitter performance. The key benefit of the proposed structure is that it provides a highly digital technique to reduce deterministic jitter in the MDLL output with low sensitivity to mismatch and offset in the associated tuning circuits. The TDC structure, which is based on a gated ring oscillator (GRO), is expected to benefit other PLL/DLL applications as well due to the fact that it scrambles and first-order noise shapes its associated quantization noise. Measured results are presented of a custom MDLL prototype that multiplies a 50 MHz reference frequency to 1.6 GHz with 928 fs rms jitter performance. The prototype consists of two 0.13 μm integrated circuits, which have a combined active area of 0.06 mm 2 and a combined core power of 5.1 mW, in addition to an FPGA board, a discrete DAC, and a simple RC filter.

100 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
14 Jun 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, a 1.6 GHz multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) was proposed to achieve low deterministic jitter while still maintaining low random jitter, using a ring oscillator that is gated on and off to accurately measure time and scramble the measurement's residual error.
Abstract: This paper presents a 1.6 GHz multiplying delay-locked loop (MDLL) that leverages time-to-digital conversion and a digital correlation technique to achieve low deterministic jitter while still maintaining low random jitter. A proposed time-to-digital converter consists of a ring oscillator that is gated on and off to accurately measure time and scramble the measurement's residual error. Using a 50 MHz reference, the prototype system has measured reference spurs less than -59 dBc and an overall measured jitter of 1.41 ps.

50 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
15 Jul 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, a pulse injection-locked oscillator (PILO) is proposed to provide low jitter clock multiplication of a clean input reference clock, where a mostly-digital feedback circuit provides continuous tuning of the oscillator such that its natural frequency is locked to the injected frequency.
Abstract: This paper introduces a pulse injection-locked oscillator (PILO) that provides low jitter clock multiplication of a clean input reference clock. A mostly-digital feedback circuit provides continuous tuning of the oscillator such that its natural frequency is locked to the injected frequency. The prototype uses a 50 MHz reference input to generate a 3.2 GHz output with integrated phase noise, reference spur, and estimated deterministic jitter of 134 fs (rms), - 63.4 dBc, and 211 fs (peak-to-peak), respectively.

19 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An 11-bit, 50-MS/s time-to-digital converter (TDC) using a multipath gated ring oscillator with 6 ps of effective delay per stage demonstrates 1st-order noise shaping.
Abstract: An 11-bit, 50-MS/s time-to-digital converter (TDC) using a multipath gated ring oscillator with 6 ps of effective delay per stage demonstrates 1st-order noise shaping. At frequencies below 1 MHz, the TDC error integrates to 80 fs (rms) for a dynamic range of 95 dB with no calibration required. The 157 times 258 mum TDC is realized in 0.13 mum CMOS and, depending on the time difference between input edges, consumes 2.2 to 21 mA from a 1.5 V supply.

340 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A 3.6-GHz digital fractional-N frequency synthesizer achieving low noise and 500-kHz bandwidth is presented, which uses a gated-ring-oscillator time-to-digital converter to achieve integrated phase noise of less than 300 fs.
Abstract: A 3.6-GHz digital fractional-N frequency synthesizer achieving low noise and 500-kHz bandwidth is presented. This architecture uses a gated-ring-oscillator time-to-digital converter (TDC) with 6-ps raw resolution and first-order shaping of its quantization noise along with digital quantization noise cancellation to achieve integrated phase noise of less than 300 fs (1 kHz to 40 MHz). The synthesizer includes two 10-bit 50-MHz passive digital-to-analog converters for digital control of the oscillator and an asynchronous frequency divider that avoids divide-value delay variation at its output. Implemented in a 0.13-mum CMOS process, the prototype occupies 0.95-mm2 active area and dissipates 39 mW for the core parts with another 8 mW for the oscillator output buffer. Measured phase noise at 3.67 GHz carrier frequency is -108 and -150 dBc/Hz at 400 kHz and 20 MHz offset, respectively.

325 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2008
TL;DR: A digital fractional-N frequency synthesizer is presented that leverages a noise-shaping time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a simple quantization noise cancellation technique to achieve low phase noise with a wide PLL bandwidth of 500kHz.
Abstract: A digital fractional-N frequency synthesizer is presented that leverages a noise-shaping time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a simple quantization noise cancellation technique to achieve low phase noise with a wide PLL bandwidth of 500kHz. In contrast to previous cancellation techniques, this structure requires no analog components and is straightforward to implement with standard-cell digital logic.

233 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A complete analysis on subharmonically injection-locked PLLs develops fundamental theory for subharmonic locking phenomenon, which explains the noise shaping phenomenon, locking range and behavior, PVT tolerance, and pseudo locking issue.
Abstract: A complete analysis on subharmonically injection-locked PLLs develops fundamental theory for subharmonic locking phenomenon. It explains the noise shaping phenomenon, locking range and behavior, PVT tolerance, and pseudo locking issue. All of the analyses are verified by real chip measurements. Two 20-GHz PLLs based on the proposed theory are designed and fabricated in 90-nm CMOS technology to demonstrate the superiority and robustness of this technique. The first chip aims at low-noise/low-power/high-divide-ratio design, achieving 149-fs rms jitter (integrated from 100 Hz to 1 GHz) while consuming 38 mW from a 1.3-V supply. The second prototype shoots for the lowest noise performance, presenting 85-fs rms jitter (the same integration interval) with a power dissipation of 105 mW. The jitter generation (from 50 kHz to 80 MHz) measures 48 fs, which is at least twice as small as that of any other known circuits.

175 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A high-resolution TDC with low latency and low dead-time is proposed, where a coarse time quantization derived from a differential inverter delay-line is locally interpolated with passive voltage dividers to make the concept very robust against process variations.
Abstract: Time-to-digital converters (TDCs) are promising building blocks for the digitalization of mixed-signal functionality in ultra-deep-submicron CMOS technologies. A short survey on state-of-the-art TDCs is given. A high-resolution TDC with low latency and low dead-time is proposed, where a coarse time quantization derived from a differential inverter delay-line is locally interpolated with passive voltage dividers. This high-resolution TDC is monotonic by construction which makes the concept very robust against process variations. The feasibility is demonstrated by a 90 nm demonstrator which uses a 4x interpolation and provides a time domain resolution of 4.7 ps. An integral nonlinearity of 1.2 LSB and a differential nonlinearity of 0.6 LSB are achieved. The resolution restrictions imposed by an uncertainty of the stop signal and local variations are derived theoretically.

164 citations