Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links

High-speed links which employ source synchronous clocking architectures have the ability to track correlated jitter between clock and data channels up to high frequencies. However, system timing margins are degraded by channel skew between clock and data signals and high-frequency loss. This paper d...

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Main Authors: Ahmed Ragab, Yang Liu, Kangmin Hu, Patrick Chiang, Samuel Palermo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2011-01-01
Series:Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/982314
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spelling doaj-603b811f811b48ce97c442fbc902992f2021-07-02T07:53:59ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Electrical and Computer Engineering2090-01472090-01552011-01-01201110.1155/2011/982314982314Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous LinksAhmed Ragab0Yang Liu1Kangmin Hu2Patrick Chiang3Samuel Palermo4Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USADepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USABroadcom Corporation, Analog and Mixed-Signal Group, Irvine, CA 92618, USASchool of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USADepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USAHigh-speed links which employ source synchronous clocking architectures have the ability to track correlated jitter between clock and data channels up to high frequencies. However, system timing margins are degraded by channel skew between clock and data signals and high-frequency loss. This paper describes how these key channel effects impact the jitter performance and influence the clocking architecture of high-speed source synchronous links. Tradeoffs in complexity and jitter tracking performance of common per-channel de-skew circuits are discussed, along with how band-pass filtering can be leveraged to provide additional jitter filtering at the receiver. Jitter tolerance analysis for a 10 Gb/s system shows that a near all-pass delay-locked loop (DLL) and phase-interpolator- (PI-) based de-skew performs best under low skew conditions, while, at high skew, architectures which leverage band-pass clock filtering or a phase-locked loop (PLL) for increased jitter filtering are more suitable. De-skew based on injection-locked oscillators (ILOs) offer a reduced complexity design and competitive jitter tolerance over a wide skew range.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/982314
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed Ragab
Yang Liu
Kangmin Hu
Patrick Chiang
Samuel Palermo
spellingShingle Ahmed Ragab
Yang Liu
Kangmin Hu
Patrick Chiang
Samuel Palermo
Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering
author_facet Ahmed Ragab
Yang Liu
Kangmin Hu
Patrick Chiang
Samuel Palermo
author_sort Ahmed Ragab
title Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
title_short Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
title_full Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
title_fullStr Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
title_full_unstemmed Receiver Jitter Tracking Characteristics in High-Speed Source Synchronous Links
title_sort receiver jitter tracking characteristics in high-speed source synchronous links
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering
issn 2090-0147
2090-0155
publishDate 2011-01-01
description High-speed links which employ source synchronous clocking architectures have the ability to track correlated jitter between clock and data channels up to high frequencies. However, system timing margins are degraded by channel skew between clock and data signals and high-frequency loss. This paper describes how these key channel effects impact the jitter performance and influence the clocking architecture of high-speed source synchronous links. Tradeoffs in complexity and jitter tracking performance of common per-channel de-skew circuits are discussed, along with how band-pass filtering can be leveraged to provide additional jitter filtering at the receiver. Jitter tolerance analysis for a 10 Gb/s system shows that a near all-pass delay-locked loop (DLL) and phase-interpolator- (PI-) based de-skew performs best under low skew conditions, while, at high skew, architectures which leverage band-pass clock filtering or a phase-locked loop (PLL) for increased jitter filtering are more suitable. De-skew based on injection-locked oscillators (ILOs) offer a reduced complexity design and competitive jitter tolerance over a wide skew range.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/982314
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