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  3. How to use MOSFET as a switch to introduce a capacitor into...

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How to use MOSFET as a switch to introduce a capacitor into a LC tank in VCO?

Alex Liao
Alex Liao over 10 years ago

Hi guys,

In my VCO design, if I introduce a fixed capacitance, Cap_fix into the C tank, it works fine and give me the target frequency I want. If I disconnect this path (in parallel with the total C) to disable the introduction of this Cap_fix, it gives me higher frequency and it is reasonable as it follows:
w = 1/sqrt(C*L).

But if I want to implement this on/off feature using a MOSFET it does not work.
It always generates strange frequency. I was observing the target frequency through Cadence DFT function of the output in the ADE panel.

Working as a switch, I treated the D and S ends as the switch's two ends. I biased the MOSEFT in triode (ohmic) region, which means,
give me a small Ron (1/gds) when it is on and a infinite large Ron when it is off. For MOSFET size, I tried several combinations, still not working. Either the harmonic signal's strength is high or sometimes output some unreasonable DFT waveform.

Is it such tricky on just using a triode region MOSFET as a simple on/off switch in RF circuit? Or was I implementing the switch using MOSFET in a wrong way? or any tips on bias or sizing this MOSFET? Shouldn't be the reason of my core design as it works fine by simply connecting/disconnect a regular capacitor into the LC tank.

Any reply is appreciated!
Thanks,
Alex

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  • Andrew Beckett
    Andrew Beckett over 10 years ago

    Alex Liao said:
    2. Can the transient analysis operating point (TA-OP) help by running transient analysis? I always use it in diagnose problems in high frequency domain. It can print out a list of parameters. But I do not know how the Cadence get those information. Transient is run on a specific time range, the results must correspond to a sampling time. Are the printed TA-OP information revealing the simulation of the last sampling time or it always returns a average value? Should not be the later case, as the TA-OP list includes the region of Mosfet, which is 0,1,2,3,4 for different meaning. This information cannot be averaged. Right?

    Alex,

    If you use the "infotimes" parameter of the tran analysis to save the operating point at a list of times (what you call "TA-OP", which is a term I've never heard anyone use before!) then you get the operating point at those times - it's not averaged. I'm not sure why you would think it was averaged - you get an output at each and every time you ask to save at.

    Regards,

    Andrew.

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  • Andrew Beckett
    Andrew Beckett over 10 years ago

    Alex Liao said:
    2. Can the transient analysis operating point (TA-OP) help by running transient analysis? I always use it in diagnose problems in high frequency domain. It can print out a list of parameters. But I do not know how the Cadence get those information. Transient is run on a specific time range, the results must correspond to a sampling time. Are the printed TA-OP information revealing the simulation of the last sampling time or it always returns a average value? Should not be the later case, as the TA-OP list includes the region of Mosfet, which is 0,1,2,3,4 for different meaning. This information cannot be averaged. Right?

    Alex,

    If you use the "infotimes" parameter of the tran analysis to save the operating point at a list of times (what you call "TA-OP", which is a term I've never heard anyone use before!) then you get the operating point at those times - it's not averaged. I'm not sure why you would think it was averaged - you get an output at each and every time you ask to save at.

    Regards,

    Andrew.

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