On Thu, 18 Sep 2014 13:13:53 -0700, John Larkin wrote:
> Has anyone used silicon oscillators? I'd like to stock a few SOT-23
> oscillators to replace quartz crystal oscillators for non-critical
> stuff. Something cheap, of course.
Perhaps not what you're looking for, but I put a Silicon Labs Si5340 into
a product recently. It has a 14GHz internal VCO with four frac-N output
dividers, and a frac-N feedback divider that allows it to synthesise just
about any four frequencies up to 800MHz to better than 0.1ppm. If the
frequencies you want are integer numbers of Hz, it will synthesise them
with 0ppm error. At least it did that for all the test frequencies I
tried.
The frac-N dividers have dynamic phase adjusters to help reduce the
jitter due to the fractional N division process. They don't say how this
is done, but I assume that they get multiple phases from the 14GHz VCO
and switch between them.
It's programmable over I2C or SPI. It also has a one-time programmable
memory so you can get it to power up with the frequencies you want, but
I'm not using that in my application.
I used a 48MHz TXCO as the input reference.
The datasheet doesn't give phase noise plots. (The part is new. I
expect phase noise plots to turn up in future releases.)
I tried to measure the performance. I couldn't see any but the carrier
above the noise floor of my spectrum analyser at any span / rbw setting.
Ok, I need a better spectrum analyser.
With the four outputs set to different frequencies, I measured crosstalk
between adjacent outputs at about -80dB.
I don't have access to a phase noise test set any more so I can't do any
real phase noise measurements :(
On my trusty Agilent scope (20GSa/s, not sure of jitter spec), I measured
the relative jitter between the Si5340 outputs. This type of measurement
shows up the jitter from the output dividers but not the VCO.
At 600MHz, with all the test outputs at the same frequency I measured
about 30ps p-p on infinite persistence. I repeated the same test with
frequency offsets, e.g. output 1 was 600MHz, output 2 was 600.0000001MHz,
etc. causing the traces to drift slowly past each other on the scope.
The jitter seemed to be about 50ps p-p.
I think the performance is good enough for my needs. A decade back, that
sort of performance on four channels would have cost a few hundred
dollars [VCSOs, buffers, PLL per channel]. Now it's $20.
Regards,
Allan