[time-nuts] Noise contribution of PLL on measuring phase noise

Magnus Danielson magnus at rubidium.dyndns.org
Wed Jun 28 20:02:16 UTC 2017


Hi,

The PLL acts like a combined lowpass and highpass filter.
Noise in the loop is high-pass filtered, thus, the further down from the 
loop bandwidth, the better suppression of the noise.
Noise on the reference input is low-pass filtered, so that it passes 
through DC and a bit more, but high frequency jitter gets filtered out 
more and more as the frequency goes up from the loop bandwidth.

While noise in the loop gets suppressed, it is wise not to make it too 
large. However, no need to go overboard. Getting the op-amp to support 
the loop bandwidth properly makes good sense. Too much leakage due to 
low load impedance is a bad thing.

Cheers,
Magnus

On 06/28/2017 09:23 PM, Thomas S. Knutsen wrote:
> Thank you Bob.
>
> I was thinking of the contribution outside the loop, as for most part my
> PLL loops are around 1Hz and resolving closer than 10Hz isn't easy with a
> analyzer that stops at 10Hz.
>
> I guess what I'm asking is: should I take any care in the unity gain
> buffers or would any normal garden variety op-amp work?
> Wentzel used the 310 in his buffers, and those are a bit special, being a
> bipolar amp with 2nA input bias current.
>
>
> BR.
> Thomas
>
>
>
> 2017-06-28 18:08 GMT+02:00 Bob kb8tq <kb8tq at n1k.org>:
>
>> Hi
>>
>> Ok, let’s back up a bit:
>>
>> There are two basic regions when measuring a phase locked oscillator. You
>> can be “inside” the loop bandwidth or “outside”. Yes it’s a bit more
>> complex
>> than that, but go with the idea for now. Inside the bandwidth, everything
>> about
>> the PLL can / may matter. It can and often does contribute noise to the
>> result.
>> That noise might be from the detector, a divider, or even the loop
>> amplifier. Outside
>> the loop bandwidth you just see the oscillator phase noise. (There is a
>> third region
>> in-between the two where things get even more messy).
>>
>> Based on that, you will see some noise from the loop amplifier. Exactly
>> how much
>> (is it 0.001 db?) or how far out will always be a “that depends” sort of
>> thing. Without
>> measurement (and possibly modeling) there is no single answer to the
>> question. There
>> are many noise sources in any phase noise setup so this issue is hardly
>> unique to the
>> loop amp.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>>> On Jun 28, 2017, at 6:29 AM, Thomas S. Knutsen <la3pna at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi.
>>>
>>> When measuring Phase Noise using PLL, what noise would be contribuded
>> from
>>> the PLL into the amplifier?
>>> Lets say we disconnect the control voltage from the oscillator, shouldn't
>>> the input stage of the PLL contribute some, altough miniscule part to the
>>> total noise seen?
>>> Would this noise be masked by the noise from the phase detector?
>>>
>>>
>>> The reason for asking is that I'm trying to improve my PN measurement
>>> setup.
>>> Currently the PLL consist of a unity gain buffer made of TL072 before the
>>> PLL filter, not unlike what Wentzel did in his amplifier. The PLL filter
>> is
>>> a low noise op-amp (OP27).
>>>
>>> BR.
>>> Thomas.
>>>
>>> --
>>> With Best regards, Thomas S. Knutsen.
>>>
>>> Please  avoid sending  me  Word  or  PowerPoint  attachments.
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>
>



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