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Design a 28Mhz colpitts oscillator

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bachhuca005

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Hi am new to this oscillator design. I want to design a colpitts crystal oscillator with 28Mhz output using mosfet instead of bjt. can anyone please suggest any models which help me to generate 28Mhz o/p. Thank you
 

I would (for the moment) forget about the 28MHz part and use Google for basic Colpitts circuit designs. You will see many that use op-amps or transistors but the basic structure will be the same. You can also narrow the search down to those that use mosfets (such as http://www.datasheetdir.com/Nanopower-Lc-colpitts-Oscillator-Circuit+Application-Notes found at random).
After that you can start to design one that will oscillate at the frequency you are interested in.
What do you want it for? Are you looking for frequency stability, or low component count or what?
Susan
 

I would (for the moment) forget about the 28MHz part and use Google for basic Colpitts circuit designs. You will see many that use op-amps or transistors but the basic structure will be the same. You can also narrow the search down to those that use mosfets (such as http://www.datasheetdir.com/Nanopower-Lc-colpitts-Oscillator-Circuit+Application-Notes found at random).
After that you can start to design one that will oscillate at the frequency you are interested in.
What do you want it for? Are you looking for frequency stability, or low component count or what?
Susan

Its the reference frequency for a PLL

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I would (for the moment) forget about the 28MHz part and use Google for basic Colpitts circuit designs. You will see many that use op-amps or transistors but the basic structure will be the same. You can also narrow the search down to those that use mosfets (such as http://www.datasheetdir.com/Nanopower-Lc-colpitts-Oscillator-Circuit+Application-Notes found at random).
After that you can start to design one that will oscillate at the frequency you are interested in.
What do you want it for? Are you looking for frequency stability, or low component count or what?
Susan

I want a Colpitts oscillator which uses an external off-chip crystal.
 

One point to consider is if your crystal is the fundamental type, or an overtone type.
The required circuits will be quite different.

Overtone oscillators almost always have a tuned circuit to ensure the oscillator has maximum gain (at around) the required frequency of oscillation to ensure oscillation starts in the right mode.

Fundamental oscillators are pretty straight forward. But if the crystal is the overtone type you are not going to get 28 Mhz, but possibly 9.33 Mhz even though the crystal is marked 28 Mhz.
 

If you are using it as the input to a PLL and want it crystal drive, then why not use a simple op-amp inverter circuit.
The Colpitts oscillator will give you a sinusoidal waveform whereas the PLL will probably want a square wave which the inverter will give you.
Susan
 

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