Hi all,
I recently studied about the PLL and synthesizer and got a LMX2531 EVM.
When measuring the tuning voltage vs output frequency, I found that the frequency decreasing as tuning voltage rises i.e. negative Kvco. And the result is in the following figure.
To the best of my knowledge, typical Kvco is positive because the capacitance of varactor diode is reduced as the tuning voltage increasing which will increase the oscillation frequency.
The VCO is inside the IC, how do you know that the control voltage is connected to the cathode of a varactor diode. It might be connected to the anode, or involve additional active circuits.
The VCO is inside the IC, how do you know that the control voltage is connected to the cathode of a varactor diode. It might be connected to the anode, or involve additional active circuits.
yes, what he said!
Since the tuning voltage is generated with an internal charge pump, it is likely that one terminal of the varactor is tied to something like 3.0 V internally.
yes, what he said!
Since the tuning voltage is generated with an internal charge pump, it is likely that one terminal of the varactor is tied to something like 3.0 V internally. View attachment 146300
when you are designing a MMIC circuit, there are all sorts of advantages to doing things an odd way. Some are dictated by the substrate material used and if it need to be a reverse biased buried diode...some are done for chip size reduction, some are done because there are breakdown voltage limitations or device type limitations. The varactor diode i drew, for instance, may not be an actual diode at all, but part of a transistor, etc.