Yes, I agree that ideally the experiment should be physically constructed and proven to operate. In fact, that is the plan eventually.
However we are trying to prove that a circuit using mulit-gate MOSFETs can exhibit the same locking proven to occur in single-gate
designs. The university may be able to get some pre-production models of these transistors, but either way I would like have both simulated and lab data to compare.
The simulation itself is less of an issue. I suppose I should be asking, can I expect to see the oscillator center frequency locking near the
resonant frequency of an LC tank if I simply place the LC tank in parallel with the oscillator? (I will attach a PDF of a rough topology of the circuit)
I understand that many injection locking examples include an explicit current source injected at a known frequency to influence the oscillator
at a particular range of frequencies. The paper I have read claims to be doing this simply with an LC tank. Though it may be more suitable to
call it locking through "resonance" or something of that nature, the paper uses the term "injection locking".