DhVJ
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Hi,Low phase noise amplifiers do work with clocks and these are kind of buffers for oscillators, that's why they are required to not contribute much to the phase noise or jitter of the oscillations. Here is from ADI's web site
" Low Phase Noise amplifiers are critical for many applications requiring high signal integrity. This is especially relevant in instrumentation, defense, and telecommunication applications where low phase noise amplifiers are becoming increasingly important as the oscillators improve. Phase noise is described as the close-in noise to the carrier that can often appear as jitter on a clock signal. "
Technically, this post is in the wrong section, since it is a distributed amplifier, which is a MMIC, and microwave, so it should be in the microwave section.
Anyhow, a low phase noise distributed amplifier needs to have low noise and low frequencies and therefore one of the those noise sources is the 1/f noise. It's all about the terminations and they are typically active terminations when designing distributed amplifiers. Typically, HBTs have lower 1/f noise than FETs, so using bipolar would be better.
In an LNA for wireless applications, we are designing a narrow band design, so typically we don't care about 1/f noise. But for low phase noise, we care about 1/f noise if we are designing for low phase noise and if doing a wideband amplifier.
So to design, you design a distributed amplifier as usual and then be mindful about the terminations as the papers below explain.
See: **broken link removed**
A few papers have been published about this and they are below:
A. Kopa, A.B. Apsel, “Distributed Amplifier With Blue Noise active Termination,” IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, vol. 18, no. 3, March 2008.
P. K. Ikalainen, “Low-Noise distributed amplifier with active load,” IEEE Microw. Guided Wave Lett., vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 7–9, Jan. 1996.
Next time, put the post in the right section. Also, knowing the application, your specifications and what you tried so far would be helpful - also what process you are using,
Hi,"Low Phase Noise Amplifier" term is-in my opinion-wrong ..
Phase Noise is a consequence of the Noise itself and the Noise creates another result.. : AM Noise.. even-tough it's negligible..
Noise adds a fluctuation over any kind of signal even DC..So even there is a carrier or not, there should be only one single term.
Low Noise System. ( amplifier,oscillator,mixer etc.) IMHO
Thank you. I would go through it.This man is an expert on Phase Noise and he discusses how to derive math. and how to measure...
There are many papers-mostly theoretical-about the mechanism about PN.
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