FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION 16 November 14, 2012
IDT82V3001A WAN PLL WITH SINGLE REFERENCE INPUT
3.9 POWER SUPPLY FILTERING TECHNIQUES
To achieve optimum jitter performance, power supply filtering is
required to minimize supply noise modulation of the output clocks. The
common sources of power supply noise are switching power supplies
and the high switching noise from the outputs to the internal PLL. The
82V3001A provides separate power pins: V
DDA
and V
DDD
. V
DDA
pins
are for the internal analog PLL, and V
DDD
pins are for the core logic as
well as I/O driver circuits.
To minimize switching power supply noise generated by the
switching regulator, the power supply output should be filtered with
sufficient bulk capacity to minimize ripple and 0.1 uF (0402 case size,
ceramic) capacitors to filter out the switching transients.
For the 82V3001A, the decoupling for V
DDA
and V
DDD
are handled
individually. V
DDD
and V
DDA
should be individually connected to the
power supply plane through vias, and bypass capacitors should be used
for each pin. Figure - 11 illustrates how bypass capacitor and ferrite
bead should be connected to each power pin.
The analog power supply V
DDA
should have low impedance. This
can be achieved by using one 10 uF (1210 case size, ceramic) and at
least two 0.1 uF (0402 case size, ceramic) capacitors in parallel. The 0.1
uF (0402 case size, ceramic) capacitors must be placed next to the
V
DDA
pins and as close as possible. Note that the 10 uF capacitor must
be of 1210 case size, and it must be ceramic for lowest possible ESR
(Effective Series Resistance). The 0.1 uF should be of case size 0402,
which offers the lowest ESL (Effective Series Inductance) to achieve low
impedance towards the high speed range.
For V
DDD
, at least three 0.1 uF (0402 case size, ceramic) and one 10
uF (1210 case size, ceramic) capacitors are recommended. The 0.1 uF
capacitors should be placed as close to the V
DDD
pins as possible.
Please refer to evaluation board schematic for details.
Figure - 11 IDT82V3001A Power Decoupling Scheme
SLF7028T-100M1R1
10 F
0.1 F
0.1 F
37
48
3.3 V
SLF7028T-100M1R1
10 F
0.1 F
0.1 F
13
19
0.1 F
26
3.3 V
IDT82V3001A
V
DDA
V
DDA
V
DDD
V
DDD
V
DDD
V
SS
V
SS
V
SS
V
SS
V
SS
12
18
27
38
47
MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE 17 November 14, 2012
IDT82V3001A WAN PLL WITH SINGLE REFERENCE INPUT
4 MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE
The following are some synchronizer performance indicators and
their corresponding definitions.
4.1 INTRINSIC JITTER
Intrinsic jitter is the jitter produced by the synchronizing circuit and is
measured at its output. It is measured by applying a reference signal
with no jitter to the input of the device, and measuring its output jitter.
Intrinsic jitter may also be measured when the device is in a non-
synchronizing mode, such as free running or holdover, by measuring the
output jitter of the device. Intrinsic jitter is usually measured with various
band limiting filters depending on the applicable standards. In the
IDT82V3001A, the intrinsic Jitter is limited to less than 0.02 UI on the
2.048 MHz and 1.544 MHz clocks.
4.2 JITTER TOLERANCE
Jitter tolerance is a measure of the ability of a DPLL to operate
properly (i.e., remain in lock and or regain lock in the presence of large
jitter magnitudes at various jitter frequencies) when jitter is applied to its
reference. The applied jitter magnitude and jitter frequency depends on
the applicable standards.
4.3 JITTER TRANSFER
Jitter transfer or jitter attenuation refers to the magnitude of jitter at
the output of a device for a given amount of jitter at the input of the
device. Input jitter is applied at various amplitudes and frequencies, and
output jitter is measured with various filters depending on the applicable
standards.
For the IDT82V3001A, two internal elements determine the jitter
attenuation. This includes the internal 2.1 Hz low pass loop filter and the
phase slope limiter. The phase slope limiter limits the output phase slope
to 5 ns/125 µs. Therefore, if the input signal exceeds this rate, such as
for very large amplitude low frequency input jitter, the maximum output
phase slope will be limited (i.e., attenuated) to 5 ns/125 µs.
The IDT82V3001A has fourteen outputs with three possible input
frequencies for a total of 42 possible jitter transfer functions. Since all
outputs are derived from the same signal, the jitter transfer values for
three cases, 8 kHz to 8 kHz, 1.544 MHz to 1.544 MHz and 2.048 MHz to
2.048 MHz can be applied to all outputs.
It should be noted that 1 UI at 1.544 MHz is 644 ns, which is not
equal to 1 UI at 2.048 MHz, which is 488 ns. Consequently, a transfer
value using different input and output frequencies must be calculated in
common units (e.g., seconds).
Using the above method, the jitter attenuation can be calculated for
all combinations of input and outputs based on the three jitter transfer
functions provided. Note that the resulting jitter transfer functions for all
combinations of input (8 kHz, 1.544 MHz, 2.048 MHz) and outputs (8
kHz, 1.544 MHz, 3.088 MHz, 6.312 MHz, 2.048 MHz, 4.096 MHz, 8.192
MHz, 16.384 MHz, 32.768 MHz) for a given input signal (jitter frequency
and jitter amplitude) are the same.
Since intrinsic jitter is always present, jitter attenuation will appear to
be lower for small input jitter signals than for large ones. Consequently,
accurate jitter transfer function measurements are usually made with
large input jitter signals (e.g., 75% of the specified maximum jitter
tolerance).
4.4 FREQUENCY ACCURACY
Frequency accuracy is defined as the absolute tolerance of an output
clock signal when it is not locked to an external reference, but is
operating in a free running mode. For the IDT82V3001A, the Freerun
accuracy is equal to the Master Clock (OSCi) accuracy.
4.5 HOLDOVER ACCURACY
Holdover accuracy is defined as the absolute tolerance of an output
clock signal, when it is not locked to an external reference signal, but is
operating using storage techniques. For the IDT82V3001A, the storage
value is determined while the device is in Normal Mode and locked to an
external reference signal.
The absolute Master Clock (OSCi) accuracy of the IDT82V3001A
does not affect Holdover accuracy, but the change in OSCi accuracy
while in Holdover Mode does.
4.6 CAPTURE RANGE
Also referred to as pull-in range. This is the input frequency range
over which the synchronizer must be able to pull into synchronization.
The IDT82V3001A capture range is equal to ±230 ppm minus the
accuracy of the master clock (OSCi). For example, a 32 ppm master
clock results in a capture range of 198 ppm.
4.7 LOCK RANGE
This is the input frequency range over which the synchronizer must
be able to maintain synchronization. The lock range is equal to the
capture range for the IDT82V3001A.
4.8 PHASE SLOPE
Phase slope is measured in seconds per second and is the rate at
which a given signal changes phase with respect to an ideal signal. The
given signal is typically the output signal. The ideal signal is of constant
frequency and is nominally equal to the value of the final output signal or
final input signal.
4.9 TIME INTERVAL ERROR (TIE)
TIE is the time delay between a given timing signal and an ideal
timing signal.
4.10 MAXIMUM TIME INTERVAL ERROR (MTIE)
MTIE is the maximum peak to peak delay between a given timing
signal and an ideal timing signal within a particular observation period.
4.11 PHASE CONTINUITY
Phase continuity is the phase difference between a given timing
signal and an ideal timing signal at the end of a particular observation
period. Usually, the given timing signal and the ideal timing signal are of
the same frequency. Phase continuity applies to the output of the
synchronizer after a signal disturbance due to a mode change. The
observation period is usually the time from the disturbance, to just after
MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE 18 November 14, 2012
IDT82V3001A WAN PLL WITH SINGLE REFERENCE INPUT
the synchronizer has settled to a steady state.
In the case of the IDT82V3001A, the output signal phase continuity is
maintained to within ±5 ns at the instance (over one frame) of all mode
changes. The total phase shift, depending on the type of mode change,
may accumulate up to 200 ns over many frames. The rate of change of
the 200 ns phase shift is limited to a maximum phase slope of
approximately 5 ns/125 µs. This meets AT&T TR62411 maximum phase
slope requirement of 7.6 ns/125 µs and Telcordia GR-1244-CORE (81
ns/1.326 ms).
4.12 PHASE LOCK TIME
This is the time it takes the synchronizer to phase lock to the input
signal. Phase lock occurs when the input signal and output signal are
not changing in phase with respect to each other (not including jitter).
Lock time is very difficult to determine because it is affected by many
factors, which include:
i) Initial input to output phase difference
ii) Initial input to output frequency difference
iii) Synchronizer loop filter
iv) Synchronizer limiter
Although a short lock time is desirable, it is not always possible to
achieve due to other synchronizer requirements. For instance, better
jitter transfer performance is achieved with a lower frequency loop filter
which increases lock time. And better (smaller) phase slope
performance (limiter) results in longer lock times. The IDT82V3001A
loop filter and limiter were optimized to meet AT&T TR62411 jitter
transfer and phase slope requirements. Consequently, phase lock time,
which is not a standards requirement, may be longer than in other
applications. See Table - 7 for Maximum Phase Lock Time.
The IDT82V3001A provides a fast lock pin (FLOCK), which enables
the DPLL to lock to an incoming reference within approximately 500 ms
when set high.

82V3001APVG8

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
IDT
Description:
Clock Generators & Support Products 3.3V T1/E1 Stratum 4 /4E single ref WAN
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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