Inverter crystal oscillator

In numerous RF synthesizer chips lies an inverter with input and output pins for making a reference crystal oscillator clock. I built some discrete chip inverter xtal oscillators with 74HC series logic gates to better examine them. You’ll quickly recognize the oft-used Pierce oscillator topology with 1 trimmer capacitor to tweak the fundamental frequency which might vary from factors like crystal aging and gate, crystal, crystal holder + board reactances.

I determined the 27 pF and trimmer cap values through experiments and measures.

Above — A crystal reference oscillator + buffer with inverters built from NAND gates. The crystal is a good 1 — built in 2013; AT- cut; parallel 20 pF load capacitance; fundamental 12.8 MHz; a measured QuL of 265K and zero spurs during my test sweeps. Further, this crystal ages < 5 ppm per annum for at least 2 decades.

If I contrast this with some cheap xtals I bought and tested from eBay — it’s night versus day. You might find such xtals in DDS and other low-cost synthesizers kits. They typically come in a HC-49S case, might suffer a QuL of 40-60K — and more alarmingly, those I measured often showed strong, close-in spurs to further trash the already compromised close-in phase noise of these low-cost synthesizers.

Quoting Dr. Ulrich Rohde ” [ALL] elements in a synthesizer contribute to noise. Two primary noise contributors are the reference and the VCO. Actually, the crystal oscillator or frequency standard is a high-Q version of the VCO” [ Reference 1 ].

Although this post isn’t about phase noise; in this era of poor quality, “cheapo” crystals, I think a low-noise reference is worth considering when synthesizing signals for specific applications that require low phase noise. Big thanks to Alexei Luk for sending me this 12.8 MHz gem.

I found a problem with my circuit as shown above: strong spikes on the positive and negative edges. My quest became finding ways to decrease these spikes and enhance the square waveform seen in my DSO

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A Propos De L'Auteur

Ibrar Ayyub

Je suis expérimenté, rédacteur technique, titulaire d'une Maîtrise en informatique de BZU Multan, Pakistan à l'Université. Avec un arrière-plan couvrant diverses industries, notamment en matière de domotique et de l'ingénierie, j'ai perfectionné mes compétences dans la rédaction claire et concise du contenu. Compétent en tirant parti de l'infographie et des diagrammes, je m'efforce de simplifier des concepts complexes pour les lecteurs. Ma force réside dans une recherche approfondie et de présenter l'information de façon structurée et logique format.

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