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V. Oscillators 1. Introduction to oscillators 2. Relaxation oscillators 3. The classic timer chip: the 555 CMOS 555s 4. Voltage-controlled oscillators 5. Quadrature oscillators 6. Quartz-crystal oscillators Voltage controlled crystal oscillator - VCXO 1. Introduction to oscillators Oscillators are waveform generators. A device without an oscillator either does not do anything or expects to be driven by something else, which probably contains an oscillator. The following applications of oscillators are the most common, important: Signal generators (souse of radio, TV signal). Function generators (sine, triangle, linear etc.). Pulse generators (series of pulses for clocks, counters and computers). Souse of regular oscillations. It is necessary in any cyclical measuring process and in any instruments which periodic state or waveform (digital multimeter, oscilloscope, counter, timer, calculator or computer). Different application of oscillators needs different circuit design. Demand may be made on stability of oscillation, on accuracy or on adjustability of generator. 2. Relaxation oscillators To charge – to fill, to load, to take in the correct amount of electricity. Charging and discharging a capacitor can make a very simple kind of oscillator. The capacitor is charging through a resistor and after the voltage reaches a level it is rapidly discharging. Oscillator based on this principle is known as relaxation oscillator. It is inexpensive and simple and when carefully designed, can be quite stable in frequency. The basic circuit is shown in Fig.1. 2017-05-05 -1- Renata Kalicka Charging capacitor C 0.5V Fig.1. Op-amp relaxation oscillator. Classic RC design. The principle of operation: Applying the power, for the first time, causes the output goes to positive saturation (or negative, it does not matter). C begins charging towards V+ through R. It causes that on the inverting input (-) appears voltage of growing value. In the same time, (+) input has got the voltage of constant value 0.5V+. As long as the difference between (-) and (+) input is positive, nothing changes: VNONINV VINV 0 gives V+ level on the output, it is positive saturation. The capacitor still is charging. When it reaches 0.5V+ on the inverting input (-) its output goes negative saturation: VNONINV VINV 0 gives V- level on the output. The above process repeats with the period T 2.2RC . Nowadays in relaxation oscillators are used op-amp and specially designed ICs (Integrated Circuits). Sometimes we need an oscillator of very low noises. The appropriate solution is in Fig. 2. B) A) Fig.2. Low noise oscillators. A) Uses a pair of CMOS (Complementary Metal-OxideSemiconductor) inverters. B) An improved A solution, more complicated. 2017-05-05 -2- Renata Kalicka The output noises are really small. When A circuit is running at 100kHz, disturbances measured at 100kHz100Hz are dumped at about 85dB with respect to the 100kHz: How many times are dumped? 20 log X 85dB , log X 4.25 , X 10 4.25 17 783 times noises are weaker than the signal. 3. The classic timer chip: the 555 The previous relaxation generators were designed from R, C and op-amp or a form of digital logic (see Fig.2, inverters). The next, higher level is the use of ICs generators or oscillators. They are specially design ICs. The most popular are the 555 and its successors. See Fig.3. Fig.3. Simplified 555 scheme. Some symbols in the figure belong to the digital world. We will talk about it later. The principle of operation of 555 is as follows: It has 2 inputs: the trigger (terminal 2) and the threshold (terminal 6). An input level below 1 1 VCC activates the trigger. The trigger input is active below VCC . 3 3 2 An input level above VCC activates the threshold. The threshold input is active above 3 2 VCC . 3 The output (terminal 3) goes High=HVCC or it goes Low=Lground level. The output goes high H when the 555 receives the trigger input, and stays there until the 555 gets the threshold input. Then the output goes low L and the discharge transistor Q1 is turned on. Fig.4 shows the process. 2017-05-05 -3- Renata Kalicka Turning on and off the discharge transistor Q1 H L Fig.4. The 555 connected as an oscillator. When the output is H, Q1 is turned off (key is opened) and capacitor C begins charging through RA+RB towards Vcc=10V. When it has reached 2/3Vcc, the threshold causes the output to go L. This causes that Q1 goes on (key is closed) and the capacitor begins discharging through RB toward ground. The cycle repeats with the period T 0.693 R A 2R B C This way we get rectangular wave on the output. Its duty cycle is always greater then 50%, because C is charging through RA+RB (slower) and discharging through RB only (quicker). Definition of duty cycle: ti period T duty cycle ti T The 555: Runs with a single positive supply (from 4.5V to 16V). Gives good frequency stability (close to 1%). Can be used for generation of a single pulse of arbitrary width as well as a bunch of other signals. Is small and inexpensive. CMOS 555s MOS = Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor. CMOS= Complementary MOS, the electronic structure based on the pair of complementary transistors n-MOS and p-MOS. n-MOS, p-MOS= technological structure metal-oxide-semiconductor with n-type and p-type channel. 2017-05-05 -4- Renata Kalicka The classic 555 has few drawbacks, disadvantages (see Table 5.3): high supply voltage, high supply current, high trigger current, inability to run with very low supply voltage. Using some of 555 CMOS successors allow avoiding these disadvantages. Le us have a look at Table: the CMOS are able to operate at very low supply voltage – down to 1V! Are able to operate at low supply current, therefor they are economical (not wasteful), have low power consumption. They are also able to run at higher frequency than the original 555s. In Fig.5 is shown the modification of oscillator from Fig.4. The latter gives the output with duty cycle>50%. Fig.5. Low duty cycle oscillator. The above gives low duty cycle positive pulses. The capacitor is charging rapidly through external diode discharging slowly through internal transistor. Up to now we have discussed rectangular oscillators. In Fig.6 is shown a way to generate a triangle wave with CMOS 555. Fig.6. Triangle generator. 2017-05-05 -5- Renata Kalicka There are some other interesting timer chips: The 322 timer from National Semiconductor The 74HC4060 The Exar 2243 The Intersil ICM7242 and so on... 4. Voltage-controlled oscillators There are another IC oscillators: Voltage Controlled Oscillators (VCOs). Examples are: NE566, LM331, 8038, 2206 and the series 74LS624-9. Some of them are able to generate signals which frequency ranges from 1 to 1000, i.e. fmin:fmax=1:1000. Different chips have different features: some give output frequency up to 20MHz, some faster give output frequency up to 200MHz and even to GHz range. The LM331 (Fig.7) is an example of voltage-to-frequency conversion. Fig.7. Typical V/F converter IC Output frequency f depends on input voltage Vin. The output frequency range is 10Hz104Hz. 5. Quadrature oscillators Sometimes we need a device able to generate a simultaneous pair of sine waves, which are 900 out of phase (phase shift is equal to 900) and which have equal amplitudes, like sine and cosine. We say that such signals are in quadrature. How to obtain a cosine if we have a sine A sint signal. The obvious way is to apply an integrator or differentiator: ut A sin tdt A 1 d cos t or ut A sin t A cos t dt 2017-05-05 -6- Renata Kalicka In both the cases the phase shift is 900, which is desired, but the amplitudes are not equal. There are methods, which help to combat these inconveniences. By use of amplifiers and inversion we are able to change the value and the sign of the cosine. Another ways of getting quadrature oscillators is to design the following: Analog trigonometric-function generator. State-variable generator. Phase sequence filters. Quadrature square waves, etc. 6. Quartz-crystal oscillators They are used when high stability and high accuracy of output frequency is required. For ordinary RC oscillators we can attain stability at about 0.1% and initial predictability at about 5-10%. It this good enough. It depends on the application. Very often it is not good enough. It is enough for instance for multiplexed display in pocket calculator. It this case multidigit numerical display is driven by lighting one digit after another with frequency 1kHz typically. Only 1 digit is lit at any time, but your eye sees the whole display. In this case it does not matter how precisely and accurately it is done – we can not see it, distinguish it anyway. It is a little better for LC oscillators – achievable frequency stability is 0.01%. It is good enough for radio frequency receivers and TV sets. For better, than the above, stability (0.001%) a crystal oscillator is required. For this purpose a piece of quartz is used (glass or silicon dioxide or other chemicals). The quartz is so called piezoelectric: a strain (causing mechanical deformation) generates a voltage and a voltage causes a strain (mechanical deformation). In another words: applied electric field causes acoustic waves in the quartz and in turn it causes a voltage at the crystal's surface. By plating some contacts on the crystal surface we get electronic element. It can be modeled as RLC circuit, pretuned (initially tuned) to some f0 frequency. Its equivalent circuit is shown in Fig.8 Fig.8. Equivalent circuit of a quartz oscillator. 2017-05-05 -7- Renata Kalicka In Fig.9 we have some crystal oscillator circuits. Fig.9. Various crystal oscillators. A - is classic Pierce oscillator with FET transistor. The oscillator consists of L, C and crystal. B – Colpitts oscillator. There is no L in the circuit. C – The crystal works as feedback element. D and E – generate logic output. E – uses very convenient MC12060 and MC 12061 from MOTOROLA. These chips are designed to work with crystals in range of frequency 100kHz – 20MHz. The above give sine wave and square-wave signal. An alternative (if a square wave is needed) is the use of complete crystal oscillator modules available as IC-sized metal packages. They come in lots of standard frequencies (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 16 and 20MHz) as well as frequencies commonly used in microprocessor systems (e.g. 14.31818MHz used for video boards). Typical accuracy is only 0.01%=100ppm=100x10-6, but you get it cheap (2-5$) and they are guaranteed to oscillate, which is not by any means assured when you wire your own oscillator. In general crystals are available from about 10kHz to about 10MHz and even to 250MHz. 2017-05-05 -8- Renata Kalicka You can order the crystal for any desired frequency – you just phone to the company and order any crystal you need. Apart of that, most commonly used frequencies are available off the shelf. Many of them (used in TV color, digital wristwatches, etc.) are available for less then a dollar. Low cost of crystals causes that very often crystals are used instead of RC oscillators. Voltage controlled crystal oscillator - VCXO They have good-to-excellent stability (typically 10ppm – 100ppm from center frequency) and good tunability. There are also so called TCXO – Temperature Compensated crystal oscillators. They have temperature compensation, which causes that their frequency stability, over the range 0-50C0, is as good as a few ppm up to 0.1ppm. Are more expensive. The VCXO's and the TCXO's are available as a complete module from many companies (manufacturers): Bliley, CTS Knights, Motorola, Reeves Hoffman, Vectron etc. 2017-05-05 -9- Renata Kalicka CMOS 555 successors 2017-05-05 -10- Renata Kalicka