Phase Noise Reference

Spectrum of a VCO Modulated by White Noise

To illustrate the preceding theory,   we analyze the practical example of white voltage noise modulating a VCO.

We have a VCO with tuning sensitivity Kv (Hz/Volt).  The VCO control voltage has a DC level,  giving an output frequency fc ,  and a noise voltage vn  which has a white noise spectrum of en volts/sqrt(Hz).       

To determine the output spectrum we proceed as follows:

  • consider the noise voltage to be made up of a large number of sinusoidal signals

  • note that each sinusoidal signal results in very low level phase modulation

  • so for each sinusoidal signal determine the power in the sidelobes

  • add up the power in the sidelobes from each original sinusoidal component

We consider the noise to be made up of sine waves spaced at 1Hz intervals (to be rigorous we would have to consider the limit as this frequency interval went to zero).   As the noise is white,  there is equal energy in each 1Hz cell,  so we can represent each 1Hz cell at frequency fm by

v(fm)   Ö2 en sin(2pfmt + fm)

.. (1.9)     

Note that the rms level in each 1Hz is en as required,  but with random phase fm.   Each of these sinusoids results in narrowband frequency modulation,  with modulation index given by

 

b(fm)   Ö2 en  Kv / fm 

.. (1.10)     

Note that Kv  is in Hz/volt and  fm is in Hz.   As long as the total modulation index is small (as it typically is) then each 1Hz component of vn contributes sidebands of amplitude 

 

Noise Sideband Amplitude    en  Kv / (Ö2  fm )

.. (1.11)     

relative to the carrier.   Thus the SSB Phase Noise is given by

 

Lf( fm ) = en2  Kv2 / (2  fm2 )

.. (1.12)      

 

Note that (enKv)  is the rms deviation per Hz,  allowing the use of the following universal charts

 

Figure 2 - Universal VCO Noise Modulation Chart 1

 

Figure 2 shows how the phase noise at particular offset frequencies (100Hz, 1kHz, 10kHz, 100kHz and 1MHz) varies according to the RMS frequency deviation per Hz bandwidth - that is en

 

Example:  The noise from a 1kW resistor (4nV/sqrt(Hz) ) modulating a 10MHz/V VCO results in an rms deviation of 0.04Hz,  so the chart reveals that the  phase noise will be -111dBc/Hz at 10kHz offset.

 

Figure 3 - Universal VCO Noise Modulation Chart 2

 

Figure 3 shows the typical output spectrum chosen values of enKv ,  the RMS deviation per Hz.   

 

Example: The noise from a 1kW resistor (4nV/sqrt(Hz) ) modulating a 10MHz/V VCO,  the resulting rms deviation of 0.04Hz will give a spectrum slightly worse than the third curve from the top.

 

 

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