Abstract :
Actual state of the art commercial precision 5 MHz crystal oscillators use “linear” sustaining circuits with AGC-control and have, at 1 Hz from the carrier, a phase noise performance of about -120 dBc/Hz, but F.L. Walls [1995] showed, that the fundamental limit is lower, -140 dBc/Hz should be attainable. A new design philosophy for the sustaining circuit is presented which uses a nonlinear approach, is simple and has no AGC, which is one of the causes of not reaching the fundamental limit for the phase noise and which allows the crystal to oscillate as freely as possible during the whole cycle of oscillation without degrading its Q-factor as actual bottoming nonlinear sustaining circuits do. This new sustaining circuit makes it further possible to realize a crystal oscillator which can at the same time approach the fundamental limit of phase noise at 1 Hz and have extremely low aging rate, because it is not overdriving the crystal in order to reach low noise at 1 Hz
Keywords :
Q-factor; ageing; crystal oscillators; phase noise; 5 MHz; Q-factor; aging rate; design philosophy; nonlinear sustaining circuits; phase noise performance; precision crystal oscillators; sustaining circuit; Aging; Bandwidth; Circuit noise; Circuit stability; Degradation; Guidelines; Impedance; Oscillators; Phase noise; Q factor;
Conference_Titel :
Frequency and Time Forum, 1999 and the IEEE International Frequency Control Symposium, 1999., Proceedings of the 1999 Joint Meeting of the European