Hi All, Quick question for the more experienced members here with GPSDO design/operation. Let's assume I'm using a 4096 phase comparator chip followed by some kind of long time constant lowpass loop filter, whether it be analog or digital, is not of concern for the following question.
Obviously using a 74HCT4096 would mean that my EFC voltage range would be approx. 0-5V. If I wanted to use an OCXO with say a 0-8V EFC voltage range, then I would be inclined to simply use an op-amp amplifier with a gain of 1.6 to scale the EFC voltage accordingly. But not just any op-amp would do I take it? High-speed would of course be of no concern. Also low-offset would be of little concern, as the PLL would work to correct this, and it therefore seems to be negligible. However, the part that's got me thinking is noise. Obviously any noise at the ouput of the amp would adversely affect the frequency stability of the OCXO. I thought the best way to control this would be to use an extremely low noise op-amp employing a rather large compensation cap to give me a rather small bandwidth, perhaps only a few hundred hertz. Anyone have experience with this? Assuming I have an OXCO with a max. pulling range of 1ppm or 1e-6 over a 10V range, then I effectively can pull 1e-7 per volt. This translates to 1e-10 per millivolt and 1e-13 per microvolt. Assuming that is a logical conclusion, then for a good OCXO, in which I can at best hope for 5e-12 stability for tau=1s (e.g. HP10811A), I would strive to to keep the noise at such a level that it is an order of magnitude better than the best short term stability figure. Accordingly, then I should shoot to keep any noise under 1 microvolt? I don't have much experience with noise calculations. I know it is specified in nV/sqrt(Hz) generally. Translating this to something practical is basically the assistance I'm looking for here. I would appreciate anyone being able to teach me a bit more about this. Thank you in all in advance. Sincerely, John Foege _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
