AD9361 Reference Manual
UG-570
| Page 123 of 128
Effects on Phase Noise Due to Noise on the Power Supply
Figure 90 shows the effects of power supply noise on the phase
noise of the transmitter local oscillator. The transmitter local
oscillator is set to 5.1 GHz. This plot shows that noise from a
poorly designed power management section will be up-
converted to affect the performance of the transmitter and
similarly have an adverse effect on the receiver performance.
The phase noise performance degrades as the local oscillator
frequency increases. For example, the effects of power supply
noise are not as pronounced if the local oscillator frequency is
700 MHz compared to when the local oscillator frequency is
5.8 GHz. This is because the synthesizer always generates a
frequency between 6 GHz to 12 GHz. To generate a specific LO,
the synthesizer output is divided which also reduces the noise
spectrum. Conversely, the highest frequency designs require the
lowest amount of power supply noise because the divide ratios
are small.
Figure 90 shows the best performance when the
ADP1755
LDO
is used. The
ADP1755
has better noise characteristics than the
ADP1706
LDO. The phase noise plot compares the perfor-
mance of the
ADP5040
in different layout scenarios. The
ADP5040
has a buck convertor that powers up 1.3 V analog
power supply. The
ADP5040
also has two LDOs that are used to
power the VDD_GPO supply and the VDD_INTERFACE
supply. For more details on the
ADP5040
, refer to its data sheet.
Figure 90. Phase Noise vs. Frequency Offset Comparison for Different Power Supply Schemes
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Rev. A