Copyright 1999 Analog Devices, Inc.
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A Technical Tutorial
on Digital Signal Synthesis
Copyright 1999 Analog Devices, Inc.
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Outline
Section 1. Fundamentals of DDS technology
Theory of operation
Circuit architecture
Tuning equation
Elements of DDS circuit functionality and capabilities
DAC integration
Trends in functional integration
Section 2. Understanding the Sampled Output of a DDS Output
Implications of the Nyquist Theorum
Aliased images in the output
Source of aliased images
Calculating the occurrence of aliased images
Quantization considerations
Sin(X)/X response
AC and DC linearity of the output
Section 3. Frequency/phase-hopping Capability of DDS
Calculating the output tuning word
Determining maximum tuning resolution
Determining maximum tuning speed
Understanding the DDS control interface
Pre-programming profile registers
Section 4. The DDS Output Spectrum
The effect of DAC resolution on spurious performance
The effect of oversampling on spurious performance
The effect of truncating the phase accumulator on spurious performance
Additional DDS Spur sources
Wideband spur performance
Narrowband spur performance
Predicting and exploiting spur "sweet spots" in a DDS' tuning range
Jitter and phase noise considerations in a DDS system
Output filtering considerations
Section 5. High-speed Reference Clock Considerations
Implications of jitter and phase noise in the reference clock
Reference clock multipliers
SFDR performance vs. the REFCLK Multiplier function
Copyright 1999 Analog Devices, Inc.
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Section 6. Interfacing to the DDS Output
Output power considerations
FS output current range and tradeoffs vs. spur performance
Single-ended vs. differential DAC output
Driving an output amplifier
Section 7. DDS as a Clock Generator
Definition of clock generator application for a DDS
Squaring the DDS output with an LP filter and comparator
Managing jitter in the clock generator application
Section 8. Replacing/Integrating a PLL with a DDS Solution
Traditional analog synthesizer vs. the DDS implementation
How DDS can eliminate analog upconverter stages
Example of implementation of DDS as an LO
Section 9. Digital Modulator Application of DDS
Basic digital modulator theory
System architecture and requirements
Digital filters
Multirate DSP
Clock and input data synchronization considerations
Data encoding methodologies and DDS implementations
Section 10. Using Aliased Images to Generate Nyquist + Frequencies from a DDS
Creating and isolating aliased images in the DDS output spectrum
SFDR performance expectations of the aliased image
Amplitude prediction of the aliased image
Frequency hopping considerations in the aliased image application
Section 11. Ancillary DDS Techniques, Features, and Functions
Improving SFDR with the addition of phase dither in the phase accumulator
Understanding DDS frequency “chirp” functionality
Achieving output amplitude control/modulation within a DDS device
Synchronization multiple DDS devices
Section 12. Techniques for Bench Evaluation of a DDS Solution
PC-based evaluation platforms and reference designs
Copyright 1999 Analog Devices, Inc.
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Section 13. Integrating DDS-based Hardware into a System Environment
Analog/digital ground considerations
Power supply considerations
High-speed PCB layout techniques
Section 14. DDS Product Selection Guide
Appendix A – Glossary of Related Electronic Terms
Appendix B – Common Communications Acronyms
Appendix C – An FM Modulator using DDS
Appendix D – Pseudo-Random Generator
Appendix E - Jitter Reduction in DDS Clock Generator Systems
Copyright 1999 Analog Devices, Inc.
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Section 1. Fundamentals of DDS Technology
Overview
Direct digital synthesis (DDS) is a technique for using digital data processing blocks as a means
to generate a frequency- and phase-tunable output signal referenced to a fixed-frequency
precision clock source. In essence, the reference clock frequency is “divided down” in a DDS
architecture by the scaling factor set forth in a programmable binary tuning word. The tuning
word is typically 24-48 bits long which enables a DDS implementation to provide superior
output frequency tuning resolution.
Today’s cost-competitive, high-performance, functionally-integrated, and small package-sized
DDS products are fast becoming an alternative to traditional frequency-agile analog synthesizer
solutions. The integration of a high-speed, high-performance, D/A converter and DDS
architecture onto a single chip (forming what is commonly known as a Complete-DDS solution)
enabled this technology to target a wider range of applications and provide, in many cases, an
attractive alternative to analog-based PLL synthesizers. For many applications, the DDS solution
holds some distinct advantages over the equivalent agile analog frequency synthesizer employing
PLL circuitry.
DDS advantages:
• Micro-Hertz tuning resolution of the output frequency and sub-degree phase tuning
capability, all under complete digital control.
• Extremely fast “hopping speed” in tuning output frequency (or phase), phase-continuous
frequency hops with no over/undershoot or analog-related loop settling time anomalies.
• The DDS digital architecture eliminates the need for the manual system tuning and tweaking
associated with component aging and temperature drift in analog synthesizer solutions.
• The digital control interface of the DDS architecture facilitates an environment where
systems can be remotely controlled, and minutely optimized, under processor control.
• When utilized as a quadrature synthesizer, DDS afford unparalleled matching and control of I
and Q synthesized outputs.
Theory of Operation
In its simplest form, a direct digital synthesizer can be implemented from a precision reference
clock, an address counter, a programmable read only memory (PROM), and a D/A converter (see
Figure 1-1).