马上注册,结交更多好友,享用更多功能,让你轻松玩转社区。
您需要 登录 才可以下载或查看,没有账号?注册
x
Clock JitterClock jitter is the deviation from the ideal timing of clock transition events. Because such deviation can be detrimental to high-speed data transfer and can degrade performance, jitter must be kept to a minimum in a high-speed system.High-speed signaling is very sensitive to jitter. As signals toggle faster and faster, tighter restrictions fall on the signal transmitter and receiver. In many high-speed data applications, the clock edge must fall within a tight margin of time to capture data correctly. The more jitter in a system, the more often the clock edge will fall outside the margin. The frequency of clock edge deviations from the acceptable margin translates to the system’s bit error rate (BER). Figure 1 shows a schematic representation of clock jitter. file:///C:/Users/hp/AppData/Local/Temp/enhtmlclip/Image.jpg
Slew or Transition time:
Time taken for a signal to reach from 10% of VDD to 90% VDD
Insertion Delay – delay from clock source to the clock endpoint
Skew - Difference in arrival time at clock endpoints
clock skew = clock insertion delay of FF1 - clock insertion delay of FF2
What is Clock Jitter? Clock jitter is the variation of a clock edge from its ideal position in time, as illustrated in Figure 3-45. The heavy line shows the ideal position on the clock signal. On each clock edge, there is some amount of variation between the actual clock edge and its ideal location. The difference between the maximum and minimum variations is called peak-topeak jitter. Jitter is only relevant on the active clock edge. For example, in single-data rate (SDR) applications, data is clocked at each rising clock edge and the specified jitter only subtracts from the total clock period. In dual-data rate (DDR) application, data is clocked at the start of each period and halfway into the period. Therefore, jitter affects each half period. file:///C:/Users/hp/AppData/Local/Temp/enhtmlclip/Image(1).jpg
What Causes Clock Jitter? Clock jitter is unavoidable and exists in all systems. Clock jitter is caused by the various sources of noise or by signal imperfections within the system. In fact, jitter is the manifestation of noise in the time domain. The incoming clock source, for example, has its own jitter characteristics due to random thermal or mechanical vibration noise from the crystal. A large number of simultaneous switching outputs (SSOs) adds substrate noise that slightly changes internal switching thresholds and therefore adds jitter. Similarly, an improperly designed power supply or insufficient decoupling also contributes to jitter. Other sources of clock jitter include cross talk from adjacent signals, poor termination, ground bounce, and electromagnetic interference (EMI)
|