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Maxim > Design Support > Technical Documents > Application Notes > General Engineering Topics > APP 3512
Keywords: EMI, noise, Oscillator, Spread Spectrum, Electromagnetic Interference, Radiated, overtone,
harmonic, app note 3512
APPLICATION NOTE 3512
Automotive Applications for Silicon SpreadSpectrum Oscillators
Jun 08, 2005
Abstract: Digital-electronics systems enrich our lives in many ways, but digital clock signals also act as a
source of conducted noise (via cables) and radiated electromagnetic interference (EMI). Because the
potential noise problems are substantial, all of today's electronic products are tested to ensure
compliance with recognized EMI standards. But it's not just about EMI compliance. . . The use of spreadspectrum (SS) oscillators is increasingly attractive for use in automobiles, where the benefits are seen
not just by instruments, but also by the driver and passengers—in clean performance of the electronic
automotive subsystems.
Automotive Advantages
Benefits of the SS approach go well beyond its efficacy in meeting
certain FCC and regulatory requirements for EMI compliance. The
benefits perceived for EMI compliance depend mostly on the
bandpass specification of your measurement technique. SS
techniques do minimize concentrations of peak energy, and the
resulting distribution of this energy into the noise floor does reduce
the need for filtering and shielding, but they can provide other
benefits as well.
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The increasing number of high-performance multimedia, audio, video, and wireless systems deployed in
today's automobiles compels designers to pay special attention to any unwanted RF energy present at
frequencies to which these subsystems are sensitive. For high-quality radios and wireless data systems,
the elimination of RF energy peaks can determine whether a system is usable or not.
For years, radios have utilized a method known as frequency parking to avoid interference from powersupply switching noise. Such radios actually communicate with the power supply, commanding it to alter
its switching frequency as necessary to shift energy peaks out of the tuner's input band. With the
increasing number of interference sources in a modern automobile, however, you cannot always
anticipate how the systems will work together. The situation is further complicated by the use of antenna
diversity systems, and by restrictions on the placement of new subsystems.
Other benefits of the SS oscillator can be found in digital audio and in the factory-installed, hands-free
interface. These systems commonly use a codec to increase audio quality by providing a digital interface
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to the cell phone or other telematic interface. The use of a dithered (spread-spectrum) oscillator as clock
source to the codec eliminates the generation of annoying idle tones during otherwise silent intervals.
This technique is also common in multimedia applications that incorporate switched-capacitor codecs.
Besides eliminating the idle tones, an SS oscillator pushes energy peaks into the noise floor, which
reduces (for example) the possibility of landing on channels used by a frequency-hopping wireless
network.
Virtually all subsystems in the next-generation automobile are likely to include areas in which SSclocking techniques can provide significant benefits in performance and EMI compliance. For that
purpose, vendors such as Maxim/Dallas offer all-silicon oscillators that have reliable startup
characteristics and are not affected by vibration. They are cost competitive with ceramic resonators, and
cover a range from kilohertz to over sixty megahertz.
General Considerations
Controlling EMI remains a challenge for the electronics designer. A look at the origin of EMI often shows
the largest contributor as a digital system clock, which follows for several reasons: the clock often has
the highest frequency in the system, it is usually a periodic square wave, and clock traces are often the
longest traces in the system. The frequency spectrum for such a signal consists of a fundamental tone
and lower-amplitude harmonic tones, whose amplitudes diminish with increasing frequency.
Other signals in the system (those on the data and address buses) are updated at the same frequency
as the clock, but they occur at irregular intervals and are generally uncorrelated with each other. The
result is a broadband noise spectrum of much lower amplitude than that of the clock. The total energy in
this spectrum is much larger than the clock energy, but it has little effect on the EMI tests. Those tests
look at the highest spectral amplitudes; not the total radiated energy.
You can control EMI with filtering, shielding, and good PCB layout. But filtering and shielding add cost,
and a precise layout takes time. Another approach is to attack the noise source itself—most commonly,
the clock oscillator. You can easily lower the amplitudes of the fundamental and overtones by making the
clock frequency vary with time. Because the energy of the clock signal remains constant, a varying
frequency that broadens the overtones necessarily lowers their amplitudes.
A simple way to generate such a clock is to modulate a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) with a
triangle wave. The resulting spectrum becomes broader as the triangle-wave amplitude increases. How
fast should this triangle wave repeat? A slow sweep (in the audible range) can couple through power
supplies to analog subsystems. A sweep that's too fast, on the other hand, may confuse the digital
circuitry.
Figure 1 is the block diagram of a clock oscillator based on the approach described above, in which a
triangle wave controls the spectral broadening of a VCO output. (The VCO's center frequency is
controlled by a DAC and programmable 8-bit divider that allows you to set the frequency anywhere
between 260kHz and 133MHz.) The IC of Figure 1 is controlled by a 2-wire interface, and settings are
stored in an on-board EEPROM. Such devices can operate in stand-alone mode when pre-programmed
to the desired frequency, and their frequency can be updated on the fly—an advantage in low-power
applications.
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Figure 1. The core of the DS1086 programmable clock generator is a VCO controlled by a triangle wave.
The frequency is preprogrammed over a 2-wire interface and stored in an onboard EEPROM.
Figure 2 compares the spectrum of an ordinary crystal oscillator with that of the spread-spectrum clock
oscillator. Setting the triangle-wave amplitude to broaden the spectrum by 4% lowers the peak amplitude
nearly 25dB below that of the crystal clock oscillator.
Figure 2. The difference between the amplitude of a crystal oscillator and the amplitude of the DS1086
with 4% spreading is close to 25 dB.
When using the spread-spectrum oscillator as a clock source for microprocessors, be sure the µP can
cope with tolerances on the duty cycles, rise and fall times, and other parameters associated with
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frequency variation in the source. For applications in which the oscillator is used as a reference (realtime clocks and real-time measurements, for example), the varying frequency may add quite a bit of
error.
Portable consumer products can include radio functions such as cellular phones, and spread-spectrum
techniques are applicable to the switching power supplies found in those products. The radio circuitry
(especially the VCO) is susceptible to noise on the power supply. Switching supplies are needed to
maximize battery life, but they unfortunately have noise spectra similar to those of clock oscillators. That
noise can limit performance by coupling directly into the radio circuitry.
A step-up converter with external synchronization pin (such as the MAX1703) lets you control its
frequency with a spread-spectrum clock. It is instructive to compare the noise spectra of a free-running
step-up converter (Figure 3) to one that is synchronized to a spread-spectrum clock (Figure 4).
Overtones of the free-running stepup converter are visible all the way out to 10MHz, whereas spreadspectrum broadening (Figure 4) pushes the tones into the noise floor. Note that the noise floor in this
plot has risen because the overall energy is constant.
Figure 3. The spectrum of the MAX1703 step-up converter shows the fundamental at 300kHz, the freerunning switch frequency. Overtones are visible all the way up to 10MHz.
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Figure 4. Synchronizing the MAX1703 step-up converter to a spread-spectrum oscillator removes the
peaks and causes the noise floor to rise.
To implement a dithered clock source, one needs the answers to several questions: What should be the
dithering shape to reduce the narrow-band spectral energy? How is the maximum clock-frequency shift
related to the narrow-band spectral energy? How does dither rate effect the narrow-band spectral
energy? What limits the dithering rate being used? Those questions are addressed in the following
sections.
Dithering Shape
To ensure that the clock signal remains usable, the dithering amplitude is generally small ( 3(triangle pattern frequency), and
Loop BW > 3(pseudo-random pattern rate)(pattern length).
For a fixed amount of loop bandwidth, the triangle pattern can support a larger dither frequency. Because
the dither rate must be faster than the narrow-band detection of an interferer (to appear as frequency
dithering), the triangle looks more dithered than does the pseudo-random pattern for the same detection
time.
Thus, dither-detection time influences how low the dither frequency can be. Because the bandwidth of an
interference victim varies with the application, the dither frequency has no hard lower limit
(unfortunately). The other consideration on the dither frequency's lower limit is out-of-band noise from
the dither rate itself. For a linear system, the triangle dithering system has no tones at the dither rate or
its near harmonics. The pseudo-random scheme has some lower-level version of the pseudo-random
pattern spectrum at the dither rate. If this clock signal is picked up by a non-linear circuit, however, there
exists the unwelcome possibility of mixing the low dither rate into a desired band.
Spread-spectrum techniques do not replace the traditional EMI-lowering techniques of filtering, shielding,
and good layout practice. They can provide a substantial benefit, however, especially in systems for
which certain subassemblies or peripheral equipment are sensitive to energy peaks at particular
frequencies. They are extremely useful in minimizing radio/TV interference in automotive and homeentertainment systems. Good PCB layout is essential for proper functioning of digital and analog
systems, but a spread-spectrum clock can aid EMI certification and lower costs by reducing the amount
of filtering and shielding needed.
Maxim produces a family of spread-spectrum oscillators suitable for a wide range of applications. For
further information, plese see EconOscillator Timing Products.
References
1. Ott, H. W., Noise Reduction Techniques in Electronic Systems, 2 nd edition, chapters 10 and 11.
Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1988.
2. Maxim application note 232, "Using the DS1086 as a Microcontroller Clock to Reduce EMI" 2003.
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