Friday, July 28, 2023

Phase Noise and the Radio Amateur

A weak signal disappears in the phase noise of the stronger signal.

The March 1988 QST provides a relatively clear explanation of what phase noise really is:

Highlights: 

Phase noise is an undesired variation in the phase of the signal. In this case, an oscilloscope shows that the time between zero crossings of the signal varies over time when compared to the zero crossings of an ideal sine wave. An exaggerated example of phase noise is shown above.

Phase noise on an oscillator signal has exactly the same effect as frequency modulating the oscillator with noise.

Whenever a carrier is passed through a mixer, the phase noise of the oscillator driving that mixer is added to the carrier.

Phase noise on a transmitted signal causes effects identical to phase noise generated in a receiver.

Any signal that reaches a mixer in the receiver is modulated by the phase noise in the local oscillator driving that mixer. As such, the signal appears to have at least as much phase noise as the local oscillator. Thus, sufficiently strong signals off the receiving frequency can degrade receiver sensitivity by raising the noise floor at the receiving frequency. Receiver dynamic range is reduced as the noise floor rises.

With a frequency-shift-keyed or- a phase-shift-keyed signal, the close-in phase noise limits the maximum bit error rate that the system can achieve. Both of these effects can be quantified once the communications system is defined. With an SSB voice signal, the effects are much harder to predict, but excessive phase noise does degrade SSB signal intelligibility to some extent.

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Receiver guru Rob Sherwood provides some very useful historical background on his web site:

http://www.sherweng.com/documents/TermsExplainedSherwoodTableofReceiverPerformance-RevF.pdf

Phase Noise: Old radios (Collins, Drake, Hammarlund, National) used a VFO or PTO and crystal oscillators to tune the bands. Any noise in the local oscillator (LO) chain was minimal. When synthesized radios came along in the 70s, the LO had noise on it. It is caused by phase jitter in the circuit, and puts significant noise sidebands on the LO. This can mix with a strong signal outside the passband of the radio and put noise on top of the weak signal you are trying to copy. This is a significant problem in some cases: You have a neighboring ham close by, during Field Day when there are multiple transmitters at the same site, and certainly in a multi-multi contest station. You would like the number to be better that 130 dBc / Hz at 10 kHz. A non-synthesized radio, such as a Drake or Collins, has so little local oscillator noise the measurements were made closer-in between 2 and 5 kHz.   

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Experimental Methods in RF Design (EMRFD) has this to say about phase noise:

"The local oscillator is a critical part of any communications system. Modern transceiver performance is often compromised by LO systems that suffer from excess phase noise, effectively limiting the receiver dynamic range. While quiet oscillators, those with low phase noise, can be built using traditional methods, these circuits often lack the thermal stability of a synthesizer.... Frequency synthesis is not, however, the answer to all the LO problems presented to the experimenter.  Some PLL synthesizers are burdened by excessive phase noise. Those using DDS, while quieter, emit spurious outputs, often in profusion.  Both use an excess of digital circuitry that can often corrupt a receiver environment."  page 4.1
   
"At first glance, phase noise sounds like an esoteric detail that probably has little impact on practical communications.  This is generally true." page 4.12 

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Hans Summers G0UPL analyzed and measured the phase noise of the Si5351a chip: 

http://qrp-labs.com/qcxp/phasenoise.html

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DC4KU appears to be using the crystal filter method used by Hans: 

https://dc4ku.darc.de/Transmitter-Sideband-Noise_DC4KU.pdf

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Martien PA3AKE has done a lot of great work on this topic.  See: 

https://martein.home.xs4all.nl/pa3ake/hmode/dds_pmnoise_intro.html

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Dean KK4DAS commented on the phase noise video of the IMSAI guy: 

Watching the video I was reminded of Segal's law roughly paraphrased as follows.:

A man with one spectrum analyzer knows his phase noise. A man with two is unsure.

5 comments:

  1. This is an excellent and very-useful compendium. The content of the March and April 1988 QST article by KI6WX was included (apparently in full) in the 1992 ARRL Handbook, 10-24 through 10-30. That or similar material may have appeared in later editions.

    Additional material is also in Ulrich Rohde (N1UL), "All About Phase Noise in Oscillators," QEX 12/93--2/94; and in Rohde and Whitaker, _Communications Receivers_ (3d ed.), Chapter 7, pp. 367-493. Rohde and Whitaker conclude that PLL frequency synthesis is inherently more phase-noisy than crystal oscillators, and those are noisier than LC oscillators. They note, though, that phase noise is much more of a problem for high-bit-rate psk or fsk modulation than it is for SSB, and that anyway "modern" PLL chips are pretty good (enough?).

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    1. Thanks Todd: Needless to say, I was pleased to hear that there is SOMETHING in which the old LC VFO is superior. 73 Bill

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  2. Hi Bill. Great chatter on non-ideal oscillators. Please allow me to weigh in with some kludgey thoughts.

    Disclaimer – I am not bound to Amateur radio experiments only and study all things radio (and audio).

    Phase noise sidebands arise from random fluctuations in the phase of a signal. Most LO phase noise (PN) appears to comes from thermal and flicker (1/f) noises of the oscillator components including the tank & gain device, non-linear capacitors + includes both DC and AC currents. Close in spectra get degraded by 1/f flicker noise upconversion --- the pumping oscillator upconverts this noise to the carrier frequency and its harmonics via AM FM and phase modulation. Other factors including noise sideband asymmetry -- and various circuit non-linearities seem to contribute to low frequency noise modulation. External noise also may get injected into the oscillator. As most of your linked sources mention --- AM is not too concerning and gets “limited” naturally in oscillators and buffer amps.

    Close in, phase noise tends to dominate over amplitude noise.
    Recent state‐of‐the‐art professional literature has well advanced of the knowledge of PN in receiver systems and the math gets crazy. Calculating and modeling oscillator phase noise in 5G and other digital systems that use 4 PSK is not for the faint of heart. Here LO PN matters, however controversy remains since older theories get challenged by new ideas, theories, and models.

    I think did Hans et al. did a great job with xtal filtration and direct spectrum analysis using modest gear, but good xtal filters. 1 vexing problem is the quieter your oscillator ( for example crystal or SAW resonator oscillators @ UHF) the more difficult it gets to accurately measure PN

    Modern theorists further break the phase noise spectra into 1/f 2 thermal phase noise, 1/f3 close-in phase noise and the 1/f3 corner frequency.

    I still make PLL synthesizers; mostly for UHF. This means a low noise xtal reference oscillator and running the loop filter bandwidth inside the 1/f3 PN corner frequency to try and keep the VCO quiet. Resonator Q ,or as I prefer to say, Vitamin Q proves harder to get as you move above 100 MHz and that’s about where PN becomes more important.

    It all boils down to the SNR you require in your receive system.

    PN in modern, fast digital circuits may cause loss of phase lock in phase tracking systems that use coherent PLLs, GPS systems, cell networks, delayed-lock loops (no oscillator). In futuristic 5G, “dream big – hope big” engineers strive for peak data rates of 10 Gbps. This will likely require going above 20 GHz --- Here lowering PN matters!

    I think I once told you about my Ham neighbour 5 doors down with a legacy aka “noisy’ Yaesu transceiver running 1 KW on 40 meters who raised my noise floor during CW contest weekends. That’s a case where HF phase noise hurt. I guess that’s why I went on 15 meters on my breaks during the day time?

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  3. Replies
    1. Thank you Vasily! I always learn so much from your comments. Thanks Todd. 73 Bill

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