New York: McGraw-Hill. - 2003. - 421 p. Historically the PLL has been a linear circuit. While the first PLLs were realized with discrete components, they became available as ICs in about 1965. The first of these were linear devices (LPLLs), built in semiconductor technologies similar to the operational amplifiers of that era. A few years later (about 1970) the first digital PLLs (DPLLs) became available, but when looking at their schematics, we recognize that only the phase detector was built from logic cir-cuits, while the remaining parts (voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO), loop filter) stayed analog; hence these PLLs must be considered hybrid systems. In this new edition of the book we combined the two categories LPLL and DPLL into one single class named mixed-signal PLL. Doing so greatly simplifies the analysis, because both classes now can be treated by a unified theory.
Preface to the Fifth Edition
Introduction to PLLs
Mixed-Signal PLLs
PLL Frequency Synthesizers
Higher-Order Loops
Computer-Aided Design and Simulation of Mixed-Signal PLLs
All-Digital PLLs (ADPLLs)
Computer-Aided Design and Simulation of ADPLLs
The Software PLL (SPLL)
The PLL in Communications
State of the Art of Commercial PLL Integrated Circuits
Measuring PLL Parameters
The Pull-in Process
The Laplace Transform
Digital Filter Basics