Chip One Stop - Shopping Site for Electronic Components and Semiconductors
Menu
Japan
Change
English
SELECT YOUR LANGUAGE
JPY
SELECT YOUR CURRENCY FOR DISPLAY
About Preferential Rank / Discount

Current price of Item(s) have been applied below.
 


・Preferential Rank and Discount rate will be applied according to your usage of our web service.
・Discount is only applicable to orders from chip1stop web site.
・Discounts may not be applicable to all products and may be subject to MOQ.
・Please contact your representative for details of Preferential Rank.
・No other coupons may be used in conjunction with this discount.

News Center

Toshiba’s Spur Canceled Clock Generator Recovers Receiver Sensitivity in Wireless SoCs

2016/06/15Toshiba  RF & Micro Wave


June 14, 2016


TOKYO—Toshiba Corporation (TOKYO: 6502) has developed a spur canceled clock generator (SCCG) that recovers receiver sensitivity of wireless connectivity IC. The SCCG recovers receiver sensitivity by suppressing the spur, interference that originates from the clock signal, and achieves receiver sensitivity of -93 dBm for all channels in Bluetooth® Smart ICs. Toshiba will announce this advance at VLSI Circuits Symposium 2016, the international conference on semiconductor devices held in Honolulu, Hawaii on June 15.


Recent wireless connectivity ICs integrate analog blocks, such as RF circuits, digital blocks, and mixed signal blocks, such as AD converters, on one chip. However, some of the harmonics of the reference clock signal for AD converters and digital circuits, known as clock spurs, degrade receiver sensitivity. Conventional techniques to recover sensitivity have resulted in issues with additional power consumption, chip size and development costs.


Toshiba’s solution is a clock generator that suppresses spur by delaying some parts of the clock. This clock delay generates two kinds of clock spurs that have reverse phase with the same amplitude, which cancel each other out. Since the generator’s power consumption is 18μW and the size is 40μm×120μm, clock spur is suppressed without any increase in power consumption or size. This approach recovers 4dB of sensitivity degraded by the spur, and applied to Bluetooth® Smart IC achieves -93dBm receiver sensitivity.


The spread of such applications as wearable devices is boosting demand for wireless connectivity ICs. Toshiba will proactively continue to expand its line-up of high performance wireless ICs, and plans to launch a Bluetooth® Smart IC with the SCCG this summer.


* Bluetooth is a registered trademark owned by the Bluetooth SIG; Toshiba uses it under license.


Toshiba Corporation- Semiconductor and Storage Products Company Website>
http://toshiba.semicon-storage.com/ap-en?mm=cp160615&no=02

 


 


Visit Chip1Stop Chinese site
Visit Chip1Stop Korean site
Visit Chip1Stop English site
Visit Chip1Stop German site


Companies Website:
http://toshiba.semicon-storage.com/ap-en?mm=cp160615&no=02

Toshiba News Release

Related News Release