This paper presents electronic techniques and a general methodology for the
rapid design of two-port surface acoustic wave oscillators. By using a met
hodical approach, the stability problems and much of the time-consuming exp
erimentation common to radio frequency (RF) oscillator design was avoided.
Several oscillators in the range of 200 MHz to 1 GHz were designed using va
riations of the same basic circuit. Circuit designs included both two-port
resonator and delay line SAW devices. The electronics were small in size (1
.75 cm x 1.75 cm) and inexpensive (< US$ 10 in part cost). The active circu
it element of the oscillators was a radio frequency integrated circuit (RFI
C) wide-band amplifier.
The first step of this systematic method was to identify a readily availabl
e RFIC amplifier that met the specifications of the oscillator. The specifi
cations included amplifier gain, bandwidth and maximum input power. Choice
of the proper amplifier allowed the same circuit to be used for several SAW
oscillators spanning a large frequency range. Next a passive LC filter was
designed to limit the open loop gain to a small frequency region around th
e SAW device's fundamental frequency. This filter eliminates the problems o
f mode hopping and oscillation at harmonics. The S-parameters of the oscill
ator were then measured in an open-loop configuration to determine the phas
e shift requisite for the closed loop oscillation condition of 0 degrees ph
ase shift. To achieve stable oscillation, a passive LC phase-shifting filte
r was designed. Using the properties of Butterworth filters and a simple co
mputer program, filters of exact phase shift were designed. The last step o
f design was the use of microstrip layout techniques to reduce wave reflect
ions and susceptibility to electromagnetic interference. (C) 2001 Elsevier
Science B.V. All rights reserved.