
Advanced Clock Drivers Devices
6
Freescale Semiconductor
MPC93R51
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Programming the MPC93R51
The MPC93R51 clock driver outputs can be configured
into several divider modes. In addition, the external feedback
of the device allows for flexibility in establishing various input
to output frequency relationships. The output divider of the
four output groups allows the user to configure the outputs
into 1:1, 2:1, 4:1 and 4:2:1 frequency ratios. The use of even
dividers ensure that the output duty cycle is always 50%.
Table 7 illustrates the various output configurations. The
table describes the outputs using the input clock frequency
CLK as a reference.
The output division settings establish the output
relationship. In addition, it must be ensured that the VCO will
be stable given the frequency of the outputs desired. The
feedback frequency should be used to situate the VCO into a
frequency range in which the PLL will be stable. The design
of the PLL supports output frequencies from 25 MHz to
240 MHz while the VCO frequency range is specified from
200 MHz to 480 MHz and should not be exceeded for stable
operation.
Using the MPC93R51 in Zero-Delay Applications
Nested clock trees are typical applications for the
MPC93R51. For these applications the MPC93R51 offers a
differential LVPECL clock input pair as a PLL reference. This
allows for the use of differential LVPECL primary clock
distribution devices such as the Freescale MC100EP111 or
MC10EP222, taking advantage of its superior low-skew
performance. Clock trees using LVPECL for clock distribution
and the MPC93R51 as LVCMOS PLL fanout buffer with zero
insertion delay will show significantly lower clock skew than
clock distributions developed from CMOS fanout buffers.
The external feedback option of the MPC93R51 PLL
allows for its use as a zero delay buffer. The PLL aligns the
feedback clock output edge with the clock input reference
edge and virtually eliminates the propagation delay through
the device.
The remaining insertion delay (skew error) of the
MPC93R51 in zero-delay applications is measured between
the reference clock input and any output. This effective delay
consists of the static phase offset (SPO or t()), I/O jitter
(tJIT(), phase or long-term jitter), feedback path delay and
the output-to-output skew (tSK(O) relative to the feedback
output.
Figure 3. MPC93R51 Zero-Delay Configuration
(Feedback of QD4)
Table 7. Output Frequency Relationship(1) for an Example Configuration
1. Output frequency relationship with respect to input reference frequency CLK. QC1 is connected to EXT_FB.
Inputs
Outputs
FSELA
FSELB
FSELC
FSELD
QA
QB
QC
QD
0
2 * CLK
CLK
0
1
2 * CLK
CLK
÷ 2
0
1
0
4 * CLK
2 * CLK
CLK
2* CLK
0
1
4 * CLK
2 * CLK
CLK
0
1
0
2 * CLK
CLK
÷ 2
CLK
0
1
0
1
2 * CLK
CLK
÷ 2
CLK
÷ 2
0
1
0
4 * CLK
CLK
2 * CLK
0
1
4 * CLK
CLK
1
0
CLK
1
0
1
CLK
÷ 2
1
0
1
0
2 * CLK
CLK
2 * CLK
1
0
1
2 * CLK
CLK
1
0
CLK
÷ 2
CLK
1
0
1
CLK
÷ 2
CLK
÷ 2
1
0
2 * CLK
CLK
2 * CLK
1
2 * CLK
CLK
MPC93R51
TCLK
QA
fref = 100 MHz
REF_SEL
PLL_EN
FSELA
FSELB
FSELC
FSELD
Ext_FB
QB
QC0
QC1
QD0
QD1
QD2
QD3
QD4
2 x 100 MHz
4 x 100 MHz
100 MHz (Feedback)
1
0