SWRA495K December 2015 – April 2024 CC1310 , CC1350 , CC2620 , CC2630 , CC2640 , CC2640R2F , CC2640R2F-Q1 , CC2642R-Q1 , CC2650 , CC2662R-Q1
The crystal oscillator frequency is dependent on the capacitive loading of the crystal. The crystal data sheet provides the required load capacitance for the crystal, CL, for the oscillation to be at the correct frequency. The total CL consists of the loading capacitors and the parasitic capacitance of the layout and packaging. CL1 and CL2 are in series with respect to the crystal. Therefore, the effective load capacitance they present is CL1/2, assuming CL1=CL2. Extra capacitance between board traces that connect to the crystal will increase the effective CL.
Using external capacitors to get the correct frequency means that the internal caps must be set to minimum. For example, an application could use near minimum on-chip capacitance of approximately 2 pF and an off chip capacitance of 7 pF to provide CL=9pF to the crystal. Table 3-1 shows using external caps this way gives slightly worse frequency stability with temperature than using internal capacitors. Certain sub-1GHz users may need to use external load capacitors to reduce spurs at an offset of twice the crystal frequency from the RF carrier frequency.
9-pF Internal CL | Minimum Internal CL /External CL | |
---|---|---|
Frequency variation –40°C to +90°C | Set by crystal | Set by crystal + 5 ppm |
Voltage accuracy, ppm/V | 6.9 | 9 |
The following presents the relative advantages of crystals with different CL values.
The disadvantages of lower CL are as follows:
Advantages of lower CL are as follows:
The internal load capacitance has no appreciable impact on the shape of the frequency vs temperature of the high frequency crystal. This can be seen by looking at the following two plots. Figure 3-2 shows the frequency versus temperature curve for the crystal using 13 different but closely spaced load capacitance. Each different load capacitance shifts the curve up or down, but does not change the overall shape of the curve. This can be seen by removing the offset of each curve, as shown in Figure 3-3.
Figure 3-3 shows that a change in the internal load capacitance does not influence the shape of the frequency vs temperature curve. This indicates that the internal load capacitors have minimal impact on this curve.
A method to change the on-chip load caps of the crystal is discussed in CC13xx/CC26xx Hardware Configuration and PCB Design Considerations.