Tech Papers

Introduction to PLLs

McGraw-Hill
Roland E. Best

Book Excerpt

October 2005

External URL
Chapter 1 of Phase-Locked Loops: Design, Simulation, and Applications provides an introduction to phase-locked loops (PLLs). The PLL helps keep parts of our world orderly. If we turn on a television set, a PLL will keep heads at the top of the screen and feet at the bottom. In color television, another PLL makes sure that green remains green and red remains red (even if the politicians claim that the reverse is true).

A PLL is a circuit that causes a particular system to track with another one. More precisely, a PLL is a circuit synchronizing an output signal (generated by an oscillator) with a reference or input signal in frequency as well as in phase. In the synchronized—often called locked—state the phase error between the oscillator's output signal and the reference signal is zero, or remains constant.

Reproduced from the book Phase-Locked Loops: Design, Simulation, and Applications. Copyright 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies. Reproduced by permission of The McGraw-Hill Companies. Written permission from The McGraw-Hill Companies is required for all other uses.





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