Clock/Timing - Clock Buffers, Drivers

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
CY2305ESXI-1

CY2305ESXI-1

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

5524

CY2544C013

CY2544C013

Rochester Electronics

PROGRAMMABLE CLOCK GENERATOR

6026

W152-12G

W152-12G

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

15151

CY2544C023

CY2544C023

Rochester Electronics

PROGRAMMABLE CLOCK GENERATOR

6594

CY2CC910OI

CY2CC910OI

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER

3737

CY2DP3110AI

CY2DP3110AI

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER

2350

CY2308SZC-1T

CY2308SZC-1T

Rochester Electronics

3.3V ZERO DELAY BUFFER

2500

CY2544C015

CY2544C015

Rochester Electronics

CLOCKS

589

CY2544C013T

CY2544C013T

Rochester Electronics

CLOCKS

7500

CY2308SC-1T

CY2308SC-1T

Rochester Electronics

PLL CLOCK DRIVER

2500

CY23S08SC-3

CY23S08SC-3

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

2091

CY2CC910OIT

CY2CC910OIT

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER

5770

CY2544C014

CY2544C014

Rochester Electronics

PROGRAMMABLE CLOCK GENERATOR

6223

DS0026CJ-8

DS0026CJ-8

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER, 0 TRUE OU

2539

CY7B9945V-2AC

CY7B9945V-2AC

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

1352

CY2V995AI

CY2V995AI

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

1810

CY2544C016T

CY2544C016T

Rochester Electronics

CLOCKS

2500

W255H

W255H

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER

1819

IMIZ9972BAT

IMIZ9972BAT

Rochester Electronics

PLL BASED CLOCK DRIVER

22495

CY7B9911V-7JXC

CY7B9911V-7JXC

Rochester Electronics

LOW SKEW CLOCK DRIVER

1184

Clock/Timing - Clock Buffers, Drivers

1. Overview

Clock buffers and drivers are integrated circuits (ICs) designed to distribute clock signals in electronic systems. They amplify, condition, and route timing signals to multiple destinations while minimizing skew, jitter, and signal degradation. These components are critical in synchronizing operations across processors, memory modules, communication interfaces, and other timing-sensitive circuits. Their importance spans industries such as telecommunications, automotive, and high-performance computing.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

Type Functional Characteristics Application Examples
Clock Buffers Single-input, multiple-output devices with low phase noise and skew CPU clock distribution, FPGA systems
Clock Drivers High-drive capability for fan-out applications Networking switches, server motherboards
Differential Clock Buffers Supports LVDS, HCSL, and CML signal types High-speed ADC/DAC systems, RF transceivers
Programmable Clock Buffers Configurable output frequency/division ratios Industrial automation, test equipment

3. Structure and Composition

Clock buffers/drivers typically consist of:

  • Input receivers (single-ended or differential)
  • Internal amplification stages
  • Output drivers with controlled impedance
  • Power supply decoupling structures
  • Thermal management pads (in QFN/SSOP packages)
They are fabricated using CMOS, Bipolar, or SiGe processes to optimize speed and noise performance.

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Description Importance
Max Operating Frequency Up to 1.2 GHz (CMOS), 3.2 GHz (SiGe) Determines application suitability for high-speed systems
Additive Phase Jitter 0.05 ps RMS to 1 ps RMS Impacts timing precision in data converters
Propagation Delay 50 ps to 5 ns Critical in synchronized multi-channel systems
Output Voltage Levels LVCMOS, LVDS, HSTL, etc. Ensures compatibility with downstream circuits
Supply Voltage 1.8V to 5V Affects power consumption and integration

5. Application Areas

  • Telecommunications: 5G base stations, optical transceivers
  • Computing: Servers, workstations, high-end PCs
  • Industrial: PLCs, motor controllers, test instruments
  • Automotive: ADAS clock synchronization, infotainment systems
Case Study: In 5G massive MIMO systems, low-jitter clock drivers ensure phase coherence across 64+ antenna elements.

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

Manufacturer Representative Product Key Specifications
TI (Texas Instruments) CDCE62005 3.2 GHz LVDS driver, 0.1 ps RMS jitter
Analog Devices ADCLK846 16-output clock buffer, 1.6 GHz bandwidth
STMicroelectronics DF1610S 1.8V/3.3V dual supply buffer, 8 outputs
ON Semiconductor MC100EP195 Differential ECL buffer, 2.5 GHz operation

7. Selection Recommendations

Key considerations:

  • Match output type to receiver requirements (LVDS/CML/LVCMOS)
  • Calculate required fan-out capacity with voltage margin
  • Specify jitter budget (e.g., <0.3 ps RMS for 10 Gbps SerDes)
  • Consider temperature stability (-40 C to +125 C automotive grade)
  • Optimize package size vs. thermal dissipation needs

8. Industry Trends

Future developments include:

  • Sub-100 fs jitter performance using advanced CMOS processes
  • Integration with PLL/VCO for clock generation
  • Multi-die packaging for hybrid signal conditioning
  • Energy-efficient designs for battery-powered IoT devices
  • Automotive-grade ICs with AEC-Q100 qualification

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top