Features
- PCIe Gen 1–5 compliant
- PCIe Gen 5 Common Clock jitter < 80fs RMS
- 261fs RMS typical phase jitter at 156.25MHz (12kHz to 20MHz)
- 4 programmable output pairs plus 2 LVCMOS REF outputs
- 1 integer output frequency per configuration
- 1MHz to 325MHz output frequency (LVDS or LP-HCSL)
- 1MHz to 200MHz output frequency (LVCMOS)
- 1.8V to 3.3V core VDD
- Individual 1.8V to 3.3V VDDO for each programmable output pair
- Supports HCSL, LVDS, and LVCMOS I/O standards
- Supports AC-coupled LVPECL and CML logic – See AN-891
- 4mm × 4mm 24-VFQFPN and 24-LGA packages with 50MHz integrated crystal option
- Supported by Timing Commander™ software
Description
The 9FGV1001 is a member of Renesas' PhiClock™ programmable clock generator family. The 9FGV1001 provides four non-spread-spectrum copies of a single output frequency and two copies of the crystal reference input. Two select pins allow for hardware selection of the desired configuration, or two I²C bits allow easy software selection of the desired configuration. The user may configure any one of the four OTP configurations as the default when operating in I²C mode. Four unique I²C addresses are available, allowing easy I²C access to multiple components.
Parameters
| Attributes | Value |
|---|---|
| Temp. Range (°C) | -40 to 85°C |
Filters
Software & Tools
Sample Code
Simulation Models
Ron Wade, chief PCIe system architect explains the fundamental difference in reference clock jitter budgets between the first three generations of the specification and those of Gen4 and Gen5 which raise new challenges for designers.
Related Resources
This whiteboard video presents a brief overview comparing the evolution of PCI Express data rates through five generations versus that of the common clock jitter specifications.
Renesas's chief PCIe system architect explains how to derive separate reference clock jitter limits from the PCI Express Gen4 and Gen5 specifications.
The IDT PhiClock™ 9FGV100x PCIe Gen 4 clock generators combine space savings, high performance and low power in a single, easy-to-use solution. All PhiClock PCIe reference clock devices integrate crystal load capacitors and offer an optional integrated crystal to simplify designs and save board space. When configured with HCSL outputs for PCIe applications, PhiClock products integrate the output termination resistors, further reducing board space. Extremely small 3 x 3 mm and 4 x 4 mm packages complement the integration for maximum space savings. The programmable PhiClock clock generators combine outstanding PCIe Gen4 performance and outstanding Ethernet performance with phase jitter as low as 225fs rms at 156.25MHz (12k-20M). Extremely low power consumption (as low as 100 mW at 1.8V) allows placement closer to high-power components, which also reduces board space requirements.
A detailed overview of IDT's full-featured PCI Express (PCIe) clock and timing solutions. The presentation addresses PCIe Gen 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, and Gen 4 architectures and how IDT's industry-leading solutions provide all the functions, features, and performance required by the application.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT. For more information visit the PCIe clocks page.
This is the first video in our PCIe series. In this video, we define PCIe architectures, focusing on common and separate clock architectures. Watch the rest of the video series below where Ron will cover the impact of different timing architectures.
In this episode, Ron Wade from IDT (acquired by Renesas) explains PCIe common clocking and its impact on timing solutions. Learn about using a single clock source, fan-out buffers, and the considerations for spread spectrum and non-spread spectrum clocking in PCIe systems.
In this video, we explore PCIe with separate reference clocks and the effects of clock selection. Learn how separate reference clocks work and their impact on system performance and stability.
This video provides a high-level overview of Separate Reference Clock with Independent Spread (SRIS) architectures for PCI Express systems, additional performance requirements that this clocking architecture imposes on the reference clocks, and some system implications encountered trying to implement the architecture.
IDT (acquired by Renesas) engineer provides a brief tutorial describing the main differences between standard HCSL and low-power HCSL (LP-HCSL).
Presented by Ron Wade, PCI Express timing expert.
Related Resources
An overview of IDT's full-featured PCI Express (PCIe) clock generators addressing PCIe Gen 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, and Gen 4.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT.
An overview of PCI Express applications and how IDT's industry-leading portfolio of PCIe clock products addresses the requirements. The video briefly discusses PCIe riser cards, embedded SOC, and PCIe storage (NVME) examples.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT.
A brief overview of how data rates have changed from PCI Express (PCIe) Generation 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT. For more information about IDT's PCIe timing solutions, visit the PCI Express (PCIe) Clocks page.
A brief overview of how clock and timing specifications have changed from PCI Express (PCIe) Generation 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT (acquired by Renesas). For more information, visit Renesas's PCIe Timing Solutions page.
A brief overview of the PCI Express common clock (CC) jitter model, and the transfer functions as they relate to the timing PLLs. This model applies to PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5. The equations would be slightly different for other PCIe architectures, such as SRIS, SRnS, or data clocked.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT (acquired by Renesas). For more information about Renesas's PCIe timing solutions, visit the PCI Express (PCIe) Clocks page.