Analog Devices AD9243 Datasheet

Complete 14-Bit, 3.0 MSPS
VINA
CAPT CAPB
SENSE
OTR BIT 1
(MSB)
BIT 14 (LSB)
VREF
DVSSAVSS
AD9243
SHA
DIGITAL CORRECTION LOGIC
OUTPUT BUFFERS
VINB
1V
REFCOM
5
5
4
4
4
4
4
14
DVDDAVDD
CLK
MODE
SELECT
MDAC3
GAIN = 8
MDAC2
GAIN = 8
MDAC1
GAIN = 16
A/D
A/D
A/DA/D
DRVDD
DRVSS
CML
a
FEATURES Monolithic 14-Bit, 3 MSPS A/D Converter Low Power Dissipation: 110 mW Single +5 V Supply Integral Nonlinearity Error: 2.5 LSB Differential Nonlinearity Error: 0.6 LSB Input Referred Noise: 0.36 LSB Complete: On-Chip Sample-and-Hold Amplifier and
Voltage Reference Signal-to-Noise and Distortion Ratio: 79.0 dB Spurious-Free Dynamic Range: 91.0 dB Out-of-Range Indicator Straight Binary Output Data 44-Lead MQFP
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The AD9243 is a 3 MSPS, single supply, 14-bit analog-to­digital converter (ADC). It combines a low cost, high speed CMOS process and a novel architecture to achieve the resolution and speed of existing hybrid implementations at a fraction of the power consumption and cost. It is a complete, monolithic ADC with an on-chip, high performance, low noise sample-and-hold amplifier and programmable voltage reference. An external refer­ence can also be chosen to suit the dc accuracy and temperature drift requirements of the application. The device uses a multistage differential pipelined architecture with digital output error correc­tion logic to guarantee no missing codes over the full operating temperature range.
The input of the AD9243 is highly flexible, allowing for easy interfacing to imaging, communications, medical, and data­acquisition systems. A truly differential input structure allows for both single-ended and differential input interfaces of varying input spans. The sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) is equally suited for both multiplexed systems that switch full-scale voltage levels in successive channels as well as sampling single-channel inputs at frequencies up to and beyond the Nyquist rate. Also, the AD9243 performs well in communication systems employ­ing Direct-IF Down Conversion since the SHA in the differen­tial input mode can achieve excellent dynamic performance well beyond its specified Nyquist frequency of 1.5 MHz.
A single clock input is used to control all internal conversion cycles. The digital output data is presented in straight binary output format. An out-of-range (OTR) signal indicates an overflow condition which can be used with the most significant bit to determine low or high overflow.
*Patents pending.
REV. A
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
AD9243*
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
The AD9243 offers a complete single-chip sampling 14-bit, analog-to-digital conversion function in a 44-lead Metric Quad Flatpack.
Low Power and Single Supply
The AD9243 consumes only 110 mW on a single +5 V power supply.
Excellent DC Performance Over Temperature
The AD9243 provides no missing codes, and excellent tempera­ture drift performance over the full operating temperature range.
Excellent AC Performance and Low Noise
The AD9243 provides nearly 13 ENOB performance and has an input referred noise of 0.36 LSB rms.
Flexible Analog Input Range
The versatile onboard sample-and-hold (SHA) can be configured for either single ended or differential inputs of varying input spans.
Flexible Digital Outputs
The digital outputs can be configured to interface with +3 V and +5 V CMOS logic families.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A. Tel: 781/329-4700 World Wide Web Site: http://www.analog.com Fax: 781/326-8703 © Analog Devices, Inc., 1998
AD9243–SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, f
DC SPECIFICATIONS
otherwise noted)
Parameter AD9243 Units
RESOLUTION 14 Bits min MAX CONVERSION RATE 3 MHz min INPUT REFERRED NOISE
V
= 1 V 0.9 LSB rms typ
REF
V
= 2.5 V 0.36 LSB rms typ
REF
ACCURACY
Integral Nonlinearity (INL) ± 2.5 LSB typ Differential Nonlinearity (DNL) ±0.6 LSB typ
±1.0 LSB max ±2.5 LSB typ ±0.7 LSB typ
INL DNL
1
1
No Missing Codes 14 Bits Guaranteed Zero Error (@ +25°C) 0.3 % FSR max Gain Error (@ +25°C) Gain Error (@ +25°C)
2 3
1.5 % FSR max
0.75 % FSR max
TEMPERATURE DRIFT
Zero Error 3.0 ppm/°C typ Gain Error Gain Error
2 3
20.0 ppm/°C typ
5.0 ppm/°C typ
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION 0.1 % FSR max ANALOG INPUT
Input Span (with V
Input Span (with V
= 1.0 V) 2 V p-p min
REF
= 2.5 V) 5 V p-p max
REF
Input (VINA or VINB) Range 0 V min
AVDD V max
Input Capacitance 16 pF typ
INTERNAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE
Output Voltage (1 V Mode) 1 Volts typ Output Voltage Tolerance (1 V Mode) ±14 mV max Output Voltage (2.5 V Mode) 2.5 Volts typ Output Voltage Tolerance (2.5 V Mode) ±35 mV max Load Regulation
4
2.0 mV max
REFERENCE INPUT RESISTANCE 5 kΩ typ POWER SUPPLIES
Supply Voltages
AVDD +5 V (± 5% AVDD DVDD +5 V (±5% DVDD DRVDD +5 V (±5% DRVDD
Supply Current
IAVDD 23.0 mA max (20 mA typ) IDRVDD 1.0 mA max (0.5 mA typ) IDVDD 5.0 mA max (3.5 mA typ)
POWER CONSUMPTION 110 mW typ
145 mW max
NOTES
1
V
=1 V.
REF
2
Including internal reference.
3
Excluding internal reference.
4
Load regulation with 1 mA load current (in addition to that required by the AD9243).
Specification subject to change without notice.
= 3 MSPS, VREF = 2.5 V, VINB = 2.5 V, T
SAMPLE
to T
MIN
MAX
Operating)
Operating)
Operating)
unless
REV. A–2–
AD9243
AC SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = +5 V, DVDD= +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, f Differential Input, T
MIN
to T
unless otherwise noted)
MAX
= 3 MSPS, VREF = 2.5 V, AIN = –0.5 dBFS, AC Coupled/
SAMPLE
Parameter AD9243 Units
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE AND DISTORTION RATIO (S/N+D)
= 500 kHz 75.0 dB min
f
INPUT
79.0 dB typ
f
= 1.5 MHz 77.0 dB typ
INPUT
EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB)
f
= 500 kHz 12.3 Bits min
INPUT
12.8 Bits typ
f
= 1.5 MHz 12.5 Bits typ
INPUT
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR)
f
= 500 kHz 76.0 dB min
INPUT
80.0 dB typ
f
= 1.5 MHz 79.0 dB typ
INPUT
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD)
f
= 500 kHz –78.0 dB max
INPUT
–87.0 dB typ
f
= 1.5 MHz –82.0 dB typ
INPUT
SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
f
= 500 kHz 91.0 dB typ
INPUT
f
= 1.5 MHz 84.0 dB typ
INPUT
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
Full Power Bandwidth 40 MHz typ Small Signal Bandwidth 40 MHz typ Aperture Delay 1 ns typ Aperture Jitter 4 ps rms typ Acquisition to Full-Scale Step (0.0025%) 80 ns typ Overvoltage Recovery Time 167 ns typ
Specifications subject to change without notice.
DIGITAL SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, T
MIN
to T
unless otherwise noted)
MAX
Parameters Symbol AD9243 Units
LOGIC INPUTS
High Level Input Voltage V Low Level Input Voltage V High Level Input Current (V Low Level Input Current (V
= DVDD) I
IN
= 0 V) I
IN
Input Capacitance C
IH
IL IH IL
IN
+3.5 V min +1.0 V max
±10 µA max ±10 µA max
5 pF typ
LOGIC OUTPUTS (with DRVDD = 5 V)
High Level Output Voltage (I High Level Output Voltage (I Low Level Output Voltage (I Low Level Output Voltage (I
= 50 µA) V
OH
= 0.5 mA) V
OH
= 1.6 mA) V
OL
= 50 µA) V
OL
Output Capacitance C
OH
OH
OL
OL
OUT
+4.5 V min +2.4 V min +0.4 V max +0.1 V max 5 pF typ
LOGIC OUTPUTS (with DRVDD = 3 V)
High Level Output Voltage (I Low Level Output Voltage (I
Specifications subject to change without notice.
= 50 µA) V
OH
= 50 µA) V
OL
OH
OL
+2.4 V min +0.7 V max
REV. A
–3–
AD9243
3
4 5
6 7
1 2
10 11
8 9
40 39 3841424344 36 35 3437
29
30
31
32
33
27
28
25
26
23
24
PIN 1 IDENTIFIER
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
BIT 5
BIT 4
BIT 3
BIT 8
BIT 11
BIT 9
BIT 7
BIT 6
NC
NC
NC
CML
NC
CAPT
NC
REFCOM VREF SENSE NC AVSS AVDD NC
AD9243
DVSS AVSS DVDD
AVDD DRVSS DRVDD
CLK
NC = NO CONNECT
NC NC NC
(LSB) BIT 14
NC OTR BIT 1 (MSB) BIT 2
BIT 10
CAPB
NC
VINB
VINA
BIT 13
BIT 12
WARNING!
ESD SENSITIVE DEVICE
(T
to T
MIN
t
C CH CL OD
S4
t
OD
+ 0.3 V
+ 0.3 V + 0.3 V + 0.3 V + 0.3 V + 0.3 V
SWITCHING SPECIFICATIONS
Parameters Symbol AD9243 Units
Clock Period CLOCK Pulsewidth High t CLOCK Pulsewidth Low t Output Delay t
Pipeline Delay (Latency) 3 Clock Cycles
NOTES
1
The clock period may be extended to 1 ms without degradation in specified performance @ +25 °C.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
ANALOG
INPUT
INPUT
CLOCK
DATA
OUTPUT
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
Parameter to Min Max Units
AVDD AVSS –0.3 +6.5 V DVDD DVSS –0.3 +6.5 V AVSS DVSS –0.3 +0.3 V AVDD DVDD –6.5 +6.5 V DRVDD DRVSS –0.3 +6.5 V DRVSS AVSS –0.3 +0.3 V REFCOM AVSS –0.3 +0.3 V CLK DVSS –0.3 DVDD Digital Outputs DRVSS –0.3 DRVDD VINA, VINB AVSS –0.3 AVDD VREF AVSS –0.3 AVDD SENSE AVSS –0.3 AVDD CAPB, CAPT AVSS –0.3 AVDD Junction Temperature +150 °C Storage Temperature –65 +150 °C Lead Temperature
(10 sec) +300 °C
*Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause perma-
nent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum ratings for extended periods may effect device reliability.
CAUTION
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on the human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although the AD9243 features proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high energy electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance degradation or loss of functionality.
1
S1
t
CH
S2
t
C
t
CL
Figure 1. Timing Diagram
With Respect
S3
with AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, CL = 20 pF)
MAX
333 ns min 150 ns min 150 ns min 8 ns min 13 ns typ 19 ns max
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
Thermal Resistance 44-Lead MQFP
= 53.2°C/W
θ
JA
= 19°C/W
θ
JC
ORDERING GUIDE
DATA 1
Temperature Package Package
Model Range Description Option*
AD9243AS –40°C to +85°C 44-Lead MQFP S-44 AD9243EB Evaluation Board
*S = Metric Quad Flatpack.
PIN CONNECTIONS
–4–
REV. A
AD9243
PIN DESCRIPTION
Pin Number Name Description
1 DVSS Digital Ground 2, 29 AVSS Analog Ground 3 DVDD +5 V Digital Supply 4, 28 AVDD +5 V Analog Supply 5 DRVSS Digital Output Driver Ground 6 DRVDD Digital Output Driver Supply 7 CLK Clock Input Pin 8–10 NC No Connect 11 BIT 14 Least Significant Data Bit (LSB) 12–23 BIT 13–BIT 2 Data Output Bits 24 BIT 1 Most Significant Data Bit (MSB) 25 OTR Out of Range 26, 27, 30 NC No Connect 31 SENSE Reference Select 32 VREF Reference I/O 33 REFCOM Reference Common 34, 35, 38 NC No Connect 40, 43, 44 36 CAPB Noise Reduction Pin 37 CAPT Noise Reduction Pin 39 CML Common-Mode Level (Midsupply) 41 VINA Analog Input Pin (+) 42 VINB Analog Input Pin (–)
DEFINITIONS OF SPECIFICATION
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY (INL)
INL refers to the deviation of each individual code from a line drawn from “negative full scale” through “positive full scale.” The point used as “negative full scale” occurs 1/2 LSB before the first code transition. “Positive full scale” is defined as a level 1 1/2 LSB beyond the last code transition. The deviation is measured from the middle of each particular code to the true straight line.
DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY (DNL, NO MISSING CODES)
An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions that are exactly 1 LSB apart. DNL is the deviation from this ideal value. Guaranteed no missing codes to 14-bit resolution indicates that all 16384 codes, respectively, must be present over all operating ranges.
ZERO ERROR
The major carry transition should occur for an analog value 1/2 LSB below VINA = VINB. Zero error is defined as the deviation of the actual transition from that point.
GAIN ERROR
The first code transition should occur at an analog value 1/2 LSB above negative full scale. The last transition should occur at an analog value 1 1/2 LSB below the nominal full scale. Gain error is the deviation of the actual difference between first and last code transitions and the ideal differ­ence between first and last code transitions.
OVERVOLTAGE RECOVERY TIME
Overvoltage recovery time is defined as that amount of time required for the ADC to achieve a specified accuracy after an
overvoltage (50% greater than full-scale range), measured from the time the overvoltage signal reenters the converter’s range.
TEMPERATURE DRIFT
The temperature drift for zero error and gain error specifies the maximum change from the initial (+25°C) value to the value at
or T
T
MIN
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION
MAX
.
The specification shows the maximum change in full scale from the value with the supply at the minimum limit to the value with the supply at its maximum limit.
APERTURE JITTER
Aperture jitter is the variation in aperture delay for successive samples and is manifested as noise on the input to the A/D.
APERTURE DELAY
Aperture delay is a measure of the sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) performance and is measured from the rising edge of the clock input to when the input signal is held for conversion.
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE AND DISTORTION (S/N+D, SINAD) RATIO
S/N+D is the ratio of the rms value of the measured input sig­nal to the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist frequency, including harmonics but excluding dc. The value for S/N+D is expressed in decibels.
EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB)
For a sine wave, SINAD can be expressed in terms of the num­ber of bits. Using the following formula,
N = (SINAD – 1.76)/6.02
it is possible to get a measure of performance expressed as N, the effective number of bits.
Thus, effective number of bits for a device for sine wave inputs at a given input frequency can be calculated directly from its measured SINAD.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD)
THD is the ratio of the rms sum of the first six harmonic components to the rms value of the measured input signal and is expressed as a percentage or in decibels.
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR)
SNR is the ratio of the rms value of the measured input signal to the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist frequency, excluding the first six harmonics and dc. The value for SNR is expressed in decibels.
SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR)
SFDR is the difference in dB between the rms amplitude of the input signal and the peak spurious signal.
TWO-TONE SFDR
The ratio of the rms value of either input tone to the rms value of the peak spurious component. The peak spurious component may or may not be an IMD product. May be reported in dBc (i.e., degrades as signal level is lowered), or in dBFS (always related back to converter full scale).
REV. A
–5–
AD9243
9
3
4
2
8
5
7
6
0 –15 –30 –45 –60 –75 –90
–105 –120 –135 –150
0 1.5
FREQUENCY – MHz
AMPLITUDE – dB
1
INPUT POWER LEVEL (F1 = F2) – dBFS
WORST CASE SPURIOUS – dBc AND dBFS
110
60
–40 –35 0
–30 –25 –20 –15 –10 –5
105
90 85
75
65
100
95
80
70
5V SPAN - dBFS
5V SPAN - dBc
2V SPAN - dBFS
2V SPAN - dBc
Typical Differential AC Characterization Curves/Plots
90
85
80
–0.5dBFS
75
–6.0dBFS
70
65
SINAD – dB
–20.0dBFS
60
55
50
100k 1M 20M10M
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 2. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 5 V, V
90
85
80
–0.5dBFS
75
–6.0dBFS
70
SINAD – dB
65
60
–20.0dBFS
55
50
100k 1M 20M10M
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
= 2.5 V)
CM
Figure 5. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
14.7
13.8
13.0
12.2
11.3
10.5
9.7
8.8
8.0
14.7
13.8
13.0
12.2
11.3
10.5
9.7
8.8
8.0
–40
–50
–60
–20.0dBFS
–70
THD – dB
ENOB – Bits
–6.0dBFS
–80
–0.5dBFS
–90
–100
100k 1M
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 3. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 5 V, V
–40
–50
–60
–70 THD – dB
ENOB – Bits
–6.0dBFS
–80
–90
–100
100k 1M 20M10M
–20.0dBFS
–0.5dBFS
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
= 2.5 V)
CM
Figure 6. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
10M
(AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, f = 3.00 MSPS, TA = +258C, Differential Input)
20M
Figure 4. Typical FFT, fIN = 500 kHz (Input Span = 5 V, V
0 –15 –30 –45 –60 –75
4
–90
AMPLITUDE – dB
–105 –120 –135 –150
0 1.5
6
2
8
FREQUENCY – MHz
Figure 7. Typical FFT, fIN = 1.50 MHz (Input Span = 2 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
= 2.5 V)
CM
9
SAMPLE
1
7
5
3
–60
–65
–70
–75
–80
THD – dB
–85
–90
–95
–100
0.1 1 5
Figure 8. THD vs. Sample Rate (f
= 1.5 MHz, AIN = –0.5 dBFS,
IN
V
= 2.5 V)
CM
5V SPAN
2V SPAN
SAMPLE RATE – MSPS
110
100
dBFS – 2V
90
80
70 dBc – 5V
60
SFDR – dBc AND dBFS
50
40
dBc – 2V
–60 –50 0
Figure 9. Single Tone SFDR (f
= 1.5 MHz, VCM = 2.5 V)
IN
dBFS – 5V
–40 –30 –20 –10
AIN – dBFS
–6–
Figure 10. Dual Tone SFDR (f
= 0.95 MHz, f2 = 1.04 MHz,
1
V
= 2.5 V)
CM
REV. A
AD9243
FREQUENCY – MHz
CMR – dB
20
30
90
0.1 1 10010
40
50
60
70
80
TEMPERATURE – 8C
V
REF
ERROR – V
0.01
–0.004
–0.01
–60 –40 140
–20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120
0.008
–0.002
–0.006 –0.008
0.002 0
0.006
0.004
Other Characterization Curves/Plots
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
INL – LSB
0.0
–0.5
–1.0
–1.5
0
CODE
16383
Figure 11. Typical INL (Input Span = 5 V)
90
85
80
75
70
SINAD – dB
65
60
55
50
100k 1M 10M
–0.5dBFS
–6.0dBFS
–20.0dBFS
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
14.7
13.8
13.0
12.2
11.3
10.5
9.7
8.8
8.0
Figure 14. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
ENOB – Bits
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
–0.2
DNL – LSB
–0.4 –0.6 –0.8 –1.0
0 16383
–40
–50
–60
–70
THD – dB
–80
–90
–100
100k 1M 10M
Figure 15. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V, V
(AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, f Single-Ended Input)
CODE
Figure 12. Typical DNL (Input Span = 5 V)
–20dBFS
–6.0dBFS
–0.5dBFS
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
= 2.5 V)
CM
= 3.00 MSPS, TA = +258C,
SAMPLE
4,343,995
HITS
439,383
N–1
CODE
356,972
N N+1
Figure 13. “Grounded-Input” Histogram (Input Span = 5 V)
Figure 16. CMR vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
90
85
80
–0.5dBFS
75
–6.0dBFS
70
SINAD – dB
65
60
–20.0dBFS
55
50
100k 1M 10M
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 17. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 5 V, V
REV. A
= 2.5 V)
CM
14.7
13.8
13.0
12.2
11.3
10.5
9.7
8.8
8.0
–40
–50
ENOB – Bits
–60
–70
THD – dB
–80
–90
–100
100k 1M
–20dBFS
–0.5dBFS
–6.0dBFS
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 18. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 5 V, V
= 2.5 V)
CM
–7–
10M
Figure 19. Typical Voltage Reference Error vs. Temperature
AD9243
C
S
Q
S1
Q
H1
VINA
VINB
C
S
Q
S1
C
PIN
C
PAR
C
PIN
+
C
PAR
Q
S2
C
H
Q
S2
C
H
INTRODUCTION
The AD9243 utilizes a four-stage pipeline architecture with a wideband input sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) implemented on a cost-effective CMOS process. Each stage of the pipeline, excluding the last stage, consists of a low resolution flash A/D connected to a switched capacitor DAC and interstage residue amplifier (MDAC). The residue amplifier amplifies the differ­ence between the reconstructed DAC output and the flash input for the next stage in the pipeline. One bit of redundancy is used in each of the stages to facilitate digital correction of flash er­rors. The last stage simply consists of a flash A/D.
The pipeline architecture allows a greater throughput rate at the expense of pipeline delay or latency. This means that while the converter is capable of capturing a new input sample every clock cycle, it actually takes three clock cycles for the conversion to be fully processed and appear at the output. This latency is not a concern in most applications. The digital output, together with the out-of-range indicator (OTR), is latched into an output buffer to drive the output pins. The output drivers can be con­figured to interface with +5 V or +3.3 V logic families.
The AD9243 uses both edges of the clock in its internal timing circuitry (see Figure 1 and specification page for exact timing requirements). The A/D samples the analog input on the rising edge of the clock input. During the clock low time (between the falling edge and rising edge of the clock), the input SHA is in the sample mode; during the clock high time it is in the hold mode. System disturbances just prior to the rising edge of the clock and/or excessive clock jitter may cause the input SHA to acquire the wrong value, and should be minimized.
ANALOG INPUT AND REFERENCE OVERVIEW
Figure 20, a simplified model of the AD9243, highlights the rela­tionship between the analog inputs, VINA, VINB, and the reference voltage, VREF. Like the voltage applied to the top of the resistor ladder in a flash A/D converter, the value VREF defines the maximum input voltage to the A/D core. The minimum input voltage to the A/D core is automatically defined to be –VREF.
VINA
AD9243
V
CORE
+V
REF
A/D
CORE
14
Therefore, the equation,
V
= VINA – VINB (1)
CORE
defines the output of the differential input stage and provides the input to the A/D core.
The voltage, V
, must satisfy the condition,
CORE
V
–VREF
≤ VREF (2)
CORE
where VREF is the voltage at the VREF pin. While an infinite combination of VINA and VINB inputs exist
that satisfy Equation 2, there is an additional limitation placed on the inputs by the power supply voltages of the AD9243. The power supplies bound the valid operating range for VINA and VINB. The condition,
AVSS – 0.3 V < VINA < AVDD + 0.3 V (3) AVSS – 0.3 V < VINB < AVDD + 0.3 V
where AVSS is nominally 0 V and AVDD is nominally +5 V, defines this requirement. Thus, the range of valid inputs for VINA and VINB is any combination that satisfies both Equa­tions 2 and 3.
For additional information showing the relationship between VINA, VINB, VREF and the digital output of the AD9243, see Table IV.
Refer to Table I and Table II for a summary of the various analog input and reference configurations.
ANALOG INPUT OPERATION
Figure 21 shows the equivalent analog input of the AD9243 which consists of a differential sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA). The differential input structure of the SHA is highly flexible, allowing the devices to be easily configured for either a differen­tial or single-ended input. The dc offset, or common-mode voltage, of the input(s) can be set to accommodate either single­supply or dual supply systems. Also, note that the analog inputs, VINA and VINB, are interchangeable with the exception that reversing the inputs to the VINA and VINB pins results in a polarity inversion.
VINB
–V
REF
Figure 20. AD9243 Equivalent Functional Input Circuit
The addition of a differential input structure gives the user an additional level of flexibility that is not possible with traditional flash converters. The input stage allows the user to easily config­ure the inputs for either single-ended operation or differential operation. The A/D’s input structure allows the dc offset of the input signal to be varied independently of the input span of the converter. Specifically, the input to the A/D core is the difference of the voltages applied at the VINA and VINB input pins.
–8–
Figure 21. AD9243 Simplified Input Circuit
REV. A
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