TI DAC8580IPW

 DAC
®
858
0
DAC8580
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
16-BIT, HIGH-SPEED, LOW-NOISE, VOLTAGE OUTPUT,
DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTER
FEATURES
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
DESCRIPTION
16-Bit Monotonic
±5-V Rail-to-Rail Output
Fast Settling: 0.65 µs
Fast Slew Rate: 35 V/µs
Low Noise: 20 nV/√Hz
Low Glitch Energy: 0.5 nV-s
Low Power-On Transient
On-Chip Digital Low-Pass Filter
Programmable Oversampling
16-MSPS Update Rate (Filter On)
30-MHz Serial Interface
1.8-V to 5.5-V Logic Compatible
TSSOP-16 Package
The DAC8580 is a 16-bit, high-speed, low-noise,
voltage-output DAC designed for
waveform
generation applications. It operates from dual ±5-V
power supplies and requires only a single external
reference. The DAC8580 is capable of generating
output signal frequencies up to 1 MHz. The DAC8580
significantly relaxes, or removes, the need for
external de-glitchers, analog filters and high-swing
output buffers. It incorporates a programmable digital
interpolation filter capable of oversampling the input
word rate by 2, 4, 8, or 16. The digital filter can be
bypassed on-the-fly, or can be permanently turned
off. The fast 30-MHz serial interface is compatible
with right-justified digital audio format. The DAC8580
is specified from –40°C to 85°C.
APPLICATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Waveform Generation
CRT Projection TV Digital Convergence
Automated Test Equipment
Industrial Process Control
Music Synthesis
Ultrasound
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM OF DAC8580
AVSS
OSR1
AVDD
DVDD
DGND
VREF
Digital Filter
OSR2
RSTB
AGND
H (z) = (
1 1 −z -N 3
)
N 1 − z -1
DAC
VOUT
DAC
Latch
BPB
DIN
SCLK
Serial Interface
Shift Register
FSYNC
MUTEB
Control
Logic
DAC8580
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas
Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Copyright © 2005, Texas Instruments Incorporated
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated
circuits be handled with appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation
procedures can cause damage.
ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision
integrated circuits may be more susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could
cause the device not to meet its published specifications. This device is rated at 1500 V HBM and 1000
V CDM.
PACKAGE/ORDERING INFORMATION (1)
PRODUCT
PACKAGE
PACKAGE
DRAWING
NUMBER
SPECIFICATION
TEMPERATURE
RANGE
PACKAGE
MARKING
DAC8580
16-TSSOP
PW
–40°C TO +85°C
D8580I
(1)
ORDERING
NUMBER
TRANSPORT MEDIA
DAC8580IPW
90-Piece Tube
DAC8580IPWR
2000-Piece Tape and Reel
For the most current package and ordering information, see the Package Option Addendum at the end of this document, or see the TI
Web site at www.ti.com.
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS (1)
AVDD or DVDD to AVSS
–0.3 V to 12 V
Digital input voltage to AVSS
–0.3 V to 12 V
VOUT or VREF to AVSS
–0.3 V to 12 V
DGND and AGND to AVSS
–0.3 V to 6 V
Operating temperature range
– 40°C to +85°C
Storage temperature range
– 65°C to +150°C
Junction temperature range (TJ max)
Power dissipation:
Lead temperature, soldering:
(1)
+150°C
Thermal impedance (ΘJA)
118°C/W
Thermal impedance (ΘJC)
29°C/W
Vapor phase (60 s)
215°C
Infrared (15 s)
220°C
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute
maximum conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
All specifications at TA = TMIN to TMAX, +AVDD = +5 V, –AVDD = –5 V, DVDD = +5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise noted
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
STATIC PERFORMANCE
Resolution
16
Bits
Linearity error
±0.05
Differential linearity error
±0.25
±1
2
3
Gain error
1
Gain drift
% FSR
±3
±5
LSB
% FSR
ppm/°C
±25
Bipolar zero error
VREF = 4.096 V
Bipolar zero drift
From –40°C to +85°C
±20
µV/°C
mV
Total drift
From –40°C to +85°C
±8
ppm/°C
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Voltage output range
AVDD = 6 V, AVSS = –6 V, VREF = 5.5 V
Maximum current drive capability
At full speed, driving resistive load
(1)
Output Impedance
(1)
2
Sourcing and sinking dc currents larger than 25 mA is not recommended.
–5.5
5.5
V
±25
mA
18
Ω
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
All specifications at TA = TMIN to TMAX, +AVDD = +5 V, –AVDD = –5 V, DVDD = +5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise noted
PARAMETER
Settling time (large signal)
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
CL <200 pF, RL = 2 kΩ, to 0.1% FS, 8-V step
To 0.003% FS, 8-V step
TYP
MAX
0.35
0.65
1.0
UNIT
µs
Settling time (small signal)
To 0.003% FS, 100-mV step
0.15
Slew rate
From 10% to 90% of % FSR
35
Code-to-code glitch impulse
1 LSB change around major carry
5
mV
Code-to-code glitch energy
1 LSB change around major carry
0.5
nV-s
Overshoot
Limited by slew-boost circuit operation during
large-signal swings.
100
mV
Digital feedthrough (2)
SCLK toggling
0.5
nV-s
Voltage output noise
Frequency = 100 kHz
20
nV/√Hz
Frequency = 10 kHz
25
nV/√Hz
F = 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz
25
µVp-p
VDD varies ±10%
0.3
mV/V
Power supply rejection
µs
V/µs
REFERENCE INPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Reference input voltage range
3.0
Reference input impedance
AVDD
5
Reference input capacitance
Reference multiplying bandwidth
Large signal (1 V peak-to-peak)
Reference multiplying bandwidth
Small signal
V
kΩ
5
pF
3
MHz
10
MHz
AC CHARACTERISTICS
2nd Harmonic distortion
3rd Harmonic distortion
Spurious free dynamic range (SFDR)
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Digital filter is OFF
–72
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 40 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 1 MSPS,
Digital filter oversampling rate = 16 (3)
–72
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS
Software calibrated, digital filter is OFF (4)
–100
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Digital filter is OFF
–72
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 40 kHz,
DAC input update rate= 1 MSPS,
Digital filter oversampling rate = 16 (3)
–72
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Software calibrated, digital filter is OFF (4)
–100
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Digital filter is OFF
72
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 40 kHz,
DAC input update rate= 1 MSPS,
Digital filter oversampling rate =16 (3)
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Software calibrated, digital filter is OFF (4)
(2)
(3)
(4)
56
–56
dB
–56
dB
dB
70
dB
–100
Digital feedthrough error is defined as the area of the impulse injected into the analog output from the digital input, during the toggling of
the digital input.
No analog filter is used. On-chip digital filter is set at oversampling ratio of 16. High-speed digitizer has 10-MHz input bandwidth. This
specification is 100% tested during production.
Software calibration requires the user to calibrate the linearity error using a precision digitizer and provide the DAC inputs from a lookup
table.
3
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
All specifications at TA = TMIN to TMAX, +AVDD = +5 V, –AVDD = –5 V, DVDD = +5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise noted
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
–56
dB
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Digital filter is OFF
–70
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 40 kHz,
DAC input update rate =1 MSPS,
Digital filter oversampling rate =16 (3)
–68
DAC output signal (sine wave) frequency = 1 kHz,
DAC input update rate = 192 KSPS,
Software calibrated, digital filter is OFF (4)
–98
Signal to noise ratio (SNR)
DAC output signal is 1-kHz sine wave, –1 dBFS.
Noise bandwidth is from 0 to 10 kHz. (5)
110
dBFS
Maximum output frequency (without external
analog filter)
Serial clock = 16 MHz,
Digital filter oversampling rate =16
THD > 50 dBs, without analog filter
0.2
MHz
Maximum output frequency (with external
analog filter)
Serial clock = 32 MHz,
Digital filter oversampling rate = 8 (6)
THD > 50 dBs, with analog filter
1
MHz
Total harmonic distortion (THD)
Maximum output update rate
16
MHz
DIGITAL INPUT CHARACTERISTICS
VIH
0.7 x DVDD
DVDD
VIL
GND
0.3 x DVDD
Input leakage current
±0.05
Input capacitance
Power-on delay
From VDD high to CS low
V
±1
µA
5
pF
130
µs
POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS
+AVDD
4.0
5
6.0
V
–AVDD
–6.0
–5
–4.0
V
DVDD
1.8
AVDD
V
IDD
AVDD = 5.0 V, AVSS = –5.0 V,
VREF = 4.096 V, IREF included
ISS
17
24
–23
–32
mA
TEMPERATURE RANGE
Specified performance
(5)
(6)
–40
85
°C
A precision delta-sigma digitizer is used to make the measurement.
An oversampling ratio of 16X cannot be supported at 32 MHz clock frequency. 8X oversampling can be used instead to generate a
1-MHz output. To generate output frequencies over 200 kHz, use of analog anti-imaging filters are highly recommended. The DAC8580
digital filter still relaxes the analog filter requirements. At FOUT >200 kHz, large-signal waveforms have overshoot/undershoot due to the
settling characteristics of the output amplifiers. Small-signal waveforms don't show this behavior.
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
At –40°C to 85°C, DVDD = +5 V, +AVDD = +5 V, –AVDD = –5 V, unless otherwise noted (1) (2)
PARAMETER
MIN
MAX
tsck
SCLK period
33
twsck
SCLK high or low time
16
tsu
Data setup time (input)
5
thi
Data hold time (input)
5
tSWF
FSYNC setup time
5
tHWF
FSYNC hold time
5
tr
Rise time
20
1
tf
Fall time
20
1
tWFUPDAC
Delay from falling edge of FSYNC to loading DAC latch (3)
1.5
(1)
(2)
(3)
4
Specified by design. Not production tested.
Sample tested during the initial release and after any redesign or process changes that may affect this parameter.
OUTPUT of pin VOUT changes to new level immediately (within settling time) after DAC register is loaded.
UNIT
ns
tsck
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TSSOP PACKAGE
(TOP VIEW)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
VREF
VOUT
AVSS
AVDD
AGND
BPB
OSR2
OSR1
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
DGND
RSTB
MUTEB
DVDD
DGND
FSYNC
SCLK
SDIN
TERMINAL FUNCTIONS
NO.
NAME
DESCRIPTION
1
VREF
Reference input voltage; 3 V to AVDD.
2
VOUT
DAC output voltage; output swing is ±VREF
3
AVSS
Negative analog supply voltage; tie to –5 V
4
AVDD
Positive analog supply voltage; tie to +5 V
5
AGND
Ground reference for analog circuitry of the device
6
BPB
Active-low, asynchronous digital input for filter bypass
7
OSR2
Digital input for selecting the oversampling ratio
8
OSR1
Digital input for selecting the oversampling ratio
9
DIN
Digital input, serial data
10
SCLK
Digital input, serial bit clock
11
FSYNC
Digital input. FSYNC is word clock.
12
DGND
Ground reference for digital circuitry
13
DVDD
Positive digital supply, 1.8-V to 5.5-V compatible
14
MUTEB
Digital input, actime low, for forcing the output to mid-scale.
15
RSTB
Filter reset. Active-low, asynchronous digital input for disabling all digital filter activity.
16
DGND
Must connect to digital ground reference to ensure correct operation.
5
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
RIGHT-JUSTIFIED AUDIO TIMING DIAGRAM
The DAC8580 serial interface timing uses a single channel (mono) version of right-justified audio format. The
input data is latched into the device input shift register on the rising edge of SCLK, MSB first. The falling edge of
FSYNC latches the last 16 bits of received data (right-justified) from the shift register into a temporary register,
which connects to either the digital filter or the DAC latch. Data in the temporary register is transferred to the
DAC latch (when digital filter is off), or to the digital filter (when the filter is on) on the second rising SCLK edge
after the falling edge of FSYNC. For operating the digital filter, a continuous SCLK is required.
t WFUPDAC
t HWF
t SWF
t WFUPDAC
DAC
Updated
FSYNC
Temporary
Register
PREVIOUS VALUE
VALUE of WORD−0
New Word
Starts
t SCK
t wsck
t wsck
t hi
t r
VALUE of WORD−1
DAC Latch or Digital filter input **
changes immediately to new value
DAC Latch or Digital filter input **
changes immediately to new value
New Word
Starts
t f
SCLK
t su
DIN
BIT−1
BIT−0
BIT−15 (MSB)
WORD−0
BIT−14,...., 1
BIT−0
BIT−15 (MSB)
WORD−1
BIT−14, ...., 1
WORD−2
** −− New data is transferred to DAC Latch if filter is off;
transferred to filter if filter is on.
Figure 1. Timing Diagram
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted)
LINEARITY ERROR
vs
INPUT CODE
DIFFERENTIAL LINEARITY ERROR
vs
INPUT CODE
20
0.5
15
0.25
DLE − LSBs
LE − LSBs
10
5
0
−5
−10
0
−0.25
−15
−20
−0.5
0
8192
16384
24576
32768
40960
Input Code
Figure 2.
6
49152
57344
65536
0
8192
16384
24576
32768
40960
Input Code
Figure 3.
49152 57344
65536
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted) (continued)
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY ERROR
vs
VREF
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY ERROR
vs
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
30
30
INL max
20
20
10
AVSS = −AVDD,
VREF = AVDD −0.3 V
INL max
10
INL − LSBs
INL − LSBs
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V
0
−10
0
−10
INL min
INL min
−20
−20
−30
−30
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
5.5
3
3.5
4
Figure 5.
OFFSET ERROR
vs
TEMPERATURE
GAIN ERROR
vs
TEMPERATURE
5.5
6
193
AVDD = 5 V,
AVSS = –5 V,
VREF = 4.096 V
AVDD = 5 V,
AVSS = –5 V,
VREF = 4.096 V
191
Gain Error − mV
2
Offset Error − mV
5
Figure 4.
4
0
189
187
−2
−4
−40
4.5
AVDD − Supply Voltage − V
VREF − Reference Voltage − V
−20
0
20
40
60
185
−40
80
−20
0
20
40
60
80
TA − Free-Air Temperature − C
TA − Free-Air Temperature − C
Figure 6.
Figure 7.
POSITIVE SUPPLY CURRENT - IDD
vs
TEMPERATURE
NEGATIVE SUPPLY CURRENT - ISS
vs
TEMPERATURE
25
I SS − Supply Current − mA
IDD − Supply Current − mA
−11
20
15
−13
−15
−17
−19
−21
−23
10
−40
−20
0
20
40
60
80
−25
−40
−20
0
20
40
TA − Free-Air Temperature − °C
TA − Free-Air Temperature − °C
Figure 8.
Figure 9.
60
80
7
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted) (continued)
POSITIVE SUPPLY CURRENT - IDD
vs
CODE
NEGATIVE SUPPLY CURRENT - ISS
vs
CODE
−19.5
I SS − Supply Current − mA
I DD − Supply Current − mA
15
14.5
14
13.5
13
−32768
−16384
0
16384
−20
−20.5
−21
−32768
32768
−16384
0
16384
32768
Code
Code
Figure 11.
LARGE-SIGNAL SETTLING
SMALL-SIGNAL SETTLING
V − 2 V/div
mV − 50 mV/div
Figure 10.
t − Time − 1µs/ div
t − Time − 50 ns/div
Figure 12.
Figure 13.
DIGITAL FEEDTHROUGH AND MID-CODE GLITCH
OUTPUT VOLTAGE NOISE
Feedthrough
FSYNC
t − Time − 1µs/div
V n − Output Noise Voltage − nV/
mV − 10 mV/div
Glitch
Hz
100 k
10 k
1k
100
10
1
10
100
1k
f − Frequency − Hz
Figure 14.
8
Figure 15.
10 k
100 k
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted) (continued)
SINE WAVE OUTPUT
Fo = 30 kHZ
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
Fo = 30 kHz
0
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
2.5
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
−10
−20
−30
Gain − dB
V O − Output Voltage − V
5
0
−40
−50
−60
−70
−2.5
−80
−90
−5
0.00001
−100
0.00002
0.00003
0.00004
0
0.00005
t − Time − s
Figure 16.
Figure 17.
SINE WAVE OUTPUT
Fo = 50 kHz
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
Fo = 50 kHz
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
−10
−20
−30
Gain − dB
V O − Output Voltage − V
4000000
0
5
2.5
2000000
f − Frequency − Hz
0
−40
−50
−60
−70
−2.5
−80
−90
−5
0.00001
−100
0.00002
0.00003
0.00004
0.00005
0
t − Time − s
Figure 18.
Figure 19.
SINE WAVE OUTPUT
Fo = 100 kHz
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
Fo = 100 kHz
4000000
0
5
−10
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
2.5
0
−20
−30
Gain − dB
V O − Output Voltage − V
2000000
f − Frequency − Hz
−40
OSR = 16
Fclk = 16 MHz
No Analog Filter Used
AVDD = 6 V
AVSS = −6 V
VREF = 5 V
Digitizer Fs = 8 MHz
−50
−60
−70
−2.5
−80
−90
−5
0.00001
0.00002
0.00003
t − Time − s
Figure 20.
0.00004
0.00005
−100
0
2000000
f − Frequency − Hz
4000000
Figure 21.
9
DAC8580
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted) (continued)
SINE WAVE OUTPUT
Fo = 150 kHz
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
Fo = 150 kHz
0
5
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
2.5
−20
−30
Gain − dB
V O − Output Voltage − V
−10
0
−40
−50
−60
−70
−2.5
−80
−90
−5
0.00001
−100
0.00002
0.00003
0.00004
0.00005
0
2000000
f − Frequency − Hz
t − Time − s
Figure 22.
Figure 23.
SINE WAVE OUTPUT
Fo = 200 kHz
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
Fo = 200 kHz
0
5
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
−10
−20
OSR = 16,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V,
VREF = 5 V,
Digitizer FS = 8 MHz
2.5
0
−30
Gain − dB
V O − Output Voltage − V
4000000
−40
−50
−60
−70
−2.5
−80
−90
−5
0.00001
−100
0.00002
0.00003
0.00004
0
0.00005
2000000
f − Frequency − Hz
t − Time − s
Figure 25.
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
FROM DC TO 6 kHz
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION
AND SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
vs
CLOCK FREQUENCY
SFDR, Dominated by Images or 3rd Harmonic
Fo = 1 kHz,
Fclk = 192 KSPS,
OSR = 1,
THD = −71 dB,
SNR = 113 dBFS,
Digitizer = Delta−Sigma
−40
−50
60
THD and SFDR − dB
−20
−30
Gain − dB
Figure 24.
80
0
−10
−60
−70
−80
−90
−100
20
0
−20
THD
−60
−80
0
2000
4000
f − Frequency − Hz
Figure 26.
10
OSR = 16,
Fo = 20 kHz,
No Analog Filter Used
40
−40
−110
−120
−130
−140
4000000
6000
0
5000000
10000000
Clock Frequency − Hz
Figure 27.
15000000
20000000
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SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (AVDD = 5 V, AVSS = –5 V, VREF = 4.096 V, unless otherwise
noted) (continued)
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION
AND SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
vs
OUTPUT FREQUENCY
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION
AND SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
vs
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
80
80
SFDR, Dominated by Images
60
60
40
40
THD and SFDR − dB
THD and SFDR − dB
SFDR
20
OSR = 16,
No Analog Filter Used
0
−20
−40
OSR = 16,
Fo = 20 kHz,
Fclk = 8 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
Vref = AVDD = −AVSS
20
0
−20
−40
THD
THD
−60
−60
−80
−80
50000
0
100000
150000
200000
250000
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
5.5
6
AVDD − Supply Voltage − V
Output Frequency − Hz
Figure 28.
Figure 29.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION
AND SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
vs
REFERENCE VOLTAGE
SOFTWARE-TRIMMED UNIT
LINEARITY ERROR
vs
INPUT CODE
4
80
3
60
SFDR
2
20
0
−20
LE − LSBs
OSR = 16,
Fo = 100 kHz,
Fclk = 16 MHz,
No Analog Filter Used,
AVDD = 6 V,
AVSS = −6 V
1
0
−1
After piece−wise linear external calibration
−2
−40
THD
−3
−60
−4
−80
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
5.5
6
0
16384
VREF − Reference Voltage − V
32768
49152
65536
Input Code
Figure 30.
Figure 31.
SOFTWARE-TRIMMED UNIT
POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY
0
Fo = 1 kHz,
Fs = 192 KSPS
−20
−40
Code − dB
THD and SFDR − dB
40
−60
After piece−wise linear external calibration.
Filter Off
−80
−100
−120
−140
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
f − Frequency − Hz
5000
6000
Figure 32.
11
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
THEORY OF OPERATION
The traditional high-speed, voltage-output D/A conversion employs a current-output DAC followed by an I-to-V
conversion amplifier. For voltage waveform generation applications, these components are typically followed by a
sample-and-hold de-glitcher circuit, an analog low-pass filter, and an external buffer to drive low-impedance
loads (see Figure 33). Monolithic applications of such traditional architectures suffer from the imperfections of
on-chip sample-and-hold circuits, and the analog filters. Multi-chip applications of this traditional architecture
suffer from voltage drift problems due to the temperature coefficient mismatches between external passive
components and the D/A converter, as well as large circuit size and high cost. DAC8580 is designed to address
the problems of traditional high-speed, high-resolution, voltage-output D/A converters.
I-to-V
Converter
−
Iout
DAC
−
De-glitcher
+
DAC8580
+
LPF
Output
Driver
Figure 33. Traditional Voltage Output Waveform Generation Circuitry Replaced by a Single DAC8580
The DAC8580 uses a proprietary, inherently monotonic, high-speed, low-glitch, resistor-string architecture,
followed by an on-chip low-noise output amplifier. 16-bit input data is coded in twos-complement format and
transmitted using a 3-wire serial interface (MSB first). The input data is sent to an on-chip digital interpolation
filter. The filter can be programmed to different oversampling rates, it can be bypassed, or it can be totally
disabled. The digital data is then decoded to select a tap voltage of the resistor string. The resistor-string output
is sent to a high-speed, low-noise output amplifier. The output buffer has quasi-rail-to-rail swing capability (within
250-mV range of each rail) on a 600-Ω, 200-pF load. Loads of 50 Ω or 75 Ω can also be continuously driven as
long as the output current remains within ±25 mA. The DAC8580 reduces the components that are used for
implementing sample-and-hold circuits, analog filters, and output driver amplifiers.
The resistor-string DAC architecture provides low glitch, exceptional differential linearity, and temperature stability
while the output buffer provides fast settling and exceptionally low noise (20 nV/√Hz). The DAC8580 settles well
under 1 µs for large signals. The small-signal settling time is less than 150 ns, which enables (oversampled)
update rates exceeding 6.7 MSPS. If some small-signal settling error can be tolerated, the DAC8580 can update
as fast as 16 MSPS.
Due to the remarkably low glitch energy, the DAC8580 has low harmonic distortion ( –70 dB THD for 1-kHz sine
wave output). When the linearity error of the DAC8580 is calibrated using a lookup table, the THD performance
typically exceeds 98 dBs, without an external S/H circuit.
The DAC8580 needs a low-noise external reference voltage to set its output voltage range. The DAC8580 does
not introduce glitches to the external voltage source. This significantly reduces the crosstalk when a single
external reference is used to supply the reference voltage for multiple devices.
The DAC8580 has a 3-wire serial interface to communicate with a microprocessor or a DSP. The host is not
overloaded by the DAC8580: When the digital filter is on, the host needs only to send 1-out-of-16 data points (for
oversampling rate 16). The digital filter of the DAC8580 can generate the remaining data points digitally, on-chip.
When the digital filter is disabled (bypassed), the DAC8580 operates as a standard, 16-bit, 2-MSPS,
voltage-output DAC. The 1.8-V to 5.5-V digital interface of the DAC8580 enables compatibility with various logic
families.
Output Voltage (VOUT)
The DAC8580 uses a high-performance rail-to-rail output buffer capable of driving a 600-Ω, 200-pF load with fast
1-µs large-signal settling. The buffer has exceptional noise performance (20 nV/√Hz) and fast slew-rate
(35 V/µs). The small-signal settling time is under 150 ns, supporting DAC update rates exceeding 6.7 MSPS.
12
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
THEORY OF OPERATION (continued)
On power up, a switching circuitry is used to lower power-on transients. Before power up, the DAC output is
connected to AGND voltage using a 100-kΩ resistor. During power up, transient output voltages are typically less
than 200 mV. Approximately 30 µs after power up, the output gets set to mid-scale value (power-on reset). This
mid-scale value is around AGND potential within offset error limits.
Table 1. Two's-Complement Data Format
DAC OUTPUT
DIGITAL CODE
BINARY
HEX
+Vref
0111111111111111
7FFF
+Vref/2
0100000000000000
4FFF
0
0000000000000000
0000
–Vref/2
1011111111111111
BFFF
–Vref
1000000000000000
8000
Reference Input Voltage (VREF)
The reference input pin VREF is typically tied to a standard 3-V, 4.096-V, or 5-V external reference. Minimum
external reference voltage that can be used is 3 V. A 0.1-µF (or less) bypass capacitor is recommended,
depending on the load-driving capability of the external voltage reference. To reduce crosstalk and improve
settling time, VREF pin is internally buffered by a high-performance amplifier. Pin VREF has a constant 5-kΩ
impedance to AGND; therefore, a reference driver should be chosen with care. Because the VREF pin does not
induce glitches, multiple DAC8580 devices can share a single external reference without crosstalk concerns. In
addition, because the reference pin does not require fast current spikes, the reference voltage generator can be
heavily filtered to improve noise performance without hurting settling or distortion. The output range of the
DAC8580 is equal to ±VREF. Pin VREF should not be powered before the supply pins. REF3133 and REF3140 are
recommended to set the DAC8580 output range to ±3.3 V and ±4.096 V, respectively. The reference bandwidth
is 10 MHz (small signal) and 3 MHz (large signal).
Power Supply (AVDD, AVSS, DVDD)
The DAC8580 uses ±5-V analog power supplies (AVDD, AVSS) and a 1.8-V to 5.5-V digital supply (DVDD). Analog
and digital ground pins (AGND and DGND) are also provided. For low-noise operation, analog and digital power,
and ground pins should be separated. Sufficient bypass capacitors, at least 1 µF, should be placed between
AVDD and AVSS, AVSS and DGND, and DVDD and DGND pins. Series inductors are not recommended on the
supply paths. AVDD, DVDD, AVSS, and VREF should be applied together. VREF must not be applied before AVDD
and AVSS. During power up, all digital inputs and the reference input should be kept at zero volts. If any pin is
brought high before the power supplies, overvoltage protection circuitry turns on.
SERIAL INTERFACE
The DAC8580 serial interface consists of serial data input pin SDIN, bit clock pin SCLK, and word clock pin
FSYNC. The serial interface is designed to support the right-justified (mono) audio format. The serial inputs are
1.8-V to 5.5-V logic compatible.
Data from SDIN pin is continuously clocked into a 16-bit shift register, at each rising edge of SCLK. Falling edge
of the FSYNC latches the shift register data into a 16-bit temporary register. The second rising edge of SCLK
following the falling edge of FSYNC transfers the data stored in the temporary register to the DAC latch when the
digital filter is turned off; when the digital filter is on, data is transferred to the digital filter. That is, DAC data is
updated 1.5 clock cycles after the falling edge of FSYNC when the digital filter is off. The shift register
continuously performs a shift operation; therefore, on the falling edge of the word clock FSYNC, the last 16 bits
received determines the data update (right-justified). Data is received MSB-first. This operation provides a
simplified timing for the digital filter, and enables clock rates exceeding 30 MHz. See the timing diagram for
details.
13
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
DIGITAL FILTER
The digital filter removes, or simplifies, the component tolerance and temperature drift requirements of the analog
filter that follows the DAC8580. Thus, the digital filter reduces the system cost, and improves system reliability.
The filter does so at the expense of a 2-input-word delay and some rolloff of the input spectrum, which also is
present for the case of an analog filter. The DAC8580 is not a delta-sigma DAC. No noise shaping is performed,
and there is no out-of-band noise other than the significantly reduced image frequencies. Driving a 600-Ω load,
the DAC8580 idle channel noise typically exceeds 115 dBs over the audio bandwidth.
For output signals exceeding 200 kHz, an analog anti-imaging filter is recommended.
The digital filter is a third-order comb filter with programmable oversampling ratio, which performs a second-order
interpolation on the input data.
Figure 34 shows the third-order comb filter effect, which is quadratic interpolation (two-frame delay is not shown).
Data vs time. Third-order comb filtering, quadratic interpolation. Over-sampling ratio = 4.
Figure 34. Data vs Time – Third-Order Comb Filtering
The digital filter has a two-frame delay, independent of the oversampling rate. It does not exactly preserve the
input samples. However, it has the nice property of outputting the input sample, if two repetitive input frames are
used in a row. It is a finite impulse response (FIR) filter with linear phase, and it does not distort audio phase
relationships. The hardware implementation uses feedback; therefore, it is implemented similar to an infinite
impulse response (IIR) filter. The number of equivalent FIR coefficients depends on the oversampling rate and is
not described in detail. The filter has the following Z-transform and its low-pass frequency response has sinx/x
envelope to the third power.
N
H(z) 1 1 z 1
N 1z
3
(1)
The filter serves three major purposes:
The first purpose of the filter is to relax the analog filtering requirement by pushing the image frequencies
higher in the spectrum. A single analog RC filter, or no analog filter at all, could work fine. Image frequencies
are a fundamental property of an ideal D/A converter, and they can easily dominate the spurious free
dynamic range (SFDR) for high-frequency output signals. The digital filter helps remove these image
frequencies. Image frequencies appear at the integer multiples of the output data update rate (±) input signal
rate. For example, a 1-MSPS DAC generating a 225-kHz sine wave has image frequencies pop up at 775
kHz, 1.225 MHz, 1.775 MHz, 2.25 MHz, etc. The images for the fifth-harmonic are at 112.5 kHz, 887.5 kHz,
1.125 MHz, 1.887 MHz, etc. This 112.5-kHz image for the fifth harmonic pops up even below the 225 kHz
fundamental. With an oversampling rate of 16, at 16 MSPS, the image frequency for that same fifth harmonic
is pushed back to 16 MHz – 5 × 225 kHz = 14.875 MHz, which can be filtered easily with an RC circuit.
The second purpose of the digital filter is to relax the computational burden on the microcontroller unit driving
the DAC8580. At an oversampling rate of 16, the MCU needs to generate only 1-out-of-16 samples; 15
samples out of 16 are computed and generated by the DAC8580 digital filter. Even the input sample itself
gets recomputed into a slightly different value by the filter. This way a high-MIPS (million instructions per
second) MCU or DSP is not required to drive the DAC8580 for continuous waveform generation applications.
A simple microcontroller is sufficient.
14
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
The third purpose of the filter is to relax the burden on the DAC8580 output buffer by band limiting the digital
input signal. Analog overshoot is not generated during smooth digital signals (filter on). Moreover, when the
filter is on, the 150-ns small-signal settling time becomes a dominant factor, as opposed to the 1-µs
large-signal settling time. This enables 6.7-MSPS operation with full settling; 16 MSPS is possible if full
settling is not necessary. At output update rates above 6.7 MSPS, the user can trade off image frequencies
with distortion caused by insufficient settling.
When the filter is bypassed (pin BPB connects to DGND), the DAC latch is loaded directly with the value from
the input temporary register. The DAC output changes immediately when the input temporary register is loaded
with the new value. If high-speed signals are needed within smooth signals, the filter bypass feature is useful to
temporarily switch back to 35 V/µs fast slew rate, while the filter is still in operation.
The DAC8580 uses an infinite impulse response (IIR) implementation of the third-order comb filter. This
implementation is stable when there is exactly 16 SCLK rising edges per frame. SCLK should be equally spaced,
continuous, and uninterrupted for proper filtered operation. The particular frame during which the RSTB pulse
makes a low-to-high transition can contain any number of clock cycles, but after that frame, there must be 16
clocks per frame.
For oversampling ratios of 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16, the DAC8580 analog outputs change every 16, 8, 4, 2, and 1 SCLK
rising edges, respectively. For all oversampling ratios, DAC8580 always receives one input data every 16 SCLK
cycles. To perform the low-pass function, the digital filter uses the current input, as well as two previous inputs.
During power up, when three consecutive inputs are not yet available, the current input and two previous inputs
are taken at mid-scale code. The intermediate points between consecutive digital input samples are computed
(interpolated) by the digital filter and sent to the output at a higher update rate determined by the oversampling
ratio.
The digital filter itself can support update rates up to 16 MSPS due to inherent logic delay limitations. Therefore,
the oversampled output update rate of the DAC8580 should not exceed 16 MSPS. For example:
Case 1: Fsclk = 32 MHz
Din = 32 MHz/16 = 2 MSPS
Vout (OSR = 2) = 4 MSPS
Vout (OSR = 4) = 8 MSPS
Vout (OSR = 8) = 16 MSPS
Vout (OSR =16) = Not allowed, limited by the filter update-rate.
Case 2: Fsclk = 16 MHz
Din = 16 MHz/16 = 1 MSPS.
Vout (OSR = 2) = 2 MSPS
Vout (OSR = 4) = 4 MSPS
Vout (OSR = 8) = 8 MSPS
Vout (OSR =16) = 16 MSPS
15
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
CONFIGURATION of DIGITAL FILTER
The digital filter is configured through hardware as shown in Table 2.
Table 2. Configuration of Digital Filter
BPB
RSTB
OSR2
OSR1 MUTEB
DESCRIPTION
Don't
care
Don't
care
Don't
care
Don't
care
0
OUTPUT CLEAR. The output goes to mid-scale, 1.5 SCLK cycles after falling FSYNC
0
0
Don't
care
Don't
care
1
STANDARD DAC OPERATION (FILTER OFF)
DAC output updates with serial data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC
1
0
Don't
care
Don't
care
1
FILTER INITIALIZATION
Digital filter gets reset. DAC output goes to mid-scale after receiving SCLK rising edge.
0
1
Don't
care
Don't
care
1
STANDARD DAC OPERATION (FILTER COMPUTES IN THE BACKGROUND)
DAC output updates with serial data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC
1
1
0
0
1
2X oversampled OPERATION WITH FILTER ON
DAC output updates with filtered data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC and every 8th SCLK
thereafter.
1
1
0
1
1
4X oversampled OPERATION WITH FILTER ON
DAC output updates with filtered data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC and every 4th SCLK
thereafter.
1
1
1
0
1
8X oversampled OPERATION WITH FILTER ON
DAC output updates with filter data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC and every 2nd SCLK
thereafter.
1
1
1
1
1
16X oversampled OPERATION WITH FILTER ON
DAC output updates with filter data, 1.5 SCLK after falling FSYNC and every SCLK thereafter.
Mute Function (Pin MUTEB)
Mute function is implemented by setting the DAC output voltage to mid-scale (~0 V). The MUTEB pin is active
low, and is synchronized with the frame. That is, the DAC latch and DAC output are immediately set to mid-scale
during the first update while the MUTEB pin is low. The MUTEB pin works independent of the serial data
transfer, or the digital filter. Neither the serial input, nor the digital filter data get interrupted or get lost while the
output is set at mid-scale with MUTEB. The first DAC update occurring after the MUTEB pin goes high sets the
DAC latch and DAC output to the next desired value. MUTEB pin must be kept at logic low level before power
up.
Oversampling Rate (Pin OSR2, OSR1)
oversampling rate of the digital filter is set via pins OSR2 and OSR1.
OSR2 OSR1
OVERSAMPLING RATE
0
0
2
0
1
4
1
0
8
1
1
16
The DAC8580 can support these oversampling ratios as long as the oversampled update rate does not exceed
16 MSPS. The oversampling ratio should be set at power up. OSR1 and OSR2 pins must be kept at logic-low
level before power up.
Digital Filter Bypass (Pin BPB)
The digital filter can be asynchronously bypassed via pin BPB. When pin BPB is active low, the digital filter is
bypassed. In this case, the DAC latch receives the data from the temporary register, not from the digital filter.
When the series input data is latched into the temporary register from the input shift register, the DAC latch and
DAC output are updated immediately with the new value of the temporary register. When pin BPB is high, digital
filter is not bypassed. The DAC latch is loaded with the output of the digital filter, not with the content of the
temporary register. The digital filter generates the data and transfers it to the DAC latch.
When the digital filter is bypassed, the filter keeps running. A bypass does not disrupt the internal computations
of the digital filter. When the BPB pin goes high, the oversampled operation resumes without any discontinuity of
16
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
the filtered output. The BPB pin multiplexes the DAC input between the filter output and the output of the
temporary register. Certain applications require generation of smooth waveforms, combined with fast edges. A
good example is the CRT positioning signal, where a smooth ramp is followed by a fast blanking pulse. The
digital low-pass filter offers the capability to generate smooth ramp waveforms (with filter on) and fast blanking
pulse (with filter bypassed). The bypass feature offers on-the-fly capability to switch between smooth filtered
operation and high-speed unfiltered operation. The BPB pin must be kept at logic low before power up.
Digital Filter Asynchronous Reset (Pin RSTB)
The digital filter equation is invalidated if other than 16 clocks per frame are received. This condition causes
numerical instability; the RSTB pin is used for recovering from such errors without forcing the user to issue a
power-on reset. The RSTB digital input is an active-low, asynchronous filter reset. The RSTB does not reset the
serial interface. Immediately after RSTB becomes low, all filter registers were cleared, all filter clocks are
stopped, all digital filter switching activities are stopped in order to lower switching noise and digital power
consumption. If the digital filter is not needed, the RSTB and BPB pins should both be tied to a logic zero. The
filter reset operation always occurs asynchronously when RSTB = 0. However, the effect of RSTB = 0 at the
DAC output (Vout ~ 0 V) cannot be observed if the SCLK is stopped, or if BPB = 0. Pin RSTB must be kept at
logic low before power up.
The DAC8580 monitors for receipt of 16 clocks per frame and issues an automatic filter reset if other than 16
clocks per frame is received. This auto-reset is synchronized with the FSYNC line.
RSTB
BPB
OPERATION
0
0
Conventional DAC operation: Shutdown and disconnect
the digital filter
0
1
Filter reset. DAC output becomes ~0 V only if SCLK is
continuously running.
1
0
Filter bypass. Conventional DAC operation resumes,
while filter is on.
1
1
Filtered operation. DAC outputs filtered data at the
oversampling rate.
17
DAC8580
www.ti.com
SLAS458B – JUNE 2005 – REVISED AUGUST 2005
APPLICATION INFORMATION
CRT Projection TV Digital Convergence
The DAC8580 is an ideal component for the digital convergence units of the three-tube projection TV sets. Digital
convergence applications require the generation of precision voltage waveforms with approximately 150-kHz
bandwidth. Six DAC8580s are needed for one TV set to generate convergence waveforms for horizontal and
vertical red, green, and blue, as seen in Figure 35. A single external reference, REF3025, can support all six
DACs. The low temperature drift, low glitch, and low noise of the DAC8580 improve the picture quality and color
drift.
−5V
+5V
REF3025
+
Ref (+5V)
−
0.1 µF
AV
AVSS
V REF
AGND
OSR2
DIN
V OUT
DAC
DAC
Latch
Serial
Interface Shift
Register
BCLK
FSYNC
DAC8580
MUTEB
Digital
Convergence
Controller
DAC-1
DGND
Digital
Filter
OSR1
BPB
WCLK
DVDD
DD
RSTB
RHOUT
Ref (+5V)
DVDD
0.1 µF
Control
Logic
MODE
GHOUT
BHOUT
RVOUT
GVOUT
0.1 µF
+5V
−5V
AV SS
AV DD
OSR2
MUTEB
OSR1
BPB
DIN
SCLK
FSYNC
Digital
Filter
Ref (+5V)
0.1 µF
V REF
DD
DGND
DAC
Latch
DAC8580
Control
Logic
Figure 35. DAC8580 for Projection TV Digital Convergence
18
DAC-6
V OUT
DAC
Serial
Interface Shift
Register
MUTEB
MODE
DV
AGND
RSTB
BVOUT
DVDD
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
27-Sep-2005
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status (1)
Package
Type
Package
Drawing
Pins Package Eco Plan (2)
Qty
DAC8580IPW
ACTIVE
TSSOP
PW
16
90
Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
DAC8580IPWG4
ACTIVE
TSSOP
PW
16
90
Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
DAC8580IPWR
ACTIVE
TSSOP
PW
16
2000 Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
DAC8580IPWRG4
ACTIVE
TSSOP
PW
16
2000 Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
Lead/Ball Finish
MSL Peak Temp (3)
(1)
The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in
a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS) or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check
http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements
for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered
at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame
retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder
temperature.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is
provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the
accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and continues to take
reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on
incoming materials and chemicals. TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited
information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI
to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 1
MECHANICAL DATA
MTSS001C – JANUARY 1995 – REVISED FEBRUARY 1999
PW (R-PDSO-G**)
PLASTIC SMALL-OUTLINE PACKAGE
14 PINS SHOWN
0,30
0,19
0,65
14
0,10 M
8
0,15 NOM
4,50
4,30
6,60
6,20
Gage Plane
0,25
1
7
0°– 8°
A
0,75
0,50
Seating Plane
0,15
0,05
1,20 MAX
PINS **
0,10
8
14
16
20
24
28
A MAX
3,10
5,10
5,10
6,60
7,90
9,80
A MIN
2,90
4,90
4,90
6,40
7,70
9,60
DIM
4040064/F 01/97
NOTES: A.
B.
C.
D.
All linear dimensions are in millimeters.
This drawing is subject to change without notice.
Body dimensions do not include mold flash or protrusion not to exceed 0,15.
Falls within JEDEC MO-153
POST OFFICE BOX 655303
• DALLAS, TEXAS 75265
IMPORTANT NOTICE
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enhancements, improvements, and other changes to its products and services at any time and to discontinue
any product or service without notice. Customers should obtain the latest relevant information before placing
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TI warrants performance of its hardware products to the specifications applicable at the time of sale in
accordance with TI’s standard warranty. Testing and other quality control techniques are used to the extent TI
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Products
Applications
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amplifier.ti.com
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www.ti.com/audio
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dataconverter.ti.com
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www.ti.com/automotive
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dsp.ti.com
Broadband
www.ti.com/broadband
Interface
interface.ti.com
Digital Control
www.ti.com/digitalcontrol
Logic
logic.ti.com
Military
www.ti.com/military
Power Mgmt
power.ti.com
Optical Networking
www.ti.com/opticalnetwork
Microcontrollers
microcontroller.ti.com
Security
www.ti.com/security
Telephony
www.ti.com/telephony
Video & Imaging
www.ti.com/video
Wireless
www.ti.com/wireless
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