MAXIM MAX3780

19-2247; Rev 0; 10/01
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
Features
♦ Quad 2:1 Channel Serialization
♦ Quad 1:2 Channel Deserialization
♦ 3m Link Distance with Low-Cost Copper Cable
♦ Better than 10-16 BER Performance
♦ 10Gbps Aggregate Parallel Interface
♦ System Loopback
♦ 1.25Gbps LVDS Synchronous Interface
♦ 2.5Gbps CML Serial Cable Interface
♦ PLL Lock Detect Signal
♦ Selectable Cable Pre-Emphasis
♦ Fixed Receive Equalization
Applications
Ordering Information
Gigabit Ethernet Cable Backplane Concentration
PART
System Interconnects Using Low-Cost Copper
Cable
TEMP. RANGE
MAX3780CCQ
0°C to +70°C
PIN-PACKAGE
100 TQFP-EP*
*Exposed pad
System Interconnects Using Parallel Optics
Typical Operating Circuit
0.1µF
CMOS ASIC
8B/10B
CODING
8B/10B
DECODING
625MHz
8
TDAT[1:8] ±
1.25Gbps
LVDS
625MHz
RECEIVER
DESKEW
8
CHANNEL
IDENTITY
TCLK ±
TX[1:4] ±
MAX3780
CABLE TRANSCEIVER
RCLK ±
RDAT[1:8] ±
+3.3V
2.5Gbps CML
10kΩ
LOCK
RESET
RX[1:4] ±
LOOPEN
TRIEN
EQ1
EQ2
GND
REFCLK ±
125MHz
REFERENCE
CLOCK
RXFIL VCC1
VCC2
VCC3
VCC4
VCC6
0.1µF
PECL
BUFFER
0.1µF
50Ω
50Ω
VCC5 TXFIL
SUPPLY FILTER NETWORK
+3.3V
VCC6 - 2V
________________________________________________________________ Maxim Integrated Products
For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim/Dallas Direct! at
1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim’s website at www.maxim-ic.com.
1
MAX3780
General Description
The MAX3780 cable transceiver provides a bidirectional
interface of four 2.5Gbps channels over low-cost copper
cable or external fiber-optic interface. The transmitter
section accepts eight channels of input at 1.25Gbps. An
integrated 4-bit FIFO allows retiming of the transmit data
to a clean local reference clock. The channels are multiplexed (2:1) into four outputs operating at 2.5Gbps. Preemphasis and equalization provide compensation for
losses in low-cost cables up to 3m. The receiver recovers the clock and demultiplexes (1:2) the 2.5Gbps channels into eight 1.25Gbps outputs. Fully integrated
phase-locked loops and delay-locked loops recover
clock and data from the serial data inputs.
The transceiver IC is available in a compact 100-pin
TQFP package with exposed-ground pad and consumes 2.2W.
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Supply Voltage (VCC1, VCC2, VCC3, VCC4,
VCC5, VCC6, VCCTEMP) ....................................-0.5V to +4.0V
Continuous CML Output Current ......................-10mA to +25mA
Momentary CML Output Voltage
(duration < 1 minute, +25°C).......................0V to (VCC + 0.5V)
CML Input Voltage......................................-0.5V to (VCC + 0.5V)
LVDS Input and Output Voltage .................-0.5V to (VCC + 0.5V)
TTL Input or Output Voltage .......................-0.5V to (VCC + 0.5V)
PECL Input Voltage ....................................-0.5V to (VCC + 0.5V)
TMPSENS, TXFIL, RXFIL Voltage ...............-0.5V to (VCC + 0.5V)
Operating Ambient Temperature Range ................0°C to +70°C
Operating Junction Temperature Range ..............0°C to +150°C
Storage Ambient Temperature Range...............-55C° to +100°C
Stresses beyond those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional
operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to
absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VCC = +3.0V to +3.6V, LVDS differential load = 100Ω ±1%, CML differential load = 100Ω ±1%, TA = 0°C to +70°C, unless otherwise
noted. Typical values are at VCC = +3.3V and TA = +25°C.)
PARAMETER
MIN
TYP
MAX
3.0
3.3
3.6
V
TA
0
25
70
°C
1.6
2.2
3.3
W
ICC
533
665
916
mA
TTL Input High Voltage
VIH
2.0
TTL Input Low Voltage
VIL
0.8
V
TTL Input High Current
IIH
VIH = 2.0V
-250
µA
IIL
VIL = 0V
-500
µA
0.4
V
Supply Voltage
Operating Ambient Temperature
SYMBOL
VCC
CONDITIONS
Referenced to GND
Power Dissipation
Supply Current
UNITS
TTL INPUTS AND OUTPUTS
TTL Input Low Current
TTL Output High Voltage
VOH
Open collector, RLOAD = 10kΩ
TTL Output Low Voltage
VOL
RLOAD = 10kΩ
V
2.4
V
PECL INPUTS
PECL Input High Voltage
Referenced to VCC6
-1165
-880
mV
PECL Input Low Voltage
Referenced to VCC6
-1810
-1475
mV
-10
+10
µA
200
800
mVp-p
VCC 0.5
VCC +
0.2
V
PECL Input Current
CML INPUTS (Note 1, Figure 5)
Differential Input Voltage Range
Total differential signal required to achieve
error rate
Single-Ended Input Voltage
Range
Single-ended range of a differential input
signal
Common-Mode Voltage
Inputs open or AC-coupled
Input Impedance
RIN
VCC
V
Differential
85
100
115
0m channel, EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 1
400
600
800
Ω
CML OUTPUTS (Note 1, Figure 4)
Differential Output Voltage
(Measured at the End of the
Channel)
(Note 3)
2
0.5m channel, EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 1
540
1m channel, EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 0
500
3m channel, EQ1 = 0, EQ2 = 1
400
_______________________________________________________________________________________
mVp-p
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
(VCC = +3.0V to +3.6V, LVDS differential load = 100Ω ±1%, CML differential load = 100Ω ±1%, TA = 0°C to +70°C, unless otherwise
noted. Typical values are at VCC = +3.3V and TA = +25°C.)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
MAX
VCC 0.3
Output Common-Mode Voltage
Differential Output Impedance
TYP
ROUT
85
100
UNITS
V
115
Ω
LVDS INPUTS
Input Voltage Range
VI
|VGPD| < 925mV
0
2000
mV
Differential Input Voltage
|VID|
|VGPD| < 925mV
150
500
mV
Differential Input Impedance
RIN
100
115
Ω
-80
-200
µA
1.475
V
400
mV
25
mV
1.275
V
25
mV
120
Ω
40
mA
Input Common-Mode Current
85
VOS = 1.2V, inputs tied together
LVDS OUTPUTS (Note 2)
Output High Voltage
Output Low Voltage
Differential Output Voltage
Change in Magnitude of
Differential Output Voltage for
Complementary States
Output Offset Voltage
Change in Magnitude of Output
Offset Voltage for
Complementary States
Differential Output Impedance
VOH
VOL
0.925
|VOD|
250
V
∆|VOD|
VOS
1.125
∆|VOS|
ROD
Short-Circuit Current
Short to supply or ground
Impedance When Disabled
TRIEN = 0
80
100
5
10
kΩ
Note 1: CML differential signal amplitudes are specified as the total signal across the load (V+ - V-).
Note 2: LVDS output signal amplitudes are specified according to IEEE 1596.3-1996.
Note 3: Differential output voltage is production tested for all EQ1 and EQ2 settings. Typical values are the differential peak-to-peak
eye opening at the end of the cable.
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VCC = +3.0V to +3.6V, LVDS differential load = 100Ω ±1%, CML differential load = 100Ω ±1%, TA = 0°C to +70°C, REFCLK =
125MHz, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VCC = +3.3V and TA = +25°C.) (Note 4)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
TRANSMITTER PARAMETERS
TCLK Frequency
Transmitter Latency
From TDAT to TX
625
MHz
4.5
ns
±0.8
ns
LVDS INPUTS
Accumulated Phase Error at
TCLK
Relative to REFCLK
_______________________________________________________________________________________
3
MAX3780
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
(VCC = +3.0V to +3.6V, LVDS differential load = 100Ω ±1%, CML differential load = 100Ω ±1%, TA = 0°C to +70°C, REFCLK =
125MHz, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VCC = +3.3V and TA = +25°C.) (Note 4)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
Setup Time
tSU
Figure 1
100
ps
Hold Time
tH
Figure 1
100
ps
CML OUTPUTS
Deterministic Jitter
(Note 5)
15
25
psp-p
Random Jitter
Wideband jitter with 01 pattern
(Note 7)
22
66
psp-p
140
ps
Edge Speed
tr, tf
20% to 80%, measured at transmitter output,
(EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 1)
RECEIVER PARAMETERS
Clock Frequency
625
MHz
µs
PLL Lock Time
After valid data applied
525
Receiver Latency
From RX to RDAT
4.3
Jitter Generation
(Note 7)
25
ns
66
psp-p
+32
ps
50
psp-p
LVDS OUTPUTS
Clock Duty-Cycle Distortion
TPW
Variation of 50% crossing from ideal time
-32
Measured with K28.5 pattern at RDAT_
outputs
Deterministic Jitter
Edge Speed
tr, tf
τCLK-Q
Clock-to-Data Delay
15
20% to 80%
160
250
ps
Figure 2
268
400
532
ps
(Note 6)
220
300
CML INPUTS
High-Frequency Jitter Tolerance
psp-p
Note 4: AC characteristics are guaranteed by design and characterization.
Note 5: Deterministic jitter (DJ) and differential output signal measured with K28.5 at TX_ pins.
Note 6: High-frequency jitter comprised of 164psp-p of deterministic jitter, 1.6psRMS random jitter, and the remaining as 5MHz sinusoidal jitter.
Note 7: Peak-to-peak random jitter is 16.4 ✕ RMS jitter for a jitter probability of 10-16.
RCLK
τCLK-Q
DIFFERENTIAL AMPLITUDE
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
tH = 100ps
1000mVp-p
MAXIMUM
INPUT
tSU = 100ps
300mV
MINIMUM INPUT
τCLK-Q
RDAT_
Figure 2. Definition of Clock-to-Q Delay
CENTER OF RISING OR
FALLING CLOCK EDGE
Figure 1. LVDS Receiver Input Eye Mask
4
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
390
370
350
330
310
-10
-20
-30
-15
-20
-25
-40
-35
270
-50
250
75
100
125
-40
1
150
10
JUNCTION TEMPERATURE (°C)
TRANSMITTER POWER-SUPPLY REJECTION
1.5
1.0
0.5
1
10,000
0
10
100
0.3
0.2
0.1
1000
100
10
1000
1.0
VCO FREQUENCY DIFFERENCE (ppm)
10
5
0
250
50
100
150
200
250
0
-5
RETURN LOSS (dB)
-10
-15
-20
-10
-15
-20
-30
0
200
15
CML OUTPUT RETURN LOSS
-25
0.5
150
20
10,000
MAX3780 toc08
-5
RETURN LOSS (dB)
1.5
100
25
VCO FREQUENCY DIFFERENCE (ppm)
0
MAX3780 toc07
2.0
50
30
CML INPUT RETURN LOSS
2.5
0
35
FREQUENCY (kHz)
TX TO RX VCO PULLING
3.0
10,000
0
1
POWER-SUPPLY NOISE FREQUENCY (kHz)
3.5
1000
40
0
1
100
RX TO TX VCO PULLING
MAX3780 toc05
0.4
10
FREQUENCY (kHz)
RECEIVER POWER-SUPPLY REJECTION
0.5
JITTER GENERATION (psp-p/mVp-p)
MAX3780 toc04
2.0
1000
100
FREQUENCY (kHz)
MAX3780 toc06
50
MAX3780 toc09
25
ADDED DETERMINISTIC JITTER (psp-p)
0
JITTER GENERATION (psp-p/mVp-p)
-5
-10
-30
290
ADDED DETERMINISTIC JITTER (psp-p)
MAX3708 toc03
0
JITTER TRANSFER (dB)
0
JITTER TRANSFER (dB)
410
5
MAX3708 toc02
430
TMPSENS VOLTAGE (mV)
10
MAX3780 toc01
450
RECEIVER JITTER TRANSFER
(RX4 TO RCLK)
TRANSMITTER JITTER TRANSFER
(REFCLK TO TX_)
TMPSENS VOLTAGE VS. TEMPERATURE
-25
0
1000
2000
3000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
4000
5000
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
_______________________________________________________________________________________
5
MAX3780
Typical Operating Characteristics
(VCC = +3.3V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.)
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(VCC = +3.3V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.)
RX4 JITTER TOLERANCE VS.
INPUT AMPLITUDE
INPUT JITTER (UIp-p)
INPUT = 210 - 1 PRBS WITH
ADDITIONAL 0.4UI OF
DETERMINISTIC JITTER
0.25
0.20
0.15
MAX3780 toc12
100
MAX3780 toc11
MAX3780 toc10
0.40
0.35
0.30
EYE DIAGRAM AFTER 3m CABLE
UNCOMPENSATED (EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 1)
RX4 JITTER TOLERANCE
0.45
5MHz JITTER TOLERANCE (UIp-p)
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
INPUT = 80mVp-p 210 - 1
PRBS WITH 0.4UI OF
DETERMINISTIC JITTER
PATTERN = 27 - 1 PRBS
10
64mV/
div
1
0.10
0.05
0.1
0
10
100
1000
10
1000
100
EYE DIAGRAM AFTER 3m CABLE
COMPENSATED (EQ1 = 0, EQ2 = 1)
MAX3780 toc13
6
EYE DIAGRAM AFTER 0.5m CABLE
(EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 1)
MAX3780 toc15
MAX3780 toc14
PATTERN = 27 - 1 PRBS
64mV/
div
64mV/
div
70ps/div
70ps/div
EYE DIAGRAM AFTER 1.0m CABLE
(EQ1 = 1, EQ2 = 0)
PATTERN = 27 - 1 PRBS
64mV/
div
10,000
JITTER FREQUENCY (kHz)
DIFFERENTIAL INPUT AMPLITUDE (mVp-p)
PATTERN = 27 - 1 PRBS
70ps/div
_______________________________________________________________________________________
70ps/div
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
PIN
NAME
1, 12, 25, 26, 28, 31,
45, 50, 51, 55, 63, 71,
75, 76, 80, 100
GND
Supply Ground
2, 11, 24
VCC1
+3.3V Supply for Receiver, LVDS Data and Clock Outputs, and Digital Receiver Functions
3, 5, 7, 9, 13, 15, 17,
19
RDAT1+ to
RDAT8+
Positive Parallel-Data Outputs, LVDS
4, 6, 8, 10, 14, 16, 18,
20
RDAT1- to
RDAT8-
Negative Parallel-Data Outputs, LVDS
21
RCLK+
Positive 625MHz Recovered Clock, LVDS. Parallel-data outputs are clocked on both the
rising and falling edge of the clock.
22
RCLK-
Negative 625MHz Recovered Clock, LVDS. Parallel-data outputs are clocked on both the
rising and falling edge of the clock.
23
TRIEN
Three-State Enable, TTL Input. Setting TRIEN low forces the LVDS outputs into a highimpedance state and the LOCK pin to a logical ‘1’. CML outputs are not affected by
TRIEN. Internally pulled high through 15kΩ.
27
LOCK
Lock Status Indicator, TTL Output. This output goes high when the transmit PLL, receiver
PLL, and receiver DLLs are in lock. Because this output is open-collector TTL, it requires
an external 10kΩ pullup resistor to VCC. The LOCK pins from multiple MAX3780s can be
connected in parallel to form a single LOCK signal.
29
RXFIL
Receiver Loop Filter Connection. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor between RXFIL and VCC2.
VCC2
+3.3V Supply for Receiver VCO, Analog Receiver Functions, and External Loop Filter
Connection
32, 35, 38, 41, 44
VCC3
+3.3V Supply for CML Inputs
33, 36, 39, 42
RX4- to
RX1-
Negative Serial Input, CML
34, 37, 40, 43
RX4+ to
RX1+
Positive Serial Input, CML
46, 79, 99
VCC6
47
LOOPEN
48
VCCTEMP
+3.3V Supply for TMPSENS. Connect to ground to disable the temperature-sensing
circuit.
49
TMPSENS
Junction Temperature Sensor. Analog output corresponding to the junction temperature
of the die. Leave open for normal use.
52
PTPIN
53
EQ2
Transmit Equalizer Control Input #2, TTL. Refer to Table 1 for setting transmitter
precompensation. Internally pulled high.
54
EQ1
Transmit Equalizer Control Input #1, TTL. Refer to Table 1 for setting transmitter
precompensation. Internally pulled high.
56, 59, 62, 64, 67, 70
VCC4
30
FUNCTION
+3.3V Supply for LVDS Inputs, FIFO, Multiplexer, and PECL REFCLK Input
Loopback Enable, TTL input. Force low to enable system loopback. Internally pulled high
through 15kΩ.
Reserved for Maxim Use. Connect to ground for normal operation.
+3.3V Supply for CML Outputs
_______________________________________________________________________________________
7
MAX3780
Pin Description
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
MAX3780
Pin Description (continued)
PIN
NAME
FUNCTION
57, 60, 65, 68
TX4- to
TX1-
Negative Serial Output, CML
58, 61, 66, 69
TX4+ to
TX1+
Positive Serial Output, CML
72
RESET
Reset Input, TTL. Connect low for >80ns to reset FIFO and receiver components.
Internally pulled high through 15kΩ.
73
TXFIL
Transmitter Loop Filter Connection. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor between TXFIL and VCC5.
74
VCC5
+3.3V Supply for Transmitter VCO, Analog Transmitter Functions, and External Loop
Filter Connection
77
REFCLK+
Positive Reference Clock Input, PECL
78
REFCLK-
Negative Reference Clock Input, PECL
81
TCLK+
Positive Clock Input for Transmitter Input Data, LVDS
82
TCLK-
Negative Clock Input for Transmitter Input Data, LVDS
83, 85, 87, 89, 91, 93,
95, 97
TDAT1+ to
TDAT8+
Positive Parallel Data Inputs, LVDS
84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94,
96, 98
TDAT1- to
TDAT8-
Negative Parallel Data Inputs, LVDS
Detailed Description
The MAX3780 cable transceiver uses four 2:1 muxes
and four 1:2 demuxes to simplify backplane routing.
The serial transceiver interface can either be a fiber
module or up to 3m of low-cost, twisted-pair copper
cable. This bidirectional interface provides low-voltage
differential signaling (LVDS) interfaces at the 1.25Gbps
parallel inputs and outputs. The serial data inputs and
outputs utilize current-mode logic (CML) structures. An
integrated PLL recovers the clock from the incoming
serial data, as well as retimes the received data.
The serial interface uses both precompensation as well
as equalization to allow high-speed transmission
through up to 3m of copper cable while maintaining a
BER < 10-16. The compensation/equalization circuits
are optimized for short cables, 0.5m cables, 1m cables,
or 3m cables. TTL inputs are provided to select the
amount of precompensation.
LVDS Inputs and Outputs
The MAX3780 parallel interface includes eight differential data inputs at 1.25Gbps, one half-rate differential
clock input at 625MHz, eight differential data outputs at
1.25Gbps, and one half-rate differential clock output at
625MHz. All parallel inputs and outputs are LVDS compatible to minimize power dissipation, speed transition
time, and improve noise immunity. The LVDS outputs
8
go into a high-impedance state when TRIEN is forced
low. This simplifies system checks by allowing vectors
to be forced on the LVDS outputs. The LVDS outputs
also have short-circuit protection in case of shorts to
VCC or GND.
PLL Clock Multiplier
The PLL clock multiplier uses the 125MHz reference
clock to synthesize 1.25GHz and 2.5GHz clocks used to
synchronize the transmitter functions. The reference clock
is also used to aid frequency acquisition in the receiver.
The 125MHz input signal at REFCLK requires a duty
cycle between 40% and 60%. To achieve proper jitter
performance and BER benchmarks, it is critical to use a
high-quality, low-jitter reference clock. See the Reference
Clock Requirements table for more information.
Bit-Interleaved Multiplexer/Demultiplexer
The MAX3780 uses bit interleaving to multiplex the parallel data and bit deinterleaving to demultiplex the serial data. After serial transmission, the channel
assignment of the parallel outputs is random for each
serial channel. In other words, there is a 50% chance
that RDAT1 = TDAT1 and RDAT2 = TDAT2 and a 50%
chance that RDAT1 = TDAT2 and RDAT2 = TDAT1.
Because the MAX3780 does not perform channel
assignment, other circuitry must handle this task.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
MAX3780
TXFIL
REFCLK+
REFCLK-
TX_LOCK
(INTERNAL)
625MHz DDR
CLOCK
TCLK+
TCLK-
REFCLK
(INTERNAL)
PLL CLOCK
MULTIPLIER
MAX3780
CABLE TRANSCEIVER
2.5GHz
1.25GHz
LVDS
INPUTS
TDAT1+
TDAT1-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT2+
TDAT2-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT3+
TDAT3-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT4+
TDAT4-
D
Q
FIFO
D
Q
D
Q
PRECOMP
TX1+
TX1-
PRECOMP
TX2+
TX2CML
OUTPUTS
TDAT5+
TDAT5-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT6+
TDAT6-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT7+
TDAT7-
D
Q
FIFO
TDAT8+
TDAT8-
D
Q
FIFO
D
Q
D
Q
PRECOMP
TX3+
TX3-
PRECOMP
TX4+
TX4EQ2
RESET
EQ1
TRIEN
LOOPEN
RDAT1+
RDAT1-
Q
D
Q
RDAT2+
RDAT2-
Q
D
RDAT3+
RDAT3-
Q
D
Q
LVDS
OUTPUTS
RDAT4+
RDAT4-
Q
D
RDAT5+
RDAT5-
Q
D
RDAT6+
RDAT6-
Q
D
RDAT7+
RDAT7-
Q
D
D
D
DLL
PHASE
RECOVERY
0
DLL
PHASE
RECOVERY
0
DLL
PHASE
RECOVERY
0
1
1
EQ
RX1+
RX1-
EQ
RX2+
RX2CML
INPUTS
Q
1
D
1
Q
EQ
RX3+
RX3-
EQ
RX4+
RX4-
0
Q
RDAT8+
RDAT8-
D
D
2.5GHz
RCLK+
RCLK-
DIVIDE
BY 2
PLL CLOCK RECOVERY
1.25GHz
RXFIL
REFCLK
K
TX_LOCK
1
RX_LOCK
TMPSENS
VCCTEMP
LOCK
0
1
Figure 3. Functional Diagram
_______________________________________________________________________________________
9
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
ment, and the DLLs only serve as adjustable delay
lines to allow for different channels to have different
(static) phase relationships.
Table 1. Setting the CML Output
Precompensation
RECOMMENDED
CHANNEL
PRECOMPENSATION
VALUE
EQ1
Extended Range
30%
0
0
3m Cable
20%
0
1
1m Cable
10%
1
0
Off
1
1
0.5m Cable or
Fiber Module
EQ2
VCC
50Ω
50Ω
TX_+
TX_-
CML Outputs with Precompensation
The serial outputs of the MAX3780 (TX1–TX4) are CML
compatible. These outputs offer the best combination
of low power dissipation, performance, and external
component count. AC-coupling capacitors should
always be used to provide immunity to common-mode
voltage mismatches. The CML output structure is
shown in Figure 4. For more information, refer to the
applications note HFAN 01.0 Introduction to LVDS,
PECL, and CML. Table 1 gives the amount of compensation for different EQ1 and EQ2 settings.
The CML data outputs have adjustable precompensation to compensate for cable and PC board trace losses. The cable and PC board traces have skin-effect
and dielectric losses that attenuate high frequencies
more than low frequencies. The precompensation FIR
filter does the inverse. It attenuates low frequencies
and boosts high frequencies. If precompensation is
chosen to match the channel attenuation, the data at
the end of the cable will be equalized.
CML Inputs with Equalization
The CML input structure, shown in Figure 5, provides
low power dissipation and excellent performance. The
CML inputs have integrated 50Ω termination resistors,
reducing the external component count required for
interfacing.
GND
Figure 4. Simplified CML Output Structure
PLL Clock Recovery
The phase-locked loop recovers a synchronous clock
signal from the incoming serial data on RX4. This
recovered clock is then used to retime all four channels
of incoming serial data before demultiplexing. Phase
alignment on channels RX1, RX2, and RX3 is achieved
by using delay-locked loops. The typical loop bandwidth of the PLL clock recovery circuit is 1.5MHz.
Delay-Locked Loop (DLL) Phase Recovery
The delay-locked loops in the RX1, RX2, and RX3
receive path are used to phase align the incoming data
to the clock generated by the PLL. Because all serial
channels originate from the same source and travel
down the same cable, it is assumed that the low-frequency jitter on channel 4 is common to all channels.
This allows the PLL to maintain frequency/phase align10
The CML inputs of the MAX3780 (RX1–RX4) provide
equalization to further compensate for cable losses.
The equalization circuit will typically add about 2dB of
boost at 2GHz.
Lock Detection
The LOCK output indicates the state of both the transmitter and receiver PLLs. For lock detect to be asserted
high, both the transmitter and receiver internal-lock
indicators must be high for 394µs. The internal lock signals go high once frequency lock has been achieved.
For LOCK to be asserted low, either the transmitter or
receiver internal-lock indicators must be low for a minimum of 1053µs. LOCK is also asserted low when
RESET is forced low. LOCK will stay low for a minimum
of 394µs. For the lock detector to function properly,
there must be data transitions at the RX4 input and a
valid reference clock input. Note: The LOCK output is
not an accurate indicator of signal presence at the
receiver inputs. With no data input, the LOCK output
can be high, low, or toggling.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
VCC
2kΩ
MAX3780
50Ω
50Ω
RX_+
T(°C) ≈ VTEMPSENS (mV) ×
RX_-
1°C
− 273°C
mV
Applications Information
BER Calculation
GND
Figure 5. CML Input Structure
VCC
MAX3780
RLOAD =
10kΩ
100Ω
LOCK
Figure 6. LOCK Output Structure
RESET Input
Approximately 10ms or longer after power-up, the
RESET input should be asserted low. RESET must be
held low for a minimum of four reference clock cycles
for it to be properly asserted. RESET is used to reset
the lock state, FIFO clock logic, and delay-lock loops.
Digital transmission systems will always, given enough
time, have errors. This is due to the random nature of
both voltage noise and timing noise, or jitter. In today’s
high performance digital transmission systems, we
often try to measure bit error ratios (BERs) of fewer than
1 error every 10,000,000,000 bits (BER<10 -10 ).
Measuring such low error rates can prove to be problematic, since even at high data rates, the testing time
required to obtain statistically significant results
becomes impractical. (For more information, refer to
HFTA-05.0 Statistical Confidence Levels for Calculating
Error Probability.)
The MAX3780 serial interface operates at 2.5Gbps and
is designed to operate with a BER better than 10-16 (1
error every 10,000,000,000,000,000 bits). This will give,
on average, one error every 46 days on each 2.5Gbps
channel. It is practically impossible to directly test such
a low BER. For this reason, we turn to mathematics to
ensure that this incredible BER is met.
The thermal noise in the MAX3780 serial channel is low
(<1mVRMS in the CML receiver). The dominant voltage
noise in the serial channel is due to crosstalk. The
remaining impairments are various types of timing jitter
due to clock nonidealities and data-dependant jitter. In
this section, all calculations will be done in the time
domain (similar to the draft technical report by ANSI
T11.2, Project 1230, Fibre Channel—Methodologies for
Jitter Specification) where timing jitter is applied directly and voltage noise is converted into an equivalent timing jitter. The equation relating timing jitter to error rate
is below:
1UI = ΣDJp−p + α × ΣRJ2RMS
______________________________________________________________________________________
11
MAX3780
Temperature Sensor
To aid in evaluation of thermal performance, a temperature sensor is incorporated into the MAX3780. The temperature sensor may be powered on or off regardless
of the state of the rest of the chip. The VCCTEMP pin
provides supply voltage for the temperature sensor circuit. The TMPSENS output is designed to output a voltage proportional to the die junction temperature (1mV
per Kelvin). The temperature of the die can be estimated as:
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
Table 2. Summary of Jitter Parameters Contributing to the BER Calculation
DETERMINISTIC COMPONENTS
PARAMETER
TYPICAL
(mUIp-p)
WORST-CASE
(mUIp-p)
Reference Clock—Random
Reference Clock—Deterministic
5
10
8.75
23.75
Transmitter—Random
Transmitter—Oscillator Pulling
Transmitter—Supply Noise
2.5
7.5
Transmitter—Output Stage
37.5
62.5
50
112.5
Channel—Cable Losses
Channel—Crosstalk
Channel—Mismatched Load
28
56
12.5
25
Receiver—VCO Phase Noise
Receiver—Input-Referred Noise
Receiver—Sampling Offset
187.5
7.5
15
Receiver—Supply Noise
6.25
18.75
345.5
718.5
TYPICAL
WORST-CASE
ALPHA =
127.8
19.6
~0
5.7 ✕ 10-23
BER =
Deterministic jitter and receiver sampling offset effectively reduce the amount of time that the receiver can
sample without error. Errors occur at a rate determined
by α:
α=
1− ΣDJp−p
ΣRJ2RMS
An α >16.4 corresponds to a BER < 10-16. Refer to
Maxim applications note HFAN-4.0.2 Converting
Between RMS and Peak-to-Peak Jitter at a Specified
BER.
For a discussion of deterministic jitter and random jitter
and the characteristics of each, refer to Maxim applications note HFAN-4.0.3 Jitter in Digital Communication
Systems, Part 1.
Table 2 shows the deterministic and random components used in the BER calculation for the MAX3780.
Typical and worst-case numbers are presented. The
worst-case estimate represents a BER with greater than
12
TYPICAL
(mUIRMS)
WORST-CASE
(mUIRMS)
0.19
0.38
3.25
10
3.75
10
1.25
2.5
5.12
14.37
387.5
Receiver—Oscillator Pulling
TOTALS =
RANDOM COMPONENTS
6-sigma margin. Many of the worst-case components
are uncorrelated variables that are taken to their individual 6-sigma limits.
In summary, the predicted worst-case BER = 10-20. A
typical channel will operate error free.
All transmitter and channel jitter components are compared to the jitter tolerance of the receiver by translating the components to equivalent phase error in the
receiver. Low-frequency jitter components are tracked
by the receive PLL, and therefore contribute little to the
phase error. High-frequency jitter components (beyond
the loop bandwidth of the receiver) are not tracked by
the receiver PLL and therefore directly translate to
phase error. The phase error transfer function is essentially equivalent to the inverse of the jitter tolerance versus frequency with the high-frequency portion
normalized to unity.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
3) Output Stage
Finite bandwidth and pulse-width distortion in the
serial transmitter can cause deterministic jitter in the
serial data stream. Characterization and simulation
results tell us the deterministic jitter is typically
15psp-p (37.5mUIp-p) and 25psp-p (62.5mUIp-p)
worst-case.
Reference Clock—Deterministic
A maximum deterministic jitter of 20psp-p for frequencies greater than 5kHz is stated as a requirement for the
reference clock in the Reference Clock Requirements
section. Combining the low-pass jitter transfer of the
transmitter and the high-pass phase error transfer of the
receiver results in a bandpass transfer function. For
design margin, it is assumed that this deterministic jitter
is within the bandpass frequency range. The typical
deterministic component is 2psp-p (5mUIp-p) and the
worst-case entry is 4psp-p (10mUIp-p).
Channel—Deterministic
1) Cable Losses
The frequency-dependent skin-effect and dielectric
losses in the cable (and PC board traces) will cause
data-dependent jitter (also known as intersymbol
interference). Adjustable transmit precompensation
and fixed receiver boost is used to reduce the
cable-induced jitter. However, there will always be
some uncompensated jitter due to the cable and PC
board trace losses. Characterization and simulation
results tell us the deterministic jitter is typically
20ps p-p (50mUIp-p) and 45ps p-p (112.5mUIp-p)
worst-case.
Transmitter—Random
This is the random jitter that results from the transmitter
VCO phase noise and is an AC parameter guaranteed
in the AC Electrical Characteristics table. Typical measured numbers are 1.3ps RMS (3.3mUI RMS) and the
worst-case specification is 4.0psRMS (10mUIRMS).
Transmitter—Deterministic
1) Oscillator Pulling
The transmitter and receiver integrated LC oscillators when running at small frequency differences will
beat with each other at a rate equivalent to the frequency difference between the oscillators. Typical
Operating Characteristic plot RX to TX VCO
PULLING shows the typical transmitter jitter versus
frequency difference. When referred to the phase
error transfer, the deterministic jitter is typically
3.5psp-p (8.75mUIp-p) and 9.5psp-p (23.75mUIp-p)
worst-case.
2) Supply Noise
Noise on the power supply will modulate the transmit
PLL output according to the typical transfer curve
shown in the Typical Operating Characteristic plot
TRANSMITTER POWER-SUPPLY REJECTION.
Combining this transfer function with the phase error
transfer of the receiver results in a band-pass characteristic. At the peak of this band pass, the typical
transfer is 100fs/mV and the worst-case transfer is
300fs/mV. Making the worst-case assumption that all
the supply noise is at this peak with a value of 10mV
results in typically 1psp-p (2.5mUIp-p) and worstcase 3psp-p (7.5mUIp-p).
2) Crosstalk
The MAX3780 channel requirements allow for
crosstalk of up to 5% to be present at the RX inputs.
This is a peak-to-peak voltage measurement which
refers to 5% of the transmitter amplitude.
Characterization and simulation results tell us the
deterministic jitter due to crosstalk is typically
11.2psp-p (28mUIp-p) and 22.4psp-p (56mUIp-p)
worst-case.
3) Mismatched Load Jitter
Incorrect impedances in PC board traces, connectors, cables, and terminations can cause reflections
that can, in turn, cause deterministic jitter. These
effects are more pronounced on short cables (less
attenuation of the reflection) where timing margins
are highest. While measurements already account
for mistermination effects, we have allocated an
additional fixed budget for jitter induced by reflections. Characterization and simulation results tell us
the deterministic jitter due to load mismatch is typically 5psp-p (12.5mUIp-p) and 10psp-p (25mUIp-p)
worst-case.
Receiver—Random
1) VCO Phase Noise
This is the random jitter that results from the receiver
VCO phase noise and is an AC parameter guaranteed in the AC Electrical Characteristics table. Typical
measured numbers are 1.5psRMS (3.75mUIRMS) and
the worst-case specification is 4psRMS (10mUIRMS).
______________________________________________________________________________________
13
MAX3780
Reference Clock—Random
A maximum random jitter of 15psRMS for frequencies
less than 5kHz is stated as a requirement for the reference clock in the Reference Clock Requirements section. Translating this to the phase error of the receiver
gives 75fs RMS (0.19mUI RMS ) typical and 150fs RMS
(0.38mUIRMS) worst-case.
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
2) Input-Referred Noise
All electronic circuits generate random noise. The
input-referred noise voltage of the CML RX inputs is
< 0.5mVRMS. This will contribute <1psRMS jitter. In
the BER calculation, it is assumed the jitter is typically 0.5ps RMS (1.25mUI RMS ) and 1ps RMS
(2.5mUIRMS) worst-case.
Receiver—Deterministic
1) Sampling Offset
The peak-to-peak sampling offset in the receiver is
equal to 1UI minus the jitter tolerance minus the random jitter of the receiver. Removal of the random jitter is necessary since receiver VCO Phase Noise in
Table 2 accounts for this. For simplicity, the random
jitter portion will be assumed to be the typical measured value of 25ps p-p (62.5mUIp-p). Using the
numbers from the AC parameter electrical table, the
typical sampling offset is calculated to be
187.5mUIp-p and the worst-case is 387.5mUIp-p.
2) Oscillator Pulling
The transmitter and receiver integrated LC oscillators, when running at small frequency differences,
will beat with each other at a rate equivalent to the
frequency difference between the oscillators.
Typical Operating Characteristic plot TX to RX VCO
PULLING shows the typical receiver jitter versus frequency difference. Typically the receiver oscillator
pulling jitter is 3psp-p (7.5mUIp-p) and worst-case is
6psp-p (15.0mUIp-p).
3) Supply Noise
terminate these outputs to ground. The parallel data
LVDS inputs (TCLK+, TCLK-, TDAT_+, TDAT_-) are
internally terminated with 100Ω differential input resistance and therefore do not require external termination.
The LVDS inputs must be biased for proper operation.
DC-coupling LVDS outputs and inputs together provides sufficient biasing. When interfacing to laboratory
test equipment, AC-coupling cannot be used. A signal
source with DC offset must be used.
Layout Techniques
For best performance, use good high-frequency layout
techniques. Filter voltage supplies, keep ground connections short, and use multiple vias where possible. Use
controlled-impedance 50Ω transmission lines to interface
with the MAX3780 high-speed inputs and outputs.
Place power-supply decoupling as close to VCC as
possible. To reduce feedthrough, take care to isolate
the input signals from the output signals.
Exposed-Pad (EP) Package
The exposed-pad 100-pin TQFP-EP incorporates features that provide a very low thermal resistance path for
heat removal from the IC. The pad is electrical ground
on the MAX3780 and must be soldered to the circuit
board for proper thermal and electrical performance.
Noise on the power supply will modulate the receive
PLL sampling point according to the typical transfer
curve shown in Typical Operating Characteristic plot
RECEIVER POWER-SUPPLY REJECTION. Using a
typical transfer of 250fs/mV and a worst-case transfer of 750fs/mV with 10mV of supply noise results in
2.5psp-p (6.25mUIp-p) and 7.5psp-p (18.75mUIp-p)
respectively.
Low-Voltage Differential Signal (LVDS)
Inputs/Outputs
The MAX3780 has LVDS inputs and outputs for interfacing with high-speed digital circuitry. All LVDS inputs
and outputs are compatible with the IEEE-1596.3 LVDS
specification. This technology uses 250mV to 400mV
differential low-voltage amplitudes to achieve fast transition times, minimize power dissipation, and improve
noise immunity. For proper operation, the parallel clock
and data LVDS outputs (RCLK+, RCLK-, RDAT_+,
RDAT_-) require 100Ω differential DC terminations
between the inverting and noninverting outputs. Do not
14
______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
Impedance
CONDITIONS
MIN
Differential
Through Loss at 1GHz
(S12, S21)
Wideband Through Loss
(S12, S21)
Return Loss at 1GHz
(S11, S22)
Wideband Return Loss
(S11, S22)
TYP
UNITS
Ω
f = 1GHz, 3m channel
4.0
5.0
f = 1GHz, 1m channel
1.5
2.4
3.2
f = 1GHz, 0.5m channel
1.0
1.7
2.6
6.0
dB
See Figures 7–9
-12
dB
5
%
MAX
UNITS
-100
+100
ppm
40
60
%
See Figure 10
% of signal at aggressor. Near-end and far-end
aggressors driven with 100ps (20% to 80%)
edges. End of channel terminated with 100Ω.
Channel Crosstalk
MAX
100
Reference Clock Requirements
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
REFCLK Frequency
TYP
125
REFCLK Frequency Tolerance
REFCLK Duty Cycle
f < 5kHz (jitter assumed Gaussian)
REFCLK Jitter
f > 5kHz (jitter is assumed deterministic,
caused by power-supply noise and buffer
jitter)
MHz
240
psp-p
15
psRMS
20
psp-p
UNITS
Parallel Fiber Module Requirements
PARAMETER
Differential Input Impedance
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
RIN
MIN
TYP
MAX
80
100
120
Ω
300
mVp-p
80
psp-p
800
mVp-p
120
Ω
5
%
Transmitter Input Sensitivity
Deterministic and random jitter, peak-topeak, (DJ + 16.4 × RJRMS)
Total Jitter Generation
Receiver Data Output Amplitude
Differential Output Impedance
Channel-to-Channel Crosstalk
Differential
ROUT
300
80
100
______________________________________________________________________________________
15
MAX3780
Channel Requirements
MAX3780
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
0.5m CHANNEL LOSS
1m CHANNEL LOSS
0
0
-1.00
-1.00
-2.00
UPPER MASK
-2.00
UPPER MASK
-3.00
-4.00
dB
NOMINAL
-4.00
dB
-3.00
NOMINAL
-5.00
-6.00
-7.00
-5.00
LOWER MASK
-8.00
-6.00
LOWER MASK
-7.00
-9.00
-10.00
0
500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000
500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000
0
FREQUENCY (MHz)
FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 7. 0.5m Channel Loss Mask
Figure 8. 1.0m Channel Loss Mask
3m CHANNEL LOSS
RETURN LOSS MASK
0
-2.00
-4.00
UPPER MASK
-8.00
dB
dB
-6.00
-10.00
NOMINAL
-12.00
-14.00
LOWER MASK
-16.00
-18.00
0
500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 9. 3.0m Channel Loss Mask
16
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12
-13
-14
0
500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 10. Channel Input Return Loss Mask
______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
GND
VCC6
TDAT8-
TDAT8+
TDAT7-
TDAT7+
TDAT6-
TDAT6+
TDAT5-
TDAT5+
TDAT4-
TDAT4+
TDAT3-
TDAT3+
TDAT2-
TDAT2+
TDAT1-
TDAT1+
TCLK-
TCLK+
GND
VCC6
REFCLK-
REFCLK+
GND
100
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
91
90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
82
81
80
79
78
77
76
TOP VIEW
GND
1
75
GND
VCC1
2
74
VCC5
RDAT1+
3
73
TXFIL
RDAT1-
4
72
RESET
RDAT2+
5
71
GND
RDAT2-
6
70
VCC4
RDAT3+
7
69
TX1+
RDAT3-
8
68
TX1-
RDAT4+
9
67
VCC4
RDAT4-
10
66
TX2+
VCC1
11
65
TX2-
GND
12
64
VCC4
RDAT5+
13
63
GND
RDAT5-
14
62
VCC4
RDAT6+
15
61
TX3+
RDAT6-
16
60
TX3-
RDAT7+
17
59
VCC4
RDAT7-
18
58
TX4+
RDAT8+
19
57
TX4-
RDAT8-
20
56
VCC4
RCLK+
21
55
GND
RCLK-
22
54
EQ1
TRIEN
23
53
EQ2
VCC1
24
52
PTPIN
GND
25
51
GND
48
49
50
VCCTEMP
TMPSENS
GND
VCC3
47
44
RX1+
LOOPEN
43
RX1-
46
42
VCC3
45
41
RX2+
GND
40
VCC6
39
38
RX2-
37
RX4-
RX3+
33
VCC3
VCC3
32
GND
36
31
VCC2
RX3-
30
RXFIL
35
29
34
28
GND
RX4+
27
LOCK
VCC3
26
GND
MAX3780
CABLE TRANSCEIVER
TQFP - EP*
*EXPOSED PAD MUST BE CONNECTED TO GROUND
Chip Information
TRANSISTOR COUNT: 15,270
PROCESS: Bipolar
______________________________________________________________________________________
17
MAX3780
Pin Configuration
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
MAX3780
Package Information
18
______________________________________________________________________________________
Quad 2.5Gbps Cable Transceiver
Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are
implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time.
Maxim Integrated Products, 120 San Gabriel Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 408-737-7600 ____________________ 19
© 2001 Maxim Integrated Products
Printed USA
is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products.
MAX3780
Package Information (continued)