AD ADT7318 0.5c accurate digital temperature sensor and quad voltage output 12-/10-/8-bit dac Datasheet

±0.5°C Accurate Digital Temperature Sensor
and Quad Voltage Output 12-/10-/8-Bit DACs
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
PIN CONFIGURATION
ADT7316—four 12-bit DACs
ADT7317—four 10-bit DACs
ADT7318—four 8-bit DACs
Buffered voltage output
Guaranteed monotonic by design over all codes
10-bit temperature-to-digital converter
Temperature range: −40°C to +120°C
Temperature sensor accuracy of ±0.5°C
Supply range: 2.7 V to 5.5 V
DAC output range: 0 V to 2 VREF
Power-down current : <10 μA
Internal 2.28 VREF option
Double-buffered input logic
Buffered/unbuffered reference input option
Power-on reset to 0 V
Simultaneous update of outputs (LDAC function)
On-chip rail-to-rail output buffer amplifier
I2C®-, SMBus-, SPI®-, QSPI™-, MICROWIRE™-, and DSPcompatible 4-wire serial interface
SMBus packet error checking (PEC) compatible
16-lead QSOP
VOUT-B
1
16
VOUT-A
2
15
VOUT-D
VREF -AB
3
ADT7316/
ADT7317/
ADT7318
14
VREF -CD
13
SCL/SCLK
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
12
SDA/DIN
VOUT-C
CS
4
GND
5
VDD
6
11
DOUT/ADD
D+
7
10
INT/INT
D–
8
9
LDAC
02661-006
FEATURES
Figure 1.
APPLICATIONS
Portable battery-powered instruments
Personal computers
Telecommunications systems
Electronic test equipment
Domestic appliances
Process control
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT73181combine a 10-bit
temperature-to-digital converter and a quad 12-/10-/8-bit
DAC, respectively, in a 16-lead QSOP. This includes a band
gap temperature sensor and a 10-bit ADC to monitor and
digitize the temperature reading to a resolution of 0.25°C. The
ADT7316/ ADT7317/ADT7318 operate from a single 2.7 V to
5.5 V supply. The output voltage of the DAC ranges from 0 V
to 2 VREF, with an output voltage settling time of 7 μs typically.
The ADT7316/ ADT7317/ADT7318 provide two serial interface options, a 4-wire serial interface that is compatible with
SPI, QSPI, MICROWIRE, and DSP interface standards, and a
2-wire SMBus/I2C interface. They feature a standby mode that
is controlled via the serial interface.
The reference for the four DACs is derived either internally
or from two reference pins (one per DAC pair). The outputs
of all DACs may be updated simultaneously using the software
LDAC function or external LDAC pin. The ADT7316/ADT7317/
ADT7318 incorporate a power-on-reset circuit that ensures the
DAC output powers up to 0 V and remains there until a valid
write takes place.
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 wide supply voltage range,
low supply current, and SPI-/I2C-compatible interface make
them ideal for a variety of applications, including personal
computers, office equipment, and domestic appliances.
1
Protected by the following U.S. patent numbers: 5,764,174; 5,867,012;
6,097,239; 6,169,442.
Rev. B
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 that may result from its use. Specifications subject to change without notice. No
license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781.329.4700
www.analog.com
Fax: 781.461.3113 ©2003–2007 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Features .............................................................................................. 1
Output Amplifier........................................................................ 21
Applications....................................................................................... 1
Thermal Voltage Output ........................................................... 21
Pin Configuration............................................................................. 1
Functional Description—Measurement...................................... 23
General Description ......................................................................... 1
Temperature Sensor ................................................................... 23
Revision History ............................................................................... 2
VDD Monitoring .......................................................................... 23
Specifications..................................................................................... 3
On-Chip Reference .................................................................... 24
Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 8
Round Robin Measurement...................................................... 24
DAC AC Characteristics.................................................................. 9
Single-Channel Measurement .................................................. 24
Absolute Maximum Ratings.......................................................... 10
Temperature Measurement Method ........................................ 24
ESD Caution................................................................................ 10
Temperature Value Format ....................................................... 25
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions........................... 11
Interrupts..................................................................................... 26
Terminology .................................................................................... 12
Registers........................................................................................... 27
Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 14
Register Descriptions................................................................. 28
Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 19
Serial Interface ................................................................................ 36
Power-Up Calibration................................................................ 19
Serial Interface Selection ........................................................... 36
Conversion Speed....................................................................... 19
I2C Serial Interface ..................................................................... 36
Functional Description—Voltage Output ................................... 20
SPI Serial Interface ..................................................................... 37
Digital-to-Analog Converters................................................... 20
Layout Considerations................................................................... 41
Digital-to-Analog Section ......................................................... 20
Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 42
Resistor String ............................................................................. 20
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 42
DAC External Reference Inputs ............................................... 20
REVISION HISTORY
1/07—Rev. A to Rev. B
Updated Format..................................................................Universal
Changes to Table 3.......................................................................... 10
Changes to Internal THIGH Limit Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x25] Section .................................................................. 33
Changes to Internal TLOW Limit Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x26] Section .................................................................. 33
Changes to External THIGH Limit Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x27] Section .................................................................. 33
External TLOW Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x28]
Section.............................................................................................. 37
Changes to SPI Interface Section.................................................. 38
Updated Outline Dimensions ....................................................... 42
Changes to Ordering Guide .......................................................... 42
6/04—Rev. 0 to Rev. A
Updated Format...................................................................... Universal
Internal VREF Value Change................................................... Universal
Change to Equation in Thermal Voltage Output Section..............21
Changes to Outline Dimensions .......................................................40
8/03—Revision 0: Initial Version
Rev. B | Page 2 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
SPECIFICATIONS
Temperature ranges for A version: –40°C to +120°C. VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V, GND = 0 V, REFIN = 2.25 V, unless otherwise noted.
Table 1.
Parameter 1
DAC DC PERFORMANCE 2 , 3
ADT7318
Resolution
Relative Accuracy
Differential Nonlinearity
ADT7317
Resolution
Relative Accuracy
Differential Nonlinearity
ADT7316
Resolution
Relative Accuracy
Differential Nonlinearity
Offset Error
Gain Error
Lower Dead Band
Min
Upper Dead Band
Unit
Conditions/Comments
8
±0.15
±0.02
±1
±0.25
Bits
LSB
LSB
Guaranteed monotonic over all codes.
10
±0.5
±0.05
±4
±0.5
Bits
LSB
LSB
Guaranteed monotonic over all codes.
12
±2
±0.02
±0.4
±0.4
20
±16
±0.9
±2
±2
65
Bits
LSB
LSB
% of FSR
% of FSR
mV
60
100
mV
Resolution
Long-Term Drift
EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE SENSOR
Accuracy at VDD = 3.3 V ±10%
ppm of FSR/°C
ppm of FSR/°C
dB
μV
∆VDD = ±10%.
See Figure 6.
Internal reference used. Averaging on.
±1.5
±3
±5
±3
±5
10
180
11
°C
°C
°C
°C
°C
Bits
μA
μA
TA = 85°C.
TA = 0°C to +85°C.
TA = −40°C to +120°C.
TA = 0°C to +85°C.
TA = −40°C to +120°C.
Equivalent to 0.25°C.
Drift over 10 years if part is operated at 55°C.
External transistor = 2N3906.
TA = +85°C.
TA = 0°C to +85°C.
TA = −40°C to +120°C.
TA = 0°C to +85°C.
TA = −40°C to +120°C.
Equivalent to +0.25°C.
High level.
Low level.
8.79
17.58
°C
mV/°C
mV/°C
0 V to VREF output. TA = −40°C to +120°C.
0 V to 2 VREF output. TA = −40°C to +120°C.
2.2
4.39
°C
mV/°C
mV/°C
0 V to VREF output. TA = −40°C to +120°C.
0 V to 2 VREF output. TA= −40°C to +120°C.
±2
±3
Resolution
Output Source Current
Lower dead band exists only if offset error is
negative. See Figure 2.
Upper dead band exists if VREF = VDD and offset
plus gain error is positive. See Figure 3.
°C
°C
°C
°C
°C
Bits
°C
0.25
Accuracy at VDD = 5 V ±5%
Guaranteed monotonic over all codes.
±1.5
±3
±5
±3
±5
10
±0.5
±2
±2
±3
Accuracy at VDD = 5 V ±5%
10-Bit DAC Output
Resolution
Scale Factor
Max
−12
−5
−60
200
Offset Error Drift
Gain Error Drift
DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio
DC Crosstalk
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE SENSOR
Accuracy at VDD = 3.3 V ±10%
Thermal Voltage Output
8-Bit DAC Output
Resolution
Scale Factor
Typ
1
0.25
Rev. B | Page 3 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Parameter 1
CONVERSION TIMES
Slow ADC
VDD
Min
Internal Temperature
External Temperature
Fast ADC
VDD
Internal Temperature
External Temperature
Typ
Max
Unit
Conditions/Comments
Single channel mode.
11.4
712
11.4
712
24.22
1.51
ms
μs
ms
μs
ms
ms
Averaging (16 samples) on.
Averaging off.
Averaging (16 samples) on.
Averaging off.
Averaging (16 samples) on
Averaging off.
712
44.5
2.14
134
14.25
890
μs
μs
ms
μs
ms
μs
Averaging (16 samples) on.
Averaging off.
Averaging (16 samples) on.
Averaging off.
Averaging (16 samples) on.
Averaging off.
Time to complete one measurement cycle
through all channels.
59.95
6.52
ms
ms
Averaging on.
Averaging off.
19.59
2.89
ms
ms
Averaging on.
Averaging off.
Buffered reference mode.
Unbuffered reference mode.
Unbuffered reference mode.
0 V to 2 VREF output range.
Unbuffered reference mode.
0 V to VREF output range.
Buffered reference mode and power-down
mode.
Frequency = 10 kHz.
Frequency = 10 kHz.
ROUND ROBIN UPDATE RATE 4
Slow ADC at 25°C
Fast ADC at 25°C
DAC EXTERNAL REFERENCE INPUT 5
VREF Input Range
VREF Input Range
VREF Input Impedance
Reference Feedthrough
Channel-to-Channel Isolation
ON-CHIP REFERENCE
Reference Voltage5
Temperature Coefficient5
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS5
Output Voltage 6
1
0.25
37
45
V
V
kΩ
74
90
kΩ
>10
MΩ
−90
−75
dB
dB
2.2662
2.2938
V
ppm/°C
VDD to 0.001
V
0.5
25
16
2.5
5
Power-Up Time
LDAC Pulse Width
2.28
80
0.001
DC Output Impedance
Short-Circuit Current
DIGITAL INPUTS5
Input Current
Input Low Voltage, VIL
Input High Voltage, VIH
Pin Capacitance
SCL, SDA Glitch Rejection
VDD
VDD
Ω
mA
mA
μs
μs
±1
0.8
1.89
3
20
10
50
μA
V
V
pF
ns
ns
Rev. B | Page 4 of 44
This is a measure of the minimum and maximum
drive capability of the output amplifier.
VDD = 5 V.
VDD = 3 V.
Coming out of power-down mode. VDD = 5 V.
Coming out of power-down mode. VDD = 3.3 V.
VIN = 0 V to VDD.
All digital inputs.
Input filtering suppresses noise spikes of less than
50 ns.
Edge triggered input.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Parameter1
DIGITAL OUTPUT
Output High Voltage, VOH
Output Low Voltage, VOL
Output High Current, IOH
Output Capacitance, COUT
INT/INT Output Saturation Voltage
I2C TIMING CHARACTERISTICS7, 8
Serial Clock Period, t1
Data In Setup Time to SCL High, t2
Data Out Stable After SCL Low, t3
SDA Low Setup Time to SCL Low
(Start Condition), t4
SDA High Hold Time After SCL High
(Stop Condition), t5
SDA and SCL Fall Time, t6
SDA and SCL Rise Time, t6
SPI TIMING CHARACTERISTICS10, 11
CS to SCLK Setup Time, t1
SCLK High Pulse Width, t2
SCLK Low Pulse Width, t3
Data Access Time After SCLK Falling
Edge, t412
Data Setup Time Prior to SCLK
Rising Edge, t5
Data Hold Time after SCLK Rising
Edge, t6
CS to SCLK Hold Time, t7
CS to DOUT High Impedance, t8
POWER REQUIREMENTS
VDD
VDD Settling Time
IDD (Normal Mode)13
Min
Typ
Power Dissipation
Unit
Conditions/Comments
0.4
1
50
0.8
V
V
mA
pF
V
ISOURCE = ISINK = 200 μA.
IOL = 3 mA.
VOH = 5 V.
2.4
IOUT = 4 mA.
2.5
50
0
50
μs
ns
ns
ns
Fast-mode I2C. See Figure 4.
50
ns
See Figure 4.
300
3009
ns
ns
See Figure 4.
See Figure 4.
35
ns
ns
ns
ns
See Figure 7.
See Figure 7.
See Figure 7.
See Figure 7.
20
ns
See Figure 7.
0
ns
See Figure 7.
40
ns
ns
See Figure 7.
See Figure 7.
5.5
50
3
3
10
10
10
33
V
ms
mA
mA
μA
μA
mW
μW
VDD settles to within 10% of its final voltage level.
VDD = 3.3 V, VIH = VDD, and VIL = GND.
VDD = 5 V, VIH = VDD , and VIL = GND.
VDD = 3.3 V, VIH = VDD, and VIL = GND.
VDD = 5 V, VIH = VDD, and VIL = GND.
VDD = 3.3 V, using normal mode.
VDD = 3.3 V, using shutdown mode.
0
50
50
0
2.7
2.2
IDD (Power-Down Mode)
Max
1
See Figure 4.
See Figure 4.
See the Terminology section.
DC specifications tested with the outputs unloaded.
3
Linearity is tested using a reduced code range: ADT7316 (Code 115 to 4095); ADT7317 (Code 28 to 1023); ADT7318 (Code 8 to 255).
4
A round robin is the continuous sequential measurement of the following three channels: VDD, internal temperature, and external temperature.
5
Guaranteed by design and characterization, but not production tested.
6
For the amplifier output to reach its minimum voltage, the offset error must be negative. For the amplifier output to reach its maximum voltage, VREF = VDD, offset plus
gain error must be positive.
7
The SDA and SCL timing is measured with the input filters turned on to meet the fast-mode I2C specification. Switching off the input filters improves the transfer rate,
but has a negative effect on the EMC behavior of the part.
8
Guaranteed by design. Not tested in production.
9
The interface is also capable of handling the I2C standard mode rise time specification of 1000 ns.
10
Guaranteed by design and characterization, but not production tested.
11
All input signals are specified with tr = tf = 5 ns (10% to 90% of VDD) and timed from a voltage level of 1.6 V.
12
Measured with the load circuit of Figure 5.
13
IDD specification is valid for all DAC codes. Interface inactive. All DACs active. Load currents excluded.
2
Rev. B | Page 5 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
GAIN ERROR
+
OFFSET ERROR
OUTPUT
VOLTAGE
NEGATIVE
OFFSET
ERROR
DAC CODE
ACTUAL
IDEAL
LOWER
DEAD BAND
CODES
AMPLIFIER
FOOTROOM
02661-007
NEGATIVE
OFFSET
ERROR
Figure 2. DAC Transfer Function with Negative Offset
GAIN ERROR
+
OFFSET ERROR
UPPER
DEAD BAND
CODES
OUTPUT
VOLTAGE
POSITIVE
OFFSET
ERROR
DAC CODE
02661-008
ACTUAL
IDEAL
FULL SCALE
Figure 3. DAC Transfer Function with Positive Offset (VREF = VDD)
t1
SCL
t4
t5
t2
SDA
DATA IN
t6
Figure 4. I2C Bus Timing Diagram
Rev. B | Page 6 of 44
02661-002
t3
SDA
DATA OUT
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
200µA
1.6V
CL
50pF
200µA
02661-004
TO OUTPUT
PIN
IOL
IOH
Figure 5. Load Circuit for Access Time and Bus Relinquish Time
VDD
4.7kΩ
4.7kΩ
200pF
02661-005
TO DAC
OUTPUT
Figure 6. Load Circuit for DAC Outputs
CS
t1
t2
t7
SCLK
DIN
D7
D6
D5
t6
t5
D4
D3
D2
D1
t8
D0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
t4
DOUT
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
D7
D6
Figure 7. SPI Bus Timing Diagram
Rev. B | Page 7 of 44
02661-003
t3
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
D–
8
ANALOG
MUX
A-TO-D
CONVERTER
VDD
SENSOR
VDD
VALUE
REGISTER
LIMIT
COMPARATOR
TLOW LIMIT
REGISTERS
VDD LIMIT
REGISTERS
CONTROL CONFIG. 1
REGISTER
EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE
VALUE REGISTER
DAC A
REGISTERS
STRING
DAC A
2
VOUT-A
DAC B
REGISTERS
STRING
DAC B
1
VOUT-B
DAC C
REGISTERS
STRING
DAC C
16 VOUT-C
DAC D
REGISTERS
STRING
DAC D
15 VOUT-D
CONTROL CONFIG. 2
REGISTER
CONTROL CONFIG. 3
REGISTER
ADT7316/
ADT7317/
ADT7318
DAC CONFIGURATION
REGISTER
GAIN
SELECT
LOGIC
LDAC CONFIGURATION
REGISTER
STATUS
REGISTERS
INTERRUPT MASK
REGISTERS
10 INT/INT
SMBus/SPI INTERFACE
6
5
VDD
GND
4
13
CS SCL/SCLK
POWERDOWN
LOGIC
12
11
SDA/DIN DOUT/ADD
Figure 8.
Rev. B | Page 8 of 44
INTERNAL
REFERENCE
9
3
14
LDAC
VREF-AB
VREF-CD
02661-001
7
THIGH LIMIT
REGISTERS
DIGITAL MUX
D+
ADDRESS POINTER
REGISTER
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE
VALUE REGISTER
DIGITAL MUX
ON-CHIP
TEMPERATURE
SENSOR
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
DAC AC CHARACTERISTICS
Guaranteed by design and characterization, but not production tested. VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; RL = 4.7 kΩ to GND;
CL = 200 pF to GND; 4.7 kΩ to VDD. All specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.
Table 2.
Parameter 1
Output Voltage Settling Time
ADT7318
ADT7317
ADT7316
Slew Rate
Major-Code Change Glitch Energy
Digital Feedthrough
Digital Crosstalk
Analog Crosstalk
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
Multiplying Bandwidth
Total Harmonic Distortion
1
Min
Typ (@ 25°C)
Max
Unit
6
7
8
0.7
12
0.5
1
0.5
3
200
−70
8
9
10
μs
μs
μs
V/μs
nV-s
nV-s
nV-s
nV-s
kHz
dB
See Terminology section.
Rev. B | Page 9 of 44
Conditions and Comments
VREF = VDD = +5 V.
1/4 scale to 3/4 scale change (0x40 to 0xC0).
1/4 scale to 3/4 scale change (0x100 to 0x300).
1/4 scale to 3/4 scale change (0x400 to 0xC00).
1 LSB change around major carry.
VREF = 2 V ± 0.1 V p-p.
VREF = 2.5 V ± 0.1 V p-p. Frequency = 10 kHz.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Table 3.
Parameter
VDD to GND
Digital Input Voltage to GND
Digital Output Voltage to GND
Reference Input Voltage to GND
Operating Temperature Range
Storage Temperature Range
Junction Temperature
16-Lead QSOP
Power Dissipation 1
Thermal Impedance 2
θJA Junction-to-Ambient
θJC Junction-to-Case
IR Reflow Soldering
Peak Temperature
Time at Peak Temperature
Ramp-Up Rate
Ramp-Down Rate
IR Reflow Soldering (Pb-Free Package)
Peak Temperature
Time at Peak Temperature
Ramp-Up Rate
Ramp-Down Rate
Time 25°C to Peak Temperature
1
2
Rating
−0.3 V to +7 V
−0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V
−40°C to +120°C
−65°C to +150°C
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings
may cause permanent 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
section of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
Table 4. I2C Address Selection
150°C
(TJ max − TA)/θJA
ADD Pin
Low
Float
High
105.44°C/W
38.8°C/W
220°C (0/5°C)
10 sec to 20 sec
2°C/sec to 3°C/sec
−6°C/sec
ESD CAUTION
260°C (+ 0°C)
20 sec to 40 sec
3°C/sec maximum
–6°C/sec maximum
8 minutes maximum
Values relate to package being used on a 4-layer board.
Junction-to-case resistance is applicable to components featuring a
preferential flow direction, for example, components mounted on a heat
sink. Junction-to-ambient resistance is more useful for air-cooled, PCBmounted components.
Rev. B | Page 10 of 44
I2C Address
1001 000
1001 010
1001 011
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
VOUT-B
1
16
VOUT-C
VOUT-A
2
15
VOUT-D
VREF -AB
3
CS
4
GND
5
VDD
6
D+
D–
ADT7316/
ADT7317/
ADT7318
14
VREF -CD
13
SCL/SCLK
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
12
SDA/DIN
11
DOUT/ADD
7
10
INT/INT
8
9
LDAC
02661-006
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Figure 9. Pin Configuration QSOP
Table 5. Pin Function Descriptions
Pin No.
1
2
3
Mnemonic
VOUT-B
VOUT-A
VREF-AB
4
CS
5
6
7
8
9
GND
VDD
D+
D−
LDAC
10
INT/INT
11
DOUT/ADD
12
SDA/DIN
13
SCL/SCLK
14
VREF-CD
15
16
VOUT-D
VOUT-C
Description
Buffered Analog Output Voltage from DAC B. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage from DAC A. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.
Reference Input Pin for DAC A and DAC B. It may be configured as a buffered or unbuffered input to both DAC A
and DAC B. It has an input range from 0.25 V to VDD in unbuffered mode and from 1 V to VDD in buffered mode.
DAC A and DAC B default on power-up to this pin.
SPI Active Low Control Input. This is the frame synchronization signal for the input data. When CS goes low, it
enables the input register, and data is transferred in on the rising edges and out on the falling edges of the
subsequent serial clocks. It is recommended that this pin be tied high to VDD when operating the serial interface
in I2C mode.
Ground Reference Point for All Circuitry on the Part. Analog and digital ground.
Positive Supply Voltage, 2.7 V to 5.5 V. The supply should be decoupled to ground.
Positive connection to external temperature sensor.
Negative connection to external temperature sensor.
Active low control input that transfers the contents of the input registers to their respective DAC registers. A falling
edge on this pin forces any or all DAC registers to be updated if the input registers have new data. A minimum
pulse width of 20 ns must be applied to the LDAC pin to ensure proper loading of a DAC register. This allows
simultaneous update of all DAC outputs. Bit C3 of the Control Configuration 3 register enables the LDAC pin.
Default is with the LDAC pin controlling the loading of DAC registers.
Over-Limit Interrupt. The output polarity of this pin can be set to give an active low or active high interrupt when
temperature or VDD limits are exceeded. Default is active low. Open-drain output—needs a pull-up resistor.
DOUT: SPI Serial Data Output. Logic output. Data is clocked out of any register at this pin. Data is clocked out on
the falling edge of SCLK. Open-drain output—needs a pull-up resistor.
ADD: I2C Serial Bus Address Selection Pin. Logic input. A low on this pin gives the address 1001 000, leaving it
floating gives the address 1001 010, and setting it high gives the address 1001 011. The I2C address set up by the
ADD pin is not latched by the device until after this address has been sent twice. On the eighth SCL cycle of the
second valid communication, the serial bus address is latched in. Any subsequent changes on this pin have no
affect on the I2C serial bus address.
SDA: I2C Serial Data Input. I2C serial data that is loaded into the device registers is provided on this input. Opendrain configuration—needs a pull-up resistor.
DIN: SPI Serial Data Input. Serial data to be loaded into the device registers is provided on this input. Data is
clocked into a register on the rising edge of SCLK. Open-drain configuration—needs a pull-up resistor.
Serial Clock Input. This is the clock input for the serial port. The serial clock is used to clock data out of any register
of the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 and also to clock data into any register that can be written to. Open-drain
configuration; needs a pull-up resistor.
Reference Input Pin for DAC C and DAC D. It can be configured as a buffered or unbuffered input to both DAC C
and DAC D. It has an input range from 0.25 V to VDD in unbuffered mode and from 1 V to VDD in buffered mode.
DAC C and DAC D default, on power-up, to this pin.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage from DAC D. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage from DAC C. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.
Rev. B | Page 11 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
TERMINOLOGY
Relative Accuracy
Relative accuracy or integral nonlinearity (INL) is a measure of
the maximum deviation, in LSBs, from a straight line passing
through the endpoints of the DAC transfer function. Typical
INL vs. code plots can be seen in Figure 10, Figure 11, and
Figure 12.
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Differential nonlinearity is the difference between the measured
change and the ideal 1 LSB change between any two adjacent
codes. A specified differential nonlinearity of ±0.9 LSB maximum
ensures monotonicity. Typical DAC DNL vs. code plots can be
seen in Figure 13, Figure 14, and Figure 15.
Offset Error
This is a measure of the offset error of the DAC and the output
amplifier (see Figure 2 and Figure 3). It can be negative or
positive. It is expressed as a percentage of the full-scale range.
Gain Error
This is a measure of the span error of the DAC. It is the deviation in slope of the actual DAC transfer characteristic from
the ideal. It is expressed as a percentage of the full-scale range.
Offset Error Drift
This is a measure of the change in offset error with changes
in temperature. It is expressed in ppm of full-scale range/°C.
Gain Error Drift
This is a measure of the change in gain error with changes in
temperature. It is expressed in ppm of full-scale range/°C.
Long Term Temperature Drift
This is a measure of the change in temperature error with the
passage of time. It is expressed in degrees Celsius. The concept
of long term stability has been used for many years to describe
by what amount an IC’s parameter would shift during its lifetime.
This is a concept that has been typically applied to both voltage
references and monolithic temperature sensors. Unfortunately,
integrated circuits cannot be evaluated at room temperature
(25°C) for 10 years or so to determine this shift. As a result,
manufacturers very typically perform accelerated lifetime
testing of integrated circuits by operating ICs at elevated temperatures (between 125°C and 150°C) over a shorter period of
time (typically between 500 and 1000 hours). As a result of this
operation, the lifetime of an integrated circuit is significantly
accelerated due to the increase in rates of reaction within the
semiconductor material.
DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR)
This indicates how the output of the DAC is affected by changes
in the supply voltage. PSRR is the ratio of the change in VOUT to
a change in VDD for full-scale output of the DAC. It is measured
in decibels. VREF is held at 2 V and VDD is varied ±10%.
DC Crosstalk
This is the dc change in the output level of one DAC in response
to a change in the output of another DAC. It is measured with a
full-scale output change on one DAC while monitoring another
DAC. It is expressed in microvolts.
Reference Feedthrough
This is the ratio of the amplitude of the signal at the DAC output to
the reference input when the DAC output is not being updated
(that is, LDAC is high). It is expressed in decibels.
Channel-to-Channel Isolation
This is the ratio of the amplitude of the signal at the output of
one DAC to a sine wave on the reference input of another DAC.
It is measured in decibels.
Major-Code Transition Glitch Energy
Major-code transition glitch energy is the energy of the impulse
injected into the analog output when the code in the DAC register
changes state. It is normally specified as the area of the glitch in
nV-s and is measured when the digital code is changed by 1 LSB
at the major carry transition (011…11 to 100…00 or 100...00 to
011…11).
Digital Feedthrough
Digital feedthrough is a measure of the impulse injected into
the analog output of a DAC from the digital input pins of the
device but is measured when the DAC is not being written to. It
is specified in nV-s and is measured with a full-scale change on
the digital input pins, that is, from all 0s to all 1s or vice versa.
Digital Crosstalk
This is the glitch impulse transferred to the output of one DAC
at midscale in response to a full-scale code change (all 0s to all
1s and vice versa) in the input register of another DAC. It is
measured in standalone mode and is expressed in nV-s.
Analog Crosstalk
This is the glitch impulse transferred to the output of one DAC
due to a change in the output of another DAC. It is measured by
loading one of the input registers with a full-scale code change
(all 0s to all 1s and vice versa) while keeping LDAC high. Pulse
LDAC low and monitor the output of the DAC whose digital
code was not changed. The area of the glitch is expressed
in nV-s.
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
This is the glitch impulse transferred to the output of one DAC
due to a digital code change and subsequent output change of
another DAC. This includes both digital and analog crosstalk.
It is measured by loading one of the DACs with a full-scale
code change (all 0s to all 1s and vice versa) with LDAC low
and monitoring the output of another DAC. The energy of
the glitch is expressed in nV-s.
Rev. B | Page 12 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Multiplying Bandwidth
The amplifiers within the DAC have a finite bandwidth. The
multiplying bandwidth is a measure of this. A sine wave on
the reference (with full-scale code loaded to the DAC) appears
on the output. The multiplying bandwidth is the frequency at
which the output amplitude falls to 3 dB below the input.
Total Harmonic Distortion
This is the difference between an ideal sine wave and its
attenuated version using the DAC. The sine wave is used
as the reference for the DAC, and the THD is a measure
of the harmonics present on the DAC output. It is measured
in decibels.
Round Robin
This term is used to describe the ADT7316/ADT7317/
ADT7318 cycling through the available measurement
channels in sequence, taking a measurement on each
channel.
DAC Output Settling Time
This is the time required, following a prescribed data change,
for the output of a DAC to reach and remain within ±0.5 LSB
of the final value. A typical prescribed change is from 1/4 scale
to 3/4 scale.
Rev. B | Page 13 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
0.20
0.10
0.08
0.15
0.06
0.10
DNL ERROR (LSB)
0
–0.05
–0.10
0
–0.02
–0.04
–0.06
–0.15
50
100
150
DAC CODE
200
250
–0.10
0
0.6
0.3
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.1
0
–0.2
200
400
600
DAC CODE
800
1000
1000
4000
–0.1
–0.3
02661-010
0
0
1.0
2.0
0.8
1.5
0.6
1.0
0.4
DNL ERROR (LSB)
2.5
0.5
0
–0.5
–0.2
–1.5
–0.6
–2.0
–0.8
1000
1500
2000
2500
DAC CODE
3000
800
0
–0.4
500
400
600
DAC CODE
0.2
–1.0
0
200
Figure 14. ADT7317 Typical DNL Plot
3500
4000
02661-011
INL ERROR (LSB)
250
0
Figure 11. ADT7317 Typical INL Plot
–2.5
200
–0.2
–0.4
–0.6
100
150
DAC CODE
Figure 13. ADT7318 Typical DNL Plot
DNL ERROR (LSB)
INL ERROR (LSB)
Figure 10. ADT7318 Typical INL Plot
50
02661-012
0
02661-013
–0.08
02661-009
–0.20
0.02
02661-014
INL ERROR (LSB)
0.04
0.05
–1.0
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
DAC CODE
3000
Figure 15. ADT7316 Typical DNL Plot
Figure 12. ADT7316 Typical INL Plot
Rev. B | Page 14 of 44
3500
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
0.30
10
0.25
INL WCP
OFFSET ERROR
5
0.20
0
ERROR (LSB)
0.10
0.05
DNL WCP
0
VREF = 2.25V
–5
–10
DNL WCN
GAIN ERROR
–15
–0.05
INL WCN
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
VREF (V)
–20
02661-015
–0.10
1.0
2.7
Figure 16. ADT7318 INL Error and DNL Error vs. VREF
3.3
3.6
4.0
VDD (V)
4.5
5.0
02661-018
ERROR (LSB)
0.15
5.5
Figure 19. Offset Error and Gain Error vs. VDD
2.505
0.14
INL WCP
0.12
2.500
SOURCE CURRENT
0.10
2.495
INL WCN
DAC OUTPUT (V)
ERROR (LSB)
0.08
0.06
0.04
DNL WCP
0.02
2.490
2.485
SINK CURRENT
2.480
0
2.475
DNL WCN
–0.04
–10
20
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
110
2.465
02661-016
–0.06
–40
VDD = 5V
VREF = 5V
DAC OUTPUT
LOADED TO MIDSCALE
2.470
0
Figure 17. ADT7318 INL Error and DNL Error vs. Temperature
1
2
4
5
6
Figure 20. VOUT Source and Sink Current Capability
1.98
0
DAC OUTPUT UNLOADED
–0.2
1.96
OFFSET ERROR
–0.4
1.94
ICC (mA)
–0.6
–0.8
–1.0
1.92
DAC OUTPUT LOADED
1.90
–1.2
–1.4
1.88
GAIN ERROR
–1.8
–40
–20
0
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
100
120
1.86
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
DAC CODE
3000
Figure 21. Supply Current vs. DAC Code
Figure 18. Offset Error and Gain Error vs. Temperature
Rev. B | Page 15 of 44
3500
4000
02661-020
–1.6
02661-017
ERROR (LSB)
3
CURRENT (mA)
02661-019
–0.02
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
2.00
1.8
ADC OFF,
DAC OUTPUTS AT 0V
1.6
1.4
DAC OUTPUT (V)
ICC (mA)
1.95
1.90
1.85
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
1.80
3.1
3.5
3.9
4.3
VCC (V)
4.7
5.1
5.5
0
02661-021
1.75
2.7
0
2
4
6
8
10
TIME (µs)
02661-024
0.2
Figure 25. Exiting Power-Down to Midscale
Figure 22. Supply Current vs. Supply Voltage @25°C
7
0.4700
0.4695
6
0.4690
0.4685
DAC OUTPUT (V)
ICC (µA)
5
4
3
0.4680
0.4675
0.4670
0.4665
2
0.4660
1
3.9
4.3
VCC (V)
4.7
5.1
5.5
0.4650
4
6
8
10
10
Figure 26. ADT7316 Major-Code Transition Glitch Energy
(0….11 to 100…00)
0.4730
3.5
0.4725
3.0
0.4720
DAC OUTPUT (V)
4.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.4715
0.4710
0.4705
0.4700
0.4695
0.5
0.4690
0
2
4
6
8
10
TIME (µs)
0.4685
02661-023
DAC OUTPUT (V)
2
TIME (µs)
Figure 23. Power-Down Current vs. Supply Voltage @ 25°C
0
0
02661-025
3.5
02661-022
3.1
02661-026
0.4655
0
2.7
Figure 24. Half-Scale Settling (1/4 to 3/4 Scale Code Change)
0
2
4
6
TIME (µs)
8
Figure 27. ADT7316 Major-Code Transition Glitch Energy
(100…00 to 011…11)
Rev. B | Page 16 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
0
1.5
VDD = 5V
TA = 25°C
EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE @ 5V
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
FULL-SCALE ERROR (mV)
–2
–4
–6
–8
1.0
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE @ 3.3V
0.5
0
–0.5
–10
EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE @ 3.3V
1
2
3
4
–1.0
02661-027
–12
5
VREF (V)
VDD = 3.3V
TEMPERATURE = 25°C
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
10
2.327
2.326
2.325
2.324
2.323
D+ TO GND
5
0
–5
D+ TO VCC
–10
–15
1
2
3
TIME (µs)
4
5
–25
02661-028
0
Figure 29. DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
PCB TRACK RESISTANCE (MΩ)
90
100
02661-031
–20
Figure 32. External Temperature Error vs. PCB Track Resistance
0
0
±100mV RIPPLE ON VCC
VREF = 2.25V
VDD = 3.3V
TEMPERATURE = 25°C
VDD = 3.3V
–10
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–20
–30
–40
–50
10
FREQUENCY (kHz)
Figure 30. PSRR vs. Supply Ripple Frequency
100
–60
02661-029
1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
CAPACITANCE (nF)
40
45
50
02661-032
DAC OUTPUT (V)
120
15
VDD = 5V
VREF = 5V
DAC OUTPUT LOADED
TO MIDSCALE
2.328
AC PSRR (dB)
85
40
Figure 31. Temperature Error @ 3.3 V and 5 V
2.329
–60
0
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 28. Full-Scale Error vs. VREF
2.322
–30
02661-030
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE @ 5V
Figure 33. External Temperature Error vs. Capacitance Between D+ and D−
Rev. B | Page 17 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
10
140
VDD = 3.3V
COMMON-MODE
VOLTAGE = 100mV
EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE
120
4
2
0
–2
100
200
300
400
NOISE FREQUENCY (Hz)
500
600
60
40
0
02661-033
1
TEMPERATURE OF
ENVIRONMENT
CHANGED HERE
0
10
20
30
TIME (s)
40
50
60
Figure 37. Temperature Sensor Response to Thermal Shock
Figure 34. External Temperature Error vs. Common-Mode Noise Frequency
0
70
VDD = 3.3V
DIFFERENTIAL-MODE
VOLTAGE = 100mV
60
–5
50
ATTENUATION (dB)
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE
80
20
–4
–6
100
02661-036
6
TEMPERATURE (°C)
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
8
40
30
20
10
–10
–15
–20
1
100
200
300
400
NOISE FREQUENCY (MHz)
500
600
–25
02661-034
–10
Figure 35. External Temperature Error vs. Differential-Mode Noise Frequency
0.6
0.2
0
–0.2
±250mV
1
100
200
300
400
NOISE FREQUENCY (Hz)
500
600
02661-035
TEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
0.4
–0.6
10
100
1k
10k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
100k
1M
10M
Figure 38. Multiplying Bandwidth (Small-Signal Frequency Response)
VDD = 3.3V
–0.4
1
02661-037
0
Figure 36. Internal Temperature Error vs. Power Supply Noise Frequency
Rev. B | Page 18 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
THEORY OF OPERATION
Directly after the power-up calibration routine, the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318 go into idle mode. In this mode, the device
is not performing any measurements and is fully powered up.
All four DAC outputs are at 0 V.
To begin monitoring, write to the Control Configuration 1
register (Address 0x18), and set Bit C0 = 1. The ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318 go into their power-up default measurement mode, which is round robin. The device proceeds to take
measurements on the VDD channel, the internal temperature
sensor channel, and the external temperature sensor channel.
Once it finishes taking measurements on the external temperature sensor channel, the device immediately loops back to start
taking measurements on the VDD channel and repeats the same
cycle as before. This loop continues until the monitoring is
stopped by resetting Bit C0 of the Control Configuration 1
register to 0.
only be switched back to be I2C when the device is powered
off and on. When using I2C, the CS pin should be tied to either
VDD or GND.
There are a number of different operating modes on the
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 devices, and all of them can
be controlled by the configuration registers. These features
consist of enabling and disabling interrupts, polarity of the
INT/INT pin, enabling and disabling the averaging on the
measurement channels, SMBus timeout, and software reset.
POWER-UP CALIBRATION
It is recommended that no communication to the part is initiated
until approximately 5 ms after VDD has settled to within 10% of
its final value. It is generally accepted that most systems take a
maximum of 50 ms to power-up. Power-up time is directly
related to the amount of decoupling on the voltage supply line.
It is also possible to continue monitoring as well as switching to
single-channel mode by writing to the Control Configuration 2
register (Address 0x19) and setting Bit C4 = 1. Further explanation of the single-channel and round robin measurement modes
is given in later sections. All measurement channels have averaging
enabled on power-up. Averaging forces the device to take an
average of 16 readings before giving a final measured result. To
disable averaging and consequently decrease the conversion
time by a factor of 16, set C5 = 1 in the Control Configuration
2 register.
During the 5 ms after VDD has settled, the part performs a calibration routine; any communication to the device interrupts
this routine and can cause erroneous temperature measurements.
If it is not possible to have VDD at its nominal value by the time
50 ms has elapsed, or that communication to the device has
started prior to VDD settling, then it is recommended that a
measurement be taken on the VDD channel before a tempera
ture measurement is taken. The VDD measurement is used to
calibrate out any temperature measurement error due to
different supply voltage values.
Controlling the DAC outputs can be done by writing to the DAC
MSB and LSB registers (Address 0x10 to Address 0x17). The
power-up default setting is to have a low going pulse on the
LDAC pin controlling the updating of the DAC outputs from
the DAC registers. Alternatively, users can configure the updating
of the DAC outputs to be controlled by means other than the
LDAC pin by setting C3 = 1 of the Control Configuration 3
register (Address 0x1A). The DAC Configuration register
(Address 0x1B), and the LDAC Configuration register (Address
0x1C) can then be used to control the DAC updating. These
two registers also control the output range of the DACs, enabling
or disabling the external reference buffer, and selecting between
the internal or external reference. DAC A and DAC B outputs
can be configured to give a voltage output proportional to the
temperature of the internal and external temperature sensors,
respectively.
CONVERSION SPEED
The dual serial interface defaults to the I2C protocol on powerup. To select and lock in the SPI protocol, follow the selection
process as described in the Serial Interface Selection section.
The I2C protocol cannot be locked in, while the SPI protocol,
when selected, is automatically locked in. The interface can
The internal oscillator circuit used by the ADC has the capability to output two different clock frequencies. This means
that the ADC is capable of running at two different speeds
when performing a conversion on a measurement channel.
Thus, the time taken to perform a conversion on a channel
can be reduced by setting C0 of Control Configuration 3
register (Address 0x1A). This increases the ADC clock speed
from 1.4 kHz to 22 kHz. At the higher clock speed, the analog
filters on the D+ and D− input pins (external temperature
sensor) are switched off. This is why the power-up default
setting is to have the ADC working at the slow speed. The
typical times for fast and slow ADC speeds are given in the
Specifications section.
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 power up with averaging
on. This means every channel is measured 16 times and internally averaged to reduce noise. The conversion time can also
be sped up by turning the averaging off; to do so, set Bit C5 of
the Control Configuration 2 register (Address 0x19) to 1.
Rev. B | Page 19 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION—VOLTAGE OUTPUT
DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTERS
DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG SECTION
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 have four resistor-string
DACs fabricated on a CMOS process, with resolutions of 12,
10, and 8 bits, respectively. They contain four output buffer
amplifiers and are written to via an I2C serial interface or an
SPI serial interface. See the Serial Interface Selection section
for more information.
The architecture of a DAC channel consists of a resistor string DAC
followed by an output buffer amplifier. The voltage at the VREF
pin or the on-chip reference of 2.28 V provides the reference
voltage for the corresponding DAC. Figure 39 shows a block
diagram of the DAC architecture. Because the input coding to
the DAC is straight binary, the ideal output voltage is given by
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 operate from a single supply
of 2.7 V to 5.5 V, and the output buffer amplifiers provide railto-rail output swing with a slew rate of 0.7 V/μs. DAC A and
DAC B share a common external reference input, namely V
REF-AB. DAC C and DAC D share a common external reference
input, namely VREF-CD. Each reference input may be buffered
to draw virtually no current from the reference source or
unbuffered to give a reference input range from GND to VDD.
The devices have a power-down mode in which all DACs may
be turned off completely with a high impedance output.
Each DAC output is not updated until it receives the LDAC
command. Therefore, while a new value is written to the DAC
registers, this value is not represented by a voltage output until
the DACs receive the LDAC command. Reading back from
any DAC register prior to issuing an LDAC command results in
the digital value that corresponds to the DAC output voltage.
Therefore, the digital value written to the DAC register cannot
be read back until after the LDAC command has been initiated.
This LDAC command can be given by either pulling the LDAC
pin low (falling edge loads DACs), setting up Bit D4 and Bit D5
of the DAC Configuration register (Address 0x1B), or using the
LDAC Configuration register (Address 0x1C).
VOUT =
V REF × D
2N
where:
D = the decimal equivalent of the binary code that is loaded to
the DAC register:
0 to 255 for ADT7318 (8 bits).
0 to 1023 for ADT7317 (10 bits).
0 to 4095 for ADT7316 (12 bits).
N = the DAC resolution.
RESISTOR STRING
The resistor string section is shown in Figure 40. It is a string of
resistors, each approximately 603 Ω. The digital code loaded to
the DAC register determines the node on the string where the
voltage is tapped off to be fed into the output amplifier. The
voltage is tapped off by closing one of the switches connecting
the string to the amplifier. Because it is a string of resistors, it is
guaranteed monotonic.
R
R
R
When using the LDAC pin to control DAC register loading, the
low going pulse width should be 20 ns minimum. The LDAC
pin has to go high and low again before the DAC registers can
be reloaded.
TO OUTPUT
AMPLIFIER
R
VREF -AB
02661-039
R
BUFFER
SELECT
SIGNAL
RESISTOR
STRING
VOUT-A
OUTPUT BUFFER
AMPLIFIER
Figure 39. Single DAC Channel Architecture
02661-038
DAC
REGISTER
DAC EXTERNAL REFERENCE INPUTS
GAIN MODE
(GAIN = 1 OR 2)
INT VREF
INPUT
REGISTER
Figure 40. Resistor String
REFERENCE
BUFFER
There is a reference pin for each pair of DACs. The reference inputs
are buffered, but can also be individually configured as unbuffered.
The advantage with the buffered input is the high impedance it
presents to the voltage source driving it. However, if the unbuffered
mode is used, the user can have a reference voltage as low as
0.25 V and as high as VDD, because there is no restriction due
to headroom and footroom of the reference amplifier. If there
is a buffered reference in the circuit, there is no need to use the
on-chip buffers. In unbuffered mode, the input impedance is
still large at typically 90 kΩ per reference input for 0 V to VREF
output mode and 45 kΩ for 0 V to 2 VREF output mode.
Rev. B | Page 20 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
VDD
I
N×I
IBIAS
OPTIONAL CAPACITOR, UP TO
3nF MAX. CAN BE ADDED TO
IMPROVE HIGH FREQUENCY
NOISE REJECTION IN NOISY
ENVIRONMENTS
D+
VOUT+
C1
TO ADC
D–
LOW-PASS
FILTER
fC = 65kHz
BIAS
DIODE
VOUT–
02661-041
REMOTE
SENSING
TRANSISTOR
(2N3906)
Figure 41. Signal Conditioning for External Diode Temperature Sensors
proportional to output voltage. Each time a temperature
measurement is taken, the DAC output is updated. The output resolution for the ADT7318 is 8 bits with the 1°C change
corresponding to the 1 LSB change. The output resolution for
the ADT7316 and ADT7317 is capable of 10 bits with a 0.25°C
change corresponding to the 1 LSB change.
The buffered/unbuffered option is controlled by the DAC
Configuration register (Address 0x1B; see the Registers
section). The LDAC Configuration register controls the
selection between internal and external voltage references.
The default setting is for external reference to be selected.
VREF -AB
The default output resolution for the ADT7316 and ADT7317
is 8 bits. To increase this to 10 bits, set C1 = 1 of the Control
Configuration 3 register (Address 0x1A). The default output
range is 0 V to VREF-AB, and this can be increased to 0 V to
2 VREF-AB. The user can select the internal VREF (VREF = 2.28 V)
by setting D4 = 1 in the LDAC Configuration register (Address
0x1C). Increasing the output voltage span to 2 VREF can be done
by setting D0 = 1 for DAC A (internal temperature sensor), and
D1 = 1 for DAC B (external temperature sensor) in the DAC
Configuration register (Address 0x1B).
2.25V INTERNAL
VREF
STRING
DAC B
02661-040
STRING
DAC A
Figure 42. DAC Reference Buffer Circuit
OUTPUT AMPLIFIER
The output buffer amplifier is capable of generating output
voltages to within 1 mV of either rail. Its actual range depends
on the value of VREF, gain, and offset error.
If a gain of 1 is selected (Bit 0 to Bit 3 = 0, DAC Configuration
register, Address 0x1B), the output range is 0.001 V to VREF.
If a gain of 2 is selected (Bit 0 to Bit 3 = 1, DAC Configuration
register, Address 0x1B), the output range is 0.001 V to 2 VREF.
Because of clamping, however, the maximum output is limited
to VDD – 0.001 V.
The output amplifier is capable of driving a load of 4.7 kΩ to
VDD or 4.7 kΩ to GND in parallel with 200 pF to GND (see
Figure 6). The source and sink capabilities of the output
amplifier can be seen in Figure 20.
The slew rate is 0.7 V/μs with a half-scale settling time to
±0.5 LSB (at 8 bits) of 6 μs.
The output voltage is capable of tracking a maximum temperature range of −128°C to +127°C, but the default setting is
−40°C to +127°C. If the output voltage range is 0 V to VREF-AB
(VREF-AB = 2.25 V), then this corresponds to 0 V representing
−40°C, and 1.48 V representing +127°C. This gives an upper
dead band between 1.48 V and VREF-AB.
The internal and external analog temperature offset registers
can be used to vary this upper dead band, and consequently,
the temperature that 0 V corresponds to. Table 6 and Table 7
give examples of how this is done using a DAC output voltage
span of VREF and 2 VREF, respectively. Write in the temperature
value, in twos complement format, at which 0 V is to start. For
example, if using the DAC A output with 0 V to start at −40°C,
program 0xD8 into the internal analog temperature offset register (Address 0x21). This is an 8-bit register, and thus, only has a
temperature offset resolution of 1°C for all device models. Use
the following formulas to determine the value to program into
the offset registers.
THERMAL VOLTAGE OUTPUT
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 are capable of outputting
voltages that are proportional to temperature. The DAC A
output can be configured to represent the temperature of the
internal sensor while DAC B output can be configured to
represent the external temperature sensor. Bit C5 and Bit C6
of the Control Configuration 3 register select the temperature
Rev. B | Page 21 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Negative Temperatures
Table 7. Thermal Voltage Output (0 V to 2 VREF-AB)
Offset Register Code (dec) = (0 V Temp) + 128
where D7 of Offset Register Code is set to 1 for negative
temperatures.
Example:
Offset Register Code (dec ) = ( −40 ) + 128 = 88d = 0 x58
Because a negative temperature is input into the equation, DB7
(MSB) of the Offset Register Code is set to 1. Therefore, 0x58
becomes 0xD8:
0 x 58 + DB7 (1) = 0 xD8
Positive Temperatures
Offset Register Code (dec ) = 0 V Temp
Example:
Offset Register Code (dec ) = 10d = 0x0A
The following equation is used to work out the various
temperatures for the corresponding 8-bit DAC output:
8-Bit Temp = (DAC O/P ÷ 1 LSB) + (0 V Temp)
For example, if the output is 1.5 V, VREF-AB = 2.25 V, 8-bit DAC
has an LSB size = 2.25 V/256 = 8.79 × 10–3, and 0 V temp is at
−128°C, then the resultant temperature is
(1.5 ÷ 8.79 × 10 ) + (− 128) = + 43 o C
−3
Output Voltage (V)
0
0.25
0.5
0.75
1
1.12
1.47
1.5
2
2.25
2.5
2.75
3
3.25
3.5
3.75
4
4.25
4.5
Default (°C)
−40
−26
+12
+3
+17
+23
+43
+45
+73
+88
+102
+116
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
Max (°C)
−128
−114
−100
−85
−71
−65
−45
−43
−15
0
+14
+28
+42
+56
+70
+85
+99
+113
+127
Sample (°C)
0
+14
+28
+43
+57
+63
+83
+85
+113
+127
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
1
Upper dead band has been reached. DAC output is not capable of increasing
(see Figure 3).
Figure 43 shows the DAC output vs. temperature for a
VREF-AB = 2.25 V.
2.25
The following equation is used to work out the various
temperatures for the corresponding 10-bit DAC output
2.10
10-Bit Temp = ((DAC O/P ÷ 1 LSB) × 0.25) + (0 V Temp)
1.65
1.95
For example, if the output is 0.4991 V, VREF-AB = 2.25 V, 10-bit
DAC has an LSB size = 2.25 V/1024 = 2.197 × 10-3, and 0 V temp
is at −40°C, then the resulting temperature is
((0.4991 ÷ 2.197 × 10 −3 ) × 0.25) + (− 40) = 16.75 o C
Max (°C)
−128
−71
−15
−1
+39
+42
+99
+127
1.50
1.35
0V = –40°C
1.20
1.05
0.90
0.75
0V = 0°C
0.45
Sample (°C)
0
+56
+113
+127
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
1
Upper dead band has been reached. DAC output is not capable of increasing
(see Figure 3).
Rev. B | Page 22 of 44
0.30
0.15
0
–128 –110 –90 –70 –50 –30 –10 10 30 50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
70
90 110 127
Figure 43. 10-Bit DAC Output vs. Temperature, VREF-AB = 2.25 V
02661-042
Default (°C)
−40
+17
+73
+87
+127
UDB1
UDB1
UDB1
0V = –128°C
0.60
Table 6. Thermal Voltage Output (0 V to VREF-AB)
Output Voltage (V)
0
0.5
1
1.12
1.47
1.5
2
2.25
DAC OUTPUT (V)
1.80
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION—MEASUREMENT
TEMPERATURE SENSOR
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 contain an ADC with special input signal conditioning to enable operation with external
and on-chip diode temperature sensors. When the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318 are operating in single-channel mode, the
ADC continually processes the measurement taken on one
channel only. This channel is preselected by Bit C0 and Bit C1
in the Control Configuration 2 register (Address 0x19). When
in round robin mode, the analog input multiplexer sequentially
selects the VDD input channel, the on-chip temperature sensor
to measure its internal temperature, and the external temperature sensor. These signals are digitized by the ADC and the
results stored in the various value registers.
The measured results are compared with the internal and
external, THIGH and TLOW, limits. These temperature limits are
stored in on-chip registers. If the temperature limits are not
masked out, any out-of-limit comparisons generate flags that
are stored in the Interrupt Status 1 register (Address 0x00). One
or more out-of-limit results cause the INT/INT output to pull
either high or low depending on the output polarity setting.
Theoretically, the temperature measuring circuit can measure
temperatures from −128°C to +127°C with a resolution of 0.25°C.
Temperatures outside TA, however, are outside the guaranteed
operating temperature range of the device. Temperature measurement from −128°C to +127°C is possible using an external
sensor.
Temperature measurement is initiated by three methods. The first
method is applicable when the part is in single-channel measurement mode. The temperature is measured 16 times and
internally averaged to reduce noise. In single-channel mode,
the part continuously monitors the selected channel, that is, as
soon as one measurement is taken, then another one is started
on the same channel. The total time to measure a temperature
channel with the ADC operating at slow speed is typically
11.4 ms (712 μs × 16) for the internal temperature sensor, and
24.22 ms (1.51 ms × 16) for the external temperature sensor.
The new temperature value is stored in two 8-bit registers and
ready for reading by the I2C or SPI interface. The user can
disable the averaging by setting Bit 5 = 1 in the Control Configuration 2 register (Address 0x19). The ADT7316/ADT7317/
ADT7318 default on power-up, with the averaging enabled.
The third temperature measurement method is initiated after
every read or write to the part when the part is in either singlechannel measurement mode or round robin measurement mode.
Once serial communication has started, any conversion in progress is stopped and the ADC reset. Conversion starts again
immediately after the serial communication has finished. The
temperature measurement proceeds normally as described earlier.
VDD MONITORING
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 can monitor their own power
supplies. The parts measure the voltage on their VDD pin to a
resolution of 10 bits. The resulting value is stored in two 8-bit
registers: the 2 LSBs are stored in the Internal Temperature
Value/VDD Value register (Address 0x03) and the 8 MSBs are
stored in the VDD Value Register MSBs register (Address 0x06).
This allows the user to perform a 1-byte read if 10-bit resolution
is not important. The measured result is compared with VHIGH
and VLOW limits. If the VDD interrupt is not masked out, any outof-limit comparison generates a flag in the Interrupt Status 2
register (Address 0x10), and one or more out-of-limit results
cause the INT/INT output to pull either high or low depending
on the output polarity setting.
Measuring the voltage on the VDD pin is regarded as monitoring
a channel. Therefore, along with the internal and external temperature sensors, the VDD voltage makes up the third and final
monitoring channel. The user can select the VDD channel for
single-channel measurement by setting Bit C4 = 1 and setting
Bit C0 to Bit C2 to all 0s in the Control Configuration 2 register
(Address 0x19).
When measuring the VDD value, the reference for the ADC
is sourced from the internal reference. Table 8 shows the data
format. As the maximum VDD voltage measurable is 7 V,
internal scaling is performed on the VDD voltage to match the
2.28 V internal reference value. An example of how the transfer
function works follows.
The second temperature measurement method is applicable
when the part is in round robin measurement mode. The part
measures both the internal and external temperature sensors
as it cycles through all possible measurement channels. The
two temperature channels are measured each time the part
runs a round robin sequence. In round-robin mode, the part
continuously measures all channels.
Rev. B | Page 23 of 44
VDD = 5 V
ADC Reference = 2.28 V
1 LSB = ADC Reference/210 = 2.28/1024 = 2.226 mV
Scale Factor = Full-Scale VCC/ADC Reference = 7/2.28 = 3.07
Conversion Result = VDD/(Scale Factor × LSB Size)
= 5/(3.07 × 2.226 mV)
= 0x2DB
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
VDD
Table 8. VDD Data Format, VREF = 2.28 V
Digital Output
Binary
01 0110 1110
01 1011 0111
10 0000 0000
10 0100 1001
10 1001 0010
10 1101 1100
11 0010 0101
11 0110 1110
11 1011 0111
11 1111 1111
Hex
16E
1B7
200
249
292
2DC
325
36E
3B7
3FF
N×I
IBIAS
VOUT+
TO ADC
INTERNAL
SENSE
TRANSISTOR
BIAS
DIODE
VOUT–
02661-043
VDD Value (V)
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
6.5
7.0
I
Figure 44. Top Level Structure of Internal Temperature Sensors
SINGLE-CHANNEL MEASUREMENT
ON-CHIP REFERENCE
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 have an on-chip 1.2 V band
gap reference that is gained up by a switched capacitor amplifier
to give an output of 2.28 V. The amplifier is powered up for the
duration of the device monitoring phase and is powered down
once monitoring is disabled. This saves on current consumption. The internal reference is used as the reference for the
ADC. The ADC is used for measuring VDD and the internal
and external temperature sensors. The internal reference is
always used when measuring VDD, and the internal and external temperature sensors. The external reference is the default
power-up reference for the DACs.
ROUND ROBIN MEASUREMENT
On power-up, the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 go into round
robin mode, but monitoring is disabled. Setting Bit C0 of the
Configuration 1 Register (Address 0x18) to 1 enables conversions.
It sequences through the three channels of VDD, the internal
temperature sensor, and the external temperature sensor and
takes a measurement from each. Once the conversion is completed
on the external temperature sensor, the device loops around for
another measurement cycle on all three channels. (This method
of taking a measurement on all three channels in one cycle is
called round robin.) Setting Bit 4 of the Control Configuration 2 register (Address 0x19) disables the round-robin mode
and in turn sets up the single-channel mode. The single-channel
mode is where only one channel (for example, the internal temperature sensor) is measured in each conversion cycle.
Setting C4 of the Control Configuration 2 register (Address
0x19) enables the single-channel mode and allows the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ ADT7318 to focus on one channel only. A channel
is selected by writing to Bit C0 and Bit C1 in the Control Configuration 2 register. For example, to select the VDD channel for
monitoring, write to the Control Configuration 2 register and
set C4 = 1 (if this has not been done), then write all 0s to Bit C0
to Bit C1. All subsequent conversions are done on the VDD channel
only. To change the channel selection to the internal temperature channel, write to the Control Configuration 2 register and
set C0 = 1. When measuring in single-channel mode, conversions
on the channel selected occur directly after each other. Any
communication to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ ADT7318 stops
the conversions, but they are restarted once the read or write
operation is completed.
TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENT METHOD
Internal Temperature Measurement
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 contain an on-chip, band
gap temperature sensor whose output is digitized by the on-chip
ADC. The temperature data is stored in the internal temperature
value register. As both positive and negative temperatures can
be measured, the temperature data is stored in twos complement format, as shown in Table 9. The thermal characteristics
of the measurement sensor can change, and therefore an offset
is added to the measured value to enable the transfer function
to match the thermal characteristics. This offset is added before
the temperature data is stored. The offset value used is stored in
the internal temperature offset register.
The time taken to monitor all channels is typically not of
interest, because the most recently measured value can be
read at any time.
External Temperature Measurement
For applications where the round-robin time is important,
typical times at 25°C are given in the Specifications section.
The forward voltage of a diode or diode-connected transistor,
operated at a constant current, exhibits a negative temperature
coefficient of about –2 mV/°C. Unfortunately, the absolute value
of VBE varies from device to device, and individual calibration is
required to null this out, so the technique is unsuitable for mass
production.
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 can measure the temperature of one external diode sensor or diode-connected transistor.
Rev. B | Page 24 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
The technique used in the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 is to
measure the change in VBE when the device is operated at two
different currents. This is given by
ΔVBE = KT/q × ln (N)
where:
K is Boltzmann’s constant.
q is the charge on the carrier.
T is the absolute temperature in Kelvin.
N is the ratio of the two currents.
Figure 41 shows the input signal conditioning used to measure
the output of an external temperature sensor. This figure shows
the external sensor as a discrete substrate transistor. If a PNP
transistor is used, the base is connected to the D− input and the
emitter to the D+ input. If an NPN transistor is used, the emitter is
connected to the D− input and the base to the D+ input.
A 2N3906 is recommended to be used as the external transistor.
To prevent ground noise interfering with the measurement, the
more negative terminal of the sensor is not referenced to ground,
but is biased above ground by an internal diode at the D− input.
As the sensor is operating in a noisy environment, C1 is provided as a noise filter. See the Layout Considerations section on
for more information on C1.
To measure ΔVBE, the sensor is switched between operating
currents of I and N × I. The resulting waveform is passed
through a low-pass filter to remove noise, then to a chopper
stabilized amplifier that performs the functions of amplification
and rectification of the waveform to produce a dc voltage proportional to ΔVBE. This voltage is measured by the ADC to give
a temperature output in 10-bit twos complement format. To
further reduce the effects of noise, digital filtering is performed
by averaging the results of 16 measurement cycles.
TEMPERATURE VALUE FORMAT
One LSB of the ADC corresponds to 0.25°C. The ADC can theoretically measure a temperature span of 255°C. The internal
temperature sensor is guaranteed to a low value limit of −40°C.
It is possible to measure the full temperature span using the
external temperature sensor. The temperature data format is
shown in Table 9. The result of the internal or external temperature measurements is stored in the temperature value registers
and is compared with limits programmed into the internal or
external high and low registers.
Table 9. Temperature Data Format (Internal and External
Temperature)
Temperature
−40°C
−25°C
−10°C
−0.25°C
0°C
0.25°C
10°C
25°C
50°C
75°C
100°C
105°C
125°C
Digital Output
DB9..........DB0
11 0110 0000
11 1001 1100
11 1101 1000
11 1111 1111
00 0000 0000
00 0000 0001
00 0010 1000
00 0110 0100
00 1100 1000
01 0010 1100
01 1001 0000
01 1010 0100
01 1111 0100
Temperature Conversion Formula
Positive Temperature = ADC Code/4
Negative Temperature = (ADC Code − 512)/4
where DB9 is removed from the ADC code in the Negative
Temperature equation.
Rev. B | Page 25 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
INTERRUPTS
The measured results from the internal temperature sensor,
external temperature sensor, and the VDD pin are compared with
the THIGH/VHIGH (greater than comparison) and TLOW/VLOW (less
than or equal to comparison) limits. An interrupt occurs if the
measurement exceeds or equals the limit registers. These limits
are stored in on-chip registers. Note that the limit registers are
8 bits long, while the conversion results are 10 bits long. If the
limits are not masked out, then any out-of-limit comparisons
generate flags that are stored in the Interrupt Status 1 register
(Address 0x00) and the Interrupt Status 2 register (Address
0x01). One or more out-of-limit results cause the INT/INT output
to pull either high or low depending on the output polarity
setting. It is good design practice to mask out interrupts for
channels that are of no concern to the application.
Figure 45 shows the interrupt structure for the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318. It shows a block diagram of how the
various measurement channels affect the INT/INT pin.
S/W RESET
INTERNAL
TEMP
INTERRUPT
STATUS
REGISTER 1
(TEMP AND EXT.
DIODE CHECK)
STATUS BITS
EXTERNAL
TEMP
INTERRUPT
MASK
REGISTERS
WATCHDOG
LIMIT
COMPARISONS
INTERRUPT
STATUS
REGISTER 2
(VDD)
VDD
INT/INT
(LATCHED OUTPUT)
STATUS BIT
DIODE
FAULT
CONTROL
CONFIGURATION
REGISTER 1
INT/INT
ENABLE BIT
Figure 45. ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 Interrupt Structure
Rev. B | Page 26 of 44
02661-044
READ RESET
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
REGISTERS
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 contain registers that are
used to store the results of external and internal temperature
measurements, VDD value measurements, high and low temperature and supply voltage limits. They also set output DAC
voltage levels, configure multipurpose pins, and generally
control the device. A description of these registers follows.
The register map is divided into registers of 8 bits. Each register
has its own individual address, but some consist of data that is
linked with other registers. These registers hold the 10-bit conversion results of measurements taken on the temperature and
VDD channels. For example, the 8 MSBs of the VDD measurement
are stored in VDD Value Register MSBs Register (Address 0x06),
while the 2 LSBs are stored in Internal Temperature Value/VDD
Value LSBs Register Address 0x03. These types of registers are
linked in that when the LSB register is read first, the MSB registers associated with that LSB register are locked out to prevent
any updates. To unlock these MSB registers, the user has only to
read any one of them, which effectively unlocks all previously
locked-out MSB registers. Therefore, for the example given
earlier, if Register 0x03 is read first, MSB Register 0x06 and
Register 0x07 are locked out to prevent any updates to them.
If Register 0x06 is read, then this register and Register 0x07
would be subsequently unlocked.
LSB
REGISTER
OUTPUT
DATA
02661-046
FIRST READ
COMMAND
LOCK ASSOCIATED
MSB REGISTERS
Figure 46. Phase 1 of 10-Bit Read
MSB
REGISTER
OUTPUT
DATA
UNLOCK ASSOCIATED
MSB REGISTERS
02661-047
SECOND READ
COMMAND
Figure 47. Phase 2 of 10-Bit Read
If an MSB register is read first, its corresponding LSB register is
not locked out, allowing the user to read back only 8 bits (MSB)
of a 10-bit conversion result. Reading an MSB register first does
not lock out other MSB registers, and likewise, reading an LSB
register first does not lock out other LSB registers.
Table 10. List of ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 Registers
RD/WR
Address
0x00
0x01
0x02
0x03
0x04
0x05
0x06
0x07
0x08
0x09 to 0x0F
0x10
0x11
0x12
0x13
0x14
0x15
0x16
0x17
0x18
0x19
0x1A
0x1B
0x1C
0x1D
0x1E
0x1F
0x20
0x21
0x22
0x23
0x24
0x25
0x26
0x27
0x28
0x29 to 0x4C
0x4D
0x4E
0x4F
0x50 to 0x7E
0x7F
0x80 to 0xFF
Rev. B | Page 27 of 44
Name
Interrupt Status 1
Interrupt Status 2
Reserved
Internal Temp and VDD LSBs
External Temp LSBs
Reserved
VDD MSBs
Internal Temp MSBs
External Temp MSBs
Reserved
DAC A LSBs
(ADT7316/ADT7317 only)
DAC A MSBs
DAC B LSBs
(ADT7316/ADT7317 only)
DAC B MSBs
DAC C LSBs
(ADT7316/ADT7317 only)
DAC C MSBs
DAC D LSBs
(ADT7316/ADT7317 only)
DAC D MSBs
Control Configuration 1
Control Configuration 2
Control Configuration 3
DAC Configuration
LDAC Configuration
Interrupt Mask 1
Interrupt Mask 2
Internal Temp Offset
External Temp Offset
Internal Analog Temp Offset
External Analog Temp Offset
VDD VHIGH Limit
VDD VLOW Limit
Internal THIGH Limit
Internal TLOW Limit
External THIGH Limit
External TLOW Limit
Reserved
Device ID
Manufacturer’s ID
Silicon Revision
Reserved
SPI Lock Status
Reserved
Power-On
Default
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0xxx
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0xD8
0xD8
0xC7
0x62
0x64
0xC9
0xFF
0x00
0x01/0x09/0x05
0x41
0xXx
0x00
0x00
0x00
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS
Table 15. Internal Temperature/VDD LSBs
The bit maps in this section show the register default settings at
power-up, unless otherwise noted.
D7
N/A
N/A
Interrupt Status 1 Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x00]
This 8-bit, read-only register reflects the status of some of the
interrupts that can cause the INT/INT pin to go active. This
register is reset by a read operation, provided that any out-oflimit event has been corrected. It is also reset by a software reset.
Table 11. Interrupt Status 1 Register
D7
N/A
1
D6
N/A
D5
N/A
D4
01
D3
01
D2
01
D1
01
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 12. Interrupt Status 1 Register
Bit
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
Function
1 when internal temperature value exceeds THIGH limit. Any
internal temperature reading greater than the limit set
causes an out-of-limit event.
1 when internal temperature value exceeds TLOW limit. Any
internal temperature reading less than or equal to the
limit set causes an out-of-limit event.
1 when external temperature value exceeds THIGH limit. The
default value for this limit register is –1°C, so any external
temperature reading greater than the limit set causes an
out-of-limit event.
1 when external temperature value exceeds TLOW limit. The
default value for this limit register is 0°C, so any external
temperature reading less than or equal to the limit set
causes an out-of-limit event.
1 indicates a fault (open or short) for the external
temperature sensor.
1
D6
N/A
N/A
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
V1
01
D2
LSB
01
D1
T1
01
D0
LSB
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 16. Internal Temperature/VDD LSBs Bit Descriptions
Bit
D0
D1
D2
D3
Function
LSB of internal temperature value.
B1 of internal temperature value.
LSB of VDD value.
B1 of VDD value.
External Temperature Value Register LSBs (Read-Only)
[Address 0x04]
This 8-bit, read-only register stores the 2 LSBs of the 10-bit
temperature reading from the external temperature sensor.
Table 17. External Temperature LSBs
D7
N/A
N/A
1
D6
N/A
N/A
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
T1
01
D0
LSB
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 18. External Temperature LSBs Bit Descriptions
Bit
D0
D1
Function
LSB of external temperature value.
B1 of external temperature value.
VDD Value Register MSBs (Read-Only) [Address 0x06]
This 8-bit, read-only register stores the supply voltage value.
The 8 MSBs of the 10-bit value are stored in this register.
Interrupt Status 2 Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x01]
This 8-bit, read-only register reflects the status of the VDD
interrupt that can cause the INT/INT pin to go active. This
register is reset by a read operation, provided that any out-oflimit event has been corrected. It is also reset by a software reset.
Table 19. VDD Value MSBs
Table 13. Interrupt Status 2 Register
Internal Temperature Value Register MSBs (Read-Only)
[Address 0x07]
This 8-bit, read-only register stores the internal temperature
value from the internal temperature sensor in twos complement
format. The 8 MSBs of the 10-bit value are stored in this register.
D7
N/A
1
D6
N/A
D5
N/A
D4
01
D3
N/A
D2
N/A
D1
N/A
D0
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
Table 14. Interrupt Status 2 Register Bit Descriptions
Bit
D4
Function
1 when VDD value is greater than the corresponding VHIGH
limit.
1 when VDD is less than or equal to the corresponding VLOW
limit.
D7
V9
X1
1
D6
V8
X1
D5
V7
X1
D4
V6
X1
D3
V5
X1
D2
V4
X1
D1
V3
X1
D0
V2
X1
Loaded with VDD value after power-up.
Table 20. Internal Temperature Value MSBs
D7
T9
01
1
D6
T8
01
D5
T7
01
Default settings at power-up.
Internal Temperature Value/VDD Value Register LSBs
(Read-Only) [Address 0x03]
This 8-bit, read-only register stores the 2 LSBs of the 10-bit
temperature reading from the internal temperature sensor
and the 2 LSBs of the 10-bit supply voltage reading.
Rev. B | Page 28 of 44
D4
T6
01
D3
T5
01
D2
T4
01
D1
T3
01
D0
T2
01
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
External Temperature Value Register MSBs (Read-Only)
[Address 0x08]
This 8-bit, read-only register stores the external temperature
value from the external temperature sensor in twos complement
format. The 8 MSBs of the 10-bit value are stored in this register.
Table 26. DAC B (ADT7317) LSBs
Table 21. External Temperature Value MSBs
DAC B Register MSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x13]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 8 MSBs of the DAC B
word. The value in this register is combined with the value in
the DAC B register LSBs and converted to an analog voltage on
the VOUT-B pin. On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-B
pin is 0 V.
D7
T9
01
1
D6
T8
01
D5
T7
01
D4
T6
01
D3
T5
01
D2
T4
01
D1
T3
01
D0
T2
01
Default settings at power-up.
DAC A Register LSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x10]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 4/2 LSBs of the
ADT7316/ADT7317 DAC A word, respectively. The value in
this register is combined with the value in the DAC A Register
MSBs and converted to an analog voltage on the VOUT-A pin.
On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-A pin is 0 V.
Table 22. DAC A (ADT7316) LSBs
D7
B3
01
1
D6
B2
01
D5
B1
01
D4
LSB
01
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
Table 23. DAC A (ADT7317) LSBs
D7
B1
01
1
D6
LSB
01
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
DAC A Register MSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x11]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 8 MSBs of the DAC A
word. The value in this register is combined with the value in
the DAC A Register LSBs and converted to an analog voltage on
the VOUT-A pin. On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-A
pin is 0 V.
1
D6
B8
01
D5
B7
01
D4
B6
01
D3
B5
01
D2
B4
01
D1
B3
01
D0
B2
01
Default settings at power-up.
DAC B Register LSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x12]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 4/2 LSBs of the
ADT7316/ADT7317 DAC B word, respectively. The value in
this register is combined with the value in the DAC B register
MSBs and converted to an analog voltage on the VOUT-B pin.
On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-B pin is 0 V.
1
D6
B2
01
D5
B1
01
D4
LSB
01
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D6
LSB
01
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
Table 27. DAC B MSBs
D7
MSB
01
1
D6
B8
01
D5
B7
01
D4
B6
01
D3
B5
01
D2
B4
01
D1
B3
01
D0
B2
01
Default settings at power-up.
DAC C Register LSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x14]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 4/2 LSBs of the
ADT7316/ADT7317 DAC C word, respectively. The value in
this register is combined with the value in the DAC C register
MSBs and converted to an analog voltage on the VOUT-C pin.
On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-C pin is 0 V.
Table 28. DAC C (ADT7316) LSBs
D7
B3
01
1
D6
B2
01
D5
B1
01
D4
LSB
01
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
Table 29. DAC C (ADT7317) LSBs
D7
B1
01
D6
LSB
01
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
DAC C Register MSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x15]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 8 MSBs of the DAC C
word. The value in this register is combined with the value in
the DAC C register LSBs and converted to an analog voltage on
the VOUT-C pin. On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-C
pin is 0 V.
Table 30. DAC C MSBs
D7
MSB
01
1
Table 25. DAC B (ADT7316) LSBs
D7
B3
01
1
1
Table 24. DAC A MSBs
D7
MSB
01
D7
B1
01
D6
B8
01
D5
B7
01
Default settings at power-up.
D0
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
Rev. B | Page 29 of 44
D4
B6
01
D3
B5
01
D2
B4
01
D1
B3
01
D0
B2
01
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
DAC D Register LSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x16]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 4/2 LSBs of the
ADT7316/ADT7317 DAC D word, respectively. The value in
this register is combined with the value in the DAC D register
MSBs and converted to an analog voltage on the VOUT-D pin.
On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-D pin is 0 V.
Table 35. Control Configuration 1 Bit Descriptions
Bit
C0
Table 31. DAC D (ADT7316) LSBs
D7
B3
01
1
D6
B2
01
D5
B1
01
D4
LSB
01
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
C1:4
C5
C6
Default settings at power-up.
PD
Table 32. DAC D (ADT7317) LSBs
D7
B1
01
1
D6
LSB
01
D5
N/A
N/A
D4
N/A
N/A
D3
N/A
N/A
D2
N/A
N/A
D1
N/A
N/A
D0
N/A
N/A
Default settings at power-up.
DAC D Register MSBs (Read/Write) [Address 0x17]
This 8-bit read/write register contains the 8 MSBs of the DAC D
word. The value in this register is combined with the value in
the DAC D register LSBs and converted to an analog voltage on
the VOUT-D pin. On power-up, the voltage output on the VOUT-D
pin is 0 V.
Table 33. DAC D MSBs
D7
MSB
01
1
D6
B8
01
D5
B7
01
D4
B6
01
D3
B5
01
D2
B4
01
D1
B3
01
D0
B2
01
Default settings at power-up.
Control Configuration 1 Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x18]
This configuration register is an 8-bit read/write register that
is used to setup some of the operating modes of the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318.
Table 34. Control Configuration 1
D7
PD
01
1
D6
C6
01
D5
C5
01
Default settings at power-up.
D4
C4
01
D3
C3
01
D2
C2
01
D1
C1
01
D0
C0
01
Function
This bit enables/disables conversions in round robin
mode and single-channel mode. The
ADT7316/ADT7317/ ADT7318 power up in round-robin
mode, but monitoring is not initiated until this bit is set.
0 = Stop monitoring (default).
1 = Start monitoring.
Reserved. Only write 0s.
0 = Enable INT/INT output. 1 = Disable INT/INT output.
Configures INT/INT output polarity. 0 = Active low.
1 = Active high.
Power-Down Bit. Setting this bit to 1 puts the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318 into standby mode. In this mode,
both the ADC and the DACs are fully powered down, but
the serial interface is still operational. To power up the
part again, write 0 to this bit.
Control Configuration 2 Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x19]
This configuration register is an 8-bit, read/write register that
is used to set up some of the operating modes of the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318.
Table 36. Control Configuration 2
D7
C7
01
1
D6
C6
01
D5
C5
01
D4
C4
01
D3
C3
01
D2
C2
01
D1
C1
01
D0
C0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 37. Control Configuration 2
Bit
C0:1
C2:3
C4
C5
C6
C7
Rev. B | Page 30 of 44
Function
In single-channel mode, these bits select between VDD,
the internal temperature sensor, and the external
temperature sensor for conversion.
00 = VDD (default).
01 = Internal temperature sensor.
10 = External temperature sensor.
11 = Reserved.
Reserved.
Selects between single-channel and round robin
conversion cycle. Default is round robin.
0 = Round robin.
1 = Single channel.
Default condition is to average every measurement on
all channels 16 times. This bit disables this averaging.
Channels affected are temperature and VDD.
0 = Enable averaging.
1 = Disable averaging.
SMBus timeout on the serial clock puts a 25 ms limit
on the pulse width of the clock. Ensures that a fault
on the master SCL does not lock up the SDA line.
SMBus timeout.
0 = Disable.
1 = Enable SMBus timeout.
Software reset. Setting this bit to 1 causes a software
reset. All registers and DAC outputs reset to their
default settings.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Control Configuration 3 Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x1A]
This configuration register is an 8-bit read/write register that
is used to set up some of the operating modes of the ADT7316/
ADT7317/ADT7318.
Table 41. DAC Configuration
Bit
D0
D1
Table 38. Control Configuration 3
D7
C7
01
1
D6
C6
01
D5
C5
01
D4
C4
01
D3
C3
01
D2
C2
01
D1
C1
01
D0
C0
01
D2
D3
Default settings at power-up.
Table 39. Control Configuration 3
Bit
C0
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
C7
Function
Selects between fast and normal ADC conversion speeds
for all three monitoring channels.
0 = ADC clock at 1.4 kHz.
1 = ADC clock at 22.5 kHz. D+ and D− analog filters are
disabled.
On the ADT7316 and ADT7317, this bit selects between
8-bit and 10-bit DAC output resolution on the thermal
voltage output feature. Default = 8 bits. This bit has no
effect on the ADT7318 output because this part has only
an 8-bit DAC. In the ADT7318 case, write 0 to this bit.
0 = 8-bit resolution.
1 = 10-bit resolution.
Reserved. Only write 0.
0 = LDAC pin controls updating of DAC outputs.
1 = DAC configuration register and LDAC configuration
register control the updating of the DAC outputs.
Reserved. Only write 0.
Setting this bit selects DAC A voltage output to be
proportional to the internal temperature measurement.
Setting this bit selects DAC B voltage output to be
proportional to the external temperature measurement.
Reserved. Only write 0.
DAC Configuration Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x1B]
This configuration register is an 8-bit, read/write register that
is used to control the output ranges of all four DACs and to
control the loading of the DAC registers if the LDAC pin is
disabled (Bit C3 = 1, Control Configuration 3 register).
1
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D6
D7
LDAC Configuration Register (Write-Only)
[Address 0x1C]
This configuration register is an 8-bit write register that is used
to control the updating of the quad DAC outputs if the LDAC
pin is disabled and Bit D4 and Bit D5 of the DAC Configuration
register are both set to 1. It also selects either the internal or
external VREF for all four DACs. Bit D0 to Bit D3 in this register
are self-clearing, that is, reading back from this register always
gives 0s for these bits.
Table 42. LDAC Configuration
D7
D7
01
1
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 43. LDAC Configuration
Table 40. DAC Configuration
D7
D7
01
D4:5
Function
Selects the output range of DAC A.
0 = 0 V to VREF.
1 = 0 V to 2 VREF.
Selects the output range of DAC B.
0 = 0 V to VREF.
1 = 0 V to 2 VREF.
Selects the output range of DAC C.
0 = 0 V to VREF.
1 = 0 V to 2 VREF.
Selects the output range of DAC D.
0 = 0 V to VREF.
1 = 0 V to 2 VREF.
00 = MSB write to any DAC register generates an LDAC
command, which updates that DAC only.
01 = MSB write to DAC B or DAC D register generates
an LDAC command, which updates DAC A, DAC B or DAC
C, DAC D, respectively.
10 = MSB write to DAC D register generates an LDAC
command, which updates all 4 DACs.
11 = LDAC command generated from LDAC register.
Setting this bit allows the external VREF to bypass the
reference buffer when supplying DAC A and DAC B.
Setting this bit allows the external VREF to bypass the
reference buffer when supplying DAC C and DAC D.
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Bit
D0
D1
Default settings at power-up.
D2
D3
D4
D5:D7
Rev. B | Page 31 of 44
Function
Writing 1 to this bit generates the LDAC command to
update the DAC A output only.
Writing 1 to this bit generates the LDAC command to
update the DAC B output only.
Writing 1 to this bit generates the LDAC command to
update the DAC C output only.
Writing 1 to this bit generates the LDAC command to
update the DAC D output only.
Selects either internal VREF or external VREF-AB for DAC A,
DAC B, DAC C and DAC D.
0 = External VREF.
1 = Internal VREF.
Reserved. Only write 0s.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Interrupt Mask 1 Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x1D]
This mask register is an 8-bit, read/write register that can be
used to mask out any interrupts that can cause the INT/INT
pin to go active.
Table 48. Internal Temperature Offset
D7
D7
01
1
Table 44. Interrupt Mask 1
D7
D7
01
1
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 45. Interrupt Mask 1 Bit Descriptions
Bit
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5: 7
Function
0 = Enable internal THIGH interrupt.
1 = Disable internal THIGH interrupt.
0 = Enable internal TLOW interrupt.
1 = Disable internal TLOW interrupt.
0 = Enable external THIGH interrupt.
1 = Disable external THIGH interrupt.
0 = Enable external TLOW interrupt.
1 = Disable external TLOW interrupt.
0 = Enable external temperature fault interrupt.
1 = Disable external temperature fault interrupt.
Reserved. Only write 0s.
1
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Table 47. Interrupt Mask 2 Bit Descriptions
Bit
D0:D3
D4
D5:7
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
D7
D7
01
Table 46. Interrupt Mask 2
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
Table 49. External Temperature Offset
Interrupt Mask 2 Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x1E]
This mask register is an 8-bit read/write register that can be
used to mask out any interrupts that can cause the INT/INT
pin to go active.
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
External Temperature Offset Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x20]
This register contains the offset value for the external temperature channel. A twos complement number can be written to this
register which is then added to the measured result before it is
stored or compared to limits. In this way, one-point calibration
can be done whereby the whole transfer function of the channel
can be moved up or down. From a software point of view, this
may be a very simple method to vary the characteristics of the
measurement channel if the thermal characteristics change. As
it is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C.
1
D7
D7
01
D6
D6
01
Function
Reserved. Only write 0s.
0 = Enable VDD interrupts.
1 = Disable VDD interrupts.
Reserved. Only write 0s.
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Internal Analog Temperature Offset Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x21]
This register contains the offset value for the internal thermal
voltage output. A twos complement number can be written to
this register which is then added to the measured result before
it is converted by DAC A. Varying the value in this register has
the effect of varying the temperature span. For example, the
output voltage can represent a temperature span of −128°C to
+127°C or even 0°C to 127°C. In essence, this register changes
the position of 0 V on the temperature scale. Anything other
than −128°C to +127°C produces an upper dead band on the
DAC A output. As it is an 8-bit register, the temperature
resolution is 1°C. The default value is −40°C.
Table 50. Internal Analog Temperature Offset
D7
D7
11
Internal Temperature Offset Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x1F]
This register contains the offset value for the internal temperature channel. A twos complement number can be written to this
register which is then added to the measured result before it is
stored or compared to limits. In this way, a one-point calibration
can be done whereby the whole transfer function of the channel
can be moved up or down. From a software point of view, this
may be a very simple method to vary the characteristics of the
measurement channel if the thermal characteristics change. As
it is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C.
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
01
Default settings at power-up.
Rev. B | Page 32 of 44
D4
D4
11
D3
D3
11
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
External Analog Temperature Offset Register (Read/Write)
[Address 0x22]
This register contains the offset value for the external thermal
voltage output. A twos complement number can be written to
this register which is then added to the measured result before it
is converted by DAC B. Varying the value in this register has the
affect of varying the temperature span. For example, the output
voltage can represent a temperature span of −128°C to +127°C
or even 0°C to 127°C. In essence, this register changes the position of 0 V on the temperature scale. Anything other than −128°C
to +127°C produces an upper dead band on the DAC B output.
As it is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C. The
default value is −40°C.
Table 51. External Analog Temperature
D7
D7
11
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
11
D3
D3
11
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
VDD VHIGH Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x23]
This limit register is an 8-bit read/write register that stores the
VDD upper limit that causes an interrupt and activates the INT/
INT output (if enabled). For this to happen, the measured VDD
value has to be greater than the value in this register. The default
value is 5.46 V.
Internal THIGH Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x25]
This limit register is an 8-bit read/write register that stores
the twos complement of the internal temperature upper limit
that causes an interrupt and activates the INT/INT output (if
enabled). For this to happen, the measured internal temperature
value has to be greater than the value in this register. As it is an
8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C. The default
value is 100°C.
Positive Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec)
Negative Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec) – 256
Table 54. Internal THIGH Limit
D7
D7
01
1
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
11
D1
D1
11
D0
D0
11
Default settings at power-up.
VDD VLOW Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x24]
This limit register is an 8-bit read/write register that stores the
VDD lower limit that causes an interrupt and activates the INT/
INT output (if enabled). For this to happen, the measured VDD
value has to be less than or equal to the value in this register.
The default value is 2.7 V.
Table 53. VDD VLOW Limit
D7
D7
01
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
11
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
11
D0
D0
01
D5
D5
11
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
11
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
Default settings at power-up.
Internal TLOW Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x26]
This limit register is an 8-bit, read/write register that stores the
twos complement of the internal temperature lower limit that
causes an interrupt and activates the INT/INT output (if enabled).
For this to happen, the measured internal temperature value has
to be more negative than or equal to the value in this register.
As it is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C. The
default value is −55°C.
Positive Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec)
Negative Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec) – 256
Table 52. VDD VHIGH Limit
D7
D7
11
D6
D6
11
Table 55. Internal TLOW Limit
D7
D7
11
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
11
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
11
Default settings at power-up.
External THIGH Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x27]
This limit register is an 8-bit, read/write register that stores
the twos complement of the external temperature upper limit
that causes an interrupt and activates the INT/INT output (if
enabled). For this to happen, the measured external temperature value has to be greater than the value in this register. As it
is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C. The
default value is −1°C.
Positive Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec)
Negative Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec) – 256
Default settings at power-up.
Table 56. External THIGH Limit
D7
D7
11
1
D6
D6
11
D5
D5
11
Default settings at power-up.
Rev. B | Page 33 of 44
D4
D4
11
D3
D3
11
D2
D2
11
D1
D1
11
D0
D0
11
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Manufacturer’s ID Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x4E]
This register contains the manufacturers identification number.
Analog Devices, Inc.’s ID is 0x41.
External TLOW Limit Register (Read/Write) [Address 0x28]
This limit register is an 8-bit, read/write register that stores the
twos complement of the external temperature lower limit that
causes an interrupt and activates the INT/INT output (if enabled).
For this to happen, the measured external temperature value
has to be more negative than or equal to the value in this register. As it is an 8-bit register, the temperature resolution is 1°C.
The default value is 0°C.
Silicon Revision Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x4F]
This register is divided into the 4 LSBs representing the stepping
and the 4 MSBs representing the version. The stepping contains
the manufacturer’s code for minor revisions or steppings to the
silicon. The version is the ADT7316/ADT7317/ ADT7318
version number.
Positive Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec)
Negative Temperature = Limit Register Code (dec) – 256
SPI Lock Status Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x7F]
Bit D0 (LSB) of this read-only register indicates whether the SPI
interface is locked. Writing to this register causes the device to
malfunction. The default value is 0x00.
Table 57. External TLOW Limit
D7
D7
01
1
D6
D6
01
D5
D5
01
D4
D4
01
D3
D3
01
D2
D2
01
D1
D1
01
D0
D0
01
0 = I2C interface.
1 = SPI interface selected and locked.
Default settings at power-up.
Device ID Register (Read-Only) [Address 0x4D]
This 8-bit, read-only register indicates which part the device is
in the model range. ADT7316 = 0x01, ADT7317 = 0x09, and
ADT7318 = 0x05.
VDD
ADT7316/
ADT7317/
ADT7318
VDD
10kΩ
10kΩ
CS
SDA
I2C ADDRESS = 1001 000
02661-049
SCL
ADD
Figure 48. Typical I2C Interface Connection
ADT7316/
ADT7317/
ADT7318
LOCK AND
SELECT SPI
CS
VDD
820Ω
820Ω
820Ω
SPI FRAMING
EDGE
DIN
02661-050
SCLK
DOUT
Figure 49. Typical SPI Interface Connection
Rev. B | Page 34 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
A
CS
(START HIGH)
C
B
SPI LOCKED ON
THIRD RISING EDGE
A
SPI FRAMING
EDGE
C
B
SPI LOCKED ON
THIRD RISING EDGE
02661-048
CS
(START LOW)
SPI FRAMING
EDGE
Figure 50. Serial Interface—Selecting and Locking SPI Protocol
1
9
1
9
SCL
1
0
0
1
A2
A1
START BY
MASTER
A0
R/W
P7
P6
ACKNOWLEDGE BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FRAME 1
SERIAL BUS ADDRESS BYTE
P5
P4
P3
P2
P1
P0
ACKNOWLEDGE BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FRAME 2
ADDRESS POINTER REGISTER BYTE
Figure 51. I2C—Writing to the Address Pointer Register to Select a Register for a Subsequent Read Operation
Rev. B | Page 35 of 44
STOP BY
MASTER
02661-051
SDA
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
SERIAL INTERFACE
There are two serial interfaces that can be used on this part, the
I2C and the SPI interface. The device powers up with the serial
interface in I2C mode, but it is not locked into this mode. To
stay in I2C mode, it is recommended that the user ties the CS
line to either VCC or GND. It is not possible to lock the I2C
mode, but it is possible to select and lock the SPI mode.
calculated using CRC-8. The frame clock sequence (FCS)
conforms to CRC-8 by the polynomial:
To select and lock the interface into the SPI mode, a number
of pulses must be sent down the CS (Pin 4) line. The following
section describes how this is done.
1.
The master initiates data transfer by establishing a start
condition, defined as a high-to-low transition on the serial
data line SDA while the serial clock line SCL remains high.
This indicates that an address/data stream follow. All slave
peripherals connected to the serial bus respond to the start
condition and shift in the next 8 bits, consisting of a 7-bit
address (MSB first) plus an R/W bit, which determines the
direction of the data transfer, that is, whether data is to be
written to or read from the slave device. The peripheral
whose address corresponds to the transmitted address
responds by pulling the data line low during the low period
before the ninth clock pulse, known as the acknowledge
bit. All other devices on the bus now remain idle, while the
selected device waits for data to be read from or written to
it. If the R/W bit is 0, the master writes to the slave device.
If the R/W bit is 1, the master reads from the slave device.
2.
Data is sent over the serial bus in sequences of nine clock
pulses, 8 bits of data followed by an acknowledge bit from
the receiver of data. Transitions on the data line must occur
during the low period of the clock signal and remain stable
during the high period, because a low-to-high transition
when the clock is high may be interpreted as a stop signal.
3.
When all data bytes have been read or written, stop conditions are established. In write mode, the master pulls the
data line high during the 10th clock pulse to assert a stop
condition. In read mode, the master device pulls the data
line high during the low period before the ninth clock
pulse. This is known as no acknowledge. The master takes
the data line low during the low period before the 10th
clock pulse, then high during the 10th clock pulse to assert
a stop condition.
C(x) = x8 + x2 + x1 + 1
Consult SMBus for more information.
The serial bus protocol operates as follows:
Once the SPI communication protocol has been locked in, it
cannot be unlocked while the device is still powered up. Bit D0
of the SPI Lock Status register (Address 0x7F) is set to 1 when a
successful SPI interface lock has been accomplished. To reset
the serial interface, the user must power down the part and power
up again. A software reset does not reset the serial interface.
SERIAL INTERFACE SELECTION
The CS line controls the selection between I2C and SPI.
Figure 50 shows the selection process necessary to lock the
SPI interface mode.
To communicate to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 using
the SPI protocol, send three pulses down the CS line, as shown
in Figure 50. On the third rising edge (marked as C in Figure 50),
the part selects and locks the SPI interface. The user is limited
to communicating to the device using the SPI protocol.
As per most SPI standards, the CS line must be low during every
SPI communication to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ ADT7318 and
high all other times. Typical examples of how to connect the
dual interface as I2C or SPI are shown in Figure 48 and Figure 49.
The following sections describe in detail how to use the I2C
and SPI protocols associated with the ADT7316/ADT7317/
ADT7318.
I2C SERIAL INTERFACE
Like all I2C-compatible devices, the ADT7316/ADT7317/
ADT7318 have a 7-bit serial address. The 4 MSBs of this
address for the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 are set to
1001. The 3 LSBs are set by Pin 11, ADD. The ADD pin
can be configured three ways to give three different address
options: low, floating, and high. Setting the ADD pin low
gives a serial bus address of 1001 000, leaving it floating gives
the address 1001 010, and setting it high gives the address
1001 011. The recommended pull-up resistor value is 10 kΩ.
There is a programmable SMBus timeout. When this is enabled
the SMBus times out after 25 ms of no activity. To enable it, set
Bit 6 of the Control Configuration 2 register (Address 0x19). The
power-up default is with the SMBus timeout disabled.
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 support SMBus packet
error checking (PEC) and its use is optional. It is triggered by
supplying the extra clocks for the PEC byte. The PEC byte is
Any number of bytes of data may be transferred over the serial
bus in one operation. However, reads and writes cannot be mixed
in one operation because the type of operation is determined at
the beginning and cannot subsequently be changed without
starting a new operation.
The I2C address set up by the ADD pin is not latched by the device
until after this address has been sent twice. On the eighth SCL
cycle of the second valid communication, the serial bus address
is latched in. This is the SCL cycle directly after the device has
seen its own I2C serial bus address. Any subsequent changes on
this pin have no effect on the I2C serial bus address.
Rev. B | Page 36 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Writing to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
SPI SERIAL INTERFACE
Depending on the register being written to, there are two
different writes for the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318. It is
not possible to do a block write to this part, that is, no I2C
auto-increment.
The SPI serial interface of the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
consists of four wires, CS, SCLK, DIN, and DOUT. The CS is
used to select the device when more than one device is connected
to the serial clock and data lines. The CS is also used to distinguish
between any two separate serial communications (see Figure 58).
The SCLK is used to clock data in and out of the part. The DIN
line is used to write to the registers and the DOUT line is used
to read data back from the registers. The recommended pull-up
resistor value is between 500 Ω to 820 Ω. Strong pull ups are
needed when serial clock speeds (which are close to the maximum
limit) are used or when the SPI interface lines are experiencing
large capacitive loading. Larger resistor values can be used for
pull-up resistors when the serial clock speed is reduced.
Writing to the Address Pointer Register for a Subsequent
Read
To read data from a particular register, the address pointer
register must contain the address of that register. If it does
not, the correct address must be written to the address pointer
register by performing a single-byte write operation, as shown
in Figure 51. The write operation consists of the serial bus address
followed by the address pointer byte. No data is written to any
of the data registers. A read operation is then performed to read
the register.
The part operates in slave mode and requires an externally
applied serial clock to the SCLK input. The serial interface
is designed to allow the part to be interfaced to systems that
provide a serial clock that is synchronized to the serial data.
Writing Data to a Register
All registers are 8-bit registers so only one byte of data can be
written to each register. Writing a single byte of data to one of
these read/write registers consists of the serial bus address, the
data register address written to the address pointer register,
followed by the data byte written to the selected data register.
This is illustrated in Figure 52. To write to a different register,
another start or repeated start is required. If more than one byte
of data is sent in one communication operation, the addressed
register is repeatedly loaded until the last data byte is sent.
There are two types of serial operations, a read and a write.
Command words are used to distinguish between a read and a
write operation, as shown in Table 58. Address auto-increment
is possible in SPI mode.
Table 58. SPI Command Words
Write
0x90 (1001 0000)
Read
0x91 (1001 0001)
Reading Data from the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Reading data from the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 is done
in a 1-byte operation. Reading back the contents of a register is
shown in Figure 56. The register address previously had been
set up by a single byte write operation to the address pointer
register. To read from another register, write to the address
pointer register again to set up the relevant register address.
Therefore, block reads are not possible, that is, no I2C autoincrement.
1
9
1
9
SCL
1
0
0
1
A2
A1
START BY
MASTER
A0
P7
R/W
P6
P5
P4
P3
ACKNOWLEDGE BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
P2
P1
P0
ACKNOWLEDGE BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
FRAME 1
SERIAL BUS ADDRESS BYTE
FRAME 2
ADDRESS POINTER REGISTER BYTE
1
9
SCL (CONTINUED)
SDA (CONTINUED)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
ACKNOWLEDGE BY STOP BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 MASTER
FRAME 3
DATA BYTE
Figure 52. I2C—Writing to the Address Pointer Register Followed by a Single Byte of Data to the Selected Register
Rev. B | Page 37 of 44
02661-052
SDA
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
Write Operation
time. In Figure 54, the register address section provides the first
register address that is written to. Subsequent data bytes are
written into sequential writable registers. Therefore, after each
data byte has been written into a register, the address pointer
register auto-increments its value to the next available register.
The address pointer register auto-increments from Address
0x00 to Address 0x3F and loops back to start all over again at
Address 0x00 when it reaches Address 0x3F.
Figure 54 and Figure 55 show the timing diagrams for a write
operation to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318. Data is clocked
into the registers on the rising edge of SCLK. When the CS line
is high, the DIN and DOUT lines are in three-state mode. Only
when the CS goes from a high to a low does the part accept any
data on the DIN line. In SPI mode, the address pointer register
is capable of an auto-increment to the next register in the register
map without having to load the address pointer register each
1
9
1
9
SCL
1
0
0
1
A2
A1
A0
R/W
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
ACKNOWLEDGE BY
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
START BY
MASTER
FRAME 1
SERIAL BUS ADDRESS BYTE
D1
D0
NO ACKNOWLEDGE BY STOP BY
MASTER MASTER
FRAME 2
SINGLE DATA BYTE FROM ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
02661-053
SDA
Figure 53. I2C — Reading a Single Byte of Data From a Selected Register
CS
1
8
8
1
SCLK
DIN
D6
D7
D5
D3
D4
D2
D1
D7
D0
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
START
WRITE COMMAND
REGISTER ADDRESS
CS (CONTINUED)
1
8
SCLK (CONTINUED)
D7
DIN (CONTINUED)
D6
D3
D4
D5
D1
D2
D0
02661-054
STOP
DATA BYTE
Figure 54. SPI—Writing to the Address Pointer Register Followed by a Single Byte of Data to the Selected Register
CS
1
8
8
1
SCLK
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
STOP
START
WRITE COMMAND
REGISTER ADDRESS
Figure 55. SPI—Writing to the Address Pointer Register to Select a Register for a Subsequent Read Operation
Rev. B | Page 38 of 44
02661-055
DIN
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
CS
1
8
8
1
SCLK
DIN
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
DOUT
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
STOP
READ COMMAND
02661-056
START
DATA BYTE 1
Figure 56. SPI —Reading a Single Byte of Data From a Selected Register
CS
1
8
8
1
SCLK
DIN
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
DOUT
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
START
DATA BYTE 1
READ COMMAND
CS (CONTINUED)
1
8
SCLK (CONTINUED)
DIN (CONTINUED)
DOUT (CONTINUED)
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
02661-057
STOP
DATA BYTE 2
Figure 57. SPI—Reading Two Bytes of Data From Two Sequential Registers
SPI
READ OPERATION
WRITE OPERATION
02661-058
CS
Figure 58. SPI—Correct Use of CS During SPI Communication
Read Operation
Figure 56 and Figure 57 show the timing diagrams necessary
to accomplish correct read operations. To read back from a
register, first write to the address pointer register with the
address of the register to read from, as shown in Figure 53.
Figure 56 shows the procedure for reading back a single byte
of data. The read command is first sent to the part during the
first eight clock cycles. As the read command is being sent,
irrelevant data is output onto the DOUT line. During the
following eight clock cycles, the data contained in the register
selected by the address pointer register is output onto the
DOUT line. Data is output onto the DOUT line on the falling
edge of SCLK. Figure 57 shows the procedure when reading
data from two sequential registers. Multiple data reads are
possible in SPI interface mode as the address pointer register is
auto-incremental. The address pointer register auto-increments
from Address 0x00 to Address 0x3F and loops back to start all
over again at Address 0x00 when it reaches Address 0x3F.
Rev. B | Page 39 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 INT/INT output is an
interrupt line that signals an over-limit/under-limit event on
any of the measurement channels if the interrupt on that event
has not been disabled. The ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 are
slave-only devices and use the SMBus/SPI INT/INT as their
only means to signal other devices that an event has occurred.
The INT/INT pin has an open-drain configuration that allows
the outputs of several devices to be wire-AND’ed together when
the INT/INT pin is active low. Use C6 of the Control Configuration 1 register (Address 0x18) to set the active polarity of the
INT/INT output. The power-up default is active low. The INT/
INT output can be disabled or enabled by setting C5 of the
Control Configuration 1 register (Address 0x18) to 1 or 0,
respectively.
One or more INT/INT outputs can be connected to a common
SMBALERT line connected to the master. When a SMBALERT
line is pulled low by one of the devices, the following procedure
occurs (see Figure 59).
MASTER
RECEIVES
SMBALERT
START
ALERT RESPONSE
ADDRESS
RD ACK DEVICE ADDRESS
MASTER SENDS
ARA AND READ
COMMAND
NO
STOP
ACK
02661-059
SMBUS/SPI INT/INT
DEVICE SENDS
ITS ADDRESS
Figure 59. INT/INT Responds to SMBALERT ARA
1. SMBALERT is pulled low.
2. The master initiates a read operation and sends the alert
response address (ARA = 0001 100). This is a general call
address that must not be used as a specific device address.
The INT/INT output becomes active when either the internal
temperature value, the external temperature value, or the VDD
value exceeds the values in their corresponding THIGH/VHIGH or
TLOW/VLOW registers. The INT/INT output goes inactive again
when a conversion result indicates that all measurement channels
are within their trip limits, and when the status register associated with the out-of-limit event is read. The two interrupt status
registers show which event caused the INT/INT pin to go active.
3. The devices whose INT/INT output is low respond to the
alert response address and the master reads its device
address. Because the device address is 7 bits long, an LSB
of 1 is added. The address of the device is now known and
it can be interrogated in the usual way.
The INT/INT output requires an external pull-up resistor. This
can be connected to a voltage different from VDD provided that
the maximum voltage rating of the INT/INT output pin is not
exceeded. The value of the pull-up resistor depends on the
application but should be large enough to avoid excessive sink
currents at the INT/INT output, which can heat the chip and
affect the temperature reading.
5. Once the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 has responded
to the alert response address, it resets its INT/INT output,
provided that the condition that caused the out-of-limit
event no longer exists and the status register associated with
the out-of-limit event is read. If the SMBALERT line remains
low, the master sends the ARA again. It continues to do this
until all devices whose SMBALERT outputs were low have
responded.
The INT/INT pin behaves the same way as a SMBus alert pin
when the SMBus/I2C interface is selected. It is an open-drain
output and requires a pull-up to VDD. Several INT/INT outputs
can be wire-AND’ed together so that the common line goes low
if one or more of the INT/INT outputs goes low. The polarity
of the INT/INT pin must be set for active low for a number of
outputs to be wire-AND’ed together. The INT/INT output can
operate as a SMBALERT function. Slave devices on the SMBus
typically cannot signal to the master that they want to talk, but
the SMBALERT function allows them to do so. SMBALERT is
used in conjunction with the SMBus general call address.
MASTER
RECEIVES
SMBALERT
START
Rev. B | Page 40 of 44
ALERT RESPONSE
ADDRESS
MASTER SENDS
ARA AND READ
COMMAND
DEVICE ACK
DEVICE
RD ACK ADDRESS
MASTER
ACK
ACK
MASTER
NACK
PEC
NO
ACK
DEVICE SENDS DEVICE SENDS
ITS ADDRESS ITS PEC DATA
Figure 60. INT/INT Responds to SMBALERT ARA with
Packet Error Checking (PEC)
STOP
02661-060
SMBUS Alert Response
4. If more than one devices INT/INT output is low, the one
with the lowest device address has priority, in accordance
with typical SMBus specifications.
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
LAYOUT CONSIDERATIONS
Digital boards can be electrically noisy environments, and
care must be taken to protect the analog inputs from noise,
particularly when measuring the very small voltages from a
remote diode sensor. Take the following precautions:
•
•
Place the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318 as close as
possible to the remote sensing diode. Provided that the
worst noise sources, such as clock generators, data/address
buses, and CRTs are avoided, this distance can be 4 inches
to 8 inches.
Route the D+ and D− tracks close together, in parallel, with
grounded guard tracks on each side. Provide a ground
plane under the tracks if possible.
Use wide tracks to minimize inductance and reduce noise
pickup. A 10 mil track minimum width and spacing is
recommended.
GND
Try to minimize the number of copper/solder joints, which
can cause thermocouple effects. Where copper/ solder joints
are used, make sure that they are in both the D+ and D−
paths and at the same temperature. Thermocouple effects
should not be a major problem as 1°C corresponds to about
240 μV, and thermocouple voltages are about 3 μV/°C of
the temperature difference. Unless there are two thermocouples with a big temperature differential between them,
thermocouple voltages should be much less than 200 mV.
•
Place 0.1 μF bypass and 2200 pF input filter capacitors
close to the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318.
•
If the distance to the remote sensor is more than 8 inches,
the use of the twisted pair cable is recommended. This
works for distances from 6 feet to 12 feet.
•
For really long distances (up to 100 feet), use shielded twisted
pair, such as Belden #8451 microphone cable. Connect the
twisted pair to D+ and D− and the shield to GND close to
the ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318. Leave the remote end
of the shield unconnected to avoid ground loops.
•
Because the measurement technique uses switched current
sources, excessive cable and/or filter capacitance can affect
the measurement. When using long cables, the filter capacitor
may be reduced or removed.
10 MIL
10 MIL
10 MIL
D+
10 MIL
10 MIL
D–
10 MIL
GND
10 MIL
02661-045
•
•
Cable resistance can also introduce errors. Series resistance
of 1 Ω introduces about 0.5°C error.
Figure 61. Arrangement of Signal Tracks
Rev. B | Page 41 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
0.197
0.193
0.189
9
16
0.158
0.154
0.150
1
0.244
0.236
0.228
8
PIN 1
0.069
0.053
0.065
0.049
0.010
0.025
0.004
BSC
COPLANARITY
0.004
0.012
0.008
SEATING
PLANE
0.010
0.006
8°
0°
0.050
0.016
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-137-AB
Figure 62. 16-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [QSOP]
(RQ-16)
Dimensions shown in inches
ORDERING GUIDE
Model
ADT7318ARQ
ADT7318ARQ-REEL
ADT7318ARQ-REEL7
ADT7318ARQZ 1
ADT7318ARQZ-REEL1
ADT7318ARQZ-REEL71
ADT7317ARQ
ADT7317ARQ-REEL
ADT7317ARQ-REEL7
ADT7317ARQZ1
ADT7317ARQZ-REEL1
ADT7317ARQZ-REEL71
ADT7316ARQ
ADT7316ARQ-REEL
ADT7316ARQ-REEL7
ADT7316ARQZ1
ADT7316ARQZ-REEL1
ADT7316ARQZ-REEL71
EVAL-ADT7316EB
1
Temperature Range
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
−40°C to +120°C
DAC Resolution
8-Bits
8-Bits
8-Bits
8-Bits
8-Bits
8-Bits
10-Bits
10-Bits
10-Bits
10-Bits
10-Bits
10-Bits
12-Bits
12-Bits
12-Bits
12-Bits
12-Bits
12-Bits
Package Description
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
16-Lead QSOP
Evaluation Board
Z = Pb-free part.
Rev. B | Page 42 of 44
Package Option
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
RQ-16
Ordering Quantity
98
2,500
1,000
98
2,500
1,000
98
2,500
1,000
98
2,500
1,000
98
1,000
1,000
98
2,500
1,000
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
NOTES
Rev. B | Page 43 of 44
ADT7316/ADT7317/ADT7318
NOTES
©2003–2007 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
C02661-0-1/07(B)
Rev. B | Page 44 of 44
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