LTC2483 16-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Input Current Cancellation and I2C Interface U FEATURES ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Easy Drive Technology Enables Rail-to-Rail Inputs with Zero Differential Input Current Directly Digitizes High Impedance Sensors with Full Accuracy 600nV RMS Noise, Independent of VREF GND to VCC Input/Reference Common Mode Range 2-Wire I2C Interface Simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz Rejection 2ppm (0.25LSB) INL, No Missing Codes 1ppm Offset and 15ppm Full-Scale Error No Latency: Digital Filter Settles in a Single Cycle Single Supply 2.7V to 5.5V Operation Internal Oscillator Six Addresses Available and One Global Address for Synchronization Available in a Tiny (3mm × 3mm) 10-Lead DFN Package U APPLICATIO S ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Direct Sensor Digitizer Weight Scales Direct Temperature Measurement Strain Gauge Transducers Instrumentation Industrial Process Control DVMs and Meters The LTC2483 allows a wide common mode input range (0V to VCC) independent of the reference voltage. The reference can be as low as 100mV or can be tied directly to VCC. The noise level is 600nV RMS independent of VREF. This allows direct digitization of low level signals with 16bit accuracy. The LTC2483 includes an on-chip trimmed oscillator, eliminating the need for external crystals or oscillators and provides 87dB rejection of 50Hz and 60Hz line frequency noise. Absolute accuracy and low drift are automatically maintained through continuous, transparent, offset and full-scale calibration. , LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. No Latency ∆Σ and Easy Drive are trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Patent Pending. U ■ The LTC®2483 combines a 16-bit plus sign No Latency ∆ΣTM analog-to-digital converter with patented Easy DriveTM technology and I2C digital interface. The patented sampling scheme eliminates dynamic input current errors and the shortcomings of on-chip buffering through automatic cancellation of differential input current. This allows large external source impedances and input signals, with rail-torail input range to be directly digitized while maintaining exceptional DC accuracy. TYPICAL APPLICATIO +FS Error vs RSOURCE at IN+ and IN– VCC 1µF 10k IDIFF = 0 VIN+ 1µF SENSE REF+ SCL SDA LTC2483 VIN– 10k VCC GND REF– CA0/F0 CA1 2-WIRE I2C INTERFACE 6 ADDRESSES +FS ERROR (ppm) ■ DESCRIPTIO 80 VCC = 5V = 5V 60 VREF VIN+ = 3.75V – 40 VIN = 1.25V FO = GND 20 TA = 25°C CIN = 1µF 0 –20 –40 –60 2483 TA01 –80 1 10 100 1k RSOURCE (Ω) 10k 100k 2483 TA02 2483f 1 LTC2483 W W W AXI U U ABSOLUTE RATI GS U U W PACKAGE/ORDER I FOR ATIO (Notes 1, 2) Supply Voltage (VCC) to GND ...................... – 0.3V to 6V Analog Input Voltage to GND ....... – 0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V) Reference Input Voltage to GND .. – 0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V) Digital Input Voltage to GND ........ – 0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V) Digital Output Voltage to GND ..... – 0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V) Operating Temperature Range LTC2483C ................................................... 0°C to 70°C LTC2483I ................................................ – 40°C to 85°C Storage Temperature Range ................ – 65°C to 125°C TOP VIEW REF+ 1 10 CA0/F0 VCC 2 9 CA1 REF – 3 11 8 GND IN+ 4 7 SDA IN– 5 6 SCL DD PACKAGE 10-LEAD (3mm × 3mm) PLASTIC DFN TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 43°C/ W EXPOSED PAD (PIN 11) IS GND MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB DD PART MARKING* LBSR ORDER PART NUMBER LTC2483CDD LTC2483IDD Order Options Tape and Reel: Add #TR Lead Free: Add #PBF Lead Free Tape and Reel: Add #TRPBF Lead Free Part Marking: http://www.linear.com/leadfree/ Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges. *The temperature grade is identified by a label on the shipping container. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Notes 3, 4) PARAMETER CONDITIONS Resolution (No Missing Codes) 0.1 ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, –FS ≤ VIN ≤ +FS (Note 5) ● MIN Integral Nonlinearity 5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 5V, VIN(CM) = 2.5V (Note 6) 2.7V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 2.5V, VIN(CM) = 1.25V (Note 6) ● 2 1 10 Offset Error 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN+ = IN– ≤ VCC (Note 13) ● 0.5 2.5 Offset Error Drift 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN+ = IN– ≤ VCC Positive Full-Scale Error 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, IN+ = 0.75VREF, IN– = 0.25VREF Positive Full-Scale Error Drift 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, IN+ = 0.75VREF, IN– = 0.25VREF Negative Full-Scale Error 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, IN– = 0.75VREF, IN+ = 0.25VREF Negative Full-Scale Error Drift 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC Total Unadjusted Error Output Noise , IN– = 0.75VREF, IN+ = 0.25VREF TYP MAX 16 UNITS Bits 10 ● µV nV/°C 25 0.1 ● ppm of VREF ppm of VREF ppm of VREF ppm of VREF/°C 25 ppm of VREF 0.1 ppm of VREF/°C 5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 2.5V, VIN(CM) = 1.25V (Note 6) 5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 5V, VIN(CM) = 2.5V (Note 6) 2.7V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 2.5V, VIN(CM) = 1.25V (Note 6) 15 15 15 ppm of VREF ppm of VREF ppm of VREF 5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V, VREF = 5V, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Note 12) 0.6 µVRMS 2483f 2 LTC2483 U CO VERTER CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Notes 3, 4) PARAMETER CONDITIONS Input Common Mode Rejection DC 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Note 5) ● 140 dB Input Common Mode Rejection 50Hz ±2% 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Note 5) ● 140 dB Input Common Mode Rejection 60Hz ±2% 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Note 5) ● 140 dB Input Normal Mode Rejection 50Hz ±2% 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Notes 5, 7) ● 110 120 dB Input Normal Mode Rejection 60Hz ±2% 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Notes 5, 8) ● 110 120 dB Input Normal Mode Rejection 50Hz/60Hz ±2% 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Notes 5, 9) ● 87 Reference Common Mode Rejection DC 2.5V ≤ VREF ≤ VCC, GND ≤ IN– = IN+ ≤ VCC (Note 5) ● 120 Power Supply Rejection DC VREF = 2.5V, IN– = IN+ = GND Power Supply Rejection, 50Hz ±2% Power Supply Rejection, 60Hz ±2% MIN TYP MAX UNITS dB 140 dB 120 dB VREF = 2.5V, IN– = IN+ = GND (Notes 7, 9) 120 dB VREF = 2.5V, IN– = IN+ = GND (Notes 8, 9) 120 dB U U U U A ALOG I PUT A D REFERE CE The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Note 3) SYMBOL PARAMETER IN+ Absolute/Common Mode IN+ Voltage CONDITIONS GND – 0.3V VCC + 0.3V V IN– Absolute/Common Mode IN– Voltage GND – 0.3V VCC + 0.3V V FS Full Scale of the Differential Input (IN+ – IN–) MIN ● 0.5VREF TYP MAX UNITS V LSB Least Significant Bit of the Output Code ● FS/216 VIN Input Differential Voltage Range (IN+ – IN–) ● –FS +FS V VREF Reference Voltage Range (REF+ ● 0.1 VCC V CS (IN+) IN+ CS (IN–) CS (VREF) Sampling Capacitance 11 pF IN– Sampling Capacitance 11 pF 11 pF VREF Sampling Capacitance DC Leakage Current Sleep Mode, IN+ = GND ● –10 1 10 nA IDC_LEAK (IN–) IN– DC Leakage Current Sleep Mode, IN– = GND ● –10 1 10 nA IDC_LEAK (VREF) REF+, REF– Sleep Mode, VREF = VCC ● –100 1 100 nA IDC_LEAK (IN+) – REF–) IN+ DC Leakage Current 2483f 3 LTC2483 U U I2C DIGITAL I PUTS A D DIGITAL OUTPUTS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Note 3) SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN VIH High Level Input Voltage ● VIL Low Level Input Voltage ● 0.3VCC V VIL(CA1) Low Level Input Voltage for Address Pin ● 0.05VCC V VIH(CA0/F0,CA1) High Level Input Voltage for Address Pins ● RINH Resistance from CA0/F0,CA1 to VCC to Set Chip Address Bit to 1 ● 10 kΩ RINL Resistance from CA1 to GND to Set Chip Address Bit to 0 ● 10 kΩ RINF Resistance from CA0/F0, CA1 to VCC or GND to Set Chip Address Bit to Float ● II Digital Input Current VHYS Hysteresis of Schmitt Trigger Inputs (Note 5) VOL Low Level Output Voltage SDA I = 3mA tOF Output Fall Time from VIHMIN to VILMAX Bus Load CB 10pF to 400pF (Note 14) ● tSP Input Spike Suppression IIN Input Leakage CI Capacitance for Each I/O Pin ● CB Capacitance Load for Each Bus Line CCAX External Capacitive Load on Chip Address Pins (CA0/F0,CA1) for Valid Float VIH(EXT,OSC) High Level CA0/F0 External Oscillator 2.7V ≤ VCC < 5.5V ● VIL(EXT,OSC) Low Level CA0/F0 External Oscillator 2.7V ≤ VCC < 5.5V ● ● 0.1VCC ≤ VIN ≤ VCC TYP MAX 0.7VCC UNITS V 0.95VCC V 2 MΩ –10 10 0.05VCC µA V ● 20+0.1CB 0.4 V 250 ns ● 50 ns ● 1 µA ● 400 pF ● 10 pF 10 pF VCC – 0.5V V 0.5 V U W POWER REQUIRE E TS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Note 3) SYMBOL PARAMETER VCC Supply Voltage ICC Supply Current CONDITIONS MIN ● Conversion Mode (Note 11) Sleep Mode (Note 11) ● ● TYP MAX 5.5 V 160 1 250 2 µA µA 2.7 UNITS 2483f 4 LTC2483 UW TI I G CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Note 3) SYMBOL PARAMETER MAX UNITS fEOSC External Oscillator Frequency Range CONDITIONS ● MIN 10 4000 kHz tHEO External Oscillator High Period ● 0.125 100 µs tLEO External Oscillator Low Period ● 0.125 tCONV_1 Conversion Time ● ● 144.1 Simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz External Oscillator (Note 10) TYP µs 100 146.9 149.9 41036/fEOSC ms ms WU I2C TI I G CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. (Notes 3, 15) SYMBOL PARAMETER fSCL SCL Clock Frequency CONDITIONS ● 0 tHD(SDA) Hold Time (Repeated) START Condition ● 0.6 µs tLOW LOW Period of the SCL Clock Pin ● 1.3 µs tHIGH HIGH Period of the SCL Clock Pin ● 0.6 µs tSU(STA) Set-Up Time for a Repeated START Condition ● 0.6 µs tHD(DAT) Data Hold Time ● 0 tSU(DAT) Data Set-Up Time ● 100 tr Rise Time for Both SDA and SCL Signals (Note 14) ● 20+0.1CB 300 ns tf Fall Time for Both SDA and SCL Signals (Note 14) ● 20+0.1CB 300 ns tSU(STO) Set-Up Time for STOP Condition ● 0.6 Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings are those values beyond which the life of the device may be impaired. Note 2: All voltage values are with respect to GND. Note 3: VCC = 2.7V to 5.5V unless otherwise specified. VREF = REF+ – REF–, VREFCM = (REF+ + REF–)/2, FS = 0.5VREF; VIN = IN+ – IN–, VINCM = (IN+ + IN–)/2. Note 4: Use internal conversion clock or external conversion clock source with fEOSC = 307.2kHz unless otherwise specified. Note 5: Guaranteed by design, not subject to test. Note 6: Integral nonlinearity is defined as the deviation of a code from a straight line passing through the actual endpoints of the transfer curve. The deviation is measured from the center of the quantization band. Note 7: 50Hz fEOSC = 256kHz ±2% (external oscillator). MIN TYP MAX UNITS 400 kHz µs 0.9 ns µs Note 8: 60Hz fEOSC = 307.2kHz ±2% (external oscillator). Note 9: Simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz (internal oscillator) or fEOSC = 280kHz ±2% (external oscillator). Note 10: The external oscillator is connected to the CA0/F0 pin. The external oscillator frequency, fEOSC, is expressed in kHz. Note 11: The converter uses the internal oscillator. Note 12: The output noise includes the contribution of the internal calibration operations. Note 13: Guaranteed by design and test correlation. Note 14: CB = capacitance of one bus line in pF. Note 15: All values refer to VIH(MIN) and VIL(MAX) levels. 2483f 5 LTC2483 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS Integral Nonlinearity (VCC = 5V, VREF = 5V) –45°C 1 25°C 0 85°C –1 –2 3 VCC = 5V VREF = 2.5V VIN(CM) = 1.25V 2 INL (ppm OF VREF) 2 INL (ppm OF VREF) 3 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V Integral Nonlinearity (VCC = 2.7V, VREF = 2.5V) 1 –45°C, 25°C, 90°C 0 –1 2 –3 –1.25 2.5 1 –45°C, 25°C, 90°C 0 –1 –2 –2 –3 –2.5 –2 –1.5 –1 –0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) VCC = 2.7V VREF = 2.5V VIN(CM) = 1.25V 2 INL (ppm OF VREF) 3 Integral Nonlinearity (VCC = 5V, VREF = 2.5V) –0.75 –3 –1.25 1.25 –0.25 0.25 0.75 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) –0.75 1.25 –0.25 0.25 0.75 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 2483 G03 2483 G01 2483 G02 Total Unadjusted Error (VCC = 5V, VREF = 5V) 8 8 85°C 4 –45°C –4 –8 4 –45°C 0 –4 2 –12 –1.25 2.5 –0.75 –4 –12 –1.25 1.25 –0.25 0.25 0.75 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 4 2 1.2 1.8 2483 G07 1.25 5 VCC = 5V, VREF = 5V, VIN = 0V, VIN(CM) = 2.5V 4 TA = 25°C, RMS NOISE = 0.60µV 10,000 CONSECUTIVE READINGS RMS = 0.59µV 12 VCC = 2.7V AVERAGE = –0.19µV VREF = 2.5V 10 VIN = 0V TA = 25°C 3 8 6 4 2 1 0 –1 –2 –3 2 0 –0.25 0.25 0.75 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) Long-Term ADC Readings ADC READING (µV) NUMBER OF READINGS (%) 6 –0.75 2483 G06 14 8 –45°C 0 Noise Histogram (7.5sps) 14 –3 –2.4 –1.8 –1.2 –0.6 0 0.6 OUTPUT READING (µV) 4 85°C 2483 G05 Noise Histogram (6.8sps) 10,000 CONSECUTIVE READINGS 12 RMS = 0.60µV VCC = 5V AVERAGE = –0.69µV VREF = 5V 10 VIN = 0V TA = 25°C 25°C –8 2483 G04 NUMBER OF READINGS (%) 8 –8 –12 –2.5 –2 –1.5 –1 –0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) VCC = 2.7V VREF = 2.5V VIN(CM) = 1.25V 25°C 25°C 0 12 VCC = 5V VREF = 2.5V VIN(CM) = 1.25V 85°C TUE (ppm OF VREF) TUE (ppm OF VREF) 12 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V Total Unadjusted Error (VCC = 2.7V, VREF = 2.5V) TUE (ppm OF VREF) 12 Total Unadjusted Error (VCC = 5V, VREF = 2.5V) –4 –5 0 –3 –2.4 –1.8 –1.2 –0.6 0 0.6 OUTPUT READING (µV) 1.2 1.8 2483 G08 0 10 30 40 20 TIME (HOURS) 50 60 2483 G09 2483f 6 LTC2483 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS RMS Noise vs Input Differential Voltage 0.7 0.6 1.0 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND TA = 25°C 0.9 0.8 RMS Noise vs Temperature (TA) 0.8 0.4 –2.5 –2 –1.5 –1 –0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 INPUT DIFFERENTIAL VOLTAGE (V) 0.7 0.6 –1 0 2 1 3 5 4 VCC = 5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND TA = 25°C OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) RMS NOISE (µV) RMS NOISE (µV) 0.5 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 3.1 3.5 3.9 4.3 VCC (V) 4.7 5.1 0 1 2 3 VREF (V) –0.1 –0.2 –1 –0.1 –0.2 75 90 2483 G16 0 1 3 2 VIN(CM) (V) 5 4 0.2 0.1 Offset Error vs VREF 0.3 REF+ = 2.5V REF– = GND VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND TA = 25°C 0 –0.1 VCC = 5V REF– = GND VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND TA = 25°C 0.2 0.1 0 –0.1 –0.2 –0.3 2.7 6 2483 G15 OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) 0.3 0 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 Offset Error vs VCC 0.1 –0.3 –45 –30 –15 0.1 2483 G14 Offset Error vs Temperature 0.2 0.2 5 4 2483 G13 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN = 0V TA = 25°C –0.3 0.4 5.5 90 Offset Error vs VIN(CM) 0.3 0.9 0.6 75 2483 G12 RMS Noise vs VREF 1.0 0.7 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 2483 G11 VREF = 2.5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND TA = 25°C 0.4 2.7 0.4 –45 –30 –15 6 VIN(CM) (V) 0.8 0.3 0.6 0.4 2.5 RMS Noise vs VCC 0.9 0.7 0.5 2483 G10 1.0 0.8 0.5 0.5 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND 0.9 RMS NOISE (µV) RMS NOISE (ppm OF VREF) 0.9 1.0 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V TA = 25°C RMS NOISE (µV) 1.0 RMS Noise vs VIN(CM) –0.2 3.1 3.5 3.9 4.3 VCC (V) 4.7 5.1 5.5 2483 G17 –0.3 0 1 2 3 VREF (V) 4 5 2483.G18 2483f 7 LTC2483 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS On-Chip Oscillator Frequency vs VCC On-Chip Oscillator Frequency vs Temperature 310 310 304 302 VCC = 4.1V VREF = 2.5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND 300 –45 –30 –15 –40 306 304 300 75 90 –140 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 VCC (V) 4.5 5.0 –80 –60 –80 –100 –120 –120 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 FREQUENCY AT VCC (Hz) –140 30600 30650 30700 30800 30750 FREQUENCY AT VCC (Hz) Sleep Mode Current vs Temperature VCC = 5V 160 VCC = 2.7V 140 120 100 –45 –30 –15 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 90 2483 G26 Conversion Current vs Output Data Rate 2.0 500 1.8 450 SUPPLY CURRENT (µA) 1.6 1.4 VCC = 5V 1.0 0.8 0.6 180 2483 G25 2483 G24 1.2 1M 200 VCC = 4.1V DC ±0.7V = 2.5V V –20 INREF + = GND – = GND IN –40 TA = 25°C –100 –140 10k 100k 1k 100 FREQUENCY AT VCC (Hz) Conversion Current vs Temperature CONVERSION CURRENT (µA) –60 10 2483 G23 0 VCC = 4.1V DC ±1.4V VREF = 2.5V IN+ = GND IN– = GND TA = 25°C SLEEP MODE CURRENT (µA) 1 PSRR vs Frequency at VCC REJECTION (dB) REJECTION (dB) –40 5.5 2483 G22 PSRR vs Frequency at VCC –20 –80 –120 2483 G21 0 –60 –100 302 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) VCC = 4.1V DC VREF = 2.5V IN+ = GND IN– = GND TA = 25°C –20 REJECTION (dB) FREQUENCY (kHz) FREQUENCY (kHz) 306 0 VREF = 2.5V VIN = 0V VIN(CM) = GND 308 308 PSRR vs Frequency at VCC VCC = 2.7V VREF = VCC IN+ = GND IN– = GND CA0/F0 = EXT OSC TA = 25°C 400 350 VCC = 5V 300 VCC = 3V 250 200 0.4 150 0.2 0 –45 –30 –15 100 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 90 2483 G27 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 G28 2483f 8 LTC2483 U U U PI FU CTIO S REF+ (Pin 1), REF– (Pin 3): Differential Reference Input. The voltage on these pins can have any value between GND and VCC as long as the reference positive input, REF+, is more positive than the reference negative input, REF –, by at least 0.1V. SDA (Pin 7): Serial Data Output Line of the I2C Interface. In the transmitter mode (Read), the conversion result is output through the SDA pin. It is an open-drain N-channel driver and therefore an external pull-up resistor or current source to VCC is needed. VCC (Pin 2): Positive Supply Voltage. Bypass to GND (Pin 8) with a 1µF tantalum capacitor in parallel with 0.1µF ceramic capacitor as close to the part as possible. GND (Pin 8): Ground. Connect this pin to a ground plane through a low impedance connection. IN+ (Pin 4), IN– (Pin 5): Differential Analog Input. The voltage on these pins can have any value between GND – 0.3V and VCC + 0.3V. Within these limits the converter bipolar input range (VIN = IN+ – IN–) extends from –0.5 • VREF to 0.5 • VREF. Outside this input range the converter produces unique overrange and underrange output codes. SCL (Pin 6): Serial Clock Pin of the I2C Interface. The LTC2483 can only act as a slave and the SCL pin only accepts external serial clock. Data is shifted out the SDA pin on the falling edges of the SCL clock. CA1 (Pin 9): Chip Address Control Pin. The CA1 pin is configured as a three state (LOW, HIGH, or Floating) address control bit for the device I2C address. CA0/F0 (Pin 10): Chip Address Control Pin/External Clock Input Pin. When no transition is detected on the CA0/F0 pin, it is a two state (HIGH or Floating) address control bit for the device I2C address. When the pin is driven by an external clock signal with a frequency fEOSC of at least 10kHz, the converter uses this signal as its system clock and the fundamental digital filter rejection null is located at a frequency fEOSC/5120 and sets the Chip Address CA0 internally to a HIGH. 2483f 9 LTC2483 W FU CTIO AL BLOCK DIAGRA U U 2 1 4 5 VCC REF+ IN+ IN SCL REF+ IN+ I 2C SERIAL INTERFACE 3RD ORDER ∆Σ ADC – IN – REF – SDA CA1 CA0/F0 6 7 9 10 AUTOCALIBRATION AND CONTROL REF– 3 GND 8 INTERNAL OSCILLATOR 2483 FB 2483f 10 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO CONVERTER OPERATION Converter Operation Cycle The LTC2483 is a low power, ∆Σ analog-to-digital converter with an I2C interface. After power on reset, its operation is made up of three states. The converter operating cycle begins with the conversion, followed by the low power sleep state and ends with the data output (see Figure 1). LTC2483 is addressed for a read operation, the device begins outputting the conversion result under control of the serial clock (SCL). There is no latency in the conversion result. The data output is 24 bits long and contains a 16-bit plus sign conversion result. This result is shifted out on the SDA pin under the control of the SCL. Data is updated on the falling edges of SCL allowing the user to reliably latch data on the rising edge of SCL. A new conversion is initiated at the conclusion of a data read operation (read out all 24 bits). POWER ON RESET I2C INTERFACE CONVERSION SLEEP NO ACKNOWLEDGE YES DATA OUTPUT NO STOP OR READ 24-BITS YES 2483 F01 Figure 1. LTC2483 State Transition Diagram Initially, the LTC2483 performs a conversion. Once the conversion is complete, the device enters the sleep state. While in this sleep state, power consumption is reduced by two orders of magnitude. The part remains in the sleep state as long as it is not addressed for a read operation. The conversion result is held indefinitely in a static shift register while the converter is in the sleep state. The LTC2483 communicates through an I2C interface. The I2C interface is a 2-wire open-drain interface supporting multiple devices and masters on a single bus. The connected devices can only pull the bus wires LOW and they never drive the bus HIGH. The bus wires are externally connected to a positive supply voltage via a currentsource or pull-up resistor. When the bus is free, both lines are HIGH. Data on the I2C-bus can be transferred at rates of up to 100kbit/s in the Standard-mode and up to 400kbit/s in the Fast-mode. Each device on the I2C bus is recognized by a unique address stored in that device and can operate as either a transmitter or receiver, depending on the function of the device. In addition to transmitters and receivers, devices can also be considered as masters or slaves when performing data transfers. A master is the device which initiates a data transfer on the bus and generates the clock signals to permit that transfer. At the same time any device addressed is considered a slave. The LTC2483 can only be addressed as a slave. Once addressed, it can transmit the last conversion result. Therefore the serial clock line SCL is an input only and the data line SDA is bidirectional (data out/address in). The device supports the Standard-mode and the Fast-mode for data transfer speeds up to 400kbit/s. Figure 2 shows the definition of timing for Fast/Standard-mode devices on the I2C-bus. The device will not acknowledge an external request during the conversion state. After a conversion is finished, the device is ready to accept a read request. Once the 2483f 11 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO The START and STOP Conditions Data Transferring A START condition is generated by transitioning SDA from HIGH to LOW while SCL is HIGH. The bus is considered to be busy after the START condition. When the data transfer is finished, a STOP condition is generated by transitioning SDA from LOW to HIGH while SCL is HIGH. The bus is free again a certain time after the STOP condition. START and STOP conditions are always generated by the master. After the START condition, the I2C bus is busy and data transfer is set between a master and a slave. Data is transferred over I2C in groups of nine bits (one byte) followed by an acknowledge bit, therefore each group takes nine SCL cycles. The transmitter releases the SDA line during the acknowledge clock pulse and the receiver issues an Acknowledge (ACK) by pulling SDA LOW or leaves SDA HIGH to indicate a Not Acknowledge (NAK) condition. Change of data state can only happen while SCL is LOW. When the bus is in use, it stays busy if a repeated START (Sr) is generated instead of a STOP condition. The repeated START (Sr) conditions are functionally identical to the START (S). SDA tf tLOW tSU;DAT tr tr tHD;STA tSP tr tBUF SCL S tHD;STA tHD;DAT tHIGH tSU;STA Sr tSU;STO P S 2483 F02 Figure 2. Definition of Timing for F/S-Mode Devices on the I2C-Bus 2483f 12 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO LTC2483 Data Format After a START condition, the master sends a 7-bit address followed by a R/W bit. The bit R/W is 1 for a Read request and 0 for a Write request. If the 7-bit address agrees with an LTC2483’s address, that device is selected. When the device is in the conversion state, it does not accept the request and issues a Not-Acknowledge (NAK) by leaving SDA HIGH. A write operation will also generate an NAK signal. If the conversion is complete, it issues an acknowledge (ACK) by pulling SDA LOW. The output register contains the last conversion result. After each conversion is completed, the device automatically enters the sleep state where the supply current is reduced to 1µA. When the LTC2483 is addressed for a Read operation, it acknowledges (by pulling SDA LOW) and acts as a transmitter. The master and receiver can read up to three bytes from the LTC2483. After a complete Read operation (3 bytes), the output register is emptied, a new conversion is initiated, and a following Read request in the same output phase will be NAKed. The LTC2483 output data stream is 24 bits long, shifted out on the falling edges of SCL. The first bit is the conversion result sign bit (SIG), see Tables 1 and 2. This bit is HIGH if VIN ≥ 0. It is LOW if VIN <0. The second bit is the most significant bit (MSB) of the result. The first two bits (SIG and MSB) can be used to indicate over range conditions. If both bits are HIGH, the differential input voltage is above +FS and the following 16 bits are set to LOW to indicate an overrange condition. If both bits are LOW, the input voltage is below –FS and the following 16 bits are set to HIGH to indicate an underrange condition. The function of these two bits is summarized in Table 1. The next 16 bits contain the conversion results in binary two’s complement format. The remaining six bits are LOW. Table 1. LTC2483 Status Bits INPUT RANGE BIT 23 SIG BIT 22 MSB VIN ≥ 0.5 • VREF 1 1 0V ≤ VIN < 0.5 • VREF 1 0 –0.5 • VREF ≤ VIN < 0V 0 1 VIN < – 0.5 • VREF 0 0 As long as the voltage on the IN+ and IN– pins is maintained within the – 0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V) absolute maximum operating range, a conversion result is generated for any differential input voltage VIN from –FS = –0.5 • VREF to +FS = 0.5 • VREF. For differential input voltages greater than +FS, the conversion result is clamped to the value corresponding to the +FS + 1LSB. For differential input voltages below –FS, the conversion result is clamped to the value corresponding to –FS – 1LSB. Table 2. LTC2483 Output Data Format DIFFERENTIAL INPUT VOLTAGE VIN * VIN* ≥ FS** FS** – 1LSB 0.5 • FS** 0.5 • FS** – 1LSB 0 –1LSB – 0.5 • FS** – 0.5 • FS** – 1LSB – FS** VIN* < –FS** BIT 23 SIG 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 BIT 22 MSB 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 BIT 21 BIT 20 BIT 19 … BIT 6 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 … … … … … … … … … … 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 *The differential input voltage VIN = IN+ – IN–. **The full-scale voltage FS = 0.5 • VREF. 2483f 13 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Initiating a New Conversion Easy Drive Input Current Cancellation When the LTC2483 finishes a conversion, it automatically enters the sleep state. Once in the sleep state, the device is ready for a Read operation. After the device acknowledges a Read request, the device exits the sleep state and enters the data output state. The data output state concludes and the LTC2483 starts a new conversion once a STOP condition is issued by the master or all 24-bits of data are read out of the device. The LTC2483 combines a high precision delta-sigma ADC with an automatic differential input current cancellation front end. A proprietary front-end passive sampling network transparently removes the differential input current. This enables external RC networks and high impedance sensors to directly interface to the LTC2483 without external amplifiers. The remaining common mode input current is eliminated by either balancing the differential input impedances or setting the common mode input equal to the common mode reference (see Automatic Input Current Cancellation section). This unique architecture does not require on-chip buffers enabling input signals to swing all the way to ground and up to VCC. Furthermore, the cancellation does not interfere with the transparent offset and full-scale auto-calibration and the absolute accuracy (full scale + offset + linearity) is maintained even with external RC networks. During the data read cycle, a stop command may be issued by the master controller in order to start a new conversion and abort the data transfer. This stop command must be issued during the 9th clock cycle of a byte read when the bus is free (the ACK/NAK cycle). LTC2483 Address The LTC2483 has two address pins, enabling one in 6 possible addresses, as shown in Table 3. Conversion Clock Table 3. LTC2483 Address Assignment CA1 CA0/F0 * Address LOW HIGH 001 01 00 LOW Floating 001 01 01 Floating HIGH 001 01 11 Floating Floating 010 01 00 HIGH HIGH 010 01 10 HIGH Floating 010 01 11 * CA0/F0 is treated as HIGH when driven by a valid external clock. Data Read The data read operation sequence is shown in Figure 5. When the conversion is finished, the device may be addressed for a read operation. At the end of a read operation, a new conversion begins. At the conclusion of the conversion cycle, the next result may be read using the method described above. If the conversion cycle is not concluded and a valid address selects the device, the LTC2483 generates a NAK signal indicating the conversion cycle is in progress. A major advantage the delta-sigma converter offers over conventional type converters is an on-chip digital filter (commonly implemented as a SINC or Comb filter). For high resolution, low frequency applications, this filter is typically designed to reject line frequencies of 50Hz and 60Hz plus their harmonics. The filter rejection performance is directly related to the accuracy of the converter system clock. The LTC2483 incorporates a highly accurate on-chip oscillator. This eliminates the need for external frequency setting components such as crystals or oscillators. 2483f 14 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO automatically detects the presence of an external clock signal at the CA0/F0 pin and turns off the internal oscillator. The chip address for CA0 is internally set HIGH. The frequency fEOSC of the external signal must be at least 10kHz to be detected. The external clock signal duty cycle is not significant as long as the minimum and maximum specifications for the high and low periods tHEO and tLEO are observed. Frequency Rejection Selection (CA0/F0) The LTC2483 internal oscillator provides better than 87dB normal mode rejection at line frequencies of 50Hz and 60Hz and all of their harmonics (up to the 255th) from 48Hz to 62.4Hz. When a fundamental rejection frequency different from 50Hz/60Hz is required or when the converter must be synchronized with an outside source, the LTC2483 can operate with an external conversion clock. The converter 1 … 7 8 9 7-BIT ADDRESS R 1 2 … SGN MSB ACK BY LTC2483 START BY MASTER While operating with an external conversion clock of a frequency fEOSC, the LTC2483 provides better than 110dB 9 1 2 D15 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 LSB ACK BY MASTER NAK BY MASTER SLEEP DATA OUTPUT 2483 F03 Figure 3. Timing Diagram for Reading from the LTC2483 S R/W 7-BIT ADDRESS ACK SLEEP DATA Sr DATA TRANSFERRING P DATA INPUT/OUTPUT CONVERSION 2483 F04 Figure 4. The LTC2483 Conversion Sequence S 7-BIT ADDRESS R ACK READ P S 7-BIT ADDRESS R ACK READ P CONVERSION CONVERSION SLEEP DATA OUTPUT SLEEP DATA OUTPUT CONVERSION 2483 F05 Figure 5. Consecutive Reading at the Same Configuration 2483f 15 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO normal mode rejection in a frequency range of fEOSC/5120 ±4% and its harmonics. The normal mode rejection as a function of the input frequency deviation from fEOSC/5120 is shown in Figure 6. –80 NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) –85 –90 Ease of Use The LTC2483 data output has no latency, filter settling delay or redundant data associated with the conversion cycle. There is a one-to-one correspondence between the conversion and the output data. Therefore, multiplexing multiple analog voltages is easy. The LTC2483 performs offset and full-scale calibrations every conversion cycle. This calibration is transparent to the user and has no effect on the cyclic operation described above. The advantage of continuous calibration is extreme stability of offset and full-scale readings with respect to time, supply voltage change and temperature drift. –95 –100 –105 –110 –115 –120 –125 –130 –135 –140 –12 –8 –4 0 4 8 12 DIFFERENTIAL INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY DEVIATION FROM NOTCH FREQUENCY fEOSC/5120(%) 2483 F06 Figure 6. LTC2483 Normal Mode Rejection When Using an External Oscillator Power-Up Sequence The LTC2483 automatically enters an internal reset state when the power supply voltage VCC drops below approximately 2V. This feature guarantees the integrity of the conversion result. Whenever an external clock is not present at the CA0/F0 pin, the converter automatically activates its internal oscillator and enters the Internal Conversion Clock mode. CA0/F0 may be tied HIGH or left floating in order to set the chip address. The LTC2483 operation will not be disturbed if the change of conversion clock source occurs during the sleep state or during the data output state while the converter uses an external serial clock. If the change occurs during the conversion state, the result of the conversion in progress may be outside specifications but the following conversions will not be affected. When the VCC voltage rises above this critical threshold, the converter creates an internal power-on-reset (POR) signal with a duration of approximately 4ms. The POR signal clears all internal registers. Following the POR signal, the LTC2483 starts a normal conversion cycle and follows the succession of states described in Figure 1. The first conversion result following POR is accurate within the specifications of the device if the power supply voltage is restored within the operating range (2.7V to 5.5V) before the end of the POR time interval. Table 4 summarizes the duration of the conversion state of each state and the achievable output data rate as a function of fEOSC. Reference Voltage Range The LTC2483 external reference voltage range is 0.1V to VCC. The converter output noise is determined by the Table 4. LTC2483 State Duration STATE CONVERSION OPERATING MODE DURATION Internal Oscillator 50Hz/60Hz Rejection 147ms, Output Data Rate ≤ 6.8 Readings/s External Oscillator CA0/F0 = External Oscillator with Frequency fEOSC Hz (fEOSC/5120 Rejection) 41036/fEOSCs, Output Data Rate ≤ fEOSC/41036 Readings/s 2483f 16 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Input signals applied to IN+ and IN– pins may extend by 300mV below ground and above VCC. In order to limit any fault current, resistors of up to 5k may be added in series with the IN+ and IN– pins without affecting the performance of the devices. The effect of the series resistance on the converter accuracy can be evaluated from the curves presented in the Input Current/Reference Current sections. In addition, series resistors will introduce a temperature dependent offset error due to the input leakage current. A 1nA input leakage current will develop a 1ppm offset error on a 5k resistor if VREF = 5V. This error has a very strong temperature dependency. thermal noise of the front-end circuits, and as such, its value in nanovolts is nearly constant with reference voltage. Since the transition noise (600nV) is much less than the quantization noise (VREF/217), a decrease in the reference voltage will increase the converter resolution. A reduced reference voltage will also improve the converter performance when operated with an external conversion clock (external FO signal) at substantially higher output data rates (see the Output Data Rate section). The reference input is differential. The differential reference input range (VREF = REF+ – REF–) is 100mV to VCC and the common mode reference input range is 0V to VCC. Input Voltage Range Driving the Input and Reference The analog input is truly differential with an absolute/ common mode range for the IN+ and IN– input pins extending from GND – 0.3V to VCC + 0.3V. Outside these limits, the ESD protection devices begin to turn on and the errors due to input leakage current increase rapidly. Within these limits, the LTC2483 converts the bipolar differential input signal, VIN = IN+ – IN–, from – FS to +FS where FS = 0.5 • VREF. Beyond this range, the converter indicates the overrange or the underrange condition using distinct output codes. Since the differential input current cancellation does not rely on an on-chip buffer, current cancellation and DC performance is maintained rail-to-rail. The input and reference pins of the LTC2483 converter are directly connected to a network of sampling capacitors. Depending upon the relation between the differential input voltage and the differential reference voltage, these capacitors are switching between these four pins transferring small amounts of charge in the process. A simplified equivalent circuit is shown in Figure 7. IREF+ VCC RSW (TYP) 10k ILEAK + ( ) VREF I IN+ ILEAK I REF + ILEAK VIN+ RSW (TYP) 10k CEQ 12pF (TYP) ILEAK VCC ( ) = I IN – AVG = AVG = VIN(CM) − VREF(CM) 0.5 • REQ ( ) 2 VIN 2 1.5 • VREF − VINCM + VREFCM 0.5 • VREF • DT 1.5VREF + VREF(CM) – VIN(CM) VIN – − − ≅ 0.5 • REQ 0.5 • REQ VREF • REQ REQ VREF • REQ where: ⎛ REF + + REF – ⎞ + – VREFCM = ⎜ ⎟ , VREF = REF − REF 2 ⎠ ⎝ VIN = IN+ − IN− ⎛ IN+ + IN− ⎞ VINCM = ⎜ ⎟ 2 ⎠ ⎝ RSW (TYP) 10k ILEAK VIN– ILEAK IREF– AVG ( ) VCC IIN+ IIN– For a simple approximation, the source impedance RS driving an analog input pin (IN+, IN–, REF+ or REF–) can be considered to form, together with RSW and CEQ (see Figure 7), a first order passive network with a time constant τ = (RS + RSW) • CEQ. The converter is able to sample the REQ = 2.98MΩ INTERNAL OSCILLATOR ( VCC ) REQ = 0.833 • 1012 / f EOSC EXTERNAL OSCILLATOR ILEAK VREF– RSW (TYP) 10k 2483 F07 DT IS THE DENSITY OF A DIGITAL TRANSITION AT THE MODULATOR OUTPUT WHERE REF– IS INTERNALLY TIED TO GND ILEAK SWITCHING FREQUENCY fSW = 123kHz INTERNAL OSCILLATOR fSW = 0.4 • fEOSC EXTERNAL OSCILLATOR Figure 7. LTC2483 Equivalent Analog Input Circuit 2483f 17 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Automatic Differential Input Current Cancellation In applications where the sensor output impedance is low (up to 10kΩ with no external bypass capacitor or up to 500Ω with 0.001µF bypass), complete settling of the input occurs. In this case, no errors are introduced and direct digitization of the sensor is possible. For many applications, the sensor output impedance combined with external bypass capacitors produces RC time constants much greater than the 580ns required for 1ppm accuracy. For example, a 10kΩ bridge driving a 0.1µF bypass capacitor has a time constant an order of magnitude greater than the required maximum. Historically, settling issues were solved using buffers. These buffers led to increased noise, reduced DC performance (Offset/ Drift), limited input/output swing (cannot digitize signals near ground or VCC), added system cost and increased power. The LTC2483 uses a proprietary switching algorithm that forces the average differential input current to zero independent of external settling errors. This allows accurate direct digitization of high impedance sensors without the need of buffers (see Figures 8 to 10). Additional errors resulting from mismatched leakage currents must also be taken into account. The switching algorithm forces the average input current on the positive input (IIN+) to be equal to the average input current on the negative input (IIN–). Over the complete conversion cycle, the average differential input current (IIN+ – IIN–) is zero. While the differential input current is VINCM + 0.5VIN IN + CPAR ≅ 20pF CEXT LTC2483 RSOURCE VINCM – 0.5VIN IN – CPAR ≅ 20pF CEXT 2483 F08 Figure 8. An RC Network at IN+ and IN– 80 +FS ERROR (ppm) When using the internal oscillator, the LTC2483’s frontend switched-capacitor network is clocked at 123kHz corresponding to an 8.1µs sampling period. Thus, for settling errors of less than 1ppm, the driving source impedance should be chosen such that τ ≤ 8.1µs/14 = 580ns. When an external oscillator of frequency fEOSC is used, the sampling period is 2.5/fEOSC and, for a settling error of less than 1ppm, τ ≤ 0.178/fEOSC. RSOURCE VCC = 5V = 5V 60 VREF VIN+ = 3.75V – = 1.25V V IN 40 TA = 25°C 20 CEXT = 0pF CEXT = 100pF 0 CEXT = 1nF, 0.1µF, 1µF –20 –40 –60 –80 1 10 100 1k RSOURCE (Ω) 10k 100k 2483 F09 Figure 9. +FS Error vs RSOURCE at IN+ and IN– 80 –FS ERROR (ppm) input signal with better than 1ppm accuracy if the sampling period is at least 14 times greater than the input circuit time constant τ. The sampling process on the four input analog pins is quasi-independent so each time constant should be considered by itself and, under worst-case circumstances, the errors may add. VCC = 5V = 5V 60 VREF VIN+ = 1.25V – 40 VIN = 3.75V TA = 25°C 20 CEXT = 1nF, 0.1µF, 1µF 0 CEXT = 100pF –20 CEXT = 0pF –40 –60 –80 1 10 100 1k RSOURCE (Ω) 10k 100k 2483 F10 Figure 10. –FS Error vs RSOURCE at IN+ and IN– 2483f 18 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO zero, the common mode input current (IIN++ IIN–)/2 is proportional to the difference between the common mode input voltage (VINCM) and the common mode reference voltage (VREFCM). In applications where the input common mode voltage is equal to the reference common mode voltage, as in the case of a balance bridge type application, both the differential and common mode input current are zero. The accuracy of the converter is unaffected by settling errors. Mismatches in source impedances between IN+ and IN– also do not affect the accuracy. In applications where the input common mode voltage is constant but different from the reference common mode voltage, the differential input current remains zero while the common mode input current is proportional to the difference between VINCM and VREFCM. For a reference common mode of 2.5V and an input common mode of 1.5V, the common mode input current is approximately 0.74µA. This common mode input current has no effect on the accuracy if the external source impedances tied to IN+ and IN– are matched. Mismatches in these source impedances lead to a fixed offset error but do not affect the linearity or full-scale reading. A 1% mismatch in 1kΩ source resistances leads to a 15ppm shift (74µV) in offset voltage. In applications where the common mode input voltage varies as a function of input signal level (single-ended input, RTDs, half bridges, current sensors, etc.), the common mode input current varies proportionally with input voltage. For the case of balanced input impedances, the common mode input current effects are rejected by the large CMRR of the LTC2483 leading to little degradation in accuracy. Mismatches in source impedances lead to gain errors proportional to the difference between the common mode input voltage and the common mode reference voltage. 1% mismatches in 1kΩ source resistances lead to worst-case gain errors on the order of 15ppm or 1LSB (for 1V differences in reference and input common mode voltage). Table 5 summarizes the effects of mismatched source impedance and differences in reference/input common mode voltages. Table 5. Suggested Input Configuration for LTC2483 BALANCED INPUT RESISTANCES UNBALANCED INPUT RESISTANCES Constant VIN(CM) – VREF(CM) CEXT > 1nF at Both IN+ and IN–. Can Take Large Source Resistance with Negligible Error CEXT > 1nF at Both IN+ and IN–. Can Take Large Source Resistance. Unbalanced Resistance Results in an Offset Which Can be Calibrated Varying VIN(CM) – VREF(CM) CEXT > 1nF at Both IN+ and IN–. Can Take Large Source Resistance with Negligible Error Minimize IN+ and IN– Capacitors and Avoid Large Source Impedance (< 5k Recommended) The magnitude of the dynamic input current depends upon the size of the very stable internal sampling capacitors and upon the accuracy of the converter sampling clock. The accuracy of the internal clock over the entire temperature and power supply range is typically better than 0.5%. Such a specification can also be easily achieved by an external clock. When relatively stable resistors (50ppm/°C) are used for the external source impedance seen by IN+ and IN–, the expected drift of the dynamic current and offset will be insignificant (about 1% of their respective values over the entire temperature and voltage range). Even for the most stringent applications, a one-time calibration operation may be sufficient. In addition to the input sampling charge, the input ESD protection diodes have a temperature dependent leakage current. This current, nominally 1nA (±10nA max), results in a small offset shift. A 1k source resistance will create a 1µV typical and 10µV maximum offset voltage. Reference Current In a similar fashion, the LTC2483 samples the differential reference pins REF+ and REF– transferring small amount of charge to and from the external driving circuits thus producing a dynamic reference current. This current does not change the converter offset, but it may degrade the gain and INL performance. The effect of this current can be analyzed in two distinct situations. For relatively small values of the external reference capacitors (CREF < 1nF), the voltage on the sampling capacitor settles almost completely and relatively large values for the source impedance result in only small errors. Such values for CREF will deteriorate the converter offset and gain 2483f 19 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO performance without significant benefits of reference filtering and the user is advised to avoid them. Larger values of reference capacitors (CREF > 1nF) may be required as reference filters in certain configurations. Such capacitors will average the reference sampling charge and the external source resistance will see a quasi constant reference differential impedance. In the following discussion, it is assumed the input and reference common mode are the same. For the internal oscillator, the related difference resistance is 1.1MΩ and 10 90 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN+ = 3.75V VIN– = 1.25V TA = 25°C 70 60 0 50 CREF = 0.01µF CREF = 0.001µF CREF = 100pF CREF = 0pF 40 30 20 10 0 –10 0 10 CREF = 0.01µF CREF = 0.001µF CREF = 100pF CREF = 0pF –10 –FS ERROR (ppm) 80 +FS ERROR (ppm) the resulting full-scale error is 0.46ppm for each ohm of source resistance driving the REF+ and REF– pins. When CA0/F0 is driven by an external oscillator with a frequency fEOSC (external conversion clock operation), the typical differential reference resistance is 0.30 • 1012/fEOSC Ω and each ohm of source resistance driving the REF+ or REF– pins will result in 1.67 • 10–6 • fEOSCppm gain error. The typical +FS and –FS errors for various combinations of source resistance seen by the REF+ or REF– pins and external capacitance connected to that pin are shown in Figures 11-14. 1k 100 RSOURCE (Ω) 10k 100k –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V –70 V + = 1.25V IN – –80 VIN = 3.75V TA = 25°C –90 10 0 1k 100 RSOURCE (Ω) 10k 100k 2483 F12 2483 F11 Figure 11. +FS Error vs RSOURCE at REF+ or REF– (Small CREF) 400 +FS ERROR (ppm) 0 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN+ = 3.75V VIN– = 1.25V TA = 25°C CREF = 1µF, 10µF –100 CREF = 0.1µF 300 200 CREF = 0.01µF 100 0 –FS ERROR (ppm) 500 Figure 12. –FS Error vs RSOURCE at REF+ or REF– (Small CREF) CREF = 0.01µF –200 CREF = 1µF, 10µF –300 –400 0 200 600 400 RSOURCE (Ω) 800 1000 –500 CREF = 0.1µF VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN+ = 1.25V VIN– = 3.75V TA = 25°C 0 200 600 400 RSOURCE (Ω) 2483 F13 Figure 13. +FS Error vs RSOURCE at REF+ or REF– (Large CREF) 800 1000 2483 F14 Figure 14. –FS Error vs RSOURCE at REF+ or REF– (Large C REF) 2483f 20 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO In addition to this gain error, the converter INL performance is degraded by the reference source impedance. The INL is caused by the input dependent terms –VIN2/(VREF • REQ) – (0.5 • VREF • DT)/REQ in the reference pin current as expressed in Figure 7. When using internal oscillator, every 100Ω of reference source resistance translates into about 0.61ppm additional INL error. When CA0/F0 is driven by an external oscillator with a frequency fEOSC, every 100Ω of source resistance driving REF+ or REF– translates into about 2.18 • 10–6 • fEOSCppm additional INL error. Figure 15 shows the typical INL error due to the source resistance driving the REF+ or REF– pins when large CREF values are used. The user is advised to minimize the source impedance driving the REF+ and REF– pins. In applications where the reference and input common mode voltages are different, extra errors are introduced. For every 1V of the reference and input common mode voltage difference (VREFCM – VINCM) and a 5V reference, each Ohm of reference source resistance introduces an extra (VREFCM – VINCM)/(VREF • REQ) full-scale gain error, which is 0.067ppm when using internal oscillator. If an external clock is used, the corresponding extra gain error is 0.24 • 10–6 • fEOSCppm. The magnitude of the dynamic reference current depends upon the size of the very stable internal sampling capacitors and upon the accuracy of the converter sampling clock. The accuracy of the internal clock over the entire temperature and power supply range is typically better than 0.5%. Such a specification can also be easily achieved by an external clock. When relatively stable resistors (50ppm/°C) are used for the external source impedance seen by REF+ and REF–, the expected drift of the dynamic current gain error will be insignificant (about 1% of its value over the entire temperature and voltage range). Even for the most stringent applications a one-time calibration operation may be sufficient. In addition to the reference sampling charge, the reference pins ESD protection diodes have a temperature dependent leakage current. This leakage current, nominally 1nA (±10nA max), results in a small gain error. A 100Ω source resistance will create a 0.05µV typical and 0.5µV maximum full-scale error. INL (ppm OF VREF) 10 VCC = 5V 8 VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V 6 T = 25°C A 4 CREF = 10µF R = 1k 2 R = 500Ω 0 R = 100Ω –2 –4 –6 –8 –10 – 0.5 – 0.3 0.1 – 0.1 VIN/VREF (V) 0.3 0.5 2483 F15 Figure 15. INL vs DIFFERENTIAL Input Voltage and Reference Source Resistance for CREF > 1µF 2483f 21 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Output Data Rate When using its internal oscillator, the LTC2483 produces up to 6.82sps with simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz rejection. The actual output data rate will depend upon the length of the sleep and data output phases which are controlled by the user and which can be made insignificantly short. When operated with an external conversion clock (CA0/F0 connected to an external oscillator), the LTC2483 output data rate can be increased as desired. The duration of the conversion phase is 41036/fEOSC. If fEOSC = 307.2kHz, the converter notch is set at 60Hz. An increase in fEOSC over the nominal 307.2kHz will translate into a proportional increase in the maximum 3500 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VCC = VREF = 5V VIN = 0V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK 40 First, a change in fEOSC will result in a proportional change in the internal notch position and in a reduction of the converter differential mode rejection at the power line frequency. In many applications, the subsequent performance degradation can be substantially reduced by relying upon the LTC2483’s exceptional common mode rejection and by carefully eliminating common mode to differential mode conversion sources in the input circuit. The user should avoid single-ended input filters and should maintain a very high degree of matching and symmetry in the circuits driving the IN+ and IN– pins. 3000 +FS ERROR (ppm OF VREF) OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) 50 output data rate. The increase in output rate is nevertheless accompanied by three potential effects, which must be carefully considered. 30 TA = 85°C 20 10 2500 TA = 85°C 2000 1500 TA = 25°C 1000 0 500 TA = 25°C –10 0 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VCC = VREF = 5V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F16 Figure 17. +FS Error vs Output Data Rate and Temperature 0 24 –500 22 –1000 20 TA = 25°C TA = 85°C RESOLUTION (BITS) –FS ERROR (ppm OF VREF) Figure 16. Offset Error vs Output Data Rate and Temperature 2483 F17 TA = 25°C –1500 TA = 85°C –2000 –2500 –3000 –3500 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VCC = VREF = 5V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK 18 16 14 12 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F18 Figure 18. –FS Error vs Output Data Rate and Temperature VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VCC = VREF = 5V VIN = 0V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK RES = LOG 2 (VREF/NOISERMS) 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F19 Figure 19. Resolution (NoiseRMS ≤ 1LSB) vs Output Data Rate and Temperature 2483f 22 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Second, the increase in clock frequency will increase proportionally the amount of sampling charge transferred through the input and the reference pins. If large external input and/or reference capacitors (CIN, CREF) are used, the previous section provides formulae for evaluating the effect of the source resistance upon the converter performance for any value of fEOSC. If small external input and/or reference capacitors (CIN, CREF) are used, the effect of the external source resistance upon the LTC2483 typical performance can be inferred from Figures 9, 10, 11 and 12 in which the horizontal axis is scaled by 307200/fEOSC. Third, an increase in the frequency of the external oscillator above 1MHz (a more than 3+ increase in the output data rate) will start to decrease the effectiveness of the internal autocalibration circuits. This will result in a progressive degradation in the converter accuracy and linearity. Typical measured performance curves for output data rates up to 100 readings per second are shown in Figures 16 to 23. In order to obtain the highest possible level of accuracy from this converter at output data rates above 20 readings per second, the user is advised to maximize the power supply voltage used and to limit the maximum ambient operating temperature. In certain circumstances, a reduction of the differential reference voltage may be beneficial. 20 RESOLUTION (BITS) 20 18 TA = 85°C TA = 25°C 16 14 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) 12 VCC = VREF = 5V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK RES = LOG 2 (VREF/INLMAX) 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) OFFSET ERROR (ppm OF VREF) 22 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VIN = 0V 15 CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK TA = 25°C 10 VCC = VREF = 5V 5 0 –5 VCC = 5V, VREF = 2.5V –10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F20 2483 F21 Figure 20. Resolution (INLMAX ≤ 1LSB) vs Output Data Rate and Temperature Figure 21. Offset Error vs Output Data Rate and Reference Voltage 22 24 VCC = VREF = 5V 20 20 VCC = 5V, VREF = 2.5V 18 16 14 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VIN = 0V CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK 12 T = 25°C A RES = LOG 2 (VREF/NOISERMS) 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F22 Figure 22. Resolution (NoiseRMS ≤ 1LSB) vs Output Data Rate and Reference Voltage RESOLUTION (BITS) RESOLUTION (BITS) 22 18 VCC = VREF = 5V 16 VCC = 5V, VREF = 2.5V 14 VIN(CM) = VREF(CM) VIN = 0V 12 CA0/F0 = EXT CLOCK TA = 25°C RES = LOG 2 (VREF/INLMAX) 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 OUTPUT DATA RATE (READINGS/SEC) 2483 F23 Figure 23. Resolution (INLMAX ≤ 1LSB) vs Output Data Rate and Reference Voltage 2483f 23 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Input Bandwidth The combined effect of the internal SINC4 digital filter and of the analog and digital autocalibration circuits determines the LTC2483 input bandwidth. When the internal oscillator is used, the 3dB input bandwidth is 3.3Hz. If an external conversion clock generator of frequency fEOSC is connected to the CA0/F0 pin, the 3dB input bandwidth is 11.8 • 10–6 • fEOSC. Due to the complex filtering and calibration algorithms utilized, the converter input bandwidth is not modeled very accurately by a first order filter with the pole located at the 3dB frequency. When the internal oscillator is used, the shape of the LTC2483 input bandwidth is shown in Figure 24. When an external oscillator of frequency fEOSC is used, the shape of the LTC2483 input bandwidth can be derived from Figure 24, in which the horizontal axis is scaled by f EOSC/279.2kHz. The conversion noise (600nVRMS typical for VREF = 5V) can be modeled by a white noise source connected to a noise free converter. The noise spectral density is 47nV√Hz for an infinite bandwidth source and 64nV√Hz for a single 0.5MHz pole source. From these numbers, it is clear that particular attention must be given to the design of external amplification circuits. Such circuits face the simultaneous requirements of very low bandwidth (just a few Hz) in order to reduce the output referred noise and relatively high bandwidth (at least 500kHz) necessary to drive the input switched-capacitor network. A possible solution is a high gain, low bandwidth amplifier stage followed by a high bandwidth unity-gain buffer. When external amplifiers are driving the LTC2483, the ADC input referred system noise calculation can be simplified by Figure 25. The noise of an amplifier driving the LTC2483 input pin can be modeled as a band limited white noise source. Its bandwidth can be approximated by the bandwidth of a single pole lowpass filter with a corner frequency fi. The amplifier noise spectral density is ni. From Figure 25, using fi as the x-axis selector, we can find on the y-axis the noise equivalent bandwidth freqi of the input driving amplifier. This bandwidth includes the band limiting effects of the ADC internal calibration and filtering. The noise of the driving amplifier referred to the converter input and including all these effects can be calculated as N = ni • √freqi. The total system noise (referred to the LTC2483 input) can now be obtained by summing as square root of sum of squares the three ADC input referred noise sources: the LTC2483 internal noise, the noise of the IN+ driving amplifier and the noise of the IN– driving amplifier. If the CA0/F0 pin is driven by an external oscillator of frequency fEOSC, Figure 25 can still be used for noise calculation if the x-axis is scaled by fEOSC/307200. For large values of the ratio fEOSC/307200, the Figure 25 plot accuracy begins to decrease, but at the same time the LTC2483 noise floor rises and the noise contribution of the driving amplifiers lose significance. Normal Mode Rejection and Antialiasing One of the advantages delta-sigma ADCs offer over conventional ADCs is on-chip digital filtering. Combined with a large oversampling ratio, the LTC2483 significantly simplifies antialiasing filter requirements. Additionally, the input current cancellation feature of the LTC2483 allows external lowpass filtering without degrading the DC performance of the device. The SINC4 digital filter provides greater than 120dB normal mode rejection at all frequencies except DC and integer multiples of the modulator sampling frequency (fS). The LTC2483’s autocalibration circuits further simplify the antialiasing requirements by additional normal mode signal filtering both in the analog and digital domain. Independent of the operating mode, fS = 256 • fN = 2048 • fOUTMAX where fN is the notch frequency and fOUTMAX is the maximum output data rate. In the internal oscillator mode, fS = 13960Hz. In the external oscillator mode, fS = fEOSC/20. The performance of the normal mode rejection is shown in Figures 26 and 27. The regions of low rejection occurring at integer multiples of fS have a very narrow bandwidth. Magnified details of the normal mode rejection curves are shown in Figure 28 (rejection near DC) and Figure 29 (rejection at fS = 256fN) where fN represents the notch frequency. These curves have been derived for the external oscillator mode but they can be used in all operating modes by appropriately selecting the fN value. 2483f 24 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO 100 –1 60Hz fEOSC = 307.2kHz –2 50Hz fEOSC = 256kHz –3 –4 INTERNAL OSCILLATOR –5 –6 INPUT REFERRED NOISE EQUIVALENT BANDWIDTH (Hz) INPUT SIGNAL ATTENUATION (dB) 0 10 1 0.1 0.1 1 3 4 0 5 2 DIFFERENTIAL INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F24 Figure 25. Input Refered Noise Equivalent Bandwidth of an Input Connected White Noise Source 0 0 –10 –10 INPUT NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) INPUT NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) Figure 24. Input Signal Using the Internal Oscillator –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 –70 –80 –90 –100 –110 –120 –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 –70 –80 –90 –100 –110 –120 0 fS 2fS 3fS 4fS 5fS 6fS 7fS 8fS 9fS 10fS11fS12fS DIFFERENTIAL INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F26 INPUT NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) 0 fN = fEOSC/5120 –10 –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 –70 –80 –90 –100 –110 –120 0 fN 2fN 3fN 4fN 5fN 6fN 7fN INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY (Hz) 8fN 2483 F28 Figure 28. Input Normal Mode Rejection at DC 0 fS 2fS 3fS 4fS 5fS 6fS 7fS 8fS 9fS 10fS DIFFERENTIAL INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F27 Figure 27. Input Normal Mode Rejection at DC (Internal Oscillator) 0 INPUT NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) Figure 26. Input Normal Mode Rejection, External Oscillator (fEOSC = 256kHz) 50Hz Rejection 1 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M INPUT NOISE SOURCE SINGLE POLE EQUIVALENT BANDWIDTH (Hz) 2483 F25 –10 –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 –70 –80 –90 –100 –110 –120 250fN 252fN 254fN 256fN 258fN 260fN 262fN INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F29 Figure 29. Input Normal Mode Rejection at fs = 256fN 2483f 25 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO The user can expect to achieve this level of performance using the internal oscillator as it is demonstrated by Figures 30, 31 and 32. Typical measured values of the normal mode rejection of the LTC2483 operating with an external oscillator and a 60Hz notch setting are shown in Figure 30 superimposed over the theoretical calculated curve. Similarly, the measured normal rejection of the LTC2483 for 50Hz rejection (fEOSC = 256kHz) and 50Hz/ 60Hz rejection (internal oscillator) are shown in Figures 31 and 32. As a result of these remarkable normal mode specifications, minimal (if any) antialias filtering is required in front of the LTC2483. If passive RC components are placed in front of the LTC2483, the input dynamic current should be considered (see Input Current section). In this case, the differential input current cancellation feature of the LTC2483 allows external RC networks without significant degradation in DC performance. Traditional high order delta-sigma modulators, while providing very good linearity and resolution, suffer from potential instabilities at large input signal levels. The proprietary architecture used for the LTC2483 third order modu- lator resolves this problem and guarantees a predictable stable behavior at input signal levels of up to 150% of full scale. In many industrial applications, it is not uncommon to have to measure microvolt level signals superimposed on volt level perturbations and the LTC2483 is eminently suited for such tasks. When the perturbation is differential, the specification of interest is the normal mode rejection for large input signal levels. With a reference voltage VREF = 5V, the LTC2483 has a full-scale differential input range of 5V peak-to-peak. Figures 33 and 34 show measurement results for the LTC2483 normal mode rejection ratio with a 7.5V peak-to-peak (150% of full scale) input signal superimposed over the more traditional normal mode rejection ratio results obtained with a 5V peak-topeak (full scale) input signal. In Figure 33, the LTC2483 uses the external oscillator with the notch set at 60Hz and in Figure 34 it uses the external oscillator with the notch set at 50Hz. It is clear that the LTC2483 rejection performance is maintained with no compromises in this extreme situation. When operating with large input signal levels, the user must observe that such signals do not violate the device absolute maximum ratings. 2483f 26 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO MEASURED DATA CALCULATED DATA –20 –40 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V VIN(P-P) = 5V TA = 25°C – 60 –80 –100 –120 0 15 30 45 60 75 0 NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) 0 –20 –40 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V VIN(P-P) = 5V TA = 25°C – 60 –80 –100 –120 90 105 120 135 150 165 180 195 210 225 240 INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) MEASURED DATA CALCULATED DATA 0 12.5 25 37.5 50 62.5 75 87.5 100 112.5 125 137.5 150 162.5 175 187.5 200 INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F30 2483 F31 Figure 30. Input Normal Mode Rejection vs Input Frequency with Input Perturbation of 100% Full Scale (60Hz Notch fEOSC = 307.2kHz) MEASURED DATA CALCULATED DATA –20 –40 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V VIN(P-P) = 5V TA = 25°C – 60 –80 –100 –120 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) 160 180 200 220 0 NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) 0 Figure 31. Input Normal Mode Rejection vs Input Frequency with Input Perturbation of 100% Full Scale (50Hz Notch fEOSC = 256kHz) VIN(P-P) = 5V VIN(P-P) = 7.5V (150% OF FULL SCALE) –20 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VINCM = 2.5V TA = 25°C –40 – 60 –80 –100 –120 0 15 30 45 60 75 90 105 120 135 150 165 180 195 210 225 240 INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F33 2483 F32 Figure 32. Input Normal Mode Rejection vs Input Frequency with Input Perturbation of 100% Full Scale (Internal Oscillator) Figure 33. Measured Input Normal Mode Rejection vs Input Frequency with Input Perturbation of 150% Full Scale (60Hz Notch fEOSC = 307.2kHz) NORMAL MODE REJECTION (dB) 0 VIN(P-P) = 5V VIN(P-P) = 7.5V (150% OF FULL SCALE) –20 VCC = 5V VREF = 5V VIN(CM) = 2.5V TA = 25°C –40 – 60 –80 –100 –120 0 12.5 25 37.5 50 62.5 75 87.5 100 112.5 125 137.5 150 162.5 175 187.5 200 INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) 2483 F34 Figure 34. Measured Input Normal Mode Rejection vs Input Frequency with Input Perturbation of 150% Full Scale (50Hz Notch fEOSC = 256kHz) 2483f 27 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO /* LTC248X.h Processor setup and Lots of useful defines for configuring the LTC2481, LTC2483, and LTC2485. */ #include <16F73.h> // Device #use delay(clock=6000000) // 6MHz clock //#fuses NOWDT,HS, PUT, NOPROTECT, NOBROWNOUT // Configuration fuses #rom 0x2007={0x3F3A} // Equivalent and more reliable fuse config. #use I2C(master, sda=PIN_C5, scl=PIN_C3, SLOW)// Set up i2c port #include “PCM73A.h” // Various defines #include “lcd.c” // LCD driver functions #define READ 0x01 #define WRITE 0x00 #define LTC248XADDR 0b01001000 // bitwise OR with address for read or write // The one and only LTC248X in this circuit, // with both address lines floating. // Useful defines for the LTC2481 and LTC2485 - OR them together to make the // 8 bit config word. // These do NOT apply to the LTC2483. // Select gain - 1 to 256 (also depends on speed setting) // Does NOT apply to LTC2485. #define GAIN1 0b00000000 // G = 1 (SPD = 0), G = 1 #define GAIN2 0b00100000 // G = 4 (SPD = 0), G = 2 #define GAIN3 0b01000000 // G = 8 (SPD = 0), G = 4 #define GAIN4 0b01100000 // G = 16 (SPD = 0), G = 8 #define GAIN5 0b10000000 // G = 32 (SPD = 0), G = 16 #define GAIN6 0b10100000 // G = 64 (SPD = 0), G = 32 #define GAIN7 0b11000000 // G = 128 (SPD = 0), G = 64 #define GAIN8 0b11100000 // G = 256 (SPD = 0), G = 128 (SPD (SPD (SPD (SPD (SPD (SPD (SPD (SPD = = = = = = = = 1) 1) 1) 1) 1) 1) 1) 1) // Select ADC source - differential input or PTAT circuit #define VIN 0b00000000 #define PTAT 0b00001000 // Select rejection frequency - 50, 55, or 60Hz #define R50 0b00000010 #define R55 0b00000000 #define R60 0b00000100 // Select speed mode #define SLOW 0b00000000 // slow output rate with autozero #define FAST 0b00000001 // fast output rate with no autozero 2483f 28 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO /* LTC2483.c Basic voltmeter test program for LTC2483 Reads LTC2483, converts result to volts, and prints voltage to a 2 line by 16 character LCD display. Mark Thoren Linear Technonlgy Corporation June 23, 2005 Written for CCS PCM compiler, Version 3.182 */ #include “LTC248X.h” /*** read_LTC2483() ************************************************************ This is the funciton that actually does all the work of talking to the LTC2483. Arguments: addr - device address Returns: zero if conversion is in progress, 32 bit signed integer with lower 8 bits clear, 24 bit LTC2483 output word in the upper 24 bits. Data is left-justified for compatibility with the 24 bit LTC2485. the i2c_xxxx() functions do the following: void i2c_start(void): generate an i2c start or repeat start condition void i2c_stop(void): generate an i2c stop condition char i2c_read(boolean): return 8 bit i2c data while generating an ack or nack boolean i2c_write(): send 8 bit i2c data and return ack or nack from slave device These functions are very compiler specific, and can use either a hardware i2c port or software emulation of an i2c port. This example uses software emulation. A good starting point when porting to other processors is to write your own i2c functions. Note that each processor has its own way of configuring the i2c port, and different compilers may or may not have built-in functions for the i2c port. When in doubt, you can always write a “bit bang” function for troubleshooting purposes. The “fourbytes” structure allows byte access to the 32 bit return value: struct fourbytes // Define structure of four consecutive bytes { // To allow byte access to a 32 bit int or float. int8 te0; // int8 te1; // The make32() function in this compiler will int8 te2; // also work, but a union of 4 bytes and a 32 bit int int8 te3; // is probably more portable. }; *******************************************************************************/ signed int32 read_LTC2483(char addr) { struct fourbytes // Define structure of four consecutive bytes { // To allow byte access to a 32 bit int or float. int8 te0; // int8 te1; // The make32() function in this compiler will int8 te2; // also work, but a union of 4 bytes and a 32 bit int int8 te3; // is probably more portable. }; 2483f 29 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO union { signed int32 bits32; struct fourbytes by; } adc_code; // // // // // adc_code.bits32 adc_code.by.te0 adc_code.by.te1 adc_code.by.te2 adc_code.by.te3 all 32 bits byte 0 byte 1 byte 2 byte 3 // Start communication with LTC2483: i2c_start(); if(i2c_write(addr | READ))// If no acknowledge, return zero { i2c_stop(); return 0; } adc_code.by.te3 = i2c_read(); adc_code.by.te2 = i2c_read(); adc_code.by.te1 = i2c_read(); adc_code.by.te0 = 0; i2c_stop(); return adc_code.bits32; } // End of read_LTC2483() /*** initialize() ************************************************************** Basic hardware initialization of controller and LCD, send Hello message to LCD *******************************************************************************/ void initialize(void) { // General initialization stuff. setup_adc_ports(NO_ANALOGS); setup_adc(ADC_OFF); setup_counters(RTCC_INTERNAL,RTCC_DIV_1); setup_timer_1(T1_DISABLED); setup_timer_2(T2_DISABLED,0,1); // This is the important part - configuring the SPI port setup_spi(SPI_MASTER|SPI_L_TO_H|SPI_CLK_DIV_16|SPI_SS_DISABLED); // fast SPI clock CKP = 0; // Set up clock edges - clock idles low, data changes on CKE = 1; // falling edges, valid on rising edges. lcd_init(); delay_ms(6); printf(lcd_putc, “Hello!”); delay_ms(500); } // End of initialize() // Initialize LCD // Obligatory hello message // for half a second /*** main() ******************************************************************** Main program initializes microcontroller registers, then reads the LTC2483 repeatedly *******************************************************************************/ void main() { signed int32 x; // Integer result from LTC2481 float voltage; // Variable for floating point math int16 timeout; initialize(); // Hardware initialization while(1) { delay_ms(1); // Pace the main loop to something more than 1 ms // This is a basic error detection scheme. The LTC2483 will never take more than // 149.9ms to complete a conversion in the 55Hz // rejection mode. 2483f 30 LTC2483 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO // If read_LTC2483() does not return non-zero within this time period, something // is wrong, such as an incorrect i2c address or bus conflict. if((x = read_LTC2483(LTC248XADDR)) != 0) { // No timeout, everything is okay timeout = 0; // reset timer x ^= 0x80000000; // Invert MSB, result is 2’s complement voltage = (float) x; // convert to float voltage = voltage * 5.0 / 2147483648.0;// Multiply by Vref, divide by 2^31 lcd_putc(‘\f’); // Clear screen lcd_gotoxy(1,1); // Goto home position printf(lcd_putc, “V %01.4f”, voltage); // Display voltage } else { ++timeout; } if(timeout > 200) { timeout = 200; // Prevent rollover lcd_gotoxy(1,1); printf(lcd_putc, “ERROR - TIMEOUT”); delay_ms(500); } } // End of main loop } // End of main() U PACKAGE DESCRIPTIO DD Package 10-Lead Plastic DFN (3mm × 3mm) (Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1698) R = 0.115 TYP 6 0.38 ± 0.10 10 0.675 ±0.05 3.50 ±0.05 1.65 ±0.05 2.15 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) 3.00 ±0.10 (4 SIDES) PACKAGE OUTLINE 1.65 ± 0.10 (2 SIDES) PIN 1 TOP MARK (SEE NOTE 6) (DD10) DFN 1103 5 0.25 ± 0.05 0.200 REF 0.50 BSC 2.38 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) 1 0.75 ±0.05 0.00 – 0.05 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC 2.38 ±0.10 (2 SIDES) BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD PITCH AND DIMENSIONS NOTE: 1. DRAWING TO BE MADE A JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE M0-229 VARIATION OF (WEED-2). CHECK THE LTC WEBSITE DATA SHEET FOR CURRENT STATUS OF VARIATION ASSIGNMENT 2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE 3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS 4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.15mm ON ANY SID 5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED 6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN 1 LOCATION ON THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE 2483f Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representation that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights. 31 LTC2483 U TYPICAL APPLICATIO 5V PIC16F73 C8 1µF C7 0.1µF ISOTHERMAL R2 2k 4 TYPE K THERMOCOUPLE JACK (OMEGA MPJ-K-F) 1.7k 1.7k 5 IN+ 3 2 REF VCC SCL LTC2483 SDA 6 7 IN– 10 CA1 GND REF– CAO/FO 9 8 3 5V D7 D6 2 × 16 CHARACTER D5 LCD DISPLAY D4 (OPTREX DMC162488 EN OR SIMILAR) RW CONTRAST GND D0 D1 D2 D3 RS VCC 5V 1 3 R6 5k 2 5V 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 7 6 5 4 3 2 RC7 RC6 RC5 RC4 RC3 RC2 RC1 RC0 RB7 RB6 RB5 RB4 RB3 RB2 RB1 RB0 RA5 RA4 RA3 RA2 RA1 RA0 VDD OSC1 OSC2 MCLR VSS VSS 20 5V C6 0.1µF 9 Y1 6MHz 10 R1 1 10k D1 BAT54 5V 9 19 2483 F35 R3 10k CALIBRATE 2 1 DOWN R4 10k R5 10k UP Figure 35. Voltage Measurement Circuit RELATED PARTS PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION COMMENTS LT1236A-5 Precision Bandgap Reference, 5V 0.05% Max Initial Accuracy, 5ppm/°C Drift LT1460 Micropower Series Reference 0.075% Max Initial Accuracy, 10ppm/°C Max Drift LT1790 Micropower SOT-23 Low Dropout Reference Family 0.05% Max Initial Accuracy, 10ppm/°C Max Drift LTC2400 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADC in SO-8 0.3ppm Noise, 4ppm INL, 10ppm Total Unadjusted Error, 200µA LTC2410 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADC with Differential Inputs LTC2411/LTC2411-1 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADCs with Differential Inputs in MSOP 0.8µVRMS Noise, 2ppm INL 1.45µVRMS Noise, 4ppm INL, Simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz Rejection (LTC2411-1) LTC2413 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADC with Differential Inputs Simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz Rejection, 800nVRMS Noise LTC2415/ LTC2415-1 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADCs with 15Hz Output Rate Pin Compatible with the LTC2410 LTC2414/LTC2418 8-/16-Channel 24-Bit, No Latency ∆Σ ADCs 0.2ppm Noise, 2ppm INL, 3ppm Total Unadjusted Errors 200µA LTC2440 High Speed, Low Noise 24-Bit ∆Σ ADC 3.5kHz Output Rate, 200nV Noise, 24.6 ENOBs LTC2480 16-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Inputs, 600nV Noise, Programmable Gain, and Temperature Sensor Pin Compatible with LTC2482/LTC2484 LTC2481 16-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Inputs, 600nV Noise, I2C Interface, Programmable Gain, and Temperature Sensor Pin Compatible with LTC2483/LTC2485 LTC2482 16-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Inputs Pin Compatible with LTC2480/LTC2484 LTC2484 24-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Inputs Pin Compatible with LTC2480/LTC2482 LTC2485 24-Bit ∆Σ ADC with Easy Drive Inputs, I2C Interface and Temperature Sensor Pin Compatible with LTC2481/LTC2483 2483f 32 Linear Technology Corporation LT/LWI/TP 0805 500 • PRINTED IN USA 1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417 (408) 432-1900 ● FAX: (408) 434-0507 ● www.linear.com © LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2005