AD AD5755ACPZ

Quad Channel, 16-Bit, Serial Input,
4 mA to 20 mA and Voltage Output DAC,
Dynamic Power Control
AD5755
On-chip dynamic power control minimizes package power
dissipation in current mode. This is achieved by regulating the
voltage on the output driver from 7.4 V to 29.5 V using a dc-todc boost converter optimized for minimum on chip power
dissipation.
FEATURES
16-bit resolution and monotonicity
Dynamic power control for thermal management
Current and voltage output pins connectable to a single
terminal
Current output ranges: 0 mA to 20 mA, 4 mA to 20 mA,
or 0 mA to 24 mA
±0.05% total unadjusted error (TUE) maximum
Voltage output ranges (with 20% overrange): 0 V to 5 V, 0 V
to 10 V, ±5 V, and ±10 V
±0.04% total unadjusted error (TUE) maximum
User programmable offset and gain
On-chip diagnostics
On-chip reference (±10 ppm/°C maximum)
−40°C to +105°C temperature range
The part uses a versatile 3-wire serial interface that operates at
clock rates of up to 30 MHz and is compatible with standard
SPI, QSPI™, MICROWIRE™, DSP, and microcontroller interface standards. The interface also features optional CRC-8
packet error checking, as well as a watchdog timer that
monitors activity on the interface.
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
1.
2.
3.
APPLICATIONS
Dynamic power control for thermal management.
16-bit performance.
Multichannel.
COMPANION PRODUCTS
Process control
Actuator control
PLCs
Product Family: AD5755-1, AD5757
External References: ADR445, ADR02
Digital Isolators: ADuM1410, ADuM1411
Power: ADP2302, ADP2303
Additional companion products on the AD5755 product page
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD5755 is a quad, voltage and current output DAC that
operates with a power supply range from −26.4 V to +33 V.
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
AVCC
5.0V
AVSS
–15V
AGND
AVDD
+15V
SWx
DVDD
VBOOST_x
7.4V TO 29.5V
DGND
LDAC
DC-TO-DC
CONVERTER
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
SDO
CLEAR
DIGITAL
INTERFACE
IOUT_x
+
FAULT
ALERT
GAIN REG A
OFFSET REG A
AD1
AD0
REFIN
CURRENT AND
VOLTAGE
OUTPUT RANGE
SCALING
RSET_x
+VSENSE_x
VOUT_x
–VSENSE_x
DAC CHANNEL A
REFERENCE
DAC CHANNEL B
DAC CHANNEL C
AD5755
DAC CHANNEL D
07304-100
REFOUT
DAC A
NOTES
1. x = A, B, C, AND D.
Figure 1.
Rev. 0
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
©2011 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD5755
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Features .............................................................................................. 1 Data Registers ............................................................................. 32 Applications....................................................................................... 1 Control Registers........................................................................ 34 General Description ......................................................................... 1 Readback Operation .................................................................. 37 Product Highlights ........................................................................... 1 Device Features............................................................................... 39 Companion Products ....................................................................... 1 Output Fault................................................................................ 39 Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 1 Voltage Output Short-Circuit Protection................................ 39 Revision History ............................................................................... 2 Digital Offset and Gain Control............................................... 39 Detailed Functional Block Diagram .............................................. 3 Status Readback During a Write .............................................. 39 Specifications..................................................................................... 4 Asynchronous Clear................................................................... 40 AC Performance Characteristics ................................................ 7 Packet Error Checking............................................................... 40 Timing Characteristics ................................................................ 8 Watchdog Timer......................................................................... 40 Absolute Maximum Ratings.......................................................... 11 Output Alert................................................................................ 40 ESD Caution................................................................................ 11 Internal Reference ...................................................................... 40 Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions........................... 12 External Current Setting Resistor ............................................ 40 Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 15 Digital Slew Rate Control.......................................................... 41 Voltage Outputs .......................................................................... 15 Power Dissipation control......................................................... 41 Current Outputs ......................................................................... 19 DC-to-DC Converters............................................................... 41 DC-to-DC Block......................................................................... 23 AIcc Supply Requirements—Static............................................ 43 Reference ..................................................................................... 24 AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing ...................................... 43 General......................................................................................... 25 Applications Information .............................................................. 45 Terminology .................................................................................... 26 Voltage and Current Output Ranges on the Same Terminal 45 Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 28 Current Output Mode with Internal RSET ................................ 45 DAC Architecture....................................................................... 28 Precision Voltage Reference Selection..................................... 45 Power-On State of AD5755....................................................... 28 Driving Inductive Loads............................................................ 46 Serial Interface ............................................................................ 29 Transient Voltage Protection .................................................... 46 Transfer Function ....................................................................... 29 Microprocessor Interfacing....................................................... 46 Registers ........................................................................................... 30 Layout Guidelines....................................................................... 46 Programming Sequence to Write/Enable the Output
Correctly ...................................................................................... 31 Galvanically Isolated Interface ................................................. 47 Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 48 Changing and Reprogramming the Range ............................. 31 Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 48 REVISION HISTORY
5/11—Revision 0: Initial Version
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 48
AD5755
DETAILED FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
AVCC
5.0V
AVSS
–15V
DVDD
DGND
LDAC
CLEAR
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
SDO
AGND
INPUT
SHIFT
REGISTER
AND
CONTROL
STATUS
REGISTER
REFOUT
REFIN
SWA
POWER-ON
RESET
FAULT
ALERT
AVDD
+15V
DC-TO-DC
CONVERTER
POWER
CONTROL
16
INPUT
REG A
+
DAC
REG A
16
7.4V TO 29.5V VSEN1
REG
R2
DAC A
VSEN2
R3
GAIN REG A
OFFSET REG A
IOUT_A
R1
WATCHDOG
TIMER
(SPI ACTIVITY)
RSET_A
+VSENSE_A
VREF
REFERENCE
BUFFERS
VBOOST_A
VOUT
RANGE
SCALING
DAC CHANNEL A
VOUT_A
–VSENSE_A
AD1
AD0
AD5755
RSET_B, RSET_C, RSET_D
DAC CHANNEL D
+VSENSE_B, +VSENSE_C, +VSENSE_D
VOUT_B, VOUT_C, VOUT_D
SWB, SWC, SWD
Figure 2.
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 48
VBOOST_B, VBOOST_C, VBOOST_D
07304-001
IOUT_B, IOUT_C, IOUT_D
DAC CHANNEL B
DAC CHANNEL C
AD5755
SPECIFICATIONS
AVDD = VBOOST_x = 15 V; AVSS = −15 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AVCC = 4.5 V to 5.5 V; dc-to-dc converter disabled; AGND = DGND =
GNDSWx = 0 V; REFIN = 5 V; voltage outputs: RL = 1 kΩ, CL = 220 pF; current outputs: RL = 300 Ω; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless
otherwise noted.
Table 1.
Parameter 1
VOLTAGE OUTPUT
Output Voltage Ranges
Resolution
ACCURACY
Total Unadjusted Error (TUE)
B Version
A Version
TUE Long-Term Stability
Relative Accuracy (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Zero-Scale Error
Zero-Scale TC 2
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
0
0
5
10
V
V
−5
−10
+5
+10
V
V
0
0
6
12
V
V
−6
−12
+6
+12
V
V
16
Test Conditions/Comments
AVDD must have minimum 2.2 V headroom on
output
AVDD/AVSS must have minimum 2.2 V headroom on
output
AVDD must have minimum 2.2 V headroom on
output
AVDD/AVSS must have minimum 2.2 V headroom on
output
Bits
AVSS = −15 V, loaded and unloaded
−0.04
−0.03
−0.25
−0.075
−0.006
−0.008
−1
−0.03
±0.0032
±0.02
35
±0.0012
±0.0012
±0.002
±2
+0.04
+0.03
+0.25
+0.075
+0.006
+0.008
+1
+0.03
Bipolar Zero Error
Bipolar Zero TC2
−0.03
±0.002
±1
+0.03
Offset Error
Offset TC2
−0.03
±0.002
±2
+0.03
Gain Error
Gain TC2
−0.03
±0.004
±3
+0.03
Full-Scale Error
Full-Scale TC2
−0.03
±0.002
±2
+0.03
1
1
20
2.2
1.4
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS2
Headroom
Footroom
Output Voltage Drift vs. Time
Short-Circuit Current
12/6
Load
1
16/8
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
ppm FSR
% FSR
% FSR
LSB
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
V
V
ppm FSR
mA
kΩ
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 48
TA = 25°C
TA = 25°C
Drift after 1000 hours, TJ = 150°C
0 V to 5 V, 0 V to 10 V, ±5 V, ±10 V ranges
On overranges
Guaranteed monotonic
Drift after 1000 hours, ¾ scale output, TJ = 150°C,
AVSS = −15 V
Programmable by user, defaults to 16 mA typical
level
For specified performance
AD5755
Parameter 1
Capacitive Load Stability
DC Output Impedance
DC PSRR
DC Crosstalk
CURRENT OUTPUT
Output Current Ranges
Resolution
ACCURACY (EXTERNAL RSET)
Total Unadjusted Error (TUE)
B Version
A Version
TUE Long-Term Stability
Relative Accuracy (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Offset Error
Offset Error Drift2
Min
Typ
Max
10
2
0.06
50
24
0
0
4
16
24
20
20
−0.05
−0.2
−0.006
−1
−0.05
±0.009
±0.04
100
±0.005
±4
+0.05
+0.2
+0.006
+1
+0.05
±0.004
±3
+0.05
Full-Scale Error
Full-Scale TC2
−0.05
±0.008
±5
+0.05
TUE Long-Term Stability
Relative Accuracy (INL)
Relative Accuracy (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Offset Error3, 4
0.0005
−0.14
−0.11
−0.35
−0.2
+0.04
180
+0.006
+0.004
−1
−0.05
−0.04
+1
+0.05
+0.04
−0.12
−0.06
Gain TC2
Full-Scale Error3, 4
±0.009
+0.14
+0.11
+0.35
+0.2
−0.006
−0.004
Offset Error Drift2
Gain Error
External compensation capacitor of 220 pF
connected
mA
mA
mA
Bits
Assumes ideal resistor
−0.05
A Version
Test Conditions/Comments
Ω
μV/V
μV
Gain Error
Gain TC2
DC Crosstalk
ACCURACY (INTERNAL RSET)
Total Unadjusted Error (TUE) 3, 4
B Version
Unit
nF
μF
−0.14
−0.1
±0.007
±6
±0.002
±9
Full-Scale TC2
±0.007
±14
DC Crosstalk4
−0.011
+0.12
+0.06
+0.14
+0.1
% FSR
% FSR
ppm FSR
% FSR
LSB
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
ppm FSR
% FSR
% FSR
LSB
% FSR
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
% FSR
ppm
FSR/°C
% FSR
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 48
Drift after 1000 hours, TJ = 150°C
Guaranteed monotonic
External RSET
TA = 25°C
TA = 25°C
Drift after 1000 hours, TJ = 150°C
TA = 25°C
Guaranteed monotonic
TA = 25°C
TA = 25°C
TA = 25°C
Internal RSET
AD5755
Parameter 1
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS2
Current Loop Compliance Voltage
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
VBOOST_x
− 2.4
VBOOST_x −
2.7
V
Output Current Drift vs. Time
90
140
Resistive Load
Output Impedance
DC PSRR
REFERENCE INPUT/OUTPUT
Reference Input2
Reference Input Voltage
DC Input Impedance
Reference Output
Output Voltage
Reference TC2
Output Noise (0.1 Hz to 10 Hz)2
Noise Spectral Density2
Output Voltage Drift vs. Time2
Capacitive Load2
Load Current
Short-Circuit Current
Line Regulation2
Load Regulation2
Thermal Hysteresis2
DC-TO-DC
Switch
Switch On Resistance
Switch Leakage Current
Peak Current Limit
Oscillator
Oscillator Frequency
Maximum Duty Cycle
DIGITAL INPUTS2
VIH, Input High Voltage
VIL, Input Low Voltage
Input Current
Pin Capacitance
DIGITAL OUTPUTS2
SDO, ALERT
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOH, Output High Voltage
High Impedance Leakage
Current
High Impedance Output
Capacitance
100
0.02
1000
ppm FSR
ppm FSR
Ω
1
MΩ
μA/V
Test Conditions/Comments
Drift after 1000 hours, ¾ scale output, TJ = 150°C
External RSET
Internal RSET
The dc-to-dc converter has been characterized
with a maximum load of 1 kΩ, chosen such that
compliance is not exceeded; see Figure 52 and
DC-DC MaxV bits in Table 25
4.95
45
5
150
5.05
V
MΩ
For specified performance
4.995
−10
5
±5
7
100
180
1000
9
10
3
95
160
5
5.005
+10
V
ppm/°C
μV p-p
nV/√Hz
ppm
nF
mA
mA
ppm/V
ppm/mA
ppm
ppm
TA = 25°C
0.425
10
0.8
11.5
13
14.5
See Figure 64
See Figure 63
First temperature cycle
Second temperature cycle
This oscillator is divided down to give the dc-to-dc
converter switching frequency
At 410 kHz dc-to-dc switching frequency
JEDEC compliant
V
V
μA
pF
Per pin
Per pin
0.4
V
V
Sinking 200 μA
Sourcing 200 μA
+1
μA
0.8
+1
2.6
2.5
MHz
%
2
DVDD −
0.5
−1
See Figure 63
Ω
nA
A
89.6
−1
At 10 kHz
Drift after 1000 hours, TJ = 150°C
pF
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 48
AD5755
Parameter 1
FAULT
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOH, Output High Voltage
POWER REQUIREMENTS
AVDD
AVSS
DVDD
AVCC
AIDD
AISS
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
0.4
V
V
V
10 kΩ pull-up resistor to DVDD
At 2.5 mA
10 kΩ pull-up resistor to DVDD
33
−10.8
5.5
5.5
10.5
V
V
V
V
mA
7
−8.8
7.5
mA
mA
9.2
11
mA
mA
1
2.7
mA
mA
1
mA
mW
0.6
3.6
9
−26.4
2.7
4.5
8.6
−11
−1.7
DICC
AICC
IBOOST 5
Power Dissipation
173
Voltage output mode on all channels, output
unloaded, over supplies
Current output mode on all channels,
Voltage output mode on all channels, output
unloaded, over supplies
Current output mode on all channels
VIH = DVDD, VIL = DGND, internal oscillator running,
over supplies
Output unloaded, over supplies
Per channel, voltage output mode, output
unloaded, over supplies
Per channel, current output mode
AVDD = 15 V, AVSS = −15 V, dc-to-dc converter
enable, current output mode, outputs disabled
1
Temperature range: −40°C to +105°C; typical at +25°C.
Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.
3
For current outputs with internal RSET, the offset, full-scale, and TUE measurements exclude dc crosstalk. The measurements are made with all four channels enabled
loaded with the same code.
4
See the Current Output Mode with Internal RSET section for more explanation of the dc crosstalk.
5
Efficiency plots in Figure 54, Figure 55, Figure 56, and Figure 57 include the IBOOST quiescent current.
2
AC PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
AVDD = VBOOST_x = 15 V; AVSS = −15 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AVCC = 4.5 V to 5.5 V; dc-to-dc converter disabled; AGND = DGND =
GNDSWx = 0 V; REFIN = 5 V; voltage outputs: RL = 2 kΩ, CL = 220 pF; current outputs: RL = 300 Ω; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless
otherwise noted.
Table 2.
Parameter 1
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
Voltage Output
Output Voltage Settling Time
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
18
13
μs
μs
μs
5 V step to ±0.03% FSR, 0 V to 5 V range
10 V step to ±0.03% FSR, 0 V to 10 V range
100 mV step to 1 LSB (16-bit LSB), 0 V to 10 V
range
0 V to 10 V range
11
Slew Rate
Power-On Glitch Energy
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Energy
Glitch Impulse Peak Amplitude
Digital Feedthrough
DAC to DAC Crosstalk
Output Noise (0.1 Hz to 10 Hz
Bandwidth)
Output Noise Spectral Density
1.9
150
6
25
1
2
0.15
V/μs
nV-sec
nV-sec
mV
nV-sec
nV-sec
LSB p-p
150
nV/√Hz
AC PSRR
83
dB
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 48
0 V to 10 V range
16-bit LSB, 0 V to 10 V range
Measured at 10 kHz, midscale output, 0 V to 10 V
range
200 mV 50 Hz/60 Hz sine wave superimposed on
power supply voltage
AD5755
Parameter 1
Current Output
Output Current Settling Time
Min
Output Noise (0.1 Hz to 10 Hz
Bandwidth)
Output Noise Spectral Density
1
Typ
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
15
See test conditions/
comments
0.15
μs
ms
To 0.1% FSR (0 mA to 24 mA)
See Figure 48, Figure 49, and Figure 50
LSB p-p
16-bit LSB, 0 mA to 24 mA range
0.5
nA/√Hz
Measured at 10 kHz, midscale output, 0 mA to
24 mA range
Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
AVDD = VBOOST_x = 15 V; AVSS = −15 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AVCC = 4.5 V to 5.5 V; dc-to-dc converter disabled; AGND = DGND =
GNDSWx = 0 V; REFIN = 5 V; voltage outputs: RL = 1 kΩ, CL = 220 pF; current outputs: RL = 300 Ω; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless
otherwise noted.
Table 3.
Parameter 1, 2, 3
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
t6
t7
t8
t9
t10
t11
t12
t13
t14
t15
t16
t17
t18
t19 4
Limit at TMIN, TMAX
33
13
13
13
13
198
5
5
20
Unit
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
μs min
5
10
500
See the AC Performance
Characteristics section
10
5
40
21
5
500
800
20
5
μs min
ns min
ns max
μs max
ns min
μs max
ns max
μs min
μs min
ns min
ns min
μs min
μs min
Description
SCLK cycle time
SCLK high time
SCLK low time
SYNC falling edge to SCLK falling edge setup time
24th/32nd SCLK falling edge to SYNC rising edge (see Figure 77)
SYNC high time
Data setup time
Data hold time
SYNC rising edge to LDAC falling edge (all DACs updated or any channel has
digital slew rate control enabled)
SYNC rising edge to LDAC falling edge (single DAC updated)
LDAC pulse width low
LDAC falling edge to DAC output response time
DAC output settling time
CLEAR high time
CLEAR activation time
SCLK rising edge to SDO valid
SYNC rising edge to DAC output response time (LDAC = 0) (all DACs updated)
SYNC rising edge to DAC output response time (LDAC = 0) (single DAC updated)
LDAC falling edge to SYNC rising edge
RESET pulse width
SYNC high to next SYNC low (digital slew rate control enabled) (all DACs updated)
SYNC high to next SYNC low (digital slew rate control disabled) (single DAC
updated)
1
Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.
All input signals are specified with tRISE = tFALL = 5 ns (10% to 90% of DVDD) and timed from a voltage level of 1.2 V.
3
See Figure 3, Figure 4, Figure 5, and Figure 6.
4
This specification applies if LDAC is held low during the write cycle; otherwise, see t9.
2
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 48
AD5755
t1
SCLK
1
2
24
t3
t6
t2
t4
t5
SYNC
t8
t7
SDIN
t19
LSB
MSB
t10
t10
t9
LDAC
t17
t12
t11
VOUT_x
LDAC = 0
t12
t16
VOUT_x
t13
CLEAR
t14
VOUT_x
07304-002
t18
RESET
Figure 3. Serial Interface Timing Diagram
SCLK
1
1
24
24
t6
SYNC
MSB
LSB
MSB
INPUT WORD SPECIFIES
REGISTER TO BE READ
SDO
MSB
LSB
NOP CONDITION
LSB
MSB
UNDEFINDED
LSB
SELECTED REGISTER DATA
CLOCKED OUT
t15
Figure 4. Readback Timing Diagram
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 48
07304-003
SDIN
AD5755
1
2
MSB
SCLK
SDO
R/W
DUT_
AD1
DUT_
AD0
SDO DISABLED
X
X
X
DB15
DB14
DB1
DB0
SDO_
ENAB
STATUS
STATUS
STATUS
STATUS
Figure 5. Status Readback During Write
200µA
TO OUTPUT
PIN
IOL
VOH (MIN) OR
VOL (MAX)
CL
50pF
200µA
IOH
Figure 6. Load Circuit for SDO Timing Diagram
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 48
07304-005
SDIN
07304-004
SYNC
AD5755
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. Transient currents of up to
100 mA do not cause SCR latch-up.
Table 4.
Parameter
AVDD, VBOOST_x to AGND, DGND
AVSS to AGND, DGND
AVDD to AVSS
AVCC to AGND
DVDD to DGND
Digital Inputs to DGND
Digital Outputs to DGND
REFIN, REFOUT to AGND
VOUT_x to AGND
+VSENSE_x, −VSENSE_x to AGND
IOUT_x to AGND
SWx to AGND
AGND, GNDSWx to DGND
Operating Temperature Range (TA)
Industrial1
Storage Temperature Range
Junction Temperature (TJ max)
64-Lead LFCSP
θJA Thermal Impedance2
Power Dissipation
Lead Temperature
Soldering
Rating
−0.3 V to +33 V
+0.3 V to −28 V
−0.3 V to +60 V
−0.3 V to +7 V
−0.3 V to +7 V
−0.3 V to DVDD + 0.3 V or +7 V
(whichever is less)
−0.3 V to DVDD + 0.3 V or +7 V
(whichever is less)
−0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V or +7 V
(whichever is less)
AVSS to VBOOST_x or 33 V if using
the dc-to-dc circuitry
AVSS to VBOOST_x or 33 V if using
the dc-to-dc circuitry
AVSS to VBOOST_x or 33 V if using
the dc-to-dc circuitry
−0.3 to +33 V
−0.3 V to +0.3 V
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.
ESD CAUTION
−40°C to +105°C
−65°C to +150°C
125°C
20°C/W
(TJ max − TA)/θJA
JEDEC industry standard
J-STD-020
1
Power dissipated on chip must be derated to keep the junction temperature
below 125°C.
2
Based on a JEDEC 4-layer test board.
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 48
AD5755
64
63
62
61
60
59
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
51
50
49
RSET_C
RSET_D
REFOUT
REFIN
COMPLV_D
–VSENSE_D
+VSENSE_D
COMPDCDC_D
VBOOST_D
VOUT_D
IOUT_D
AVSS
COMPLV_C
–VSENSE_C
+VSENSE_C
VOUT_C
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
PIN 1
INDICATOR
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
AD5755
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
48
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
COMPDCDC_C
IOUT_C
VBOOST_C
AVCC
SWC
GNDSWC
GNDSWD
SWD
AVSS
SWA
GNDSWA
GNDSWB
SWB
AGND
VBOOST_B
IOUT_B
NOTES
1. THIS EXPOSED PADDLE SHOULD BE CONNECTED TO THE POTENTIALOF THE
AVSS PIN, OR, ALTERNATIVELY, IT CAN BE LEFT ELECTRICALLY UNCONNECTED.
IT IS RECOMMENDED THAT THE PADDLE BE THERMALLY CONNECTED TO A
COPPER PLANE FOR ENHANCED THERMAL PERFORMANCE.
07304-006
POC
RESET
AVDD
COMPLV_A
–VSENSE_A
+VSENSE_A
COMPDCDC_A
VBOOST_A
VOUT_A
IOUT_A
AVSS
COMPLV_B
–VSENSE_B
+VSENSE_B
VOUT_B
COMPDCDC_B
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
RSET_B
RSET_A
REFGND
REFGND
AD0
AD1
SYNC
SCLK
SDIN
SDO
DVDD
DGND
LDAC
CLEAR
ALERT
FAULT
Figure 7. Pin Configuration
Table 5. Pin Function Descriptions
Pin No.
1
Mnemonic
RSET_B
2
RSET_A
3
4
5
6
7
REFGND
REFGND
AD0
AD1
SYNC
8
SCLK
9
10
11
12
13
SDIN
SDO
DVDD
DGND
LDAC
14
CLEAR
Description
An external, precision, low drift 15 kΩ current setting resistor can be connected to this pin to improve the IOUT_B
temperature drift performance. See the Device Features section.
An external, precision, low drift 15 kΩ current setting resistor can be connected to this pin to improve the IOUT_A
temperature drift performance. See the Device Features section.
Ground Reference Point for Internal Reference.
Ground Reference Point for Internal Reference.
Address Decode for the Device Under Test (DUT) on the Board.
Address Decode for the DUT on the Board.
Active Low Input. This is the frame synchronization signal for the serial interface. While SYNC is low, data is
transferred in on the falling edge of SCLK.
Serial Clock Input. Data is clocked into the input shift register on the rising edge of SCLK. This operates at clock
speeds of up to 30 MHz.
Serial Data Input. Data must be valid on the falling edge of SCLK.
Serial Data Output. Used to clock data from the serial register in readback mode. See Figure 4 and Figure 5.
Digital Supply. The voltage range is from 2.7 V to 5.5 V.
Digital Ground.
Load DAC, Active Low Input. This is used to update the DAC register and consequently the DAC outputs. When
tied permanently low, the addressed DAC data register is updated on the rising edge of SYNC. If LDAC is held
high during the write cycle, the DAC input register is updated, but the DAC output update only takes place at
the falling edge of LDAC (see Figure 3). Using this mode, all analog outputs can be updated simultaneously. The
LDAC pin must not be left unconnected.
Active High, Edge Sensitive Input. Asserting this pin sets the output current and voltage to the preprogrammed
clear code bit setting. Only channels enabled to be cleared are cleared. See the Device Features section for more
information. When CLEAR is active, the DAC output register cannot be written to.
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 48
AD5755
Pin No.
15
Mnemonic
ALERT
16
FAULT
17
POC
18
19
20
RESET
AVDD
COMPLV_A
21
−VSENSE_A
22
23
+VSENSE_A
COMPDCDC_A
24
VBOOST_A
25
26
27
28
VOUT_A
IOUT_A
AVSS
COMPLV_B
29
−VSENSE_B
30
31
32
+VSENSE_B
VOUT_B
COMPDCDC_B
33
34
IOUT_B
VBOOST_B
35
36
AGND
SWB
37
38
39
GNDSWB
GNDSWA
SWA
40
AVSS
41
SWD
42
43
GNDSWD
GNDSWC
Description
Active High Output. This pin is asserted when there has been no SPI activity on the interface pins for a
predetermined time. See the Device Features section for more information.
Active Low Output. This pin is asserted low when an open circuit in current mode is detected, a short circuit in
voltage mode is detected, a PEC error is detected, or an overtemperature is detected (see the Device Features
section). Open-drain output.
Power-On Condition. This pin determines the power-on condition and is read during power-on or, alternatively,
after a device reset. If POC = 0, the device is powered up with the voltage and current channels in tristate mode.
If POC = 1, the device is powered up with a 30 kΩ pull-down resistor to ground on the voltage output channel,
and the current channel is in tristate mode.
Hardware Reset, Active Low Input.
Positive Analog Supply. The voltage range is from 9 V to 33 V.
Optional Compensation Capacitor Connection for VOUT_A Output Buffer. Connecting a 220 pF capacitor between
this pin and the VOUT_A pin allows the voltage output to drive up to 2 μF. Note that the addition of this capacitor
reduces the bandwidth of the output amplifier, increasing the settling time.
Sense Connection for the Negative Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_A. This pin must stay within ±3.0 V
of AGND for specified operation.
Sense Connection for the Positive Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_A.
DC-to-DC Compensation Capacitor. Connect a 10 nF capacitor from this pin to ground. Used to regulate the
feedback loop of the Channel A dc-to-dc converter. Alternatively, if using an external compensation resistor,
place a resistor in series with a capacitor to ground from this pin (see the DC-to-DC Converter Compensation
Capacitors and the AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing sections in the Device Features section for more
information).
Supply for Channel A Current Output Stage (see Figure 72). This is also the supply for the VOUT_x stage, which is
regulated to 15 V by the dc-to-dc converter. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown in
Figure 78.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage for DAC Channel A.
Current Output Pin for DAC Channel A.
Negative Analog Supply Pin. Voltage range is from −10.8 V to −26.4 V.
Optional Compensation Capacitor Connection for VOUT_B Output Buffer. Connecting a 220 pF capacitor between
this pin and the VOUT_B pin allows the voltage output to drive up to 2 μF. Note that the addition of this capacitor
reduces the bandwidth of the output amplifier, increasing the settling time.
Sense Connection for the Negative Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_B. This pin must stay within ±3.0 V
of AGND for specified operation.
Sense Connection for the Positive Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_B.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage for DAC Channel B.
DC-to-DC Compensation Capacitor. Connect a 10 nF capacitor from this pin to ground. Used to regulate the
feedback loop of the Channel B dc-to-dc converter. Alternatively, if using an external compensation resistor,
place a resistor in series with a capacitor to ground from this pin (see the DC-to-DC Converter Compensation
Capacitors and the AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing sections in the Device Features section for more
information).
Current Output Pin for DAC Channel B.
Supply for Channel B Current Output Stage (see Figure 72). This is also the supply for the VOUT_x stage, which is
regulated to 15 V by the dc-to-dc converter. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown in
Figure 78.
Ground Reference Point for Analog Circuitry. This must be connected to 0 V.
Switching Output for Channel B DC-to-DC Circuitry. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown
in Figure 78.
Ground Connection for DC-to-DC Switching Circuit. This pin should always be connected to ground.
Ground Connection for DC-to-DC Switching Circuit. This pin should always be connected to ground.
Switching Output for Channel A DC-to-DC Circuitry. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown
in Figure 78.
Negative Analog Supply Pin. The voltage range is from −10.8 V to −26.4 V. This pin can be connected to 0 V if
using the device in unipolar supply mode.
Switching Output for Channel D DC-to-DC Circuitry. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown
in Figure 78.
Ground Connections for DC-to-DC Switching Circuit. This pin should always be connected to ground.
Ground Connections for DC-to-DC Switching Circuit. This pin should always be connected to ground.
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 48
AD5755
Pin No.
44
Mnemonic
SWC
45
46
AVCC
VBOOST_C
47
48
IOUT_C
COMPDCDC_C
49
50
51
VOUT_C
+VSENSE_C
−VSENSE_C
52
COMPLV_C
53
54
55
56
AVSS
IOUT_D
VOUT_D
VBOOST_D
57
COMPDCDC_D
58
59
+VSENSE_D
−VSENSE_D
60
COMPLV_D
61
62
REFIN
REFOUT
63
RSET_D
64
RSET_C
EPAD
Description
Switching Output for Channel C DC-to-DC Circuitry. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown
in Figure 78.
Supply for DC-to-DC Circuitry.
Supply for Channel C Current Output Stage (see Figure 72). This is also the supply for the VOUT_x stage, which is
regulated to 15 V by the dc-to-dc converter. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown in
Figure 78.
Current Output Pin for DAC Channel C.
DC-to-DC Compensation Capacitor. Connect a 10 nF capacitor from this pin to ground. Used to regulate the
feedback loop of the Channel C dc-to-dc converter. Alternatively, if using an external compensation resistor,
place a resistor in series with a capacitor to ground from this pin (see the DC-to-DC Converter Compensation
Capacitors and AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing sections in the Device Features section for more
information).
Buffered Analog Output Voltage for DAC Channel C.
Sense Connection for the Positive Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_C.
Sense Connection for the Negative Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_C. This pin must stay within ±3.0 V
of AGND for specified operation.
Optional Compensation Capacitor Connection for VOUT_C Output Buffer. Connecting a 220 pF capacitor between
this pin and the VOUT_C pin allows the voltage output to drive up to 2 μF. Note that the addition of this capacitor
reduces the bandwidth of the output amplifier, increasing the settling time.
Negative Analog Supply Pin.
Current Output Pin for DAC Channel D.
Buffered Analog Output Voltage for DAC Channel D.
Supply for Channel D Current Output Stage (see Figure 72). This is also the supply for the VOUT_x stage, which is
regulated to 15 V by the dc-to-dc converter. To use the dc-to-dc feature of the device, connect as shown in
Figure 78.
DC-to-DC Compensation Capacitor. Connect a 10 nF capacitor from this pin to ground. Used to regulate the
feedback loop of Channel D dc-to-dc converter. Alternatively, if using an external compensation resistor, place a
resistor in series with a capacitor to ground from this pin (see the DC-to-DC Converter Compensation Capacitors
and AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing sections in the Device Features section for more information).
Sense Connection for the Positive Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_D.
Sense Connection for the Negative Voltage Output Load Connection for VOUT_D. This pin must stay within ±3.0 V
of AGND for specified operation.
Optional Compensation Capacitor Connection for VOUT_D Output Buffer. Connecting a 220 pF capacitor between
this pin and the VOUT_D pin allows the voltage output to drive up to 2 μF. Note that the addition of this capacitor
reduces the bandwidth of the output amplifier, increasing the settling time.
External Reference Voltage Input.
Internal Reference Voltage Output. It is recommended to place a 0.1 μF capacitor between REFOUT and
REFGND.
An external, precision, low drift 15 kΩ current setting resistor can be connected to this pin to improve the IOUT_D
temperature drift performance. See the Device Features section.
An external, precision, low drift 15 kΩ current setting resistor can be connected to this pin to improve the IOUT_C
temperature drift performance. See the Device Features section.
Exposed Pad. This exposed pad should be connected to the potential of the AVSS pin, or, alternatively, it can be
left electrically unconnected. It is recommended that the pad be thermally connected to a copper plane for
enhanced thermal performance.
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 48
AD5755
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
VOLTAGE OUTPUTS
0.0015
0.0015
±10V RANGE
AVDD = +15V
±5V RANGE
AVSS = –15V
+10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE WITH DCDC
0.0010
0.0005
INL (%FSR)
0.0005
0
0
10k
20k
30k
40k
50k
–0.0015
–40
07304-023
0
60k
CODE
–20
0
20
40
60
80
07304-127
–0.0010
–0.0010
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 11. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. Temperature
Figure 8. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. DAC Code
1.0
±10V RANGE
AVDD = +15V
±5V RANGE
AVSS = –15V
+10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE WITH DCDC
0.8
0.6
0.6
DNL ERROR (%FSR)
0.4
0.2
0
–0.2
–0.4
0.4
0.2
–0.2
–0.4
–0.6
–0.8
–0.8
10k
20k
30k
40k
50k
60k
CODE
–1.0
–40
07304-024
–1.0
Figure 9. Differential Nonlinearity Error vs. DAC Code
0.006
0
–0.002
–0.004
–0.006
0
10k
20k
30k
40k
50k
CODE
60k
07304-025
–0.008
–0.010
0
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
100
0.012
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
0.002
–20
Figure 12. Differential Nonlinearity Error vs. Temperature
±10V RANGE
AVDD = +15V
±5V RANGE
AVSS = –15V
+10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE WITH DCDC
0.004
DNL ERROR MAX
DNL ERROR MIN
0
–0.6
0
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
ALL RANGES
0.8
07304-128
1.0
DNL ERROR (LSB)
+10V RANGE MAX INL
±10V RANGE MAX INL
+10V RANGE MIN INL
±10V RANGE MIN INL
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
–0.0005
–0.0005
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
+5V RANGE MAX INL
±5V RANGE MAX INL
+5V RANGE MIN INL
±5V RANGE MIN INL
Figure 10. Total Unadjusted Error vs. DAC Code
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE
±5V RANGE
±10V RANGE
0.010
0.008
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
–0.002
–0.004
–0.006
–40
–20
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 13. Total Unadjusted Error vs. Temperature
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 48
100
07304-129
INL ERROR (%FSR)
0.0010
AD5755
0.010
0.012
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE
±5V RANGE
±10V RANGE
0.008
0.006
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
0.004
0.002
0
–0.002
–0.002
20
40
60
80
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–0.006
–40
0.0010
0.0010
ZERO-SCALE ERROR (%FSR)
0.0015
0
–0.0005
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE
–20
0
20
60
80
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
100
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE
±5V RANGE
±10V RANGE
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
–0.0010
–0.0020
–40
–20
0
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 18. Zero-Scale Error vs. Temperature
0.0020
0.0020
0.0015
0.0015
0.0010
INL EROR (%FSR)
0.0010
0.0005
0
±5V RANGE
±10V RANGE
–0.0005
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
0.0005
0V TO 10V RANGE MAX INL
0V TO 10V RANGE MIN INL
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
0
–0.0005
–0.0010
–0.0015
–0.0015
–20
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
07304-134
BIPOLAR ZERO ERROR (%FSR)
100
–0.0005
0.0025
–0.0020
–40
80
0
Figure 15. Offset Error vs. Temperature
–0.0010
60
0.0005
–0.0015
40
40
Figure 16. Bipolar Zero Error vs. Temperature
–0.0020
10
15
20
25
30
SUPPLY (V)
Figure 19. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. AVDD/|AVSS|
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 48
07304-034
–0.0025
–40
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
07304-133
OFFSET (%FSR)
0.0005
–0.0020
20
Figure 17. Gain Error vs. Temperature
0.0015
–0.0015
0
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 14. Full-Scale Error vs. Temperature
–0.0010
–20
07304-136
0
07304-132
–20
07304-135
–0.004
–0.004
–0.006
–40
+5V RANGE
+10V RANGE
±5V RANGE
±10V RANGE
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
0.008
GAIN ERROR (%FSR)
FULL-SCALE ERROR (%FSR)
0.010
AD5755
1.0
0.6
0.4
0.2
DNL ERROR MAX
DNL ERROR MIN
0
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
±10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
OUTPUT UNLOADED
8
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0.8
DNL ERROR (%FSR)
12
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
ALL RANGES
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
–0.2
–0.4
–0.6
4
0
–4
–8
15
20
25
–12
–5
07304-138
–1.0
10
30
SUPPLY (V)
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0
4
0
–4
15
20
25
30
–12
–5
SUPPLY (V)
0
5
10
15
TIME (µs)
07304-038
–8
–0.008
07304-035
Figure 24. Full-Scale Negative Step
Figure 21. Total Unadjusted Error vs. AVDD/|AVSS|
15
0.0020
8mA LIMIT, CODE = 0xFFFF
16mA LIMIT, CODE = 0xFFFF
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0.0010
0.0005
0
–0.0005
–0.0010
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
±10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
–12
–8
–4
0
4
8
12
16
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
5
0
–5
–10
–15
20
07304-036
–0.0015
–16
0x7FFF TO 0x8000
0x8000 TO 0x7FFF
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
+10V RANGE
TA = 25ºC
10
–20
0
1
2
3
TIME (µs)
Figure 25. Digital-to-Analog Glitch
Figure 22. Source and Sink Capability of Output Amplifier
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 48
4
5
07304-039
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
±10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
OUTPUT UNLOADED
8
0.002
–0.004
10
OUTPUT VOLTAGE DELTA (V)
15
12
0V TO 10V RANGE MAX INL
0V TO 10V RANGE MIN INL
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
0.004
–0.0020
–20
10
Figure 23. Full-Scale Positive Step
0.008
0.0015
5
TIME (µs)
Figure 20. Differential Nonlinearity Error vs. AVDD/|AVSS|
0.006
0
07304-037
–0.8
AD5755
40
20
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (mV)
10
5
0
–5
0
–20
–40
–60
POC = 1
POC = 0
–80
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
±10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
INT_ENABLE = 1
–100
–10
–120
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
8
7
9
10
TIME (s)
–140
07304-040
–15
0
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
VOUT_X PSRR (dB)
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (µV)
–20
0
–100
10
AVDD = +15V
VBOOST = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
–40
–60
–80
–100
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
TIME (µs)
07304-041
–200
25
20
15
10
5
0
–5
–10
–15
0
25
50
75
100
TIME (µs)
125
07304-043
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
–20
–120
10
100
1k
10k
100k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
Figure 30. VOUT_x PSRR vs. Frequency
Figure 27. Peak-to-Peak Noise (100 kHz Bandwidth)
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (mV)
8
0
±10V RANGE OUTPUT UNLOADED
TA = 25°C
100
–25
6
Figure 29. VOUT_x vs. Time on Output Enable
200
–300
4
TIME (µs)
Figure 26. Peak-to-Peak Noise (0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Bandwidth)
300
2
Figure 28. VOUT_x vs. Time on Power-Up
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 48
1M
10M
07304-045
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (µV)
60
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
±10V RANGE
TA = 25°C
OUTPUT UNLOADED
07304-044
15
AD5755
CURRENT OUTPUTS
0.0010
0.0025
0.0005
–0.0005
–0.0015
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
–0.0025
0
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
10000
EXTERNAL RSET
EXTERNAL RSET , WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
INTERNAL RSET
INTERNAL RSET , WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
CODE
0.0006
0.0004
0
–0.0002
–0.0008
–20
0
20
40
60
80
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 34. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, Internal RSET
0.0020
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
–0.2
–0.4
–0.6
0
10000
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
EXTERNAL R SET
EXTERNAL R SET , WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
INTERNAL RSET
INTERNAL RSET , WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
CODE
0.0010
0.0005
0mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX INL
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN INL
0mA TO 24mA RANGE MIN INL
0
–0.0005
–0.0010
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
–0.0015
–0.0020
–40
07304-150
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
–0.8
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX INL
0mA TO 24mA RANGE MAX INL
0mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN INL
0.0015
–20
0
20
40
60
80
07304-153
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY ERROR (%FSR)
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
0.8
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 35. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, External RSET
Figure 32. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Code
0.035
DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY ERROR (%FSR)
1.0
0.030
0.025
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
ALL CHANNELS ENABLED
0.020
0.015
0.010
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
4mA TO
0.005
0
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
20mA,
EXTERNAL R SET
EXTERNAL R SET, WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
INTERNAL RSET
INTERNAL RSET , WITH DC-TO-DC CONVERTER
–0.005
–0.015
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
CODE
60000
07304-151
–0.010
Figure 33. Total Unadjusted Error vs. Code
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
ALL RANGES
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL RSET
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
DNL ERROR MAX
DNL ERROR MIN
0
–0.2
–0.4
–0.6
–0.8
–1.0
–40
–20
0
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
Figure 36. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Temperature
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 48
100
07304-154
DNL ERROR (LSB)
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
–0.0006
1.0
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
20mA RANGE MAX INL
24mA RANGE MAX INL
20mA RANGE MIN INL
20mA RANGE MAX INL
20mA RANGE MAX INL
24mA RANGE MIN INL
–0.0004
Figure 31. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Code
–1.0
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
4mA TO
0mA TO
0.0002
–0.0010
–40
07304-149
INL ERROR (%FSR)
0.0015
0.0008
07304-152
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY ERROR (%FSR)
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
AD5755
0.02
0.03
0.01
0.01
0
–0.01
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
–0.02
–0.03
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
–0.04
–0.05
–0.06
–0.07
–0.08
–40
–20
0
20mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA INTERNAL RSET
24mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
24mA EXTERNAL R SET
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–0.01
–0.02
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
–0.03
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
–0.04
–0.05
80
100
–0.06
–40
Figure 37. Total Unadjusted Error vs. Temperature
0.03
0.0025
0.02
0.0020
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
100
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX INL
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN INL
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
0.0015
INL ERROR (%FSR)
0
–0.01
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
–0.04
–0.05
–0.06
–0.07
–0.08
–40
–20
0
20mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA INTERNAL RSET
24mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
24mA EXTERNAL R SET
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
0.0005
0
–0.0005
–0.0010
–0.0015
80
100
–0.0020
10
Figure 38. Full-Scale Error vs. Temperature
0.015
0.0010
0.010
0.0005
INL ERROR (%FSR)
0.0015
0.005
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
4mA TO
0mA TO
0mA TO
–0.010
–0.015
–0.020
–40
–20
0
20mA INTERNAL R SET
20mA INTERNAL R SET
24mA INTERNAL R SET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
24mA EXTERNAL R SET
20
40
60
TEMPERATURE (°C)
80
25
30
0
–0.0005
–0.0010
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX INL
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN INL
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
–0.0015
–0.0020
100
07304-158
–0.005
20
SUPPLY (V)
Figure 41. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. AVDD/|AVSS|,
Over Supply, External RSET
0.020
0
15
07304-056
–0.03
0.0010
–0.0025
10
15
20
SUPPLY (V)
25
30
Figure 42. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. AVDD/|AVSS|,
Over Supply, Internal RSET
Figure 39. Offset Error vs. Temperature
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 48
07304-057
–0.02
07304-157
FULL-SCALE ERROR (%FSR)
0
Figure 40. Gain Error vs. Temperature
0.01
OFFSET ERROR (%FSR)
–20
20mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA INTERNAL RSET
24mA INTERNAL RSET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
20mA EXTERNAL R SET
24mA EXTERNAL R SET
07304-159
GAIN ERROR (%FSR)
0
07304-155
TOTAL UNADJSUTED ERROR (%FSR)
0.02
AD5755
6
ALL RANGES
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL R SET
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –15V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
0.8
0.6
0.4
4
CURRENT (µA)
0.2
DNL ERROR MAX
DNL ERROR MIN
0
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
RLOAD = 300Ω
5
–0.2
3
2
–0.4
–0.6
1
–1.0
10
15
20
25
30
SUPPLY (V)
0
0
15
20
Figure 46. Output Current vs. Time on Power-Up
4
0.012
2
0.010
0
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
10
–2
–4
–6
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX TUE
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN TUE
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
15
20
SUPPLY (V)
AVDD = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
RLOAD = 300Ω
INT_EN = 1
–8
25
30
–10
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
TIME (µs)
Figure 44. Total Unadjusted Error vs. AVDD, External RSET
07304-063
CURRENT (µA)
0.008
07304-060
Figure 47. Output Current vs. Time on Output Enable
30
0
–0.002
25
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
–0.004
–0.006
–0.008
–0.010
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MAX TUE
4mA TO 20mA RANGE MIN TUE
TA = 25°C
AVSS = –26.4V FOR AVDD > +26.4V
–0.012
–0.014
–0.016
20
IOUT
VBOOST
15
10
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
AVCC = 5V
TA = 25°C
5
–0.018
15
20
SUPPLY (V)
25
30
Figure 45. Total Unadjusted Error vs. AVDD, Internal RSET
0
–0.50 –0.25
07304-061
–0.020
10
0
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00 1.25
TIME (ms)
1.50 1.75 2.00
07304-167
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
10
TIme (µs)
Figure 43. Differential Nonlinearity Error vs. AVDD
TOTAL UNADJUSTED ERROR (%FSR)
5
07304-062
–0.8
07304-162
DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY ERROR (%FSR)
1.0
Figure 48. Output Current and VBOOST_x Settling with DC-to-DC Converter
(See Figure 78)
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 48
AD5755
30
8
HEADROOM VOLTAGE (V)
IOUT, TA = –40°C
IOUT, TA = +25°C
IOUT, TA = +105°C
10
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
AVCC = 5V
0
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
1.25
1.50
1.75
TIME (ms)
4
3
2
1
0
25
–20
20
–40
IOUT_x PSRR (dB)
0
IOUT, AVCC = 4.5V
IOUT, AVCC = 5.0V
IOUT, AVCC = 5.5V
10
0
–0.25
0
0.25
0.50
0.75
–120
10
1.25
1.50
1.75
TIME (ms)
20mA OUTPUT
10mA OUTPUT
8
6
4
2
0
–2
–4
–6
–10
0
2
4
6
8
TIME (µs)
10
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
EXTERNAL R SET
TA = 25°C
12
14
07304-170
AVCC = 5V
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
–8
20
AVDD = +15V
VBOOST = +15V
AVSS = –15V
TA = 25°C
100
1k
10k
100k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
Figure 50. Output Current Settling with DC-to-DC Converter vs. Time and
AVCC (See Figure 78)
10
15
–80
–100
1.00
10
–60
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
07304-169
5
5
Figure 52. DC-to-DC Converter Headroom vs. Output Current (See Figure 78)
30
15
0
CURRENT (mA)
Figure 49. Output Current Settling with DC-to-DC Converter vs. Time and
Temperature (See Figure 78)
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
5
07304-067
0
–0.25
6
Figure 51. Output Current vs. Time with DC-to-DC Converter (See Figure 78)
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 48
Figure 53. IOUT_x PSRR vs. Frequency
1M
10M
07304-068
15
07304-168
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
20
5
CURRENT (AC-COUPLED) (µA)
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
7
25
AD5755
DC-TO-DC BLOCK
80
90
20mA
AVCC = 4.5V
AVCC = 5V
AVCC = 5.5V
70
IOUT_x EFFICIENCY (%)
VBOOST_x EFFICIENCY (%)
80
75
70
65
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
EXTERNAL RSET
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
55
50
0
4
8
12
16
24
20
50
40
30
CURRENT (mA)
20
–40
07304-016
60
60
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
EXTERNAL RSET
AVCC = 5V
fSW = 410 kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
–20
0
20
40
60
80
100
CURRENT (mA)
07304-019
85
Figure 57. Output Efficiency vs. Temperature(See Figure 78)
Figure 54. Efficiency at VBOOST_x vs. Output Current (See Figure 78)
0.6
90
20mA
0.5
SWITCH RESISTANCE (Ω)
80
75
70
60
55
50
–40
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
EXTERNAL RSET
AVCC = 5V
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
–20
0
20
40
60
80
100
Figure 55. Efficiency at VBOOST_x vs. Temperature (See Figure 78)
AVCC = 4.5V
AVCC = 5V
AVCC = 5.5V
50
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
EXTERNAL RSET
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
20
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
CURRENT (mA)
07304-018
IOUT_x EFFICIENCY (%)
60
30
0.2
0
–40
–20
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 58. Switch Resistance vs. Temperature
80
40
0.3
0.1
CURRENT (mA)
70
0.4
Figure 56. Output Efficiency vs. Output Current (See Figure 78)
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 48
100
07304-123
65
07304-017
VBOOST EFFICIENCY (%)
85
AD5755
REFERENCE
5.0050
16
AVDD
REFOUT
TA = 25°C
12
8
6
4
2
0
5.0030
5.0025
5.0020
5.0015
5.0010
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
5.0000
–40
20
40
60
80
100
Figure 62. REFOUT vs. Temperature (When the AD5755 is soldered onto a
PCB, the reference shifts due to thermal shock on the package. The average
output voltage shift is −4 mV. Measurement of these parts after seven days
shows that the outputs typically shift back 2 mV toward their initial values.
This second shift is due to the relaxation of stress incurred during soldering.)
5.002
2
1
0
–1
0
2
4
6
8
10
5.000
4.999
4.998
4.997
4.996
4.995
07304-011
–2
AVDD = 15V
TA = 25°C
5.001
0
2
4
6
8
10
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
Figure 60. REFOUT Output Noise (0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Bandwidth)
07304-014
3
REFERENCE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
AVDD = 15V
TA = 25°C
TIME (s)
Figure 63. REFOUT vs. Load Current
5.00000
150
REFERENCE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
AVDD = 15V
TA = 25°C
100
50
0
–50
–100
0
5
10
15
TIME (ms)
20
07304-012
REFERENCE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (µV)
0
TEMPERATURE (°C)
4
–150
–20
07304-163
0.2
07304-010
0
Figure 59. REFOUT Turn-On Transient
REFERENCE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (µV)
5.0035
5.0005
TIME (ms)
–3
5.0040
4.99995
TA = 25°C
4.99990
4.99985
4.99980
4.99975
4.99970
4.99965
4.99960
10
15
20
25
AVDD (V)
Figure 64. REFOUT vs. Supply
Figure 61. REFOUT Output Noise (100 kHz Bandwidth)
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 48
30
07304-015
VOLTAGE (V)
10
–2
30 DEVICES SHOWN
AVDD = 15V
5.0045
REFERENCE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
14
AD5755
GENERAL
13.4
450
DVCC = 5V
TA = 25°C
400
13.3
350
13.2
FREQUENCY (MHz)
250
200
150
13.0
12.9
12.8
100
12.7
50
0
1
2
3
5
4
SDIN VOLTAGE (V)
12.6
–40
07304-007
0
13.1
DVCC = 5.5V
–20
0
20
40
60
80
07304-020
DICC (µA)
300
100
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 65. DICC vs. Logic Input Voltage
Figure 68. Internal Oscillator Frequency vs. Temperature
10
14.4
8
14.2
6
AIDD
AISS
TA = 25°C
VOUT = 0V
OUTPUT UNLOADED
0
14.0
–2
–4
–6
–8
13.8
13.6
13.4
13.2
–12
10
15
20
25
30
VOLTAGE (V)
07304-008
–10
Figure 66. AIDD/AISS vs. AVDD/|AVSS|
7
5
4
3
2
AIDD
TA = 25°C
IOUT = 0mA
15
20
25
VOLTAGE (V)
30
07304-009
CURRENT (mA)
6
0
10
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
VOLTAGE (V)
Figure 69. Internal Oscillator Frequency vs. DVCC Supply Voltage
8
1
13.0
2.5
DVCC = 5.5V
TA = 25°C
Figure 67. AIDD vs. AVDD
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 48
07304-021
2
FREQUENCY (MHz)
CURRENT (mA)
4
AD5755
TERMINOLOGY
Relative Accuracy or Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
For the DAC, relative accuracy, or integral nonlinearity, is a
measure of the maximum deviation, in LSBs, from the best fit
line through the DAC transfer function. A typical INL vs. code
plot is shown in Figure 8.
Full-Scale Error
Full-scale error is a measure of the output error when full-scale
code is loaded to the DAC register. Ideally, the output should be
full-scale − 1 LSB. Full-scale error is expressed in percent of
full-scale range (% FSR).
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Differential nonlinearity (DNL) is the difference between the
measured change and the ideal 1 LSB change between any two
adjacent codes. A specified differential nonlinearity of ±1 LSB
maximum ensures monotonicity. This DAC is guaranteed
monotonic by design. A typical DNL vs. code plot is shown in
Figure 9.
Full-Scale TC
Full-scale TC is a measure of the change in full-scale error with
changes in temperature and is expressed in ppm FSR/°C.
Monotonicity
A DAC is monotonic if the output either increases or remains
constant for increasing digital input code. The AD5755 is
monotonic over its full operating temperature range.
Negative Full-Scale Error/Zero-Scale Error
Negative full-scale error is the error in the DAC output voltage
when 0x0000 (straight binary coding) is loaded to the DAC
register.
Zero-Scale TC
This is a measure of the change in zero-scale error with a change in
temperature. Zero-scale error TC is expressed in ppm FSR/°C.
Bipolar Zero Error
Bipolar zero error is the deviation of the analog output from the
ideal half-scale output of 0 V when the DAC register is loaded
with 0x8000 (straight binary coding).
Bipolar Zero TC
Bipolar zero TC is a measure of the change in the bipolar zero
error with a change in temperature. It is expressed in ppm
FSR/°C.
Offset Error
In voltage output mode, offset error is the deviation of the
analog output from the ideal quarter-scale output when in
bipolar output ranges and the DAC register is loaded with
0x4000 (straight binary coding).
In current output mode, offset error is the deviation of the
analog output from the ideal zero-scale output when all DAC
registers are loaded with 0x0000.
Gain Error
This is a measure of the span error of the DAC. It is the deviation in slope of the DAC transfer characteristic from the ideal,
expressed in % FSR.
Gain TC
This is a measure of the change in gain error with changes in
temperature. Gain TC is expressed in ppm FSR/°C.
Total Unadjusted Error
Total unadjusted error (TUE) is a measure of the output error
taking all the various errors into account, including INL error,
offset error, gain error, temperature, and time. TUE is expressed
in % FSR.
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, which is at midscale.
Current Loop Compliance Voltage
The maximum voltage at the IOUT_x pin for which the output
current is equal to the programmed value.
Voltage Reference Thermal Hysteresis
Voltage reference thermal hysteresis is the difference in output
voltage measured at +25°C compared to the output voltage
measured at +25°C after cycling the temperature from +25°C to
−40°C to +105°C and back to +25°C. The hysteresis is specified
for the first and second temperature cycles and is expressed in ppm.
Output Voltage Settling Time
Output voltage settling time is the amount of time it takes for
the output to settle to a specified level for a full-scale input
change. Plots of settling time are shown in Figure 23, Figure 49,
and Figure 50.
Slew Rate
The slew rate of a device is a limitation in the rate of change of
the output voltage. The output slewing speed of a voltageoutput digital-to-analog converter is usually limited by the slew
rate of the amplifier used at its output. Slew rate is measured
from 10% to 90% of the output signal and is given in V/μs.
Power-On Glitch Energy
Power-on glitch energy is the impulse injected into the analog
output when the AD5755 is powered on. It is specified as the area
of the glitch in nV-sec. See Figure 28 and Figure 46.
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse
Digital-to-analog glitch impulse is the impulse injected into the
analog output when the input code in the DAC register changes
state, but the output voltage remains constant. It is normally
specified as the area of the glitch in nV-sec and is measured
when the digital input code is changed by 1 LSB at the major
carry transition (~0x7FFF to 0x8000). See Figure 25.
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 48
AD5755
Glitch Impulse Peak Amplitude
Glitch impulse peak amplitude is the peak amplitude of the
impulse injected into the analog output when the input code in
the DAC register changes state. It is specified as the amplitude
of the glitch in mV and is measured when the digital input code
is changed by 1 LSB at the major carry transition (~0x7FFF to
0x8000). See Figure 25.
Reference TC
Digital Feedthrough
Digital feedthrough is a measure of the impulse injected into
the analog output of the DAC from the digital inputs of the
DAC but is measured when the DAC output is not updated. It is
specified in nV-sec and measured with a full-scale code change
on the data bus.
Load Regulation
Load regulation is the change in reference output voltage due to
a specified change in load current. It is expressed in ppm/mA.
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
DAC-to-DAC crosstalk is the glitch impulse transferred to the
output of one DAC due to a digital code change and a 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-sec.
Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR)
PSRR indicates how the output of the DAC is affected by
changes in the power supply voltage.
Reference TC is a measure of the change in the reference output
voltage with a change in temperature. It is expressed in ppm/°C.
Line Regulation
Line regulation is the change in reference output voltage due to
a specified change in supply voltage. It is expressed in ppm/V.
DC-to-DC Converter Headroom
This is the difference between the voltage required at the
current output and the voltage supplied by the dc-to-dc
converter. See Figure 52.
Output Efficiency
I 2OUT × R LOAD
AVCC × AI CC
This is defined as the power delivered to a channel’s load vs. the
power delivered to the channel’s dc-to-dc input.
Efficiency at VBOOST_x
I OUT × V BOOST _ x
AVCC × AI CC
This is defined as the power delivered to a channel’s VBOOST_x
supply vs. the power delivered to the channel’s dc-to-dc input.
The VBOOST_x quiescent current is considered part of the dc-todc converter’s losses.
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 48
AD5755
THEORY OF OPERATION
VBOOST_x
The AD5755 is a quad, precision digital-to-current loop and
voltage output converter designed to meet the requirements of
industrial process control applications. It provides a high
precision, fully integrated, low cost, single-chip solution for
generating current loop and unipolar/bipolar voltage outputs.
The current ranges available are 0 mA to 20 mA, 0 mA to
24 mA, and 4 mA to 20 mA. The voltage ranges available are
0 V to 5 V, ±5 V, 0 V to 10 V, and ±10 V. The current and
voltage outputs are available on separate pins, and only one is
active at any one time. The desired output configuration is user
selectable via the DAC control register.
T2
A2
T1
IOUT_x
A1
RSET
07304-071
16-BIT
DAC
Voltage Output Amplifier
DAC ARCHITECTURE
The DAC core architecture of the AD5755 consists of two
matched DAC sections. A simplified circuit diagram is shown
in Figure 70. The four MSBs of the 16-bit data-word are
decoded to drive 15 switches, E1 to E15. Each of these switches
connects one of 15 matched resistors to either ground or the
reference buffer output. The remaining 12 bits of the data-word
drive Switch S0 to Switch S11 of a 12-bit voltage mode R-2R
ladder network.
VOUT
The voltage output amplifier is capable of generating both
unipolar and bipolar output voltages. It is capable of driving a
load of 1 kΩ in parallel with 1 μF (with an external compensation capacitor) to AGND. The source and sink capabilities of
the output amplifier are shown in Figure 22. The slew rate is
1.9 V/μs with a full-scale settling time of 16 μs (10 V step). If
remote sensing of the load is not required, connect +VSENSE_x
directly to VOUT_x and connect −VSENSE directly to AGND.
+VSENSE_x must stay within ±3.0 V of VOUT_x, and −VSENSE_x must
stay within ±3.0 V of AGND for correct operation.
2R
2R
2R
2R
2R
Driving Large Capacitive Loads
S0
S1
S7/S11
E1
E2
E15
The voltage output amplifier is capable of driving capacitive
loads of up to 2 μF with the addition of a 220 pF nonpolarized
compensation capacitor on each channel. Care should be taken
to choose an appropriate value of compensation capacitor. This
capacitor, while allowing the AD5755 to drive higher capacitive
loads and reduce overshoot, increases the settling time of the
part and, therefore, affects the bandwidth of the system. Without the compensation capacitor, up to 10 nF capacitive loads
can be driven. See Table 5 for information on connecting
compensation capacitors.
FOUR MSBs DECODED INTO
15 EQUAL SEGMENTS
07304-069
2R
8-/12-BIT R-2R LADDER
Figure 70. DAC Ladder Structure
The voltage output from the DAC core is either converted to a
current (see Figure 72), which is then mirrored to the supply rail so
that the application simply sees a current source output, or it is
buffered and scaled to output a software selectable unipolar or
bipolar voltage range (see Figure 71). Both the voltage and
current outputs are supplied by VBOOST_x. The current and
voltage are output on separate pins and cannot be output
simultaneously. A channel’s current and voltage output pins can
be tied together.
RANGE
SCALING
07304-070
VOUT_X SHORT FAULT
Figure 71. Voltage Output
The AD5755 can operate with either an external or internal
reference. The reference input requires a 5 V reference for
specified performance. This input voltage is then buffered
before it is applied to the DAC.
On initial power-up of the AD5755, the power-on reset circuit
powers up in a state that is dependent on the power-on
condition (POC) pin.
VOUT_X
–VSENSE_X
Reference Buffers
POWER-ON STATE OF AD5755
+VSENSE_X
DAC
R3
Figure 72. Voltage-to-Current Conversion Circuitry
On-chip dynamic power control minimizes package power
dissipation in current mode.
2R
R2
If POC = 0, the voltage output and current output channels
power up in tristate mode.
If POC = 1, the voltage output channel powers up with a 30 kΩ
pull-down resistor to ground, and the current output channel
powers up to tristate.
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 48
AD5755
OUTPUT
I/V AMPLIFIER
Even though the output ranges are not enabled, the default
output range is 0 V to 5 V, and the clear code register is loaded
with all zeros. This means that if the user clears the part after
power-up, the output is actively driven to 0 V (if the channel
has been enabled for clear).
VREFIN
LDAC
16-BIT
DAC
VOUT_x
DAC
REGISTER
SERIAL INTERFACE
The AD5755 is controlled over a versatile 3-wire serial interface
that operates at clock rates of up to 30 MHz and is compatible
with SPI, QSPI, MICROWIRE, and DSP standards. Data coding
is always straight binary.
DAC INPUT
REGISTER
OFFSET
AND GAIN
CALIBRATION
The input shift register is 24 bits wide. Data is loaded into the
device MSB first as a 24-bit word under the control of a serial
clock input, SCLK. Data is clocked in on the falling edge of SCLK.
If packet error checking, or PEC (see the Device Features
section), is enabled, an additional eight bits must be written to
the AD5755, creating a 32-bit serial interface.
There are two ways in which the DAC outputs can be updated:
individual updating or simultaneous updating of all DACs.
Individual DAC Updating
In this mode, LDAC is held low while data is being clocked into
the DAC data register. The addressed DAC output is updated on
the rising edge of SYNC. See Table 3 and Figure 3 for timing
information.
Simultaneous Updating of All DACs
In this mode, LDAC is held high while data is being clocked
into the DAC data register. Only the first write to each channel’s
DAC data register is valid after LDAC is brought high. Any subsequent writes while LDAC is still held high are ignored, though
they are loaded into the DAC data register. All the DAC outputs
are updated by taking LDAC low after SYNC is taken high.
SCLK
SYNC
SDIN
INTERFACE
LOGIC
SDO
07304-072
DAC DATA
REGISTER
Input Shift Register
Figure 73. Simplified Serial Interface of Input Loading Circuitry
for One DAC Channel
TRANSFER FUNCTION
Table 6 shows the input code to ideal output voltage relationship
for the AD5755 for straight binary data coding of the ±10 V
output range.
Table 6. Ideal Output Voltage to Input Code Relationship
Digital Input
Straight Binary Data Coding
MSB
LSB
1111 1111
1111
1111
1111 1111
1111
1110
1000 0000
0000
0000
0000 0000
0000
0001
0000 0000
0000
0000
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 48
Analog Output
VOUT
+2 VREF × (32,767/32,768)
+2 VREF × (32,766/32,768)
0V
−2 VREF × (32,767/32,768)
−2 VREF
AD5755
REGISTERS
Table 7 shows an overview of the registers for the AD5755.
Table 7. Data, Control, and Readback Registers for the AD5755
Register
Data
DAC Data Register (×4)
Gain Register (×4)
Offset Register (×4)
Clear Code Register (×4)
Control
Main Control Register
Software Register
Slew Rate Control Register (×4)
DAC Control Register (×4)
DC-to-DC Control Register
Readback
Status Register
Description
Used to write a DAC code to each DAC channel. AD5755 data bits = D15 to D0. There are four DAC
data registers, one per DAC Channel.
Used to program gain trim, on a per channel basis. AD5755 data bits = D15 to D0. There are four gain
registers, one per DAC channel.
Used to program offset trim, on a per channel basis. AD5755 data bits = D15 to D0. There are four
offset registers, one per DAC channel.
Used to program clear code on a per channel basis. AD5755 data bits = D15 to D0. There are four clear
code registers, one per DAC channel.
Used to configure the part for main operation. Sets functions such as status readback during write,
enables output on all channels simultaneously, powers on all dc-to-dc converter blocks
simultaneously, and enables and sets conditions of the watchdog timer. See the Device Features
section for more details.
Has three functions. Used to perform a reset, to toggle the user bit, and, as part of the watchdog timer
feature, to verify correct data communication operation.
Use to program the slew rate of the output. There are four slew rate control registers, one per channel.
These registers are used to control the following:
Set the output range, for example, 4 mA to 20 mA, 0 V to 10 V.
Set whether an internal/external sense resistor is used.
Enable/disable a channel for CLEAR.
Enable/disable overrange.
Enable/disable internal circuitry on a per channel basis.
Enable/disable output on a per channel basis.
Power on dc-to-dc converters on a per channel basis.
There are four DAC control registers, one per DAC channel.
Use to set the dc-to-dc control parameters. Can control dc-to-dc maximum voltage, phase, and
frequency.
This contains any fault information, as well as a user toggle bit.
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 48
AD5755
PROGRAMMING SEQUENCE TO WRITE/ENABLE
THE OUTPUT CORRECTLY
CHANGING AND REPROGRAMMING THE RANGE
To correctly write to and set up the part from a power-on
condition, use the following sequence:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Perform a hardware or software reset after initial power-on.
The dc-to-dc converter supply block must be configured.
Set the dc-to-dc switching frequency, maximum output
voltage allowed, and the phase that the four dc-to-dc
channels clock at.
Configure the DAC control register on a per channel basis.
The output range is selected, and the dc-to-dc converter
block is enabled (DC_DC bit). Other control bits can be
configured at this point. Set the INT_ENABLE bit; however,
the output enable bit (OUTEN) should not be set.
Write the required code to the DAC data register. This
implements a full DAC calibration internally. Allow at least
200 μs before Step 5 for reduced output glitch.
Write to the DAC control register again to enable the
output (set the OUTEN bit).
When changing between ranges, the same sequence as
described in the Programming Sequence to Write/Enable the
Output Correctly section should be used. It is recommended to
set the range to its zero point (can be midscale or zero scale)
prior to disabling the output. Because the dc-to-dc switching
frequency, maximum voltage, and phase have already been
selected, there is no need to reprogram these. A flowchart of
this sequence is shown in Figure 75.
CHANNEL’S OUTPUT IS ENABLED.
STEP 1: WRITE TO CHANNEL’S DAC DATA
REGISTER. SET THE OUTPUT
TO 0V (ZERO OR MIDSCALE).
STEP 2: WRITE TO DAC CONTROL REGISTER.
DISABLE THE OUTPUT (OUTEN = 0), AND
SET THE NEW OUTPUT RANGE. KEEP THE
DC_DC BIT AND THE INT_ENABLE BIT SET.
STEP 3: WRITE VALUE TO THE DAC DATA REGISTER.
STEP 4: WRITE TO DAC CONTROL REGISTER.
RELOAD SEQUENCE AS IN STEP 2 ABOVE.
THIS TIME SELECT THE OUTEN BIT TO
ENABLE THE OUTPUT.
POWER ON.
Figure 75. Steps for Changing the Output Range
STEP 1: PERFORM A SOFTWARE/HARDWARE RESET.
STEP 2: WRITE TO DC-TO-DC CONTROL REGISTER TO
SET DC-TO-DC CLOCK FREQUENCY, PHASE,
AND MAXIMUM VOLTAGE.
STEP 3: WRITE TO DAC CONTROL REGISTER. SELECT
THE DAC CHANNEL AND OUTPUT RANGE.
SET THE DC_DC BIT AND OTHER CONTROL
BITS AS REQUIRED. SET THE INT_ENABLE BIT
BUT DO NOT SELECT THE OUTEN BIT.
STEP 5: WRITE TO DAC CONTROL REGISTER. RELOAD
SEQUENCE AS IN STEP 3 ABOVE. THIS TIME
SELECT THE OUTEN BIT TO ENABLE
THE OUTPUT.
07304-073
STEP 4: WRITE TO EACH/ALL DAC DATA REGISTERS.
ALLOW AT LEAST 200µs BETWEEN STEP 3
AND STEP 5 FOR REDUCED OUTPUT GLITCH.
Figure 74. Programming Sequence for Enabling the Output Correctly
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 48
07304-074
A flowchart of this sequence is shown in Figure 74.
AD5755
DATA REGISTERS
The input register is 24 bits wide. When PEC is enabled, the
input register is 32 bits wide, with the last eight bits corresponding to the PEC code (see the Packet Error Checking section for
more information on PEC). When writing to a data register, the
format in Table 8 must be used.
DAC Data Register
When writing to the AD5755 DAC data registers, D15 to D0 are
used for DAC data bits. Table 10 shows the register format and
Table 9 describes the function of Bit D23 to Bit D16.
Table 8. Writing to a Data Register
MSB
D23
R/W
D22
DUT_AD1
D21
DUT_AD0
D20
DREG2
D19
DREG1
D18
DREG0
D17
DAC_AD1
D16
DAC_AD0
LSB
D15 to D0
Data
Table 9. Input Register Decode
Bit
R/W
Description
Indicates a read from or a write to the addressed register.
DUT_AD1, DUT_AD0
Used in association with the external pins, AD1 and AD0, to determine which AD5755 device is being addressed
by the system controller.
DUT_AD1
DUT_AD0
Function
0
0
Addresses part with Pin AD1 = 0, Pin AD0 = 0
0
1
Addresses part with Pin AD1 = 0, Pin AD0 = 1
1
0
Addresses part with Pin AD1 = 1, Pin AD0 = 0
1
1
Addresses part with Pin AD1 = 1, Pin AD0 = 1
Selects whether a data register or a control register is written to. If a control register is selected, a further decode
of CREG bits (see Table 17) is required to select the particular control register, as follows.
DREG2
DREG1
DREG0
Function
DREG2, DREG1, DREG0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
DAC_AD1, DAC_AD0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
Write to DAC data register (individual channel write)
Write to gain register
Write to gain register (all DACs)
Write to offset register
Write to offset register (all DACs)
Write to clear code register
Write to a control register
These bits are used to decode the DAC channel.
DAC_AD1
DAC_AD0
DAC Channel/Register Address
0
0
DAC A
0
1
DAC B
1
0
DAC C
1
1
DAC D
X
X
These are don’t cares if they are not relevant to the operation being performed.
Table 10. Programming the DAC Data Registers
MSB
D23
R/W
D22
DUT_AD1
D21
DUT_AD0
D20
DREG2
D19
DREG1
D18
DREG0
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 48
D17
DAC_AD1
D16
DAC_AD0
LSB
D15 to D0
DAC data
AD5755
Gain Register
The 16-bit gain register, as shown in Table 11, allows the user to
adjust the gain of each channel in steps of 1 LSB. This is done by
setting the DREG[2:0] bits to 010. It is possible to write the
same gain code to all four DAC channels at the same time by
setting the DREG[2:0] bits to 011. The gain register coding is
straight binary as shown in Table 12. The default code in the
gain register is 0xFFFF. In theory, the gain can be tuned across
the full range of the output. In practice, the maximum
recommended gain trim is about 50% of programmed range to
maintain accuracy. See the Digital Offset and Gain Control
section in the Device Features section for more information.
Offset Register
The 16-bit offset register, as shown in Table 13, allows the user to
adjust the offset of each channel by −32,768 LSBs to +32,767 LSBs
in steps of 1 LSB. This is done by setting the DREG[2:0] bits to
100. It is possible to write the same offset code to all four DAC
channels at the same time by setting the DREG[2:0] bits to 101.
The offset register coding is straight binary as shown in Table 14.
The default code in the offset register is 0x8000, which results in
zero offset programmed to the output. See the Digital Offset
and Gain Control section in the Device Features section for
more information.
Clear Code Register
The 16-bit clear code register allows the user to set the clear
value of each channel as shown in Table 15. It is possible, via
software, to enable or disable on a per channel basis which
channels are cleared when the CLEAR pin is activated. The
default clear code is 0x0000. See the Asynchronous Clear
section in the Device Features section for more information.
Table 11. Programming the Gain Register
R/W
0
DUT_AD1
DUT_AD0
Device address
DREG2
0
DREG1
1
DREG0
0
DAC_AD1
DAC_AD0
DAC channel address
D15 to D0
Gain adjustment
G15
1
1
…
0
0
G14
1
1
…
0
0
G13
1
1
…
0
0
G12 to G4
1
1
…
0
0
DREG2
1
DREG1
0
DREG0
0
DAC_AD1
DAC_AD0
DAC channel address
OF14
1
1
…
0
…
0
0
OF13
1
1
…
0
…
0
0
OF12 to OF4
1
1
…
0
…
0
0
OF3
1
1
…
0
…
0
0
DREG1
1
DREG0
0
DAC_AD1
DAC_AD0
DAC channel address
Table 12. Gain Register
Gain Adjustment
+65,535 LSBs
+65,534 LSBs
…
1 LSB
0 LSBs
G3
1
1
…
0
0
G2
1
1
…
0
0
G1
1
0
…
0
0
G0
1
0
…
1
0
Table 13. Programming the Offset Register
R/W
0
DUT_AD1
DUT_AD0
Device address
D15 to D0
Offset adjustment
Table 14. Offset Register Options
Offset Adjustment
+32,767 LSBs
+32,766 LSBs
…
No Adjustment (Default)
…
−32,767 LSBs
−32,768 LSBs
OF15
1
1
…
1
…
0
0
OF2
1
1
…
0
…
0
0
OF1
1
0
…
0
…
0
0
OF0
1
0
…
0
…
0
0
Table 15. Programming the Clear Code Register
R/W
0
DUT_AD1
DUT_AD0
Device address
DREG2
1
Rev. 0 | Page 33 of 48
D15 to D0
Clear code
AD5755
CONTROL REGISTERS
Main Control Register
When writing to a control register, the format shown in Table 16
must be used. See Table 9 for information on the configuration
of Bit D23 to Bit D16. The control registers are addressed by
setting the DREG[2:0] bits to 111 and then setting the
CREG[2:0] bits to the appropriate decode address for that
register, according to Table 17. These CREG bits select among
the various control registers.
The main control register options are shown in Table 18 and
Table 19. See the Device Features section for more information
on the features controlled by the main Dontrol Segister.
Table 16. Writing to a Control Register
MSB
D23
R/W
D22
DUT_AD1
D21
DUT_AD0
D20
1
D19
1
D18
1
D17
DAC_AD1
D16
DAC_AD0
D15
CREG2
D14
CREG1
D13
CREG0
LSB
D12 to D0
Data
Table 17. Register Access Decode
CREG2 (D15)
0
0
0
0
1
CREG1 (D14)
0
0
1
1
0
CREG0 (D13)
0
1
0
1
0
Function
Slew rate control register (one per channel)
Main control register
DAC control register (one per channel)
DC-to-dc control register
Software register (one per channel)
Table 18. Programming the Main Control Register
MSB
D15
0
1
D14
0
D13
1
D12
POC
D11
STATREAD
D10
EWD
D9
WD1
D8
WD0
D7
X1
D6
ShtCctLim
D5
OUTEN_ALL
D4
DCDC_All
LSB
D3 to D0
X1
X = don’t care.
Table 19. Main Control Register Functions
Bit
POC
STATREAD
EWD
WD1, WD0
ShtCctLim
OUTEN_ALL
DCDC_All
Description
The POC bit determines the state of the voltage output channels during normal operation. Its default value is 0.
POC = 0. The output goes to the value set by the POC hardware pin when the voltage output is not enabled (default).
POC = 1. The output goes to the opposite value of the POC hardware pin if the voltage output is not enabled.
Enable status readback during a write. See the Device Features section.
STATREAD = 1, enable.
STATREAD = 0, disable (default).
Enable watchdog timer. See the Device Features section for more information.
EWD = 1, enable watchdog.
EWD = 0, disable watchdog (default).
Timeout select bits. Used to select the timeout period for the watchdog timer.
WD1
WD0
Timeout Period (ms)
0
0
5
0
1
10
1
0
100
1
1
200
Programmable short-circuit limit on the VOUT_x pin in the event of a short-circuit condition.
0 = 16 mA (default).
1 = 8 mA.
Enables the output on all four DACs simultaneously.
Do not use the OUTEN_ALL bit when using the OUTEN bit in the DAC control register.
When set, powers up the dc-to-dc converter on all four channels simultaneously.
To power down the dc-to-dc converters, all channel outputs must first be disabled.
Do not use the DCDC_All bit when using the DC_DC bit in the DAC control register.
Rev. 0 | Page 34 of 48
AD5755
DAC Control Register
The DAC control register is used to configure each DAC channel. The DAC control register options are shown in Table 20 and Table 21.
Table 20. Programming DAC Control Register
D15
0
1
D14
1
D13
0
D12
X1
D11
X1
D10
X1
D9
X1
D8
INT_ENABLE
D7
CLR_EN
D6
OUTEN
D5
RSET
D4
DC_DC
D3
OVRNG
D2
R2
D1
R1
D0
R0
X = don’t care.
Table 21. DAC Control Register Functions
Bit
INT_ENABLE
CLR_EN
OUTEN
RSET
DC_DC
OVRNG
R2, R1, R0
Description
Powers up the dc-to-dc converter, DAC, and internal amplifiers for the selected channel. Does not enable the output. Can
only be done on a per channel basis. It is recommended to set this bit and allow a >200 μs delay before enabling the
output because this results in a reduced output enable glitch. See Figure 29 and Figure 47 for plots of this glitch.
Per channel clear enable bit. Selects if this channel clears when the CLEAR pin is activated.
CLR_EN = 1, channel clears when the part is cleared.
CLR_EN = 0, channel does not clear when the part is cleared (default).
Enables/disables the selected output channel.
OUTEN = 1, enables channel.
OUTEN = 0, disables channel (default).
Selects an internal or external current sense resistor for the selected DAC channel.
RSET = 0, selects the external resistor (default).
RSET = 1, selects the internal resistor.
Powers the dc-to-dc converter on the selected channel.
DC_DC = 1, powers up the dc-to-dc converter.
DC_DC = 0, powers down the dc-to-dc converter (default).
This allows per channel dc-to-dc converter power-up/down. To power down the dc-to-dc converter, the OUTEN and
INT_ENABLE bits must also be set to 0.
All dc-to-dc converters can also be powered up simultaneously using the DCDC_All bit in the main control register.
Enables 20% overrange on voltage output channel only. No current output overrange available.
OVRNG = 1, enabled.
OVRNG = 0, disabled (default).
Selects the output range to be enabled.
R2
R1
R0
Output Range Selected
0
0
0
0 V to 5 V voltage range (default).
0
0
1
0 V to 10 V voltage range.
0
1
0
±5 V voltage range.
0
1
1
±10 V voltage range.
1
0
0
4 mA to 20 mA current range.
1
0
1
0 mA to 20 mA current range.
1
1
0
0 mA to 24 mA current range.
Rev. 0 | Page 35 of 48
AD5755
Software Register
The software register has three functions. It allows the user to
perform a software reset to the part. It can be used to set the
user toggle bit, D11, in the status register. It is also used as part
of the watchdog feature when it is enabled. This feature is useful
to ensure that communication has not been lost between the
MCU and the AD5755 and that the datapath lines are working
properly (that is, SDI, SCLK, and SYNC).
When the watchdog feature is enabled, the user must write
0x195 to the software register within the timeout period. If this
command is not received within the timeout period, the ALERT
pin signals a fault condition. This is only required when the
watchdog timer function is enabled.
DC-to-DC Control Register
The dc-to-dc control register allows the user control over
the dc-to-dc switching frequency and phase, as well as the
maximum allowable dc-to-dc output voltage. The dc-to-dc
control register options are shown in Table 24 and Table 25.
Table 22. Programming the Software Register
MSB
D15
1
D14
0
D13
0
LSB
D11 to D0
Reset code/SPI code
D12
User program
Table 23. Software Register Functions
Bit
User Program
Description
This bit is mapped to Bit D11 of the status register. When this bit is set to 1, Bit D11 of the status register is
set to 1. Likewise, when D12 is set to 0, Bit D11 of the status register is also set to zero. This feature can be
used to ensure that the SPI pins are working correctly by writing a known bit value to this register and
reading back the corresponding bit from the status register.
Option
Description
Reset code
Writing 0x555 to D[11:0] performs a reset of the AD5755.
SPI code
If the watchdog timer feature is enabled, 0x195 must be written to the software register
(D11 to D0) within the programmed timeout period.
Reset Code/SPI Code
Table 24. Programming the DC-to-DC Control Register
MSB
D15
0
1
D14
1
D13
1
D12 to D7
X1
D6
DC-DC Comp
D5 to D4
DC-DC phase
D3 to D2
DC-DC Freq
LSB
D1 to D0
DC-DC MaxV
X = don’t care.
Table 25. DC-to-DC Control Register Options
Bit
DC-DC Comp
DC-DC Phase
DC-DC Freq
DC-DC MaxV
Description
Selects between an internal and external compensation resistor for the dc-to-dc converter. See the DC-to-DC
Converter Compensation Capacitors and AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing sections in the Device Features
section for more information.
0 = selects the internal 150 kΩ compensation resistor (default).
1 = bypasses the internal compensation resistor for the dc-to-dc converter. In this mode, an external dc-to-dc
compensation resistor must be used; this is placed at the COMPDCDC_x pin in series with the 10 nF dc-to-dc
compensation capacitor to ground. Typically, a ~50 kΩ resistor is recommended.
User programmable dc-to-dc converter phase (between channels).
00 = all dc-to-dc converters clock on same edge (default).
01 = Channel A and Channel B clock on same edge, Channel C and Channel D clock on opposite edge.
10 = Channel A and Channel C clock on same edge, Channel B and Channel D clock on opposite edge.
11 = Channel A, Channel B, Channel C, and Channel D clock 90° out of phase from each other.
DC-to-dc switching frequency; these are divided down from the internal 13 MHz oscillator (see Figure 68 and
Figure 69).
00 = 250 ± 10% kHz.
01 = 410 ± 10% kHz (default).
10 = 650 ± 10% kHz.
Maximum allowed VBOOST_x voltage supplied by the dc-to-dc converter.
00 = 23 V + 1 V/−1.5 V (default).
01 = 24.5 V ± 1 V.
10 = 27 V ± 1 V.
11 = 29.5 V ± 1V.
Rev. 0 | Page 36 of 48
AD5755
addressed register. This second SPI transfer should either be a
request to read yet another register on a third data transfer or
0x1CE000, which is the no operation command.
Slew Rate Control Register
This register is used to program the slew rate control for the
selected DAC channel. This feature is available on both the
current and voltage outputs. The slew rate control is enabled/
disabled and programmed on a per channel basis. See Table 26
and the Device Features section for more information.
Readback Example
To read back the gain register of Device 1, Channel A on the
AD5755, implement the following sequence:
READBACK OPERATION
1.
Readback mode is invoked by setting the R/W bit = 1 in the
serial input register write. See Table 27 for the bits associated
with a readback operation. The DUT_AD1 and DUT_AD0 bits,
in association with Bits RD[4:0], select the register to be read.
The remaining data bits in the write sequence are don’t cares.
During the next SPI transfer (see Figure 4), the data appearing
on the SDO output contains the data from the previously
2.
Write 0xA80000 to the AD5755 input register. This
configures the AD5755 Device Address 1 for read mode
with the gain register of Channel A selected. All the data
bits, D15 to D0, are don’t cares.
Follow with another read command or a no operation
command (0x1CE000). During this command, the data
from the Channel A gain register is clocked out on the
SDO line.
Table 26. Programming the Slew Rate Control Register
D15
0
1
D14
0
D13
0
D12
SE
D11 to D7
X1
D6 to D3
SR_CLOCK
D2 to D0
SR_STEP
X = don’t care.
Table 27. Input Shift Register Contents for a Read Operation
D23
R/W
1
D22
DUT_AD1
D21
DUT_AD0
D20
RD4
D19
RD3
D18
RD2
D17
RD1
X = don’t care.
Table 28. Read Address Decoding
RD4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
RD3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
RD2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
RD1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
RD0
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
Function
Read DAC A data register
Read DAC B data register
Read DAC C data register
Read DAC D data register
Read DAC A control register
Read DAC B control register
Read DAC C control register
Read DAC D control register
Read DAC A gain register
Read DAC B gain register
Read DAC C gain register
Read DAC D gain register
Read DAC A offset register
Read DAC B offset register
Read DAC C offset register
Read DAC D offset register
Clear DAC A code register
Clear DAC B code register
Clear DAC C code register
Clear DAC D code register
DAC A slew rate control register
DAC B slew rate control register
DAC C slew rate control register
DAC D slew rate control register
Read status register
Read main control register
Read dc-to-dc control register
Rev. 0 | Page 37 of 48
D16
RD0
D15 to D0
X1
AD5755
Status Register
the SDO pin during every write sequence. Alternatively, if the
STATREAD bit is not set, the status register can be read using
the normal readback operation.
The status register is a read only register. This register contains
any fault information as a well as a ramp active bit and a user
toggle bit. When the STATREAD bit in the main control
register is set, the status register contents can be read back on
Table 29. Decoding the Status Register
MSB
D15
DCDCD
D14
DCDCC
D13
DCDCB
D12
DCDCA
D11
User
toggle
D10
PEC
error
D9
Ramp
active
D8
Over
TEMP
D7
VOUT_D
fault
D6
VOUT_C
fault
D5
VOUT_B
fault
D4
VOUT_A
fault
D3
IOUT_D
fault
D2
IOUT_C
fault
D1
IOUT_B
fault
LSB
D0
IOUT_A
fault
Table 30. Status Register Options
Bit
DC-DCD
DC-DCC
DC-DCB
DC-DCA
User Toggle
PEC Error
Ramp Active
Over TEMP
VOUT_D Fault
VOUT_C Fault
VOUT_B Fault
VOUT_A Fault
IOUT_D Fault
IOUT_C Fault
IOUT_B Fault
IOUT_A Fault
Description
In current output mode, this bit is set on Channel D if the dc-to-dc converter cannot maintain compliance (it may be
reaching its VMAX voltage). In this case, the IOUT_D fault bit is also set. See the DC-to-DC Converter VMAX Functionality section
for more information on this bit’s operation under this condition.
In voltage output mode, this bit is set if, on Channel D, the dc-to-dc converter is unable to regulate to 15 V as expected.
When this bit is set, it does not result in the FAULT pin going high.
In current output mode, this bit is set on Channel C if the dc-to-dc converter cannot maintain compliance (it may be
reaching its VMAX voltage). In this case, the IOUT_C fault bit is also set. See the DC-to-DC Converter VMAX Functionality section
for more information on this bit’s operation under this condition.
In voltage output mode, this bit is set if, on Channel C, the dc-to-dc converter is unable to regulate to 15 V as expected.
When this bit is set, it does not result in the FAULT pin going high.
In current output mode, this bit is set on Channel B if the dc-to-dc converter cannot maintain compliance (it may be
reaching its VMAX voltage). In this case, the IOUT_B fault bit is also set. See the DC-to-DC Converter VMAX Functionality for more
information on this bit’s operation under this condition.
In voltage output mode, this bit is set if, on Channel B, the dc-to-dc converter is unable to regulate to 15 V as expected.
When this bit is set, it does not result in the FAULT pin going high.
In current output mode, this bit is set on Channel A if the dc-to-dc converter cannot maintain compliance (it may be
reaching its VMAX voltage). In this case, the IOUT_A fault bit is also set. See the DC-to-DC Converter VMAX Functionality for more
information on this bit’s operation under this condition.
In voltage output mode, this bit is set if, on Channel A, the dc-to-dc converter is unable to regulate to 15 V as expected.
When this bit is set, it does not result in the FAULT pin going high.
User toggle bit. This bit is set or cleared via the software register. This can be used to verify data communications if needed.
Denotes a PEC error on the last data-word received over the SPI interface.
This bit is set while any one of the output channels is slewing (slew rate control is enabled on at least one channel).
This bit is set if the AD5755 core temperature exceeds approximately 150°C.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the VOUT_D pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the VOUT_C pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the VOUT_B pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the VOUT_A pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the IOUT_D pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the IOUT_C pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the IOUT_B pin.
This bit is set if a fault is detected on the IOUT_A pin.
Rev. 0 | Page 38 of 48
AD5755
DEVICE FEATURES
INPUT
REGISTER
OUTPUT FAULT
The AD5755 is equipped with a FAULT pin, an active low opendrain output allowing several AD5755 devices to be connected
together to one pull-up resistor for global fault detection. The
FAULT pin is forced active by any one of the following fault
scenarios:
•
•
•
•
The voltage at IOUT_x attempts to rise above the compliance
range due to an open-loop circuit or insufficient power
supply voltage. The internal circuitry that develops the
fault output avoids using a comparator with windowed
limits because this requires an actual output error before
the FAULT output becomes active. Instead, the signal is
generated when the internal amplifier in the output stage
has less than approximately 1 V of remaining drive
capability. Thus, the FAULT output activates slightly before
the compliance limit is reached.
A short is detected on a voltage output pin. The shortcircuit current is limited to 16 mA or 8 mA, which is
programmable by the user. If using the AD5755 in unipolar
supply mode, a short-circuit fault may be generated if the
output voltage is below 50 mV.
An interface error is detected due to a PEC failure. See the
Packet Error Checking section.
If the core temperature of the AD5755 exceeds
approximately 150°C.
The VOUT_x fault, IOUT_x fault, PEC error, and over TEMP bits
of the status register (see Table 30) are used in conjunction with
the FAULT output to inform the user which one of the fault
conditions caused the FAULT output to be activated.
VOLTAGE OUTPUT SHORT-CIRCUIT PROTECTION
DAC
REGISTER
DAC
07304-075
M
REGISTER
C
REGISTER
Figure 76. Digital Offset and Gain control
Although Figure 76 indicates a multiplier and adder for each
channel, there is only one multiplier and one adder in the device,
and they are shared among all four channels. This has
implications for the update speed when several channels are
updated at once (see Table 3).
Each time data is written to the M or C register, the output is
not automatically updated. Instead, the next write to the DAC
channel uses these M and C values to perform a new calibration
and automatically updates the channel.
The output data from the calibration is routed to the DAC input
register. This is then loaded to the DAC as described in the
Theory of Operation section. Both the gain register and the
offset register have 16 bits of resolution. The correct method to
calibrate the gain/offset is to first calibrate out the gain and then
calibrate the offset.
The value (in decimal) that is written to the DAC input register
can be calculated by
Code DACRegister = D ×
( M + 1)
216
+ C − 215
(1)
where:
D is the code loaded to the input register of the DAC channel.
M is the code in the gain register (default code = 216 – 1).
C is the code in the offset register (default code = 215).
Under normal operation, the voltage output sinks/sources up
to 12 mA and maintains specified operation. The maximum
output current or short-circuit current is programmable by
the user and can be set to 16 mA or 8 mA. If a short circuit is
detected, the FAULT goes low, and the relevant short CCT bit
in the status register is set.
STATUS READBACK DURING A WRITE
DIGITAL OFFSET AND GAIN CONTROL
When status readback during a write is enabled, the contents of
the 16-bit status register (see Table 30) are output on the SDO
pin, as shown in Figure 5.
Each DAC channel has a gain (M) and offset (C) register, which
allow trimming out of the gain and offset errors of the entire
signal chain. Data from the DAC data register is operated on by
a digital multiplier and adder controlled by the contents of the
M and C registers. The calibrated DAC data is then stored in the
DAC input register.
The AD5755 has the ability to read back the status register
contents during every write sequence. This feature is enabled
via the STATREAD bit in the main control register. This allows
the user to continuously monitor the status register and act
quickly in the case of a fault.
The AD5755 powers up with this feature disabled. When this is
enabled, the normal readback feature is not available, except for
the status register. To read back any other register, clear the
STATREAD bit first before following the readback sequence.
STATREAD can be set high again after the register read.
Rev. 0 | Page 39 of 48
AD5755
ASYNCHRONOUS CLEAR
CLEAR is an active high, edge-sensitive input that allows the
output to be cleared to a preprogrammed 16-bit code. This code
is user programmable via a per channel 16-bit clear code register.
For a channel to clear, that channel must be enabled to be
cleared via the CLR_EN bit (see Table 21) in the channel’s DAC
control register. If the channel is not enabled to be cleared, then
the output remains in its current state independent of the
CLEAR pin level.
When the CLEAR signal is returned low, the relevant outputs
remain cleared until a new value is programmed.
PACKET ERROR CHECKING
To verify that data has been received correctly in noisy environments, the AD5755 offers the option of packet error checking
based on an 8-bit (CRC-8) cyclic redundancy check. The device
controlling the AD5755 should generate an 8-bit frame check
sequence using the polynomial
C(x) = x8 + x2 + x1 + 1
This is added to the end of the data-word, and 32 bits are sent
to the AD5755 before taking SYNC high. If the AD5755 sees a
32-bit frame, it performs the error check when SYNC goes high.
If the check is valid, the data is written to the selected register.
If the error check fails, the FAULT pin goes low and the PEC
error bit in the status register is set. After reading the status
register, FAULT returns high (assuming there are no other
faults), and the PEC error bit is cleared automatically.
UPDATE ON SYNC HIGH
SYNC
disabled, the user can still use the normal readback operation to
monitor status register activity with PEC.
WATCHDOG TIMER
When enabled, an on-chip watchdog timer generates an alert
signal if 0x195 has not been written to the software register
within the programmed timeout period. This feature is useful to
ensure that communication has not been lost between the MCU
and the AD5755 and that these datapath lines are working
properly (that is, SDI, SCLK, and SYNC). If 0x195 is not
received by the software register within the timeout period, the
ALERT pin signals a fault condition. The ALERT signal is active
high and can be connected directly to the CLEAR pin to enable
a clear in the event that communication from the MCU is lost.
The watchdog timer is enabled, and the timeout period (5 ms,
10 ms, 100 ms, or 200 ms) is set in the main control register (see
Table 18 and Table 19).
OUTPUT ALERT
The AD5755 is equipped with an ALERT pin. This is an active
high CMOS output. The AD5755 also has an internal watchdog
timer. When enabled, it monitors SPI communications. If 0x195
is not received by the software register within the timeout period,
the ALERT pin goes active.
INTERNAL REFERENCE
The AD5755 contains an integrated 5 V voltage reference with
initial accuracy of ±5 mV maximum and a temperature drift
coefficient of ±10 ppm maximum. The reference voltage
is buffered and externally available for use elsewhere within
the system.
EXTERNAL CURRENT SETTING RESISTOR
SCLK
MSB
D23
SDIN
Referring to Figure 72, RSET is an internal sense resistor as part
of the voltage-to-current conversion circuitry. The stability of
the output current value over temperature is dependent on the
stability of the value of RSET. As a method of improving the
stability of the output current over temperature, an external
15 kΩ low drift resistor can be connected to the RSET_x pin of the
AD5755 to be used instead of the internal resistor, R1. The
external resistor is selected via the DAC control register (see
Table 20).
LSB
D0
24-BIT DATA
24-BIT DATA TRANSFER—NO ERROR CHECKING
UPDATE AFTER SYNC HIGH
ONLY IF ERROR CHECK PASSED
SYNC
SCLK
SDIN
FAULT
LSB
D8
24-BIT DATA
D7
D0
8-BIT CRC
FAULT PIN GOES HIGH
IF ERROR CHECK FAILS
32-BIT DATA TRANSFER WITH ERROR CHECKING
07304-180
MSB
D31
Figure 77. PEC Timing
The PEC can be used for both transmit and receive of data
packets. If status readback during a write is enabled, the PEC
values returned during the status readback during a write
operation should be ignored. If status readback during a write is
Table 1 outlines the performance specifications of the AD5755
with both the internal RSET resistor and an external, 15 kΩ RSET
resistor. Using an external RSET resistor allows for improved
performance over the internal RSET resistor option. The external
RSET resistor specification assumes an ideal resistor; the actual
performance depends on the absolute value and temperature
coefficient of the resistor used. This directly affects the gain error
of the output, and thus the total unadjusted error. To arrive at
the gain/TUE error of the output with a particular external RSET
resistor, add the percentage absolute error of the RSET resistor
directly to the gain/TUE error of the AD5755 with the external
RSET resistor, shown in Table 1 (expressed in % FSR).
Rev. 0 | Page 40 of 48
AD5755
DIGITAL SLEW RATE CONTROL
The slew rate control feature of the AD5755 allows the user to
control the rate at which the output value changes. This feature
is available on both the current and voltage outputs. With the
slew rate control feature disabled, the output value changes at a
rate limited by the output drive circuitry and the attached load.
To reduce the slew rate, this can be achieved by enabling the
slew rate control feature. With the feature enabled via the SREN
bit of the slew rate control register (see Table 26), the output,
instead of slewing directly between two values, steps digitally
at a rate defined by two parameters accessible via the slew rate
control register, as shown in Table 26. The parameters are
SR_CLOCK and SR_STEP. SR_CLOCK defines the rate at
which the digital slew is updated, for example, if the selected
update rate is 8 kHz, the output updates every 125 μs. In conjunction with this, SR_STEP defines by how much the output value
changes at each update. Together, both parameters define the
rate of change of the output value. Table 31 and Table 32 outline
the range of values for both the SR_CLOCK and SR_STEP
parameters.
SR_CLOCK
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
1
Update Clock Frequency (Hz)1
64 k
32 k
16 k
8k
4k
2k
1k
500
250
125
64
32
16
8
4
0.5
These clock frequencies are divided down from the 13 MHz internal
oscillator. See Table 1, Figure 68, and Figure 69.
Table 32. Slew Rate Step Size Options
SR_STEP
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
Step Size (LSBs)
1
2
4
16
32
64
128
256
Slew Time =
Output Change
Step Size × Update Clock Frequency × LSB Size
where:
Slew Time is expressed in seconds.
Output Change is expressed in amps for IOUT_x or volts for VOUT_x.
When the slew rate control feature is enabled, all output
changes occur at the programmed slew rate (see the DC-to-DC
Converter Settling Time section for additional information).
For example, if the CLEAR pin is asserted, the output slews to
the clear value at the programmed slew rate (assuming that the
clear channel is enabled to be cleared). If a number of channels
are enabled for slew, care must be taken when asserting the clear
pin. If one of the channels is slewing when clear is asserted,
other channels may change directly to their clear values not
under slew rate control. The update clock frequency for any
given value is the same for all output ranges. The step size,
however, varies across output ranges for a given value of step
size because the LSB size is different for each output range.
POWER DISSIPATION CONTROL
The AD5755 contains integrated dynamic power control using
a dc-to-dc boost converter circuit, allowing reductions in power
consumption from standard designs when using the part in
current output mode.
In standard current input module designs, the load resistor
values can range from typically 50 Ω to 750 Ω. Output module
systems must source enough voltage to meet the compliance
voltage requirement across the full range of load resistor values.
For example, in a 4 mA to 20 mA loop when driving 20 mA, a
compliance voltage of >15 V is required. When driving 20 mA
into a 50 Ω load, only 1 V compliance is required.
The AD5755 circuitry senses the output voltage and regulates
this voltage to meet compliance requirements plus a small
headroom voltage. The AD5755 is capable of driving up to
24 mA through a 1 kΩ load.
DC-TO-DC CONVERTERS
The AD5755 contains four independent dc-to-dc converters.
These are used to provide dynamic control of the VBOOST supply
voltage for each channel (see Figure 72). Figure 78 shows the
discreet components needed for the dc-to-dc circuitry, and the
following sections describe component selection and operation
of this circuitry.
AVCC
CIN
≥10µF
LDCDC
DDCDC
10µH
CDCDC
4.7µF
RFILTER
10Ω
SWx
Figure 78. DC-to-DC Circuit
Rev. 0 | Page 41 of 48
VBOOST_x
CFILTER
0.1µF
07304-077
Table 31. Slew Rate Update Clock Options
The following equation describes the slew rate as a function of
the step size, the update clock frequency, and the LSB size:
AD5755
Table 33. Recommended DC-to-DC Components
29.6
Symbol
LDCDC
CDCDC
DDCDC
29.5
Manufacturer
Coilcraft®
Murata
NXP
It is recommended to place a 10 Ω, 100 nF low-pass RC filter
after CDCDC. This consumes a small amount of power but
reduces the amount of ripple on the VBOOST_x supply.
DC-to-DC Converter Operation
0mA TO 24mA RANGE, 24mA OUTPUT
OUTPUT UNLOADED
29.4
29.3
29.2
29.1
DC-DC MaxV = 29.5V
DC-DCx BIT = 1
29.0
fSW = 410kHz
TA = 25°C
28.9
28.8
The on-board dc-to-dc converters use a constant frequency,
peak current mode control scheme to step up an AVCC input of
4.5 V to 5.5 V to drive the AD5755 output channel. These are
designed to operate in discontinuous conduction mode (DCM)
with a duty cycle of <90% typical. Discontinuous conduction
mode refers to a mode of operation where the inductor current
goes to zero for an appreciable percentage of the switching
cycle. The dc-to-dc converters are nonsynchronous; that is, they
require an external Schottky diode.
DC-to-DC Converter Output Voltage
When a channel current output is enabled, the converter regulates
the VBOOST_x supply to 7.4 V (±5%) or (IOUT × RLOAD + Headroom),
whichever is greater (see Figure 52 for a plot of headroom
supplied vs. output current). In voltage output mode with the
output disabled, the converter regulates the VBOOST_x supply to
+15 V (±5%). In current output mode with the output disabled,
the converter regulates the VBOOST_x supply to 7.4 V (±5%).
28.7
DC-DCx BIT = 0
28.6
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
TIME (ms)
3.0
3.5
4.0
07304-183
Value
10 μH
4.7 μF
0.38 VF
VBOOST_x VOLTAGE (mV)
Component
XAL4040-103
GRM32ER71H475KA88L
PMEG3010BEA
VMAX
DC_DC BIT
Figure 79. Operation on Reaching VMAX
As can be seen in Figure 79, the DC-DCx bit in the status register
asserts when the AD5755 is ramping to the VMAX value, but
deasserts when the voltage is decaying to VMAX − ~0.4 V.
DC-to-DC Converter On-Board Switch
The AD5755 contains a 0.425 Ω internal switch. The switch
current is monitored on a pulse by pulse basis and is limited to
0.8 A peak current.
DC-to-DC Converter Switching Frequency and Phase
Within a channel, the VOUT_x and IOUT_x stages share a common
VBOOST_x supply so that the outputs of the IOUT_x and VOUT_x stages
can be tied together.
The AD5755 dc-to-dc converter switching frequency can be
selected from the dc-to-dc control register. The phasing of the
channels can also be adjusted so that the dc-to-dc converter can
clock on different edges (see Table 25). For typical applications,
a 410 kHz frequency is recommended. At light loads (low output
current and small load resistor), the dc-to-dc converter enters a
pulse-skipping mode to minimize switching power dissipation.
DC-to-DC Converter Settling Time
DC-to-DC Converter Inductor Selection
When in current output mode, the settling time for a step greater
than ~1V (IOUT × RLOAD) is dominated by the settling time of the
dc-to-dc converter. The exception to this is when the required
voltage at the IOUT_x pin plus the compliance voltage is below
7.4 V (±5%). A typical plot of the output settling time can be
found in Figure 48. This plot is for a 1 kΩ load. The settling time
for smaller loads is faster. The settling time for current steps less
than 24 mA is also faster.
For typical 4 mA to 20 mA applications, a 10 μH inductor (such
as the XAL4040-103 from Coilcraft), combined with a switching frequency of 410 kHz, allows up to 24 mA to be driven into
a load resistance of up to 1 kΩ with an AVCC supply of 4.5 V to
5.5 V. It is important to ensure that the inductor is able to handle
the peak current without saturating, especially at the maximum
ambient temperature. If the inductor enters into saturation mode,
it results in a decrease in efficiency. The inductance value also
drops during saturation and may result in the dc-to-dc converter
circuit not being able to supply the required output power.
DC-to-DC Converter VMAX Functionality
The maximum VBOOST_x voltage is set in the dc-to-dc control
register (23 V, 24.5 V, 27 V, or 29.5 V; see Table 25). On reaching
this maximum voltage, the dc-to-dc converter is disabled, and
the VBOOST_x voltage is allowed to decay by ~0.4 V. After the
VBOOST_x voltage has decayed by ~0.4 V, the dc-to-dc converter
is reenabled, and the voltage ramps up again to VMAX, if still
required. This operation is shown in Figure 79.
DC-to-DC Converter External Schottky Selection
The AD5755 requires an external Schottky for correct operation. Ensure that the Schottky is rated to handle the maximum
reverse breakdown expected in operation and that the rectifier
maximum junction temperature is not exceeded. The diode
average current is approximately equal to the ILOAD current.
Diodes with larger forward voltage drops result in a decrease in
efficiency.
Rev. 0 | Page 42 of 48
AD5755
DC-to-DC Converter Compensation Capacitors
ηVBOOST is the efficiency at VBOOST_x as a fraction (see Figure 54
As the dc-to-dc converter operates in DCM, the uncompensated
transfer function is essentially a single-pole transfer function.
The pole frequency of the transfer function is determined by
the dc-to-dc converter’s output capacitance, input and output
voltage, and output load. The AD5755 uses an external capacitor
in conjunction with an internal 150 kΩ resistor to compensate
the regulator loop. Alternatively, an external compensation
resistor can be used in series with the compensation capacitor,
by setting the DC-DC Comp bit in the dc-to-dc control register.
In this case, a ~50 kΩ resistor is recommended. A description
of the advantages of this can be found in the AICC Supply
Requirements—Slewing section in the Device Features section.
For typical applications, a 10 nF dc-to-dc compensation
capacitor is recommended.
and Figure 55).
DC-to-DC Converter Input and Output Capacitor
Selection
AICC SUPPLY REQUIREMENTS—STATIC
The dc-to-dc converter is designed to supply a VBOOST voltage of
(2)
See Figure 52 for a plot of headroom supplied vs. output
voltage. This means that, for a fixed load and output voltage,
the output current of the dc-to-dc converter can be calculated
by the following formula:
Power Out
Efficiency × AVCC
=
I OUT × VBOOST
ηVBOOST × AVCC
25
AICC CURRENT (A)
0.6
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
0.5
0.4
20
15
0.3
10
0.2
AICC
IOUT
VBOOST
0.1
0
0
0.5
5
1.0
1.5
TIME (ms)
2.0
2.5
0
07304-184
0.7
IOUT_x CURRENT (mA)/VBOOST_x VOLTAGE (V)
30
The input capacitor provides much of the dynamic current
required for the dc-to-dc converter and should be a low ESR
component. For the AD5755, a low ESR tantalum or ceramic
capacitor of 10 μF is recommended for typical applications.
Ceramic capacitors must be chosen carefully because they can
exhibit a large sensitivity to dc bias voltages and temperature.
X5R or X7R dielectrics are preferred because these capacitors
remain stable over wider operating voltage and temperature
ranges. Care must be taken if selecting a tantalum capacitor to
ensure a low ESR value.
AI CC =
The AICC current requirement while slewing is greater than in
static operation because the output power increases to charge
the output capacitance of the dc-to-dc converter. This transient
current can be quite large (see Figure 80), although the methods
outlined in the Reducing AICC Current Requirements section
can reduce the requirements on the AVCC supply. If not enough
AICC current can be provided, the AVCC voltage drops. Due to
this AVCC drop, the AICC current required to slew increases
further. This means that the voltage at AVCC drops further (see
Equation 3) and the VBOOST voltage, and thus the output voltage,
may never reach its intended value. Because this AVCC voltage is
common to all channels, this may also affect other channels.
0.8
The output capacitor affects ripple voltage of the dc-to-dc
converter and indirectly limits the maximum slew rate at which
the channel output current can rise. The ripple voltage is caused
by a combination of the capacitance and equivalent series
resistance (ESR) of the capacitor. For the AD5755, a ceramic
capacitor of 4.7 μF is recommended for typical applications.
Larger capacitors or paralleled capacitors improve the ripple at
the expense of reduced slew rate. Larger capacitors also impact
the AVCC supplies current requirements while slewing (see the
AICC Supply Requirements—Slewing section). This capacitance at the output of the dc-to-dc converter should be >3 μF
under all operating conditions.
VBOOST = IOUT × RLOAD + Headroom
AICC SUPPLY REQUIREMENTS—SLEWING
Figure 80. AICC Current vs. Time for 24 mA Slew
with Internal Compensation Resistor
Reducing AICC Current Requirements
There are two main methods that can be used to reduce the
AICC current requirements. One method is to add an external
compensation resistor, and the other is to use slew rate control.
Both of these methods can be used in conjunction.
A compensation resistor can be placed at the COMPDCDC_x pin
in series with the 10 nF compensation capacitor. A 51 kΩ external compensation resistor is recommended. This compensation
increases the slew time of the current output but eases the AICC
transient current requirements. Figure 81 shows a plot of AICC
current for a 24 mA step through a 1 kΩ load when using a
51 kΩ compensation resistor. This method eases the current
requirements through smaller loads even further, as shown in
Figure 82.
(3)
where:
IOUT is the output current from IOUT_x in amps.
Rev. 0 | Page 43 of 48
AD5755
20
0.4
16
0.3
12
8
0.2
AICC
IOUT
VBOOST
0.1
0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
TIME (ms)
4
2.0
2.5
0
0.8
0.7
Figure 81. AICC Current vs. Time for 24 mA Through 1 kΩ Slew with External
51 kΩ Compensation Resistor
0.8
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
500Ω LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
AICC CURRENT (A)
0.6
28
24
0.5
20
0.4
16
0.3
12
0.2
8
0.1
4
0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
TIME (ms)
2.0
2.5
0
0.6
28
24
AICC
IOUT
VBOOST
0.5
20
0.4
16
0.3
12
0.2
8
0.1
4
0
0
1
2
3
TIME (ms)
4
5
6
0
Figure 83. AICC Current vs. Time for 24 mA Slew with Slew Rate Control
07304-186
AICC
IOUT
VBOOST
IOUT_x CURRENT (mA)/V BOOST_x VOLTAGE (V)
32
0.7
32
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
IOUT_x CURRENT (mA)/VBOOST_x VOLTAGE (V)
0.5
Figure 82. AICC Current vs. Time for 24 mA Through 500 Ω Slew with External
51 kΩ Compensation Resistor
Rev. 0 | Page 44 of 48
07304-187
24
AICC CURRENT (A)
0.6
28
Using slew rate control can greatly reduce the AVCC supplies
current requirements, as shown in Figure 83. When using slew
rate control, attention should be paid to the fact that the output
cannot slew faster than the dc-to-dc converter. The dc-to-dc
converter slews slowest at higher currents through large (for
example, 1 kΩ) loads. This slew rate is also dependent on the
dc-to-dc converter configuration. Two examples of the dc-to-dc
converter output slew are shown in Figure 81 and Figure 82
(VBOOST corresponds to the dc-to-dc converter’s output voltage).
07304-185
0.7
AICC CURRENT (A)
32
0mA TO 24mA RANGE
1kΩ LOAD
fSW = 410kHz
INDUCTOR = 10µH (XAL4040-103)
TA = 25°C
IOUT_x CURRENT (mA)/VBOOST_x VOLTAGE (V)
0.8
AD5755
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
VOLTAGE AND CURRENT OUTPUT RANGES ON
THE SAME TERMINAL
When using a channel of the AD5755, the current and voltage
output pins can be connected to two separate terminals or tied
together and connected to a single terminal. There is no conflict
with tying the two output pins together because only the voltage
output or the current output can be enabled at any one time.
When the current output is enabled, the voltage output is in
tristate mode, and when the voltage output is enabled, the
current output is in tristate mode. For this operation, the POC
pin must be tied low and the POC bit in the main control
register set to 0, or, if the POC pin is tied high, the POC bit in
the main control register must be set to 1 before the current
output is enabled.
As shown in the Absolute Maximum Ratings section, the output
tolerances are the same for both the voltage and current output
pins. The +VSENSE_x and −VSENSE_x connections are buffered so
that current leakage into these pins is negligible when in current
output mode.
CURRENT OUTPUT MODE WITH INTERNAL RSET
When using the internal RSET resistor in current output mode,
the output is significantly affected by how many other channels
using the internal RSET are enabled and by the dc crosstalk from
these channels. The internal RSET specifications in Table 1 are
for all channels enabled with the internal RSET selected and
outputting the same code.
For every channel enabled with the internal RSET, the offset error
decreases. For example, with one current output enabled using
the internal RSET, the offset error is 0.075% FSR. This value
decreases proportionally as more current channels are enabled;
the offset error is 0.056% FSR on each of two channels, 0.029%
on each of three channels, and 0.01% on each of four channels.
Similarly, the dc crosstalk when using the internal RSET is proportional to the number of current output channels enabled with
the internal RSET. For example, with the measured channel at
0x8000 and one channel going from zero to full scale, the dc
crosstalk is −0.011% FSR. With two channels going from zero to
full scale, it is −0.019% FSR, and with all three other channels
going from zero to full scale, it is −0.025% FSR.
For the full-scale error measurement in Table 1, all channels are
at 0xFFFF. This means that, as any channel goes to zero scale,
the full-scale error increases due to the dc crosstalk. For
example, with the measured channel at 0xFFFF and three
channels at zero scale, the full-scale error is 0.025%. Similarly,
if only one channel is enabled in current output mode with the
internal RSET, the full-scale error is 0.025% FSR + 0.075% FSR =
0.1% FSR.
PRECISION VOLTAGE REFERENCE SELECTION
To achieve the optimum performance from the AD5755 over its
full operating temperature range, a precision voltage reference
must be used. Thought should be given to the selection of a
precision voltage reference. The voltage applied to the reference
inputs is used to provide a buffered reference for the DAC cores.
Therefore, any error in the voltage reference is reflected in the
outputs of the device.
There are four possible sources of error to consider when
choosing a voltage reference for high accuracy applications:
initial accuracy, temperature coefficient of the output voltage,
long term drift, and output voltage noise.
Initial accuracy error on the output voltage of an external reference can lead to a full-scale error in the DAC. Therefore, to
minimize these errors, a reference with low initial accuracy
error specification is preferred. Choosing a reference with an
output trim adjustment, such as the ADR425, allows a system
designer to trim system errors out by setting the reference
voltage to a voltage other than the nominal. The trim adjustment can be used at any temperature to trim out any error.
Long-term drift is a measure of how much the reference output
voltage drifts over time. A reference with a tight long-term drift
specification ensures that the overall solution remains relatively
stable over its entire lifetime.
The temperature coefficient of a reference’s output voltage affects
INL, DNL, and TUE. A reference with a tight temperature
coefficient specification should be chosen to reduce the dependence of the DAC output voltage to ambient temperature.
In high accuracy applications, which have a relatively low noise
budget, reference output voltage noise must be considered.
Choosing a reference with as low an output noise voltage as
practical for the system resolution required is important. Precision
voltage references such as the ADR435 (XFET design) produce
low output noise in the 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz region. However, as the
circuit bandwidth increases, filtering the output of the reference
may be required to minimize the output noise.
Table 34. Recommended Precision References
Part No.
ADR445
ADR02
ADR435
ADR395
AD586
Initial Accuracy
(mV Maximum)
±2
±3
±2
±5
±2.5
Long-Term Drift
(ppm Typical)
50
50
40
50
15
Temperature Drift (ppm/°C Maximum)
3
3
3
9
10
Rev. 0 | Page 45 of 48
0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Noise
(μV p-p Typical)
2.25
10
8
8
4
AD5755
AD5755
DRIVING INDUCTIVE LOADS
When driving inductive or poorly defined loads, a capacitor
may be required between IOUT_x and AGND to ensure stability.
A 0.01 μF capacitor between IOUT_x and AGND ensures stability
of a load of 50 mH. The capacitive component of the load may
cause slower settling, although this may be masked by the settling time of the AD5755. There is no maximum capacitance
limit for the current output of the AD5755.
SPORT_TFS
SYNC
SPORT_TSCK
SCLK
SPORT_DTO
GPIO0
LDAC
07304-080
ADSP-BF527
Figure 85. AD5755-to-ADSP-BF527 SPORT Interface
TRANSIENT VOLTAGE PROTECTION
LAYOUT GUIDELINES
The AD5755 contains ESD protection diodes that prevent damage from normal handling. The industrial control environment
can, however, subject I/O circuits to much higher transients. To
protect the AD5755 from excessively high voltage transients,
external power diodes and a surge current limiting resistor are
required, as shown in Figure 84. The two protection diodes and
resistor must have appropriate power ratings. Further protection
can be provided with transient voltage suppressors or transorbs;
these are available as both unidirectional suppressors (protect
against positive high voltage transients) and bidirectional suppressors (protect against both positive and negative high voltage
transients) and are available in a wide range of standoff and
breakdown voltage ratings. It is recommended that all field
connected nodes be protected.
Layout—Grounding
VBOOST_x
SDIN
In any circuit where accuracy is important, careful consideration
of the power supply and ground return layout helps to ensure
the rated performance. The printed circuit board on which the
AD5755 is mounted should be designed so that the analog and
digital sections are separated and confined to certain areas of the
board. If the AD5755 is in a system where multiple devices
require an AGND-to-DGND connection, the connection should
be made at one point only. The star ground point should be
established as close as possible to the device.
The GNDSWx and ground connection for the AVCC supply are
referred to as PGND. PGND should be confined to certain areas
of the board, and the PGND-to-AGND connection should be
made at one point only.
Layout—Supply Decoupling
VBOOST_x
IOUT_x
RP
GND
RLOAD
07304-079
AD5755
Figure 84. Output Transient Voltage Protection
MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACING
Microprocessor interfacing to the AD5755 is via a serial bus that
uses a protocol compatible with microcontrollers and DSP
processors. The communications channel is a 3-wire minimum
interface consisting of a clock signal, a data signal, and a latch
signal. The AD5755 requires a 24-bit data-word with data valid
on the falling edge of SCLK.
The DAC output update is initiated on either the rising edge of
LDAC or, if LDAC is held low, on the rising edge of SYNC. The
contents of the registers can be read using the readback function.
AD5755-TO-ADSP-BF527 INTERFACE
The AD5755 can be connected directly to the SPORT interface
of the ADSP-BF527, an Analog Devices, Inc., Blackfin® DSP.
Figure 85 shows how the SPORT interface can be connected to
control the AD5755.
The AD5755 should have ample supply bypassing of 10 μF
in parallel with 0.1 μF on each supply located as close to the
package as possible, ideally right up against the device. The
10 μF capacitors are the tantalum bead type. The 0.1 μF
capacitor should have low effective series resistance (ESR) and
low effective series inductance (ESL), such as the common
ceramic types, which provide a low impedance path to ground
at high frequencies to handle transient currents due to internal
logic switching.
Layout—Traces
The power supply lines of the AD5755 should use as large a
trace as possible to provide low impedance paths and reduce the
effects of glitches on the power supply line. Fast switching
signals such as clocks should be shielded with digital ground to
prevent radiating noise to other parts of the board and should
never be run near the reference inputs. A ground line routed
between the SDIN and SCLK lines helps reduce crosstalk
between them (not required on a multilayer board that has a
separate ground plane, but separating the lines helps). It is
essential to minimize noise on the REFIN line because it
couples through to the DAC output.
Avoid crossover of digital and analog signals. Traces on
opposite sides of the board should run at right angles to each
other. This reduces the effects of feedthrough on the board. A
microstrip technique is by far the best but not always possible
with a double-sided board. In this technique, the component
Rev. 0 | Page 46 of 48
AD5755
Layout—DC-to-DC Converters
To achieve high efficiency, good regulation, and stability, a welldesigned printed circuit board layout is required.
Follow these guidelines when designing printed circuit boards
(see Figure 78):
•
•
•
•
•
•
Keep the low ESR input capacitor, CIN, close to AVCC and
PGND.
Keep the high current path from CIN through the inductor,
LDCDC, to SWX and PGND as short as possible.
Keep the high current path from CIN through LDCDC, the
rectifier, DDCDC, and the output capacitor, CDCDC, as short as
possible.
Keep high current traces as short and as wide as possible.
The path from CIN through the inductor, LDCDC, to SWX and
PGND should be able to handle a minimum of 1 A.
Place the compensation components as close as possible to
COMPDCDC_x.
Avoid routing high impedance traces near any node
connected to SWx or near the inductor to prevent radiated
noise injection.
GALVANICALLY ISOLATED INTERFACE
In many process control applications, it is necessary to provide
an isolation barrier between the controller and the unit being
controlled to protect and isolate the controlling circuitry from
any hazardous common-mode voltages that may occur.
Isocouplers provide voltage isolation in excess of 2.5 kV. The
serial loading structure of the AD5755 makes it ideal for
isolated interfaces because the number of interface lines is kept
to a minimum. Figure 86 shows a 4-channel isolated interface to
the AD5755 using an ADuM1400. For more information, visit
www.analog.com.
MICROCONTROLLER
ADuM1400*
SERIAL CLOCK
OUT
VIA
SERIAL DATA
OUT
VIB
SYNC OUT
CONTROL OUT
VIC
VID
ENCODE
DECODE
ENCODE
DECODE
ENCODE
DECODE
ENCODE
DECODE
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
Rev. 0 | Page 47 of 48
Figure 86. Isolated Interface
VOA
VOB
VOC
VOD
TO SCLK
TO SDIN
TO SYNC
TO LDAC
07304-081
side of the board is dedicated to ground plane, whereas signal
traces are placed on the solder side.
AD5755
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
0.60 MAX
9.00
BSC SQ
0.60
MAX
48
64 1
49
PIN 1
INDICATOR
PIN 1
INDICATOR
0.50
BSC
0.50
0.40
0.30
1.00
0.85
0.80
SEATING
PLANE
16
17
33
32
FOR PROPER CONNECTION OF
THE EXPOSED PAD, REFER TO
THE PIN CONFIGURATION AND
FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
SECTION OF THIS DATA SHEET.
0.05 MAX
0.02 NOM
0.30
0.23
0.18
0.25 MIN
7.50
REF
0.80 MAX
0.65 TYP
12° MAX
7.25
7.10 SQ
6.95
EXPOSED PAD
(BOTTOM VIEW)
0.20 REF
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VMMD-4
080108-C
8.75
BSC SQ
TOP VIEW
Figure 87. 64-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ]
9 mm × 9 mm Body, Very Thin Quad
(CP-64-3)
Dimensions shown in millimeters
ORDERING GUIDE
Model 1
AD5755ACPZ-REEL7
AD5755BCPZ-REEL7
1
Resolution (Bits)
16
16
Temperature Range
−40°C to +105°C
−40°C to +105°C
Z = RoHS Compliant Part.
©2011 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
D07304-0-5/11(0)
Rev. 0 | Page 48 of 48
Package Description
64-lead LFCSP_VQ
64-lead LFCSP_VQ
Package Option
CP-64-3
CP-64-3