S i53 3 8 I 2 C-P R O G R A M M A B L E A N Y -F R E Q U E N C Y, A N Y -O U T P U T QUAD CLOCK GENERATOR Features Low power MultiSynth™ technology enables independent, any-frequency synthesis on four differential output drivers Highly-configurable output drivers with up to four differential outputs, eight single-ended clock outputs, or a combination of both Low phase jitter of 0.7 ps RMS typ High precision synthesis allows true zero ppm frequency accuracy on all outputs Flexible input reference: External crystal: 8 to 30 MHz CMOS input: 5 to 200 MHz SSTL/HSTL input: 5 to 350 MHz Differential input: 5 to 710 MHz Independently configurable outputs support any frequency or format: LVPECL/LVDS: 0.16 to 710 MHz HCSL: 0.16 to 250 MHz CMOS: 0.16 to 200 MHz SSTL/HSTL: 0.16 to 350 MHz Independent output voltage per driver: 1.5, 1.8, 2.5, or 3.3 V Single supply core with excellent PSRR: 1.8, 2.5, 3.3 V Independent frequency increment/ decrement feature enables glitchless frequency adjustments in 1 ppm steps Independent phase adjustment on each of the output drivers with an accuracy of <20 ps steps Highly configurable spread spectrum (SSC) on any output: Any frequency from 5 to 350 MHz Any spread from 0.5 to 5.0% Any modulation rate from 33 to 63 kHz External feedback mode allows zero-delay mode Loss of lock and loss of signal alarms Ordering Information: See page 42. Pin Assignments I2C/SMBus compatible interface Easy to use programming software Small size: 4 x 4 mm, 24-QFN Low power: 45 mA core supply typ Wide temperature range: –40 to +85 °C Applications Ethernet switch/router PCI Express 2.0/3.0 Broadcast video/audio timing Processor and FPGA clocking Any-frequency clock conversion MSAN/DSLAM/PON Fibre Channel, SAN Telecom line cards 1 GbE and 10 GbE Description The Si5338 is a high-performance, low-jitter clock generator capable of synthesizing any frequency on each of the device's four output drivers. This timing IC is capable of replacing up to four different frequency crystal oscillators or operating as a frequency translator. Using its patented MultiSynth™ technology, the Si5338 allows generation of four independent clocks with 0 ppm precision. Each output clock is independently configurable to support various signal formats and supply voltages. The Si5338 provides low-jitter frequency synthesis in a space-saving 4 x 4 mm QFN package. The device is programmable via an I2C/ SMBus-compatible serial interface and supports operation from a 1.8, 2.5, or 3.3 V core supply. I2C device programming is made easy with the ClockBuilder™ Desktop software available at www.silabs.com/ClockBuilder. Rev. 1.5 6/15 Copyright © 2015 by Silicon Laboratories Si5338 Si5 338 Functional Block Diagram 2 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S Section Page 1. Electrical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 2. Typical Application Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 3. Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 3.1. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 3.2. Input Stage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 3.3. Synthesis Stages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 3.4. Output Stage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 3.5. Configuring the Si5338 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 3.6. Status Indicators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 3.7. Output Enable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 3.8. Power Consumption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 3.9. Reset Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 3.10. Features of the Si5338 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 4. Applications of the Si5338 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 4.1. Free-Running Clock Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 4.2. Synchronous Frequency Translation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30 4.3. Configurable Buffer and Level Translator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30 2C Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31 5. I 6. Si5338 Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 7. Pin Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33 8. Device Pinout by Part Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 9. Package Outline: 24-Lead QFN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 10. Recommended PCB Land Pattern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40 11. Top Marking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41 11.1. Si5338 Top Marking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41 11.2. Top Marking Explanation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41 12. Ordering Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42 13. Device Errata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43 Document Change List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 Contact Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46 Rev. 1.5 3 Si5 338 1. Electrical Specifications Table 1. Recommended Operating Conditions (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Ambient Temperature Test Condition TA VDD Core Supply Voltage Output Buffer Supply Voltage VDDOn Min Typ Max Unit –40 25 85 °C 2.97 3.3 3.63 V 2.25 2.5 2.75 V 1.71 1.8 1.98 V 1.4 — 3.63 V Note: All minimum and maximum specifications are guaranteed and apply across the recommended operating conditions. Typical values apply at nominal supply voltages and an operating temperature of 25 °C unless otherwise noted. Table 2. Absolute Maximum Ratings1 Parameter Symbol Test Condition Value Unit DC Supply Voltage VDD –0.5 to 3.8 V Storage Temperature Range TSTG –55 to 150 °C ESD Tolerance HBM (100 pF, 1.5 k) 2.5 kV ESD Tolerance CDM 550 V ESD Tolerance MM 175 V Latch-up Tolerance JESD78 Compliant Junction Temperature Peak Soldering Reflow TJ Temperature2 150 °C 260 °C Notes: 1. Permanent device damage may occur if the absolute maximum ratings are exceeded. Functional operation should be restricted to the conditions as specified in the operational sections of this data sheet. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. 2. Refer to JEDEC J-STD-020 standard for more information. 4 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 3. DC Characteristics (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit Core Supply Current IDD 100 MHz on all outputs, 25 MHz refclk — 45 60 mA Core Supply Current (Buffer Mode) IDDB 50 MHz refclk — 12 — mA LVPECL, 710 MHz — — 30 mA LVDS, 710 MHz — — 8 mA HCSL, 250 MHz 2 pF load — — 20 mA CML, 350 MHz — 12 — mA SSTL, 350 MHz — — 19 mA CMOS, 50 MHz 15 pF load1 — 6 9 mA CMOS, 200 MHz1,2 3.3 V VDD0 — 13 18 mA CMOS, 200 MHz1,2 2.5 V — 10 14 mA CMOS, 200 MHz1,2 1.8 V — 7 10 mA HSTL, 350 MHz — — 19 mA IDDOx Output Buffer Supply Current Notes: 1. Single CMOS driver active. 2. Measured into a 5” 50 trace with 2 pF load. Table 4. Thermal Characteristics Parameter Symbol Test Condition Value Unit Thermal Resistance Junction to Ambient JA Still Air 37 °C/W Thermal Resistance Junction to Case JC Still Air 10 °C/W Rev. 1.5 5 Si5 338 Table 5. Performance Characteristics (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit PLL Acquisition Time tACQ — — 25 ms PLL Tracking Range fTRACK 5000 20000 — ppm PLL Loop Bandwidth fBW — 1.6 — MHz MultiSynth Frequency Synthesis Resolution fRES 0 0 1 ppb CLKIN Loss of Signal Detect Time tLOS — 2.6 5 μs CLKIN Loss of Signal Release Time tLOSRLS 0.01 0.2 1 μs PLL Loss of Lock Detect Time tLOL — 5 10 ms POR to Output Clock Valid (Pre-programmed Devices) tRDY — — 2 ms Input-to-Output Propagation Delay tPROP Buffer Mode (PLL Bypass) — 2.5 4 ns tDSKEW Rn divider = 11 — — 100 ps — — 15 ms –45 — +45 ns Output-Output Skew Output frequency < Fvco/8 POR to I2C Ready Programmable Initial Phase Offset POFFSET Phase Increment/Decrement Accuracy PSTEP — — 20 ps Phase Increment/Decrement Range PRANGE –45 — +45 ns MultiSynth range for phase increment/decrement fPRANGE 5 — Fvco/82 MHz Phase Increment/Decrement Update Time PUPDATE 667 — — ns Pin control2,3 MultiSynth output >18 MHz Notes: 1. Outputs at integer-related frequencies and using the same driver format. See "3.10.3. Programmable Initial Phase Offset" on page 27. 2. The maximum step size is only limited by the register lengths; however, the MultiSynth output frequency must be kept between 5 MHz and Fvco/8. 3. Update rate via I2C is also limited by the time it takes to perform a write operation. 4. Default value is 0.5% down spread. 5. Default value is ~31.5 kHz. 6 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 5. Performance Characteristics (Continued) (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit PUPDATE Pin control2,3 MultiSynth output <18 MHz Number of periods of MultiSynth output frequency — 10 12 Periods fSTEP R divider not used 1 — See Note 2 ppm MultiSynth range for frequency increment/decrement fRANGE R divider not used 5 — Fvco/8 MHz Frequency Increment/ Decrement Update Time fUPDATE Pin control2,3 MultiSynth output >18 MHz — — 667 ns Frequency Increment/ Decrement Update Time fUPDATE Pin control2,3 MultiSynth output <18 MHz Number of periods of MultiSynth output frequency — 10 12 Periods Spread Spectrum PP Frequency Deviation SSDEV MultiSynth Output < ~Fvco/8 0.1 — 5.04 % Spread Spectrum Modulation Rate SSDEV MultiSynth Output < ~Fvco/8 30 — 635 kHz Phase Increment/Decrement Update Time Frequency Increment/ Decrement Step Size Notes: 1. Outputs at integer-related frequencies and using the same driver format. See "3.10.3. Programmable Initial Phase Offset" on page 27. 2. The maximum step size is only limited by the register lengths; however, the MultiSynth output frequency must be kept between 5 MHz and Fvco/8. 3. Update rate via I2C is also limited by the time it takes to perform a write operation. 4. Default value is 0.5% down spread. 5. Default value is ~31.5 kHz. Rev. 1.5 7 Si5 338 Table 6. Input and Output Clock Characteristics (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit 5 — 710 MHz Input Clock (AC Coupled Differential Input Clocks on Pins IN1/2, IN5/6)1 Frequency fIN Differential Voltage Swing VPP 710 MHz input 0.4 — 2.4 VPP Rise/Fall Time2 tR/tF 20%–80% — — 1.0 ns Duty Cycle DC < 1 ns tr/tf 40 — 60 % Duty Cycle DC (PLL bypass)3 < 1 ns tr/tf 45 — 55 % Input Impedance1 RIN 10 — — k Input Capacitance CIN — 3.5 — pF 5 — 200 MHz –0.1 — 3.73 V 200 MHz 0.8 — VDD+10% Vpp Input Clock (DC-Coupled Single-Ended Input Clock on Pins IN3/4) Frequency fIN Input Voltage VI Input Voltage Swing CMOS Rise/Fall Time4 tR/tF 10%–90% — — 4 ns Time4 tR/tF 20%–80% — — 2.3 ns Duty Cycle5 DC < 4 ns tr/tf 40 — 60 % Input Capacitance CIN — 2.0 — pF 0.16 — 350 MHz 367 — 473.33 MHz 550 — 710 MHz 0.16 — 250 MHz Rise/Fall Output Clocks (Differential) Frequency6 fOUT LVPECL, LVDS, CML HCSL Notes: 1. Use an external 100 resistor to provide load termination for a differential clock. See Figure 3. 2. For best jitter performance, keep the midpoint differential input slew rate on pins 1,2,5,6 faster than 0.3 V/ns. 3. Minimum input frequency in clock buffer mode (PLL bypass) is 5 MHz. Operation to 1 MHz is also supported in buffer mode, but loss-of-signal (LOS) status is not functional. 4. For best jitter performance, keep the mid point input single ended slew rate on pins 3 or 4 faster than 1 V/ns. 5. Not in PLL bypass mode. 6. Only two unique frequencies above 350 MHz can be simultaneously output, Fvco/4 and Fvco/6. See "3.3. Synthesis Stages" on page 19. 7. CML output format requires ac-coupling of the differential outputs to a differential 100 load at the receiver. 8. Includes effect of internal series 22 resistor. 8 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 6. Input and Output Clock Characteristics (Continued) (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit VOC common mode — VDDO– 1.45 V — V VSEPP peak-to-peak single-ended swing 0.55 0.8 0.96 VPP VOC common mode 1.125 1.2 1.275 V VSEPP Peak-to-Peak Single-Ended Swing 0.25 0.35 0.45 VPP VOC Common Mode 0.8 0.875 0.95 V VSEPP Peak-to-Peak Single-Ended Swing 0.25 0.35 0.45 VPP VOC Common Mode 0.35 0.375 0.400 V VSEPP Peak-to-Peak Single-Ended Swing 0.575 0.725 0.85 VPP VOC Common Mode — See Note 7 — V VSEPP Peak-to-Peak Single-Ended Swing 0.67 0.860 1.07 VPP Rise/Fall Time tR/tF 20%–80% — — 450 ps Duty Cycle5 DC 45 — 55 % CMOS 0.16 — 200 MHz SSTL, HSTL 0.16 — 350 MHz LVPECL Output Voltage LVDS Output Voltage (2.5/3.3 V) LVDS Output Voltage (1.8 V) HCSL Output Voltage CML Output Voltage Output Clocks (Single-Ended) Frequency fOUT CMOS 20%–80% Rise/Fall Time tR/tF 2 pF load — 0.45 0.85 ns CMOS 20%–80% Rise/Fall Time tR/tF 15 pF load — — 2.0 ns Notes: 1. Use an external 100 resistor to provide load termination for a differential clock. See Figure 3. 2. For best jitter performance, keep the midpoint differential input slew rate on pins 1,2,5,6 faster than 0.3 V/ns. 3. Minimum input frequency in clock buffer mode (PLL bypass) is 5 MHz. Operation to 1 MHz is also supported in buffer mode, but loss-of-signal (LOS) status is not functional. 4. For best jitter performance, keep the mid point input single ended slew rate on pins 3 or 4 faster than 1 V/ns. 5. Not in PLL bypass mode. 6. Only two unique frequencies above 350 MHz can be simultaneously output, Fvco/4 and Fvco/6. See "3.3. Synthesis Stages" on page 19. 7. CML output format requires ac-coupling of the differential outputs to a differential 100 load at the receiver. 8. Includes effect of internal series 22 resistor. Rev. 1.5 9 Si5 338 Table 6. Input and Output Clock Characteristics (Continued) (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit CMOS Output Resistance — 50 — SSTL Output Resistance — 50 — HSTL Output Resistance — 50 — VDDO – 0.3 — CMOS Output Voltage8 VOH 4 mA load VOL 4 mA load SSTL Output Voltage VOH VOL VOH VOL VOH VOL HSTL Output Voltage VOH VOL Duty Cycle5 V — 0.3 V SSTL-3 0.45xVDDO+0.41 VDDOx = 2.97 to — 3.63 V — — V — 0.45xVDDO –0.41 V SSTL-2 VDDOx = 2.25 to 2.75 V 0.5xVDDO+0.41 — — V — — 0.5xVDDO– 0.41 V SSTL-18 VDDOx = 1.71 to 1.98 V 0.5xVDDO+0.34 — — — 0.5xVDDO– 0.34 V VDDO = 1.4 to 1.6 V 0.5xVDDO+0.3 — — V — — 0.5xVDDO – 0.3 V 45 — 55 % DC V Notes: 1. Use an external 100 resistor to provide load termination for a differential clock. See Figure 3. 2. For best jitter performance, keep the midpoint differential input slew rate on pins 1,2,5,6 faster than 0.3 V/ns. 3. Minimum input frequency in clock buffer mode (PLL bypass) is 5 MHz. Operation to 1 MHz is also supported in buffer mode, but loss-of-signal (LOS) status is not functional. 4. For best jitter performance, keep the mid point input single ended slew rate on pins 3 or 4 faster than 1 V/ns. 5. Not in PLL bypass mode. 6. Only two unique frequencies above 350 MHz can be simultaneously output, Fvco/4 and Fvco/6. See "3.3. Synthesis Stages" on page 19. 7. CML output format requires ac-coupling of the differential outputs to a differential 100 load at the receiver. 8. Includes effect of internal series 22 resistor. 10 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 7. Control Pins (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Condition Min Typ Max Unit Input Control Pins (IN3, IN4) Input Voltage Low VIL –0.1 — 0.3 x VDD V Input Voltage High VIH 0.7 x VDD — 3.73 V Input Capacitance CIN — — 4 pF Input Resistance RIN — 20 — k Output Control Pins (INTR) Output Voltage Low VOL ISINK = 3 mA 0 — 0.4 V Rise/Fall Time 20–80% tR/tF CL < 10 pf, pull up 1 k — — 10 ns Symbol Min Typ Max Unit fXTAL 8 — 11 MHz cL (supported)* 11 12 13 pF cL (recommended) 17 18 19 pF cO — — 6 pF rESR — — 300 dL 100 — — μW Table 8. Crystal Specifications for 8 to 11 MHz Parameter Crystal Frequency Load Capacitance (on-chip differential) Crystal Output Capacitance Equivalent Series Resistance Crystal Max Drive Level *Note: See "AN360: Crystal Selection Guide for Si533x and Si5355/56 Devices" for how to adjust the registers to accommodate a 12 pF crystal CL. Table 9. Crystal Specifications for 11 to 19 MHz Parameter Crystal Frequency Symbol Min Typ Max Unit fXTAL 11 — 19 MHz cL (supported)* 11 12 13 pF cL (recommended) 17 18 19 pF cO — — 5 pF rESR — — 200 dL 100 — — μW Load Capacitance (on-chip differential) Crystal Output Capacitance Equivalent Series Resistance Crystal Max Drive Level *Note: See "AN360: Crystal Selection Guide for Si533x and Si5355/56 Devices" for how to adjust the registers to accommodate a 12 pF crystal CL. Rev. 1.5 11 Si5 338 Table 10. Crystal Specifications for 19 to 26 MHz Parameter Symbol Min fXTAL 19 cL (supported)* 11 cL (recommended) 17 Crystal Frequency Typ Max Unit 26 MHz 12 13 pF 18 19 pF cO 5 pF rESR 100 Load Capacitance (on-chip differential) Crystal Output Capacitance Equivalent Series Resistance Crystal Max Drive Level dL 100 μW *Note: See "AN360: Crystal Selection Guide for Si533x and Si5355/56 Devices" for how to adjust the registers to accommodate a 12 pF crystal CL. Table 11. Crystal Specifications for 26 to 30 MHz Parameter Crystal Frequency Symbol Min fXTAL 26 cL (supported)* 11 cL (recommended) 17 Typ Max Unit 30 MHz 12 13 pF 18 19 pF cO 5 pF rESR 75 Load Capacitance (on-chip differential) Crystal Output Capacitance Equivalent Series Resistance Crystal Max Drive Level dL 100 *Note: See "AN360: Crystal Selection Guide for Si533x and Si5355/56 Devices" for how to adjust the registers to accommodate a 12 pF crystal CL. 12 Rev. 1.5 μW Si5338 Table 12. Jitter Specifications1,2,3 (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit GbE Random Jitter (12 kHz–20 MHz)4 JGbE CLKIN = 25 MHz All CLKn at 125 MHz5 — 0.7 1 ps RMS GbE Random Jitter (1.875–20 MHz) RJGbE CLKIN = 25 MHz All CLKn at 125 MHz5 — 0.38 0.79 ps RMS OC-12 Random Jitter (12 kHz–5 MHz) JOC12 CLKIN = 19.44 MHz All CLKn at 155.52 MHz5 — 0.7 1 ps RMS Total Jitter6 — 20.1 33.6 ps pk-pk RMS Jitter6, 10 kHz to 1.5 MHz — 0.15 1.47 ps RMS RMS Jitter6, 1.5 MHz to 50 MHz — 0.58 0.75 ps RMS RMS Jitter6 — 0.15 0.45 ps RMS PCI Express 1.1 Common Clocked PCI Express 2.1 Common Clocked PCI Express 3.0 Common Clocked JPER N = 10,000 cycles7 — 10 30 ps pk-pk Cycle-Cycle Jitter JCC N = 10,000 cycles Output MultiSynth operated in integer or fractional mode7 — 9 29 ps pk8 Random Jitter (12 kHz–20 MHz) RJ Output and feedback MultiSynth in integer or fractional mode7 — 0.7 1.5 ps RMS Period Jitter Notes: 1. All jitter measurements apply for LVDS/HCSL/LVPECL/CML output format with a low noise differential input clock and are made with an Agilent 90804 oscilloscope. All RJ measurements use RJ/DJ separation. 2. For best jitter performance, keep the single ended clock input slew rates at Pins 3 and 4 more than 1.0 V/ns and the differential clock input slew rates more than 0.3 V/ns. 3. All jitter data in this table is based upon all output formats being differential. When single-ended outputs are used, there is the potential that the output jitter may increase due to the nature of single-ended outputs. If your configuration implements any single-ended output and any output is required to have jitter less than 3 ps rms, contact Silicon Labs for support to validate your configuration and ensure the best jitter performance. In many configurations, CMOS outputs have little to no effect upon jitter. 4. DJ for PCI and GbE is < 5 ps pp 5. Output MultiSynth in Integer mode. 6. All output clocks 100 MHz HCSL format. Jitter is from the PCIE jitter filter combination that produces the highest jitter. See AN562 for details. Jitter is measured with the Intel Clock Jitter Tool, Ver. 1.6.4. 7. Input frequency to the Phase Detector between 25 and 40 MHz and any output frequency > 5 MHz. 8. Measured in accordance with JEDEC standard 65. 9. Rj is multiplied by 14; estimate the pp jitter from Rj over 212 rising edges. Rev. 1.5 13 Si5 338 Table 12. Jitter Specifications1,2,3 (Continued) (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit — 3 15 ps pk-pk — 2 10 ps pk-pk Output MultiSynth operated in fractional mode7 — 13 36 ps pk-pk Output MultiSynth operated in integer mode7 — 12 20 ps pk-pk Output MultiSynth operated in fractional Deterministic Jitter mode7 DJ Output MultiSynth operated in integer 7 mode Total Jitter (12 kHz–20 MHz) TJ = DJ+14xRJ (See Note 9) Notes: 1. All jitter measurements apply for LVDS/HCSL/LVPECL/CML output format with a low noise differential input clock and are made with an Agilent 90804 oscilloscope. All RJ measurements use RJ/DJ separation. 2. For best jitter performance, keep the single ended clock input slew rates at Pins 3 and 4 more than 1.0 V/ns and the differential clock input slew rates more than 0.3 V/ns. 3. All jitter data in this table is based upon all output formats being differential. When single-ended outputs are used, there is the potential that the output jitter may increase due to the nature of single-ended outputs. If your configuration implements any single-ended output and any output is required to have jitter less than 3 ps rms, contact Silicon Labs for support to validate your configuration and ensure the best jitter performance. In many configurations, CMOS outputs have little to no effect upon jitter. 4. DJ for PCI and GbE is < 5 ps pp 5. Output MultiSynth in Integer mode. 6. All output clocks 100 MHz HCSL format. Jitter is from the PCIE jitter filter combination that produces the highest jitter. See AN562 for details. Jitter is measured with the Intel Clock Jitter Tool, Ver. 1.6.4. 7. Input frequency to the Phase Detector between 25 and 40 MHz and any output frequency > 5 MHz. 8. Measured in accordance with JEDEC standard 65. 9. Rj is multiplied by 14; estimate the pp jitter from Rj over 212 rising edges. Table 13. Jitter Specifications, Clock Buffer Mode (PLL Bypass)* (VDD = 1.8 V –5% to +10%, 2.5 V ±10%, or 3.3 V ±10%, TA = –40 to 85 °C) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit Additive Phase Jitter (12 kHz–20 MHz) tRPHASE 0.7 V pk-pk differential input clock at 622.08 MHz with 70 ps rise/fall time — 0.165 — ps RMS Additive Phase Jitter (50 kHz–80 MHz) tRPHASEWB 0.7 V pk-pk differential input clock at 622.08 MHz with 70 ps rise/fall time — 0.225 — ps RMS *Note: All outputs are in Clock Buffer mode (PLL Bypass). 14 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 14. Typical Phase Noise Performance Offset Frequency 25 MHz XTAL to 156.25 MHz 27 MHz Ref In to 148.3517 MHz 19.44 MHz Ref In to 155.52 MHz Units 100 Hz –90 –87 –110 dBc/Hz 1 kHz –120 –117 –116 dBc/Hz 10 kHz –126 –123 –123 dBc/Hz 100 kHz –132 –130 –128 dBc/Hz 1 MHz –132 –132 –128 dBc/Hz 10 MHz –145 –145 –145 dBc/Hz Table 15. I2C Specifications (SCL,SDA)1 Parameter Symbol LOW Level Input Voltage VILI2C HIGH Level Input Voltage VIHI2C Hysteresis of Schmitt Trigger Inputs VHYS Test Condition Standard Mode Fast Mode Unit Min Max Min Max –0.5 0.3 x VDDI2 –0.5 0.3 x VDDI2C2 V 3.63 0.7 x VDDI2C2 3.63 V N/A N/A 0.1 — V VDDI2C2 = 2.5/3.3 V 0 0.4 0 0.4 V VDDI2C2 = 1.8 V N/A N/A 0 0.2 x VDDI2C V –10 10 –10 10 μA C 0.7 x VDDI2 C LOW Level Out- VOLI2C2 put Voltage (open drain or open collector) at 3 mA Sink Current Input Current II2C Capacitance for each I/O Pin CI2C VIN = –0.1 to VDDI2C — 4 — 4 pF — Timeout Enabled 25 35 25 35 ms I2C Bus Timeout Data Rate Standard Mode 100 400 kbps Notes: 1. Refer to NXP’s UM10204 I2C-bus specification and user manual, Revision 03, for further details: www.nxp.com/acrobat_download/usermanuals/UM10204_3.pdf. 2. I2C pullup voltages (VDDI2C) of 1.71 to 3.63 V are supported. Must write register 27[7] = 1 if the I2C bus voltage is less than 2.5 V to maintain compatibility with the I2C bus standard. 3. Hold time is defined as the time that data should hold its logical value after clock has transitioned to a logic low. 4. Guaranteed by characterization. Rev. 1.5 15 Si5 338 Table 15. I2C Specifications (SCL,SDA)1 (Continued) Parameter Symbol Test Condition Standard Mode Fast Mode Unit Hold Time (Repeated) START Condition tHD:STA 4.0 — 0.6 — s Set-Up Time for a Repeated START Condition tSU:STA 4.7 — 0.6 — s Data Hold Time3,4 tHD:DAT 100 — 100 — ns Data Set-Up Time tSU:DAT 250 — 150 — ns Notes: 1. Refer to NXP’s UM10204 I2C-bus specification and user manual, Revision 03, for further details: www.nxp.com/acrobat_download/usermanuals/UM10204_3.pdf. 2. I2C pullup voltages (VDDI2C) of 1.71 to 3.63 V are supported. Must write register 27[7] = 1 if the I2C bus voltage is less than 2.5 V to maintain compatibility with the I2C bus standard. 3. Hold time is defined as the time that data should hold its logical value after clock has transitioned to a logic low. 4. Guaranteed by characterization. 16 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 2. Typical Application Circuits Rev. 1.5 17 Si5 338 3. Functional Description Figure 1. Si5338 Block Diagram 3.1. Overview The Si5338 is a high-performance, low-jitter clock generator capable of synthesizing four independent user-programmable clock frequencies up to 350 MHz and select frequencies up to 710 MHz. The device supports free-run operation using an external crystal, or it can lock to an external clock for generating synchronous clocks. The output drivers support four differential clocks or eight single-ended clocks or a combination of both. The output drivers are configurable to support common signal formats, such as LVPECL, LVDS, HCSL, CMOS, HSTL, and SSTL. Separate output supply pins allow supply voltages of 3.3, 2.5, 1.8, and 1.5 V to support the multi-format output driver. The core voltage supply accepts 3.3, 2.5, or 1.8 V and is independent from the output supplies. Using its two-stage synthesis architecture and patented high-resolution MultiSynth technology, the Si5338 can generate four independent frequencies from a single input frequency. In addition to clock generation, the inputs can bypass the synthesis stage enabling the Si5338 to be used as a high-performance clock buffer or a combination of a buffer and generator. For applications that need fine frequency adjustments, such as clock margining, each of the synthesized frequencies can be incremented or decremented in user-defined steps as low as 1 ppm per step. Output-to-output phase delays are also adjustable in user-defined steps with an error of <20 ps to compensate for PCB trace delays or for fine tuning of setup and hold margins. 18 A zero-delay mode is also available to help minimize input-to-output delay. Spread spectrum is available on each of the clock outputs for EMI-sensitive applications, such as PCI Express. Configuration and control of the Si5338 is mainly handled through the I2C/SMBus interface. Some features, such as output enable and frequency or phase adjustments, can optionally be pin controlled. The device has a maskable interrupt pin that can be monitored for loss of lock or loss of input signal conditions. The device also provides the option of storing a userdefinable clock configuration in its non-volatile memory (NVM), which becomes the default clock configuration at power-up. 3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software To simplify device configuration, Silicon Labs provides ClockBuilder Desktop software, which can operate stand alone or in conjunction with the Si5338 EVB. When the software is connected to an Si5338 EVB it will control both the supply voltages to the Si5338 as well as the entire clock path within the Si5338. Clockbuilder Desktop can also measure the current delivered by the EVB regulators to each supply voltage of the Si5338. A Si5338 configuration can be written to a text file to be used by any system to configure the Si5338 via I2C. ClockBuilder Desktop can be downloaded from www.silabs.com/ClockBuilder and runs on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7. Rev. 1.5 Si5338 3.2. Input Stage The input stage supports four inputs. Two are used as the clock inputs to the synthesis stage, and the other two are used as feedback inputs for zero delay or external feedback mode. In cases where external feedback is not required, all four inputs are available to the synthesis stage. The reference selector selects one of the inputs as the reference to the synthesis stage. The input configuration is selectable through the IC interface. The input MUXes are set automatically in ClockBuilder Desktop (see “3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software”). For information on setting the input MUXs manually, see the Si5338 Reference Manual: Configuring the Si5338 without ClockBuilder Desktop. IN3 and IN4 accept single-ended signals from 5 MHz to 200 MHz. The single-ended inputs are internally accoupled; so, they can accept a wide variety of signals without requiring a specific dc level. The input signal only needs to meet a minimum voltage swing and must not exceed a maximum VIH or a minimum VIL. Refer to Table 6 for signal voltage limits. A typical single-ended connection is shown in Figure 3. For additional termination options, refer to “AN408: Termination Options for Any-Frequency, Any-Output Clock Generators and Clock Buffers—Si5338, Si5334, Si5330”. For free-run operation, the internal oscillator can operate from a low-frequency fundamental mode crystal (XTAL) with a resonant frequency between 8 and 30 MHz. A crystal can easily be connected to pins IN1 and IN2 without external components as shown in Figure 4. See Tables 8–11 for crystal specifications that are guaranteed to work with the Si5338. Figure 4. Connecting an XTAL to the Si5338 Figure 2. Input Stage IN1/IN2 and IN5/IN6 are differential inputs capable of accepting clock rates from 5 to 710 MHz. The differential inputs are capable of interfacing to multiple signals, such as LVPECL, LVDS, HSCT, HCSL, and CML. Differential signals must be ac-coupled as shown in Figure 3. A termination resistor of 100 placed close to the input pins is also required. Refer to Table 6 for signal voltage limits. Refer to “AN360: Crystal Selection Guide for Si533x/5x Devices” for information on the crystal selection. 3.2.1. Loss-of-Signal (LOS) Alarm Detectors There are two LOS detectors: LOS_CLKIN and LOS_FDBK. These detectors are tied to the outputs of the P1 and P2 frequency dividers, which are always enabled. See "3.6. Status Indicators" on page 24 for details on the alarm indicators. These alarms are used during programming to ensure that a valid input clock is detected. The input MUXs are set automatically in ClockBuilder Desktop (see the Si5338 Reference Manual to set manually). 3.3. Synthesis Stages Figure 3. Interfacing Differential and SingleEnded Signals to the Si5338 Next-generation timing applications require a wide range of frequencies that are often non-integer related. Traditional clock architectures address this by using multiple single PLL ICs, often at the expense of BOM complexity and power. The Si5338 uses patented MultiSynth technology to dramatically simplify timing architectures by integrating the frequency synthesis capability of four Phase-Locked Loops (PLLs) in a single device, greatly reducing size and power requirements versus traditional solutions. Rev. 1.5 19 Si5 338 Synthesis of the output clocks is performed in two stages, as shown in Figure 5. The first stage consists of a high-frequency analog phase-locked loop (PLL) that multiplies the input stage to a frequency within the range of 2.2 to 2.84 GHz. Multiplication of the input frequency is accomplished using a proprietary and highly precise MultiSynth feedback divider (N), which allows the PLL to generate any frequency within its VCO range with much less jitter than typical fractional N PLL. Figure 5. Synthesis Stages The second stage of synthesis consists of the output MultiSynth dividers (MSx). Based on a fractional N divider, the MultiSynth divider shown in Figure 6 switches seamlessly between the two closest integer divider values to produce the exact output clock frequency with 0 ppm error. To eliminate phase error generated by this process, the MultiSynth block calculates the relative phase difference between the clock produced by the fractional-N divider and the desired output clock and dynamically adjusts the phase to match the ideal clock waveform. This novel approach makes it possible to generate any output clock frequency without sacrificing jitter performance. This architecture allows the output of each MultiSynth to produce any frequency from 5 to Fvco/8 MHz. To support higher frequency operation, the MultiSynth divider can be bypassed. In bypass mode, integer divide ratios of 4 and 6 are supported. This allows for output frequencies of Fvco/4 and Fvco/6 MHz, which translates to 367–473.33 MHz and 550–710 MHz respectively. Because each MultiSynth uses the same VCO output, there are output frequency limitations when output frequencies greater than Fvco/8 are desired. For example, if 375 MHz is needed at the output of MultiSynth0, the VCO frequency would need to be 2.25 GHz. Now, all the other MultiSynths can produce any frequency from 5 MHz up to a maximum frequency of 2250/8 = 281.25 MHz. MultiSynth1,2,3 could also produce Fvco/4 = 562.5 MHz or Fvco/6 = 375 MHz. Only two unique frequencies above Fvco/8 can be output: Fvco/6 and Fvco/4. Figure 6. Silicon Labs’ MultiSynth Technology 20 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 3.4. Output Stage The output stage consists of output selectors, output dividers, and programmable output drivers as shown in Figure 7. Each of the outputs can also be enabled or disabled through the I2C port. A single pin to enable/disable all outputs is available in the Si5338K/L/M. 3.5. Configuring the Si5338 The Si5338 is a highly-flexible clock generator that is entirely configurable through its I2C interface. The device’s default configuration is stored in non-volatile memory (NVM) as shown in Figure 8. The NVM is a one-time programmable memory (OTP), which can store a custom user configuration at power-up. This is a useful feature for applications that need a clock present at power-up (e.g., for providing a clock to a processor). Figure 7. Output Stage The output selectors select the clock source for the output drivers. By default, each output driver is connected to its own MultiSynth block (e.g. MS0 to CLK0, MS1 to CLK1, etc), but other combinations are possible by reconfiguring the device. The PLL can be bypassed by connecting the input stage signals (osc, ref, refdiv, fb, or fbdiv) directly to the output divider. Bypassing an input directly to an output will not allow phase alignment of that output to other outputs. Each of the output drivers can also connect to the first MultiSynth block (MS0) enabling a fan-out function. This allows the Si5338 to act as a clock generator, a fanout buffer, or a combination of both in the same package. The output dividers (R0, R1, R2, R3) allow another stage of clock division.These dividers are configurable as divide by 1 (default), 2, 4, 8, 16, or 32. When an Rn does not equal 1, the phase alignment function for that output will not work. The output drivers are configurable to support common signal formats, such as LVPECL, LVDS, HCSL, CMOS, HSTL, and SSTL. Separate output supply pins (VDDOn) are provided for each output buffer. The voltage on these supply pins can be 3.3, 2.5, 1.8, or 1.5 V as needed for the possible output formats. Additionally, the outputs can be configured to stop high, low, or tri-state when the PLL has lost lock. If the Si5338 is used in a zero delay mode, the output that is fed back must be set for always on, which will override any output disable signal. Figure 8. Si5338 Memory Configuration During a power cycle or a power-on reset (POR), the contents of the NVM are copied into random access memory (RAM), which sets the device configuration that will be used during operation. Any changes to the device configuration after power-up are made by reading and writing to registers in the RAM space through the I2C interface. ClockBuilder Desktop (see "3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software" on page 18) can be used to easily configure register map files that can be written into RAM (see “3.5.2. Creating a New Configuration for RAM” for details). Alternatively, the register map file can be created manually with the help of the equations in the Si5338 Reference Manual. Two versions of the Si5338 are available. First, standard, non-customized Si5338 devices are available in which the RAM can be configured in-circuit via I2C (example part number Si5338C-A-GM). Alternatively, standard Si5338 devices can be field-programmed using the Si5338/56-PROG-EVB field programmer. Second, custom factory-programmed Si5338 devices are available that include a user-specified startup frequency configuration (example part number Si5338C-Axxxxx-GM). See "12. Ordering Information" on page 42 for details. Rev. 1.5 21 Si5 338 3.5.1. Ordering a Custom NVM Configuration The Si5338 is orderable with a factory-programmed custom NVM configuration. This is the simplest way of using the Si5338 since it generates the desired output frequencies at power-up or after a power-on reset (POR). This default configuration can be reconfigured in RAM through the I2C interface after power-up (see “3.5.2. Creating a New Configuration for RAM”). Custom 7-bit I2C addresses may also be requested. Note that for the A/B/C devices, the I2C LS bit address is the logical “or” of the I2C address LS bit in Register 27 and the state of the I2C_LSB pin. If I2C_LSB pin functionality is required, custom I2C addresses may only be even numbers. For all other variants of the device, custom I2C addresses may be even or odd numbers. See the Si5338 Reference Manual: Configuring the Si5338 without ClockBuilder Desktop for more details. The first step in ordering a custom device is generating an NVM file which defines the input and output clock frequencies and signal formats. This is easily done using the ClockBuilder Desktop software (see "3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software" on page 18). This GUI based software generates an NVM file, which is used by the factory to manufacture custom parts. Each custom part is marked with a unique part number identifying the specific configuration (e.g., Si5338C-A00100-GM). Consult your local sales representative for more details on ordering a custom Si5338. 3.5.2. Creating a New Configuration for RAM Any Si5338 device can be configured by writing to registers in RAM through the I2C interface. A non-factory programmed device must be configured in this manner. The first step is to determine all the register values for the required configuration. This can be accomplished by one of two methods. 1. Create a device configuration (register map) using ClockBuilder Desktop (v3.0 or later; see "3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software" on page 18). a. Configure the frequency plan. b. Configure the output driver format and supply voltage. c. Configure frequency and/or phase inc/dec (if desired). d. Configure spread spectrum (if desired). e. Configure for zero-delay mode (if desired, see "3.10.6. Zero-Delay Mode" on page 28). f. If needed go to the Advanced tab and make additional configurations. g. Save the configuration using the Options > Save Register Map File or Options > Save C code Header. 2. Create a device configuration, register by register, using the Si5338 Reference Manual. 3.5.3. Writing a Custom Configuration to RAM Writing a new configuration (register map) to the RAM consists of pausing the LOL state-machine, writing new values to the IC accounting for the write-allowed mask (see the Si5338 Reference Manual, “10. Si5338 Registers”), validating the input clock or crystal, locking the PLL to the input with the new configuration, restarting the LOL state-machine, and calibrating the VCO for robust operation across temperature. The flow chart in Figure 9 enumerates the details: Note: The write-allowed mask specifies which bits must be read and modified before writing the entire register byte (a.k.a. read-modify-write). “AN428: Jump Start: In-System, Flash-Based Programming for Silicon Labs’ Timing Products” illustrates the procedure defined in Section 3.5.2 with ANSI C code. 22 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Figure 9. I2C Programming Procedure Rev. 1.5 23 Si5 338 3.5.4. Writing a Custom Configuration to NVM An alternative to ordering an Si5338 with a custom NVM configuration is to use the field programming kit (Si5338/56-PROG-EVB) to write directly to the NVM of a “blank” Si5338. Since NVM is an OTP memory, it can only be written once. The default configuration can be reconfigured by writing to RAM through the I2C interface (see “3.5.2. Creating a New Configuration for RAM”). 3.6. Status Indicators Figure 11. INTR Pin with Required Pull-Up A logic-high interrupt pin (INTR) is available to indicate a loss of signal (LOS) condition, a PLL loss of lock (PLL_LOL) condition, or that the PLL is in process of acquiring lock (SYS_CAL). PLL_LOL is held high when the input frequency drifts beyond the PLL tracking range. It is held low during all other times and during a POR or soft_reset. SYS_CAL is held high during a POR or SOFT reset so that no chattering occurs during the locking process. As shown in Figure 10, a status register at address 218 is available to help identify the exact event that caused the interrupt pin to become active. Register 247 is the sticky version of Register 218, and Register 6 is the interrupt mask for Register 218. 3.7. Output Enable There are two methods of enabling and disabling the output drivers: Pin control, and I2C control. 3.7.1. Enabling Outputs Using Pin Control The Si5338K/L/M devices provide an Output Enable pin (OEB) as shown in Figure 12. Pulling this pin high will turn all outputs off. The state of the individual drivers when turned off is controllable. If an individual output is set to always on, then the OEB pin will not have an effect on that driver. Drive state options and always on are explained in “3.7.2. Enabling Outputs through the I2C Interface”. Figure 12. Output Enable Pin (Si5338K/L/M) Figure 10. Status Register Figure 11 shows a typical connection with the required pull-up resistor to VDD. 3.6.1. Using the INTR Pin in Systems with I2C The INTR output pin is not latched and thus it should not be a polled input to an MCU but an edge-triggered interrupt. An MCU can process an interrupt event by reading the sticky register 247 to see what event caused the interrupt. The same register can be cleared by writing zeros to the bits that were set. Individual interrupt bits can be masked by register 6[4:0]. 3.6.2. Using the INTR Pin in Systems without I2C The INTR pin also provides a useful function in systems that require a pin-controlled fault indicator. Pre-setting the interrupt mask register allows the INTR pin to become an indicator for a specific event, such as LOS and/or LOL. Therefore, the INTR pin can be used to indicate a single fault event or even multiple events. 24 3.7.2. Enabling Outputs through the I2C Interface Output enable can be controlled through the I2C interface. As shown in Figure 13, register 230[3:0] allows control of each individual output driver. Register 230[4] controls all drivers at once. When register 230[4] is set to disable all outputs, the individual output enables will have no effect. Registers 110[7:6], 114[7:6], 118[7:6], and 112[7:6] control the output disabled state as tri-state, low, high, or always on. If always on is set, that output will always be on regardless of any other register or chip state. In addition, the always on mode must be selected for an output that is fed back in a Zero Delay application. Rev. 1.5 Si5338 SSTL, it is required to have load circuitry as shown in “AN408: Termination Options for Any-Frequency, AnyOutput Clock Generators and Clock Buffers”. The Si5338 EVB has layout pads that can be used for this purpose. When testing for output driver current with LVPECL the same layout pads can be used to implement the LVPECL bias resistor of 130 (2.5 V VDDx) or 200 (3.3 V VDDx). See the schematic in the Si5338-EVB data sheet and AN408 for additional information. Figure 13. Output Enable Control Registers 3.8. Power Consumption The Si5338 Power consumption is a function of Supply voltage Frequency of output Clocks Number of output Clocks Format of output Clocks Because of internal voltage regulation, the current from the core VDD is independent of the VDD voltage and hence the plot shown in Figure 14 can be used to estimate the VDD core (pins 7 and 24) current. The current from the output supply voltages can be estimated from the values provided in Table 3, “DC Characteristics,” on page 5. To get the most accurate value for VDD currents, the Si5338-EVB with Clockbuilder software should be used. To do this, go to the “Power” tab of the Clockbuilder and press “Measure”. In this manner, a specific configuration can be implemented on the EVB and the actual current for each supply voltage measured. When doing this it is critical that the output drivers have the proper load impedance for the selected format. When testing for output driver current with HSTL and Rev. 1.5 25 Si5 338 80 4 Active Outputs, Fractional Output MS 75 4 Active Outputs, Integer Output MS 3 Active Outputs, Fractional Output MS 70 Typical VDD Core Current (ma) 3 Active Outputs, Integer Output MS 2 Active Outputs, Fractional Output MS 65 2 Active Outputs, Integer Output MS 1 Active Output, Fractional Output MS 60 1 Active Output, Integer Output MS 55 50 45 40 35 30 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Output Frequency (MHz) Figure 14. Core VDD Supply Average Current vs Output Frequency 26 Rev. 1.5 350 400 Si5338 3.9. Reset Options There are two types of resets on the Si5338, POR and soft reset. A POR reset automatically occurs whenever the supply voltage on the VDD is applied. The soft reset is forced by writing 0x02 to register 246. This bit is not self-clearing, and thus it may read back as a 1 or a 0. A soft reset will not download any preprogrammed NVM and will not change any register values in RAM. The soft reset performs the following sequence: 1. All outputs turn off except if programmed to be always on. 2. Internal calibrations are done and MultiSynths are initialized. a. Outputs that are synchronous are phase aligned (if Rn = 1). 3. 25 ms is allowed for the PLL to lock (no delay occurs when FCAL_OVRD_EN = 1). 4. Turn on all outputs that were turned off in step 1. 3.10. Features of the Si5338 The Si5338 offers several features and functions that are useful in many timing applications. The following paragraphs describe in detail the main features and typical applications. All of these features can be easily configured using the ClockBuilder Desktop. See "3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software" on page 18. 3.10.1. Frequency Increment/Decrement Each of the output clock frequencies can be independently stepped up or down in predefined steps as low as 1 ppm per step and with a resolution of 1 ppm. Setting of the step size and control of the frequency increment or decrement is accomplished through the I2C interface. Alternatively, the Si5338 can be ordered with optional frequency increment (FINC) and frequency decrement (FDEC) pins for pincontrolled applications. Note that FINC and FDEC pins only affect CLK0. Frequency increment and decrement of all other channels must be performed by I2C writes to the appropriate registers. See Table 17 on page 37 for ordering information of pin-controlled devices. When phase is decremented, the MultiSynth output clock edge will happen sooner which will create a single half cycle that is shorter than expected for the MultiSynth output clock frequency. Care must be taken to insure that a single phase decrement does not produce a half cycle that is less than 4/fvco or an unwanted glitch in the MultiSynth output may occur. The frequency increment and decrement feature is useful in applications requiring a variable clock frequency (e.g., CPU speed control, FIFO overflow management, etc.) or in applications where frequency margining (e.g., fout ±5%) is necessary for design verification and manufacturing test. Frequency increment or decrement can be applied as fast as 1.5 MHz when it is done by pin control. When under I2C control, the frequency increment and decrement update rate is limited by the I2C bus speed. The magnitude of the frequency step has 0 ppm error. Frequency steps are seamless and glitchless. If a frequency increment/decrement command causes the MultiSynth output frequency to exceed the maximum/minimum limits, then a glitch on the output is likely to occur. The max frequency of a MultiSynth output that is using frequency increment/decrement is Fvco/8, and the minimum frequency is 5 MHz. 3.10.2. Output Phase Increment/Decrement The Si5338 has a digitally-controlled glitchless phase increment and decrement feature that allows adjusting the phase of each output clock in relation to the other output clocks. The phase of each output clock can be adjusted with an accuracy of 20 ps over a range of ±45 ns. Setting of the step size and control of the phase increment or decrement is accomplished through the I2C interface. Alternatively, the Si5338 can be ordered with optional phase increment (PINC) and phase decrement (PDEC) pins for pin-controlled applications. In pin controlled applications the phase increment and decrement update rate is as fast as 1.5 MHz. In I2C applications, the maximum update rate is limited by the speed of the I2C. See Table 17 for ordering information of pin-controlled devices. When phase is decremented, the MultiSynth output clock edge will happen sooner, which will create a single half cycle that is shorter than expected for the MultiSynth output clock frequency. Care must be taken to insure that a single phase decrement does not produce a half cycle that is less than 4/fvco or an unwanted glitch in the MultiSynth output may occur. The phase increment and decrement feature provides a useful method for fine tuning setup and hold timing margins or adjusting for mismatched PCB trace lengths. 3.10.3. Programmable Initial Phase Offset Each output clock can be set for its initial phase offset up to ±45 ns. In order for the initial phase offset to be applied correctly at power up, the VDDOx output supply voltage must cross 1.2 V before the VDD (pins 7,24) core power supply voltage crosses 1.45 V. This applies to the each driver output individually. A soft_reset will also guarantee that the programmed Initial Phase Offset is applied correctly. The initial phase offset only works on outputs that have their R divider set to 1. Rev. 1.5 27 Si5 338 3.10.4. Output Synchronization Upon power up or a soft_reset the Si5338 synchronizes the output clocks. With normal output polarity (no output clock inversion), the Si5338 synchronizes the output clocks to the falling, not rising edge. Synchronization at the rising edge can be done by inverting all the clocks that are to be synchronized. 3.10.5. Output R Divider When the requested output frequency of a channel is below 5 MHz, the Rn (n = 0,1,2,3) divider needs to be set and enabled. This is automatically done in register maps generated by the ClockBuilder Desktop. When the Rn divider is active the step size range of the frequency increment and decrement function will decrease by the Rn divide ratio. The Rn divider can be set to {1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32}. Non-unity settings of R0 will affect the Finc/Fdec step size at the MultiSynth0 output. For example, if the MultiSynth0 output step size is 2.56 MHz and R0 = 8, the step size at the output of R0 will be 2.56 MHz divided by 8 = .32 MHz. When the Rn divider is set to non-unity, the initial phase offset of the CLKn output with respect to other CLKn outputs is not guaranteed. 3.10.6. Zero-Delay Mode The Si5338 supports an optional zero delay mode of operation for applications that require minimal input-tooutput delay. In this mode, one of the device output clocks is fed back to the feedback input pin (IN4 or IN5/ IN6) to implement an external feedback path which nullifies the delay between the reference input and the output clocks. Figure 15 shows the Si5338 in a typical zero-delay configuration. It is generally recommended that Clk3 be LVDS and that the feedback input be pins 5 and 6. For the differential input configuration to pins 5 and 6, see Figure 3 on page 19. The zero-delay mode combined with the phase increment/decrement feature allows unprecedented flexibility in generating clocks with precise edge alignment. Figure 15. Si5338 in Zero Delay Clock Generator Mode 3.10.7. Spread Spectrum To help reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI), the Si5338 supports spread spectrum modulation. The output clock frequencies can be modulated to spread energy across a broader range of frequencies, lowering system EMI. The Si5338 implements spread spectrum using its patented MultiSynth technology to achieve previously unattainable precision in both modulation rate and spreading magnitude as shown in Figure 16. Through I2C control, the Spread spectrum can be applied to any output clock, any clock frequency, and any spread amount from ±0.1% to ±2.5% center spread and –0.1% to –5% down spread. The spreading rate is limited to 30 to 63 kHz. The Spread Spectrum is generated digitally in the output MultiSynths which means that the Spread Spectrum parameters are virtually independent of process, voltage and temperature variations. Since the Spread Spectrum is created in the output MultiSynths, through I2C each output channel can have independent Spread Spectrum parameters. Without the use of I2C (NVM download only) the only supported Spread Spectrum parameters are for PCI Express compliance composing 100 MHz clock, 31.5 kHz spreading frequency with the choice of the spreading. Rev A devices provide native support for both down and center spread. Center spread is supported in rev B devices by up-shifting the nominal frequency and using down-spread register parameters. Consult the Si5338 Reference Manual for details. Note: If you currently use center spread on a revision A and would like to migrate to a revision B device, you must generate a new register map using either ClockBuilder Desktop or the equations in the Si5338 Reference Manual. Center spread configurations for Revisions A and B are not compatible. 28 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 4. Applications of the Si5338 +/- 0% +/- 1% +/- 2.5% +/- 5% Because of its flexible architecture, the Si5338 can be configured to serve several functions in the timing path. The following sections describe some common applications. 4.1. Free-Running Clock Generator Figure 16. Configurable Spread Spectrum Using the internal oscillator (Osc) and an inexpensive external crystal (XTAL), the Si5338 can be configured as a free-running clock generator for replacing high-end and long-lead-time crystal oscillators found on many printed circuit boards (PCBs). Replacing several crystal oscillators with a single IC solution helps consolidate the bill of materials (BOM), reduces the number of suppliers, and reduces the number of long-lead-time components on the PCB. In addition, since crystal oscillators tend to be the least reliable aspect of many systems, the overall FIT rate improves with the elimination of each oscillator. Up to four independent clock frequencies can be generated at any rate within its supported frequency range and with any of supported output types. Features, such as frequency increment and decrement and phase adjustments on a per-output basis, provide unprecedented flexibility for PCB designs. Figure 17 shows the Si5338 configured as a free-running clock generator. Figure 17. Si5338 as a Free-Running Clock Generator Rev. 1.5 29 Si5 338 4.2. Synchronous Frequency Translation 4.3. Configurable Buffer and Level Translator In other cases, it is useful to generate an output frequency that is synchronous (or phase-locked) to another clock frequency. The Si5338 is the ideal choice for generating up to four clocks with different frequencies with a fixed phase relationship to an input reference. Because of its highly precise frequency synthesis, the Si5338 can generate all four output frequencies with 0 ppm error to the input reference. The Si5338 is an ideal choice for applications that have traditionally required multiple stages of frequency synthesis to achieve complex frequency translations. Examples are in broadcast video (e.g., 148.5 MHz to 148.351648351648 MHz), WAN/LAN applications (e.g. 155.52 MHz to 156.25 MHz), and Forward Error Correction (FEC) applications (e.g., 156.25 MHz to 161.1328125 MHz). Using the input reference selectors, the Si5338 can select from one of four inputs (IN1/IN2, IN3, IN4, and IN5/IN6). Figure 18 shows the Si5338 configured as a synchronous clock generator. Frequencies and multiplication ratios may be entered into ClockBuilder Desktop using fractional notation to ensure that the exact scaling ratios can be achieved. Using the output selectors, the synthesis stage can be entirely bypassed allowing the Si5338 to act as a configurable clock buffer/divider with level translation and selectable inputs. Because of its highly selectable configuration, virtually any combination is possible. The configurable output drivers allow four differential outputs, eight single-ended outputs, or a combination of both. Figure 19 shows the Si5338 configured as a flexible clock buffer. Figure 19. Si5338 as a Configurable Clock Buffer/Divider with Level Translation 4.3.1. Combination Free-Running and Synchronous Clock Generator Another application of the Si5338 is in generating both free-running and synchronous clocks in one device. This is accomplished by configuring the input and output selectors for the desired split configuration. An example of such an application is shown in Figure 20. Figure 18. Si5338 as a Synchronous Clock Generator or Frequency Translator Figure 20. Si5338 In a Free-Running and Synchronous Clock Generator Application 30 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 5. I2C Interface Configuration and operation of the Si5338 is controlled by reading and writing to the RAM space using the I2C interface. The device operates in slave mode with 7-bit addressing and can operate in Standard-Mode (100 kbps) or Fast-Mode (400 kbps) and supports burst data transfer with auto address increments. The I2C bus consists of a bidirectional serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock input (SCL) as shown in Figure 21. Both the SDA and SCL pins must be connected to the VDD supply via an external pull-up as recommended by the I2C specification. Figure 23. I2C Write Operation A read operation is performed in two stages. A data write is used to set the register address, then a data read is performed to retrieve the data from the set address. A read burst operation is also supported. This is shown in Figure 24. Figure 21. I2C and Control Signals The 7-bit device (slave) address of the Si5338 consists of a 6-bit fixed address plus a user-selectable LSB bit as shown in Figure 22. The LSB bit is selectable using the optional I2C_LSB pin which is available as an ordering option for applications that require more than one Si5338 on a single I2C bus. Devices without the I2C_LSB pin option have a fixed 7-bit address of 70h (111 0000) as shown in Figure 22. Other custom I2C addresses are also possible. See Table 17 for details on device ordering information with the optional I2C_LSB pin. Figure 24. I2C Read Operation Figure 22. Si5338 I2C Slave Address Data is transferred MSB first in 8-bit words as specified by the I2C specification. A write command consists of a 7-bit device (slave) address + a write bit, an 8-bit register address, and 8 bits of data as shown in Figure 23. A write burst operation is also shown where every additional data word is written using an autoincremented address. AC and dc electrical specifications for the SCL and SDA pins are shown in Table 15. The timing specifications and timing diagram for the I2C bus are compatible with the I2C-Bus Standard. SDA timeout is supported for compatibility with SMBus interfaces. The I2C bus can be operated at a bus voltage of 1.71 to 3.63 V and is 3.3 V tolerant. If a bus voltage of less than 2.5 V is used, register 27[7] = 1 must be written to maintain compatibility with the I2C bus standard. Rev. 1.5 31 Si5 338 6. Si5338 Registers For many applications, the Si5338's register values are easily configured using ClockBuilder Desktop (see "3.1.1. ClockBuilder™ Desktop Software" on page 18). However, for customers interested in using the Si5338 in operating modes beyond the capabilities available with ClockBuilder™, refer to the Si5338 Reference Manual: Configuring the Si5338 without ClockBuilder Desktop for a detailed description of the Si5338 registers and their usage. Also refer to “AN428: Jump Start: In-System, Flash-Based Programming for Silicon Labs’ Timing Products” for a working application example using Silicon Labs' F301 MCU to program the Si5338 register set. 32 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 7. Pin Descriptions Note: Center pad must be tied to GND for normal operation. Table 16. Si5338 Pin Descriptions Pin # 1,2 Pin Name IN1/IN2 I/O I Signal Type Description Multi CLKIN/CLKINB. These pins are used as the main differential clock input or as the XTAL input. See "3.2. Input Stage" on page 19, Figure 3 and Figure 4, for connection details. Clock inputs to these pins must be ac-coupled. Keep the traces from pins 1,2 to the crystal as short as possible and keep other signals and radiating sources away from the crystal. When not in use, leave IN1 unconnected and IN2 connected to GND. Rev. 1.5 33 Si5 338 Table 16. Si5338 Pin Descriptions (Continued) Pin # 3 Pin Name IN3 I/O I Signal Type Description Multi This pin can have one of the following functions depending on the part number: CLKIN (for Si5338A/B/C and Si5338N/P/Q devices only) Provides a high-impedance clock input for single ended clock signals. This input should be dc-coupled as shown in “3.2. Input Stage”, Figure 3. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. PINC (for Si5338D/E/F devices only) Used as the phase increment pin. See "3.10.2. Output Phase Increment/Decrement" on page 27 for more details. Minimum pulse width of 100 ns is required for proper operation. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. FINC (for Si5338G/H/J devices only) Used as the frequency increment pin. See "3.10.1. Frequency Increment/Decrement" on page 27 for more details. Minimum pulse width of 100 ns is required for proper operation. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. OEB (for Si5338K/L/M devices only) Used as an output enable pin. 0 = All outputs enabled; 1 = All outputs disabled. By default, outputs are tri-stated when disabled. This pin can have one of the following functions depending on the part number I2C_LSB (for Si5338A/B/C and Si5338K/L/M devices only) 4 34 IN4 I Multi This is the LSB of the Si5338 I2C address. 0 = I2C address 70h (111 0000), 1 = I2C address 71h (111 0001). FDBK (for Si5338N/P/Q devices only) Provides a high-impedance feedback input for single-ended clock signals. This input should be dc-coupled as shown in “3.2. Input Stage”, Figure 3. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. PDEC (for Si5338D/E/F) devices only) Used as the phase decrement pin. See “3.10.2. Output Phase Increment/Decrement” for more details. Minimum pulse width of 100 ns is required for proper operation. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. FDEC (for Si5338G/H/J devices only) Used as the frequency decrement pin. See “3.10.1. Frequency Increment/Decrement” for more details. Minimum pulse width of 100 ns is required for proper operation. If this pin is not used, it should be connected to ground. Rev. 1.5 Si5338 Table 16. Si5338 Pin Descriptions (Continued) Pin # 5,6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Pin Name IN5/IN6 VDD INTR CLK3B CLK3A VDDO3 SCL CLK2B CLK2A I/O I VDD O O O VDD I O O Signal Type Description Multi FDBK/FDBKB. These pins can be used as a differential feedback input in zero delay mode or as a secondary clock input. See section 3.2, Figure 3, for termination details. See "3.10.6. Zero-Delay Mode" on page 28 for zero delay mode set-up. Inputs to these pins must be ac-coupled. When not in use, leave IN5 unconnected and IN6 connected to GND. Supply Core Supply Voltage. This is the core supply voltage, which can operate from a 1.8, 2.5, or 3.3 V supply. A 0.1 μF bypass capacitor should be located very close to this pin. Open Drain Interrupt. A typical pullup resistor of 1–4 k is used on this pin. This pin can be pulled up to a supply voltage as high as 3.6 V regardless of the other supply voltages on pins 7, 11, 15, 16, 20, and 24. The interrupt condition allows the pull up resistor to pull the output up to the supply voltage. Multi Output Clock B for Channel 3. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK3A being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. Multi Output Clock A for Channel 3. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK3B being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. Supply LVCMOS Output Clock Supply Voltage. Supply voltage (3.3, 2.5, 1.8, or 1.5 V) for CLK3A,B. A 0.1 μF capacitor must be located very close to this pin. If CLK3 is not used, this pin must be tied to VDD (pin 7, 24). I2C Serial Clock Input. This is the serial clock input for the I2C bus. A pullup resistor at this pin is required. Typical values would be 1–4 k. See the I2C bus spec for more information. This pin is 3.3 V tolerant regardless of the other supply voltages on pins 7, 11, 15, 16, 20, 24. See Register 27. Multi Output Clock B for Channel 2. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK2A being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. Multi Output Clock A for Channel 2. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK2B being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. Rev. 1.5 35 Si5 338 Table 16. Si5338 Pin Descriptions (Continued) Pin # 15 16 17 18 19 Pin Name VDDO2 VDDO1 CLK1B CLK1A SDA I/O VDD VDD O O I/O Signal Type Description Supply Output Clock Supply Voltage. Supply voltage (3.3, 2.5, 1.8, or 1.5 V) for CLK2A,B. A 0.1 μF capacitor must be located very close to this pin. If CLK2 is not used, this pin must be tied to VDD (pin 7, 24). Supply Output Clock Supply Voltage. Supply voltage (3.3, 2.5, 1.8, or 1.5 V) for CLK1A,B. A 0.1 μF capacitor must be located very close to this pin. If CLK1 is not used, this pin must be tied to VDD (pin 7, 24). Multi Output Clock B for Channel 1. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK1A being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. Multi Output Clock A for Channel 1. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK1B being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. LVCMOS I2C Serial Data. This is the serial data for the I2C bus. A pullup resistor at this pin is required. Typical values would be 1–4 k. See the I2C bus spec for more information. This pin is 3.3 V tolerant regardless of the other supply voltages on pins 7, 11, 15, 16, 20, 24. See Register 27. Output Clock Supply Voltage. Supply voltage (3.3, 2.5, 1.8, or 1.5 V) for CLK0A,B. A 0.1 μF capacitor must be located very close to this pin. If CLK0 is not used, this pin must be tied to VDD (pin 7, 24). 20 VDDO0 VDD Supply 21 CLK0B O Multi Output Clock B for Channel 0. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK0A being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. 22 CLK0A O Multi Output Clock A for Channel 0. May be a single-ended output or half of a differential output with CLK0B being the other differential half. If unused, leave this pin floating. 23 RSVD_GND GND GND Ground. Must be connected to system ground. Minimize the ground path impedance for optimal performance of this device. 24 VDD VDD Supply GND PAD GND GND GND 36 Core Supply Voltage. The device operates from a 1.8, 2.5, or 3.3 V supply. A 0.1 μF bypass capacitor should be located very close to this pin. Ground Pad. This is the large pad in the center of the package. Device specifications cannot be guaranteed unless the ground pad is properly connected to a ground plane on the PCB. See Table 19, “PCB Land Pattern,” on page 40 for ground via requirements. Rev. 1.5 Si5338 8. Device Pinout by Part Number The Si5338 is orderable in three different speed grades: Si5338A/D/G/K/N have a maximum output clock frequency limit of 710 MHz. Si5338B/E/H/L/P have a maximum output clock frequency of 350 MHz. Si5338C/F/J/ M/Q have a maximum output clock frequency of 200 MHz. Devices are also orderable according to the pin control functions available on Pins 3 and 4: CLKIN—single-ended clock input I2C_LSB—determines the LSB bit of the 7-bit I2C address FINC—frequency increment pin FDEC—frequency decrement pin PINC—phase increment pin PDEC—phase decrement pin FDBK—single-ended feedback input OEB—output enable Table 17. Pin Function by Part Number Pin # Si5338A: 710 MHz Si5338D: 710 MHz Si5338G: 710 MHz Si5338K: 710 MHz Si5338N: 710 MHz Si5338B: 350 MHz Si5338E: 350 MHz Si5338H: 350 MHz Si5338L: 350 MHz Si5338P: 350 MHz Si5338C: 200 MHz Si5338F: 200 MHz Si5338J: 200 MHz Si5338M: 200 MHz Si5338Q: 200 MHz 1 CLKIN1 CLKIN1 CLKIN1 CLKIN1 CLKIN1 2 CLKINB1 CLKINB1 CLKINB1 CLKINB1 CLKINB1 3 CLKIN2 PINC FINC OEB CLKIN2 4 I2C_LSB PDEC FDEC I2C_LSB FDBK3 5 FDBK4 FDBK4 FDBK4 FDBK4 FDBK4 6 FDBKB4 FDBKB4 FDBKB4 FDBKB4 FDBKB4 7 VDD VDD VDD VDD VDD 8 INTR INTR INTR INTR INTR 9 CLK3B CLK3B CLK3B CLK3B CLK3B 10 CLK3A CLK3A CLK3A CLK3A CLK3A 11 VDDO3 VDDO3 VDDO3 VDDO3 VDDO3 12 SCL SCL SCL SCL SCL 13 CLK2B CLK2B CLK2B CLK2B CLK2B 14 CLK2A CLK2A CLK2A CLK2A CLK2A 15 VDDO2 VDDO2 VDDO2 VDDO2 VDDO2 16 VDDO1 VDDO1 VDDO1 VDDO1 VDDO1 Notes: 1. CLKIN/CLKINB on pins 1 and 2 are differential clock inputs or XTAL inputs. 2. CLKIN on pin 3 is a single-ended clock input. 3. FDBK on pin 4 is a single-ended feedback input. 4. FDBK/FDBKB on pins 5 and 6 are differential feedback inputs. Rev. 1.5 37 Si5 338 Table 17. Pin Function by Part Number (Continued) Pin # Si5338A: 710 MHz Si5338D: 710 MHz Si5338G: 710 MHz Si5338K: 710 MHz Si5338N: 710 MHz Si5338B: 350 MHz Si5338E: 350 MHz Si5338H: 350 MHz Si5338L: 350 MHz Si5338P: 350 MHz Si5338C: 200 MHz Si5338F: 200 MHz Si5338J: 200 MHz Si5338M: 200 MHz Si5338Q: 200 MHz 17 CLK1B CLK1B CLK1B CLK1B CLK1B 18 CLK1A CLK1A CLK1A CLK1A CLK1A 19 SDA SDA SDA SDA SDA 20 VDDO0 VDDO0 VDDO0 VDDO0 VDDO0 21 CLK0B CLK0B CLK0B CLK0B CLK0B 22 CLK0A CLK0A CLK0A CLK0A CLK0A 23 GND GND GND GND GND 24 VDD VDD VDD VDD VDD Notes: 1. CLKIN/CLKINB on pins 1 and 2 are differential clock inputs or XTAL inputs. 2. CLKIN on pin 3 is a single-ended clock input. 3. FDBK on pin 4 is a single-ended feedback input. 4. FDBK/FDBKB on pins 5 and 6 are differential feedback inputs. 38 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 9. Package Outline: 24-Lead QFN Figure 25. 24-Lead Quad Flat No-lead (QFN) Table 18. Package Dimensions Dimension Min Nom Max A 0.80 0.85 0.90 A1 0.00 0.02 0.05 b 0.18 0.25 0.30 D D2 Notes: 1. 2. 3. 4. 4.00 BSC. 2.35 2.50 e 0.50 BSC. E 4.00 BSC. 2.65 E2 2.35 2.50 2.65 L 0.30 0.40 0.50 aaa 0.10 bbb 0.10 ccc 0.08 ddd 0.10 eee 0.05 All dimensions shown are in millimeters (mm) unless otherwise noted. Dimensioning and Tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1994. This drawing conforms to the JEDEC Outline MO-220, variation VGGD-8. Recommended card reflow profile is per the JEDEC/IPC J-STD-020 specification for Small Body Components. Rev. 1.5 39 Si5 338 10. Recommended PCB Land Pattern Table 19. PCB Land Pattern Dimension Min Nom Max P1 2.50 2.55 2.60 P2 2.50 2.55 2.60 X1 0.20 0.25 0.30 Y1 0.75 0.80 0.85 C1 3.90 C2 3.90 E 0.50 Notes: General 1. All dimensions shown are in millimeters (mm) unless otherwise noted. 2. Dimensioning and Tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1994 specification. 3. This Land Pattern Design is based on the IPC-7351 guidelines. 4. Connect the center ground pad to a ground plane with no less than five vias. These 5 vias should have a length of no more than 20 mils to the ground plane. Via drill size should be no smaller than 10 mils. A longer distance to the ground plane is allowed if more vias are used to keep the inductance from increasing. Solder Mask Design 5. All metal pads are to be non-solder mask defined (NSMD). Clearance between the solder mask and the metal pad is to be 60 μm minimum, all the way around the pad. Stencil Design 6. A stainless steel, laser-cut and electro-polished stencil with trapezoidal walls should be used to assure good solder paste release. 7. The stencil thickness should be 0.125 mm (5 mils). 8. The ratio of stencil aperture to land pad size should be 1:1 for all perimeter pins. 9. A 2x2 array of 1.0 mm square openings on 1.25 mm pitch should be used for the center ground pad. Card Assembly 10. A No-Clean, Type-3 solder paste is recommended. 11. The recommended card reflow profile is per the JEDEC/IPC J-STD-020 specification for Small Body Components. 40 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 11. Top Marking 11.1. Si5338 Top Marking 11.2. Top Marking Explanation Table 20. Top Marking Explanation Line Characters Description Line 1 Si5338 Base part number. Line 2 Xxxxxx X = Frequency and configuration code. xxxxx = Optional NVM code for custom factory-programmed devices (characters are not included for blank devices). See "12. Ordering Information" on page 42. Line 3 RTTTTT R = Product revision. TTTTT = Manufacturing trace code. Circle with 0.5 mm diameter; Pin 1 indicator. left-justified Line 4 YYWW YY = Year. WW = Work week. Characters correspond to the year and work week of package assembly. Rev. 1.5 41 Si5 338 12. Ordering Information 42 Rev. 1.5 Si5338 13. Device Errata Please visit www.silabs.com to access the device errata document. Rev. 1.5 43 Si5 338 DOCUMENT CHANGE LIST Revision 0.2 to 0.3 Changed minimum output clock frequency from 5 MHz to 1 MHz. Updated slew rates. Updated " Features" on page 1. Updated Table 6, “Input and Output Clock Characteristics,” on page 8. Deleted Table 12, “Output Driver Slew Rate Control”. Revision 0.3 to 0.5 Major editorial changes to all sections to improve clarity Completed electrical specification tables with final characterization results Revised the maximum input and output frequencies from 700 MHz to 710 MHz Improved jitter specifications to reflect updated characterization results Added new Si5338N/P/Q ordering codes Added typical application diagrams Added an application section to highlight the flexibility of the Si5338 in various timing functions Added a configuration section to clarify configuration options 44 Revision 0.6 to 0.65 Editorial changes to section 3.5 “Configuring the Si5338” to improve clarity on ordering custom Si5338 and on configuring “blank” Si5338. Added pin numbers to device package drawings. Updated ordering information to include evaluation boards. Updated first page description and applications Added JC to specification tables. Added GbE RM jitter specification with 1.875– 20 MHz integration band. Updated Figure 9, “I2C Programming Procedure,” on page 23 for consistency with register description. Revision 0.65 to 1.0 Expanded PCI jitter specifications in Table 12. Moved “Si5338 Registers” section to AN411. Added I2C data rate specifications to Table 15. Revised CMOS output currents down for each CMOS driver that is active in Table 3. Clarified CMOS output loads in Table 3 Added peak reflow temperature and footnote in Table 2. Added sticky and mask register info in "3.6. Status Indicators" on page 24. Added more information to Table note about CMOS outputs and jitter in Table 12. Changed all reference of MultiSynth Mn to MSn Added "11. Top Marking" on page 41. Reworded 3.5.2 and 3.5.3 for clarity. Revision 1.0 to 1.1 Replaced all references to AN411 with "Si5338 Reference Manual" (AN411 has been replaced by the Si5338 Reference Manual). Clarified crystal specifications in Tables 8, 9, 10, 11 and added references to AN360. Revision 1.1 to 1.2 Revision 0.55 to 0.6 Revision 0.5 to 0.55 Updated Figure 9 to include the entire programming procedure. Added "3.2.1. Loss-of-Signal (LOS) Alarm Detectors" on page 19 to show the location of the LOS detector circuits. Updated input circuit diagrams in "3.2. Input Stage" on page 19. Update block diagrams with new input circuit diagrams. Updated Table 2 on page 4. Added Changed output duty cycle to 45–55%. All I2C address now in binary. Changed ordering information to reflect 710 MHz limit. Info on POR and soft reset added. Updated Figure 15 on page 28. Added register section. Update programming procedure in “3.5. Configuring the Si5338” to improve robustness. CML current consumption specification. Updated Table 6 on page 8. Corrected tR/tF for output clocks (single-ended) from 1.7 ns (max ) to 2.0 ns (max). Added CML Output Voltage parameter. Rev. 1.5 Updated Table 12 on page 13. Updated typical specifications for total jitter for PCI Express 1.1 Common clocked topology. Updated typical specifications for RMS jitter for PCI Express 2.1 Common clocked topology. Removed RMS jitter specification for PCI Express 2.1 Si5338 and 3.0 Data clocked topology. Added Table 13, “Jitter Specifications, Clock Buffer Mode (PLL Bypass)*,” on page 14. Updated typical additive jitter (12 kHz–20 MHz) from 0.150 to 0.165 ps RMS. Updated Figure 9 on page 23 to provide workaround for spread spectrum errata. Removed "3.5.4. Modifying a MultiSynth Output Divider Ratio/Frequency Configuration". A soft reset is now recommended after any changes to the feedback or output dividers. Added " " on page 42. Revision 1.2 to 1.3 Removed down spread spectrum errata that has been corrected in revision B. Updated ordering information to refer to revision B silicon. Updated top marking explanation in Table 20. Added further explanation to describe revisionspecific behavior of center spread spectrum in section 3.10.7. Revision 1.3 to 1.4 Added link to errata document. Revision 1.4 to 1.5 Added setup and hold time specifications for I2C in Table 15. Rev. 1.5 45 Si5 338 CONTACT INFORMATION Silicon Laboratories Inc. 400 West Cesar Chavez Austin, TX 78701 Tel: 1+(512) 416-8500 Fax: 1+(512) 416-9669 Toll Free: 1+(877) 444-3032 Please visit the Silicon Labs Technical Support web page: https://www.silabs.com/support/pages/contacttechnicalsupport.aspx and register to submit a technical support request. Patent Notice Silicon Labs invests in research and development to help our customers differentiate in the market with innovative low-power, small size, analogintensive mixed-signal solutions. Silicon Labs' extensive patent portfolio is a testament to our unique approach and world-class engineering team The information in this document is believed to be accurate in all respects at the time of publication but is subject to change without notice. Silicon Laboratories assumes no responsibility for errors and omissions, and disclaims responsibility for any consequences resulting from the use of information included herein. Additionally, Silicon Laboratories assumes no responsibility for the functioning of undescribed features or parameters. Silicon Laboratories reserves the right to make changes without further notice. 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Other products or brandnames mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. 46 Rev. 1.5