May 1998 High Speed SO-8 12-Bit ADCs Run on 5V or 3V

DESIGN FEATURES
High Speed SO-8 12-Bit ADCs
Run on 5V or 3V
by Ricky Chow and Teo Yang Long
Introduction
Advancing the leading edge of high
speed, low power 12-bit serial ADCs
in SO-8, LTC introduces the LTC1401
and LTC1404. The LTC1401 is a single
3V supply, 200ksps 12-bit ADC. The
LTC1404 is a pin-to-pin compatible
upgrade of the existing LTC1400. It
samples at 600ksps on either single
5V or ±5V supplies. Both of these
devices are small in size but big in
features. They achieve speeds that
are far ahead of the pack. Once again,
LTC has rewritten the record for the
highest throughput per square area
of board space of any 12-bit ADC on
the market. Both devices satisfy
tomorrow’s digitally based signal-processing requirements while achieving
a minimum footprint.
Full ADC Features
in an SO-8 Package
3V, 5V or ±5V Supplies
The LTC1401 provides a complete
200ksps unipolar A/D solution operating on a single supply as low as
2.7V. The typical supply current is
5mA and the analog input range is
from 0V to 2.048V, yielding an LSB of
0.5mV. Unlike the LTC1400 and
LTC1404, the unipolar LTC1401
replaces the unused negative supply
pin with a power-down input. The
5V
10µF
The common features shared by both
devices include a precision internal
reference, which can be overdriven
externally, and high frequency S/H
circuitry. The high impedance analog
input can be driven through a MUX
without adding any DC errors due to
on-resistance. The low input capacitance allows fast acquisition time for
the sample-and-hold, even with high
source impedance. There is a simple
3-wire digital interface to the host
computer, DSP or microcontroller. The
interface consists of a serial input
clock (CLK), data output (DOUT) and a
convert-input start (CONV) signal. The
VCC
2
3
AIN
VREF
8
CONV
SHDN
CLK
7
µP
GND
DOUT
P1.4
6
0.1µF
4
NAP and SLEEP
Shutdown Modes
The combination of CLK and CONV
signals serves another very important function. The ADCs can be placed
in NAP or SLEEP mode with the proper
manipulation of these two input signals. Figure 3 shows the power-down
5V
SHDN
0.1µF
ANALOG INPUT
(0V TO 2.048V)
1.20V
REFERENCE
+
OUTPUT 10µF
Reference, S/H and Serial I/O
LTC1401
1
+
CONV input allows precise control of
each sample conversion, so vital to
DSP applications that require precise
sampling. The rising CLK edge synchronizes all the ADC events to make
sure that none of the ADC’s critical
comparisons occur simultaneously
with a clock edge or data-out transition. The DOUT pin is at high impedance
when the ADC is not converting. During operation, it first pipes out a
REFRDY bit and follows this with the
12-bit serial data. Figure 2 shows the
block diagram and the digital timing.
The block diagram illustrates the pinout and functional differences
between the LTC1401 and LTC1404.
The REFRDY bit indicates that the
internal reference is ready for conversion. REFRDY is a logic 1 if the
reference is valid; otherwise it outputs a 0. This bit indicator becomes a
very useful feature when the chip is
toggling between the active and powerdown modes.
user can power the chip down immediately by pulling this pin low. Like
the LTC1400, the LTC1404 operates
on a single 5V or ±5V supplies and
consumes about 15mA. The analog
input signal range is automatically
determined by the supply voltage. If
VSS is connected to ground, the chip
operates in unipolar mode and accepts
analog signals between 0V and 4.096V.
If VSS is connected to a –5V supply,
the chip enters bipolar mode, in which
case the input range is ±2.048V. In
either mode, the LSB is 1mV. Figure 1
shows a typical application for
LTC1401 or LTC1404.
5
P1.3
SERIAL
DATA
LINK
SINGLE 3V SUPPLY, 200ksps
12-BIT SAMPLING A/D CONVERTER
LTC1404
1
+
10µF
2
3
AIN
CONV
VREF
CLK
GND
DOUT
0.1µF
4
P1.2
8
µP
7
6
SERIAL
DATA
5 LINK
P1.4
P1.3
P1.2
SINGLE 5V SUPPLY, 600ksps
12-BIT SAMPLING A/D CONVERTER
Figure 1. LTC1401 and LTC1404 typical applications
Linear Technology Magazine • May 1998
VSS
0.1µF
ANALOG INPUT
(0V TO 4.096V)
2.43V
REFERENCE
+
OUTPUT 10µF
VCC
1401_01.EPS
17
DESIGN FEATURES
ZERO SWITCH
CSAMPLE
AIN
VCC
GND
VREF
VSS
(LTC1404 ONLY)
INTERNAL
REF
12-BIT CAPACITIVE DAC
COMP
12
CLK
CONTROL
LOGIC
CONV
SUCCESSIVE APPROXIMATION
REGISTER/PARALLEL TO
SERIAL CONVERTER
SHDN
(LTC1401 ONLY)
DOUT
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
1
2
CLK
CONV
INTERNAL
S/H STATUS
HOLD
SAMPLE
Hi-Z
DOUT
REFRDY
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
SAMPLE
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
HOLD
Hi-Z
D0
REFRDY
1401_02.EPS
Figure 2. Block and timing diagrams
timing waveform. With CLK held at a
logic low, two consecutive CONV
pulses activate NAP mode and shut
down all internal circuitry except the
reference, which fully charges the
external bypass capacitor; the
REFRDY bit is high. Under this condition, the supply currents for the
LTC1401 and LTC1404 are 500µA
and 1.3mA, respectively. Either ADC
can be reawakened quickly to resume
conversion. If the ADC is not reawak-
ened and CLK is still held low, another
two consecutive CONV pulses (a total
of four pulses) activate the SLEEP
mode and shut down the reference;
the charge on its bypass capacitors
goes to zero and the REFRDY bit goes
low, reducing the supply current to
6.5µA for the LTC1401 and 8µA for
the LTC1404. Figure 4 shows the
power supply consumption of the
LTC1404 in its various operating
modes.
Reference Ready Indicator
In NAP or SLEEP mode, the first rising
CLK edge returns the ADC to normal
operation. When SLEEP is deactivated on the LTC1404, the internal
reference is first powered up and the
reference capacitor is slowly charged.
Since the LTC1404 has limited sourcecurrent capability to charge the
capacitor, a finite time is needed and
this time depends on the capacitance
value. Guesswork as to when the
CLK
CONV
NAP
SLEEP
VREF
REFRDY
REFRDY = 1
REFRDY = 0
DOUT
Hi-Z
Hi-Z
Hi-Z
Hi-Z
ALL ZERO
NOTE: NAP AND SLEEP ARE INTERNAL SIGNALS; REFRDY APPEARS AS THE FIRST BIT IN THE DOUT WORD.
1 11 10 9 8 7 6 5
1401_03.EPS
Figure 3. NAP and SLEEP mode waveforms
18
Linear Technology Magazine • May 1998
DESIGN FEATURES
100
0
–20
AMPLITUDE (dB)
1
0.1
fSAMPLE = 200kHz
fIN = 49.853516kHz
SINAD = 68dB
THD = –72dB
–30
NAP MODE BETWEEN CONVERSION
SLEEP MODE BETWEEN
CONVERSION
–40
–50
0.5
DNL ERROR (LSB)
10
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
1.0
–10
NORMAL CONVERSION
–60
–70
–80
–90
0.01
–0.5
–100
9.6MHz CLOCK
0.001
0.01
0
–110
–120
1
1M
10k
100
SAMPLE RATE (Hz)
1401_04.EPS
Figure 4. LTC1404 power consumption in
various operating modes
0
10 20 30 40 50 60 70
FREQUENCY (kHz)
–1.0
80 90 100
0
1401_05a.EPS
512 1024 1536 2048 2560 3072 3584 4096
CODE
1401_05b.EPS
Figure 5a. LTC1401 FFT
Figure 5b. LTC1401 DNL error
1.0
Easy to Apply
Ground Plane
As with other high resolution, high
speed ADCs, the LTC1401/LTC1404
needs some basic attention to layout
details. These include grounding,
bypassing and lead inductance. The
best performance is achieved when
the LTC1401/LTC1404 is applied as
an analog device and powered from
an analog supply. Its ground pin
should be connected to an analog
ground plane. This ground plane
should have only one connection to
the system ground. This prevents
system-ground currents from taking
a short cut through the analog ground.
This single connection should be made
to a point near the ADC ground pin.
Linear Technology Magazine • May 1998
Alternatively, a 10Ω resistor or a ferrite bead jumper instead of a direct
short may help to reduce the digital
noise.
Supply Bypassing
Noise on the power supply can cause
ADC errors. At low frequencies, the
converter has very good power supply
rejection, but as frequency increases,
all converters lose the ability to reject
power-supply noise. To eliminate
power-supply noise, the LTC1401/
LTC1404 VCC pin should be bypassed
directly to the analog ground plane
with a good 10µF AVX capacitor in
parallel with a 0.1µF ceramic; for
better results, another 10µF AVX
capacitor can be added. At 600ksps,
the LTC1404’s CLK frequency can be
as high as 9.6MHz. Some poor quality
capacitors can lose more than 80% of
their capacitance in this frequency
range. Therefore, it is important to
consult the manufacturer’s data sheet
before selecting a capacitor. For the
LTC1404, at 600ksps, every bit decision must be determined within 104ns
(9.6MHz). During this short time
interval, the supply disturbance due
to CLK transition must settle, the
ADC must update its DAC, make a
comparator decision, latch the new
DAC information and output the serial
data. Both of these ADCs have only
one power supply pin, which is connected to both the internal analog
and digital circuitry. Any ringing due
to poor bypassing, parasitic trace inductance, CLK and CONV over/
undershoot or unnecessary DOUT current loading can cause ADC errors.
0.5
INL ERROR (LSB)
capacitor is fully charged is eliminated by monitoring the REFRDY bit.
The REFRDY bit guarantees that the
reference is steady and the digital
result is correct. Some competing
ADCs need an off-chip reference. With
these parts, it is up to the system
designer to come up with a way to put
the reference to sleep and to determine just how long it takes to wake
up. Because of board-level variations
or varying reference loading conditions, the converted output may not
be correct because of different reference wake-up times. With their
proprietary power-down scheme, the
high speed LTC1401 and LTC1404
can save more power when operating
at low sampling rates than some
“micropower” ADCs without a powerdown feature.
0
–0.5
–1.0
0
512 1024 1536 2048 2560 3072 3584 4096
CODE
1401_05c.EPS
Figure 5c. LTC1401 INL error
Narrow power supply traces should
be avoided. Their comparatively high
inductance can lead to compromised
bypass performance and conversion
errors. The input signals for the CLK
and CONV pins should be terminated
properly. The DOUT signal should be
buffered if necessary to drive a long
trace or heavy load.
DC and AC Performance
With these basic concerns in mind, it
is not difficult to obtain the best performance from the LTC1401 and
LTC1404. The DC performance of the
LTC1401 and LTC1404 includes
±1LSB INL and DNL. No missing codes
are guaranteed over temperature. In
addition to these excellent DC
specifications, these devices have curvature-corrected 1.20V (LTC1401) or
2.43V (LTC1404) precision references.
For high frequency conversion applications, the LTC1401 and LTC1404
excel, with outstanding AC performance. Figures 5 and 6 show the
performance of the LTC1401 and
LTC1404, respectively.
continued on page 24
19
DESIGN FEATURES
1100
Conclusion
1000
Innovative circuit design, coupled
with Linear Technology’s 6GHz
complementary bipolar process
simultaneously achieves the seemingly contradictory goals of high speed
and low power. The LT1394 is easy to
use, thanks to its single-supply
capability and complementary outputs. Additional LT1394 applications
appear in the forthcoming Linear
Technology Application Note, A Seven
Nanosecond Comparator for Single
Supply Operation.
900
OVERDRIVE (µV)
band-limited output. A1’s wideband
output combines with A2’s DC-corrected information to yield the correct,
amplified composite signal at the
LT1394’s positive input in Trace D.
The LT1394’s output is Trace E. Figure 8 details circuit propagation delay.
The output responds in 18ns to a
500µV overdrive on a 1mV step. Figure 9 plots response time versus
overdrive. As might be expected,
propagation delay decreases at higher
overdrives. A1’s noise limits usable
sensitivity.
800
700
600
500
15
16
17
RESPONSE TIME (ns)
18
AN70 F68
Figure 9. Response time vs overdrive for
the composite level detector
LTC1401/LTC1404, continued from page 19
0
1.0
–40
–60
–80
–100
–120
0
60
120
180
FREQUENCY (kHz)
240
300
1.0
UNIPOLAR INL ERROR (LSB)
BIPOLAR AMPLITUDE (dB)
–20
UNIPOLAR DNL ERROR (LSB)
fSAMPLE = 600kHz
fIN = 298.68kHz
SINAD = 71dB
THD = –84dB
0.5
0
–0.5
–1.0
0
512 1024 1536 2048 2560 3072 3584 4096
0.5
0
–0.5
–1.0
0
512 1024 1536 2048 2560 3072 3584 4096
CODE
1401_06a.EPS
Figure 6a. LTC1404 FFT
CODE
1401_06b.EPS
Figure 6b. LTC1404 DNL error
1401_06c. EPS
Figure 6c. LTC1404 INL error
Applications
The LTC1401 and LTC1404 will find
applications in telecommunications,
digital signal processing, portablecomputer data acquisition boards and
high speed or multiplexed data
acquisition.
In telecommunication applications
such as HDSL (high-bit-rate digital
subscriber line interface), high speed
and low power dissipation are a must
because the systems are usually powered by the phone line itself. Excellent
dynamic performance is required of
the ADC’s sample-and-hold. The serial
interface minimizes the number of
signal lines that must be routed,
thereby saving significant board
24
space. The 600ksps LTC1404, with
its SO-8 footprint, is an excellent
choice for HDSL applications. At
584ksps, with 2B1Q coding, the
LTC1404 receives at 2.048Mbps over
two wires.
Another common use of ADCs is in
data acquisition applications. System designers have always faced
problems in optimizing data acquisition applications for speed, size, power
and cost, especially in the case of
portable designs. The high sample
rate, the high level of functional integration and the low cost of these
converters make them ideal choices
for these applications. The LTC1401
and LTC1404 can be easily interfaced
to a low cost MUX (for example, a
CD4051, 74HC4051 or LTC1391)
through their high impedance inputs.
The high input impedance of these
ADCs eliminates the need for a buffer
between the MUX and the ADC,
resulting in savings of both cost and
board space.
Conclusion
The new LTC1401 and LTC1404 come
with full ADC performance and an
easy-to-use serial interface. These
complete, stand alone, high speed,
low power devices will simplify the job
of system designers.
Linear Technology Magazine • May 1998