14-Bit, 500/350 MSPS JESD204B High Speed Serial Output ADC ISLA214S50 Features The ISLA214S50 is a series of low-power, high-performance, 14-bit, analog-to-digital converters. Designed with FemtoCharge™ technology on a standard CMOS process, the series supports sampling rates of up to 500MSPS. The ISLA214S50 is part of a pin-compatible family of 12-, 14-, and 16-bit A/Ds with maximum sample rates ranging from 125MSPS to 500MSPS. The family minimizes power consumption while providing state-of-the-art dynamic performance. • JESD204A/B High Speed Data Interface - JESD204A Compliant - JESD204B Device Subclass 0 Compliant - JESD204B Device Subclass 2 Compatible - Up to 3 JESD204 Output Lanes Running up to 4.375Gbps - Highly Configurable JESD204 Transmitter • Multiple Chip Time Alignment and Deterministic Latency Support (JESD204B Device Subclass 2) • SPI Programmable Debugging Features and Test Patterns • 48-pin QFN 7mmx7mm Package The device utilizes two time-interleaved 250MSPS unit ADCs to achieve the ultimate sample rate of 500MSPS. A single 500MHz conversion clock is presented to the converter, and all interleave clocking is managed internally. The proprietary Intersil Interleave Engine (I2E) performs automatic correction of offset, gain, and sample time mismatches between the unit ADCs to optimize performance. The ISLA214S50 offers a highly configurable, JESD204Bcompliant, high speed serial output link. The link offers data rates up to 4.375 Gbps per lane and multiple packing modes. The link can be configured to use two or three lanes to transmit the conversion data, allowing for flexibility in the receiver design. The JESD204 transmitter also provides deterministic latency and multi-chip time alignment support to satisfy complex synchronization requirements. A serial peripheral interface (SPI) port allows for extensive configurability of the ADC and its JESD204B transmitter including access to its built-in link and transport-layer test patterns as well as the programmable clock divider, enabling 2x harmonic clocking. The ISLA214S50 is available in a space-saving 7mmx7mm 48 Ld QFN package. The package features a thermal pad for improved thermal performance and is specified over the full industrial temperature range (-40°C to +85°C) Key Specifications • SNR @ 500/350MSPS 73.1/74.1 dBFS fIN = 30MHz 71.0/71.6 dBFS fIN = 363MHz • SFDR @ 500/350MSPS 87/87 dBc fIN = 30MHz 78/81 dBc fIN = 363MHz • Total Power Consumption: 1060mW @ 500MSPS Applications • • • • • Radar and Satellite Antenna Array Processing Broadband Communications and Microwave Receivers High-Performance Data Acquisition Communications Test Equipment High-Speed Medical Imaging Pin-Compatible Family MODEL RESOLUTION SPEED (MSPS) PRODUCT AVAILABILITY ISLA214S50 14 500 Now ISLA214S35 14 350 Soon + FIGURE 1. SERDES DATA EYE AT 4.375Gbps April 25, 2013 FN7973.2 1 CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. 1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Copyright Intersil Americas LLC 2011, 2013. All Rights Reserved Intersil (and design) and FemtoCharge are trademarks owned by Intersil Corporation or one of its subsidiaries. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. CLKP OVDD OVDD (PLL) SYNC AVDD ISLA214S50 CLOCK GENERATION CLKN AINP 14-BIT 250MSPS ADC SHA AINN LANE[2:0]P LANE[2:0]N VREF VCM I2E AND JESD204 TRANSMITTER 14-BIT 250MSPS ADC VREF + – OVSS CSB SCLK SDIO SDO SPI CONTROL RESETN AVSS (PLL) NAPSLP AVSS 1.25V FIGURE 2. BLOCK DIAGRAM Pin Configuration DNC DNC AVDD NAPSLP CLKDIV SDIO SCLK CSB SDO OVDD OVSS OVSS ISLA214S50 (48 LD QFN) TOP VIEW 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 VCM 1 36 OVDD AVDD 2 35 OVSS AVSS 3 34 LANE2N AVSS 4 33 LANE2P VINN 5 32 OVSS VINN 6 31 LANE1N VINP 7 30 LANE1P VINP 8 29 OVSS AVSS 9 28 LANE0N AVSS 10 27 LANE0P AVDD 11 DNC 12 2 26 OVSS PAD – Exposed Paddle 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 RESETN AVDD AVDD CLKP CLKN SYNCP SYNCN DNC OVSS (PLL) OVDD (PLL) OVSS (PLL) OVDD (PLL) 25 OVDD FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Pin Descriptions PIN NUMBER NAME FUNCTION 2, 11, 14, 15, 46 AVDD 1.8V Analog Supply 12, 20, 47, 48 DNC Do Not Connect 3, 4, 9, 10 AVSS Analog Ground 7, 8 VINP Analog Input Positive 5, 6 VINN Analog Input Negative 1 VCM Common Mode Output 44 CLKDIV 16, 17 CLKP, CLKN 45 NAPSLP Power Control (Nap, Sleep modes) 13 RESETN Power On Reset (Active Low) 26, 29, 32, 35, 37, 38 OVSS Output Ground 25, 36, 39 OVDD 1.8V Digital Supply Clock Divider Control Clock Input True, Complement 22, 24 OVDD (PLL) 1.8V Analog Supply for SERDES PLL 21, 23 OVSS (PLL) Analog Ground Supply for SERDES PLL 18, 19 SYNCP, SYNCN 27, 28 LANE0P, LANE0N SERDES Lane 0 30, 31 LANE1P, LANE1N SERDES Lane 1 33, 34 LANE2P, LANE2N SERDES Lane 2 40 SDO SPI Serial Data Output 41 CSB SPI Chip Select (active low) 42 SCLK SPI Clock 43 SDIO SPI Serial Data Input/Output PAD AVSS Exposed Paddle. Analog Ground (connect to AVSS) JESD204 SYNC Input Ordering Information PART NUMBER (Notes 1, 2) PART MARKING TEMP. RANGE (°C) PACKAGE (Pb-free) PKG. DWG. # ISLA214S50IR1Z ISLA214S50 IR1Z -40 to +85 48 Ld QFN L48.7x7G Coming Soon ISLA214S35IR1Z ISLA214S35 IR1Z -40 to +85 48 Ld QFN L48.7x7G Coming Soon ISLA214S50IR48EV1Z Evaluation Board NOTES: 1. These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged products employ special Pb-free material sets; molding compounds/die attach materials and NiPdAu plate-e4 termination finish, which is RoHS compliant and compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations. Intersil Pb-free products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020. 2. For Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL), please see device information page for ISLA214S50, ISLA214S35. For more information on MSL please see techbrief TB363. 3 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Table of Contents Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Thermal Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Recommended Operating Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Electrical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 I2E Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Digital Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Switching Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Typical Performance Curves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Theory of Operation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Power-On Calibration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 User Initiated Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Temperature Calibration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Analog Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Clock Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Jitter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Voltage Reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Digital Outputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Power Dissipation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Nap/Sleep. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Data Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 I2E Requirements and Restrictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Active Run State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Power Meter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 FS/4 Filter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Nyquist Zones. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Configurability and Communication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Clock Divider Synchronous Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Soft Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 JESD204 Transmitter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Initial Lane Alignment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Test Patterns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Serial Peripheral Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 SPI Physical Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 SPI Configuration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Device Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Device Configuration/Control. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Address 0x60-0x64: I2E initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Global Device Configuration/Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 ADDRESS 0xDF - 0xF3: JESD204 REGISTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Address 0xDF-0xEE: JESD204 Parameter Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 SPI Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Equivalent Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 ADC Evaluation Platform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Layout Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Split Ground and Power Planes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Clock Input Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Exposed Paddle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Bypass and Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 CML Outputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Unused Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Revision History. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 About Intersil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Package Outline Drawing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 4 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Absolute Maximum Ratings Thermal Information AVDD to AVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-0.4V to 2.1V OVDD to OVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-0.4V to 2.1V AVSS to OVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 0.3V Analog Inputs to AVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to AVDD + 0.3V Clock Inputs to AVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to AVDD + 0.3V Logic Input to AVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to OVDD + 0.3V Logic Inputs to OVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to OVDD + 0.3V Latchup (Tested per JESD-78C;Class 2,Level A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100mA Thermal Resistance (Typical) θJA (°C/W) θJC (°C/W) 48 Ld QFN (Notes 3, 4, 5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 0.75 Storage Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-65°C to +150°C Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .+150°C Pb-Free Reflow Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see link below http://www.intersil.com/pbfree/Pb-FreeReflow.asp Recommended Operating Conditions Operating Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -40°C to +85°C CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact product reliability and result in failures not covered by warranty. NOTES: 3. θJA is measured in free air with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board with “direct attach” features. See Tech Brief TB379. 4. For θJC, the “case temp” location is the center of the exposed metal pad on the package underside. 5. For solder stencil layout and reflow guidelines, please see Tech Brief TB389. Electrical Specifications All specifications apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = 1.8V, OVDD = 1.8V, TA = -40°C to +85°C (typical specifications at +25°C), AIN = -2dBFS, fSAMPLE = Maximum Conversion Rate (per speed grade). Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. ISLA214S50 PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS ISLA214S35 MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS 1.95 2.00 2.15 1.95 2.00 2.15 VP-P DC SPECIFICATIONS Analog Input Full-Scale Analog Input Range VFS Differential Input Resistance RIN Differential 600 600 Ω Input Capacitance CIN Differential 13.3 13.3 pF Full Temp 100 100 ppm/°C Full Scale Range Temp. Drift AVTC Input Offset Voltage VOS Gain Error EG -2.6 -2.6 % Common-Mode Output Voltage VCM 0.94 0.94 V Common Mode Input Current (per pin) ICM 6.0 6.0 µA/MSPS Inputs Common Mode Voltage 0.9 0.9 V CLKP, CLKN Swing 1.8 1.8 V -5.0 ±1 5.0 -5.0 ±1 5.0 mV Clock Inputs Power Requirements 1.8V Analog Supply Voltage AVDD 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.7 1.8 1.9 V 1.8V Digital Supply Voltage OVDD 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.7 1.8 1.9 V 1.8V Analog Supply Current IAVDD 359 385 313 mA 1.8V Digital Supply Current IOVDD 222 248 159 mA 5 I2E on, Fs/4 filter on, Minimum number of lanes active FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Electrical Specifications All specifications apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = 1.8V, OVDD = 1.8V, TA = -40°C to +85°C (typical specifications at +25°C), AIN = -2dBFS, fSAMPLE = Maximum Conversion Rate (per speed grade). Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. (Continued) ISLA214S50 PARAMETER SYMBOL Power Supply Rejection Ratio (Note 7) PSRR CONDITIONS MIN (Note 6) TYP ISLA214S35 MAX (Note 6) MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS 30MHz 200mVP-P 41 41 dB 1MHz 200mVP-P 47 47 dB Total Power Dissipation Normal Mode PD 1060 1139 857 mW Nap Mode PD 421 466 352 mW Sleep Mode PD CSB at logic high 6 12 6 mW Nap Mode Wakeup Time Sample Clock Running 5 5 µs Sleep Mode Wakeup Time Sample Clock Running 1 1 ms ±0.30 LSB ±1.5 LSB AC SPECIFICATIONS (Note 8) Differential Nonlinearity DNL Integral Nonlinearity INL Minimum Conversion Rate (Note 9) fS MIN Maximum Conversion Rate fS MAX -1.0 ±0.35 ±2.4 200 Efficient Packing 500 Signal-to-Noise and Distortion (Note 10) Effective Number of Bits (Note 10) SNR MSPS MSPS 74.1 dBFS 72.9 73.8 dBFS fIN = 190MHz 72.5 73.2 dBFS fIN = 363MHz 71.0 71.6 dBFS fIN = 495MHz 70.1 70.1 dBFS fIN = 605MHz 68.9 68.9 dBFS fIN = 30MHz 73.0 73.9 dBFS 72.7 73.6 dBFS fIN = 190MHz 72.1 72.9 dBFS fIN = 363MHz 70.4 71.3 dBFS fIN = 495MHz 67.9 68.4 dBFS fIN = 605MHz 67.0 67.0 dBFS fIN = 30MHz 11.8 12.0 Bits 11.8 11.9 Bits fIN = 190MHz 11.7 11.8 Bits fIN = 363MHz 11.4 11.6 Bits fIN = 495MHz 11.0 11.1 Bits fIN = 605MHz 10.8 10.8 Bits fIN = 105MHz 6 MSPS 73.1 fIN = 105MHz ENOB 500 310 fIN = 30MHz fIN = 105MHz SINAD 175 350 Simple Packing Signal-to-Noise Ratio (Note 10) 1.4 70 69.4 11.23 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Electrical Specifications All specifications apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = 1.8V, OVDD = 1.8V, TA = -40°C to +85°C (typical specifications at +25°C), AIN = -2dBFS, fSAMPLE = Maximum Conversion Rate (per speed grade). Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. (Continued) ISLA214S50 PARAMETER SYMBOL Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (Note 10) SFDR CONDITIONS fIN = 30MHz SFDRX23 Intermodulation Distortion IMD TYP MAX (Note 6) MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS 87 87 dBc 86 87 dBc fIN = 190MHz 84 85 dBc fIN = 363MHz 78 81 dBc fIN = 495MHz 70 72 dBc fIN = 605MHz 70 71 dBc fIN = 30MHz 89 93 dBc fIN = 105MHz 89 91 dBc fIN = 190MHz 87 86 dBc fIN = 363MHz 81 81 dBc fIN = 495MHz 79 76 dBc fIN = 605MHz 76 75 dBc fIN = 70MHz 83 83 dBFS fIN = 170MHz 97 96 dBFS 10-13 500 fIN = 105MHz Spurious-Free Dynamic Range Excluding H2, H3 (Note 10) MIN (Note 6) ISLA214S35 74 Word Error Rate WER 10-13 Full Power Bandwidth FPBW 500 MHz NOTES: 6. Compliance to datasheet limits is assured by one or more methods: production test, characterization and/or design. 7. PSRR is calculated by the equation 20*log10(A/B), where B is the amplitude of a disturber sinusoid on AVDD at the device pins, and A is the amplitude of the spur in the captured data at the frequency of the disturber sinusoid. 8. AC Specifications apply after internal calibration of the ADC is invoked at the given sample rate and temperature. Refer to “Power-On Calibration” on page 15 and “User Initiated Reset” on page 16 for more detail. 9. The DLL Range setting must be changed via SPI for ADC core sample rates below 160MSPS. The JESD204 transmitter can support ADC sample rates below 200MSPS, as long as the lane data rate is greater than or equal to 1Gbps. 10. Minimum specification guaranteed when calibrated at +85°C. I2E Specifications Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. PARAMETER SYMBOL Offset Mismatch-induced Spurious Power I2E Settling Times I2Epost_t Minimum Duration of Valid Analog Input 7 tTE CONDITIONS MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS No I2E Calibration performed -65 dBFS Active Run state enabled -70 dBFS Calibration settling time for Active Run state 1000 ms Allow one I2E iteration of Offset, Gain and Phase correction 100 µs FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 I2E Specifications Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. (Continued) PARAMETER SYMBOL Largest Interleave Spur Total Interleave Spurious Power Sample Time Mismatch Between Unit ADCs Gain Mismatch Between Unit ADCs CONDITIONS MIN (Note 6) UNITS fIN = 10MHz to 240MHz, Active Run State enabled, in Track Mode -99 dBc fIN = 10MHz to 240MHz, Active Run State enabled and previously settled, in Hold Mode -80 dBc fIN = 260MHz to 490MHz, Active Run State enabled, in Track Mode -95 dBc fIN = 260MHz to 490MHz, Active Run State enabled and previously settled, in Hold Mode -70 dBc Active Run State enabled, in Track Mode, fIN is a broadband signal in the 1st Nyquist zone -85 dBc Active Run State enabled, in Track Mode, fIN is a broadband signal in the 2nd Nyquist zone -75 dBc Active Run State enabled, in Track Mode Offset Mismatch Between Unit ADCs Digital Specifications MAX (Note 6) TYP 25 fs 0.02 %FS 1 mV Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS CMOS INPUTS Input Current High (RESETN) IIH VIN = 1.8V 1 10 µA Input Current Low (RESETN) IIL VIN = 0V -12 -7 µA Input Current High (SDIO, SCL, SDA SCLK) IIH VIN = 1.8V 4 12 µA Input Current Low (SDIO, SCL, SDA SCLK) IIL VIN = 0V -600 -400 -300 µA Input Current High (CSB) IIH VIN = 1.8V 40 52 70 µA Input Current Low (CSB) IIL VIN = 0V 1 10 µA Input Voltage High (SDIO, RESETN) VIH Input Voltage Low (SDIO, RESETN) VIL Input Current High (NAPSLP, CLKDIV) (Note 11) IIH 19 Input Current Low (NAPSLP, CLKDIV) IIL --30 Input Capacitance CDI -25 1.17 V 0.63 V 25 30 µA -25 -19 µA 4 pF LVDS INPUTS (SYNCP, SYNCN) Input Common Mode Range VICM 825 1575 mV Input Differential Swing (peak-to-peak, single-ended) VID 250 450 mV Input Pull-up and Pull-down Resistance RIpu 100 kΩ 1.14 mV CML OUTPUTS Output Common Mode Voltage 8 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Switching Specifications Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITION MIN (Note 6) TYP MAX (Note 6) UNITS ADC OUTPUT Aperture Delay tA 240 ps RMS Aperture Jitter jA 90 fs 250 µs L 20 cycles tOVR 2 cycles PLL Lock Time 250 µs PLL Bandwidth 2.2 MHz Added Random Jitter 5 ps RMS Added Deterministic Jitter 7 ps P-P 5 ps rms 75 ps Synchronous Clock Divider Reset Recovery Time (Note 12) Latency (ADC Pipeline Delay) Overvoltage Recovery tRSTRT DLL recovery time after Synchronous Reset SERDES Maximum Input Sample Clock Total Jitter to Maintain SERDES BER <1E-12 Integrated from 1kHz to 10MHz offset from carrier LVDS Inputs SYNCP, SYNCN Setup Time (with Respect to the Positive Edge of CLKP) tRSTS AVDD, OVDD = 1.7V to 1.9V, TA = -40°C to +85°C SYNCP, SYNCN Hold Time (with Respect to the Positive Edge of CLKP) tRSTH AVDD, OVDD = 1.7V to 1.9V, TA = -40°C to +85°C 400 150 350 ps CML Outputs Output Rise Time tR 165 ps Output Fall Time tF 145 ps Data Output Duty Cycle 50 % Differential Output Resistance 100 Ω Differential Output Voltage (Note 13) 760 mVP-P SPI INTERFACE (Notes 14, 15) SCLK Period t CLK Write Operation 14 cycles tCLK Read Operation 32 cycles CSB↓ to SCLK↑ Setup Time tS Read or Write 4 cycles CSB↑ after SCLK↑ Hold Time tH Read or Write 10 cycles 9 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Switching Specifications Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range, -40°C to +85°C. (Continued) PARAMETER SYMBOL MIN (Note 6) CONDITION MAX (Note 6) TYP UNITS Data Valid to SCLK↑ Setup Time tDS Read or Write 12 cycles Data Valid after SCLK↑ Hold Time tDH Read or Write 8 cycles Data Valid after SCLK↓ Time tDVR Read 8 cycles NOTES: 11. The Tri-Level Inputs internal switching thresholds are approximately. 0.43V and 1.34V. It is advised to float the inputs, tie to ground or AVDD depending on desired function. 12. The synchronous clock divider reset function is available as a (SPI-programmable) overload on the SYNC input. 13. The voltage is expressed in peak-to-peak differential swing. The peak-to-peak single-ended swing is 1/2 of the differential swing. 14. The SPI interface timing is directly proportional to the ADC sample period (tS). Values above reflect multiples of a 2ns sample period, and must be scaled proportionally for lower sample rates. ADC sample clock must be running for SPI communication. 15. The SPI may operate asynchronously with respect to the ADC sample clock. Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -2dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. -65 95 85 HD2 AND HD3 MAGNITUDE (dBc) 90 SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) HD2 AT 350MSPS SFDR AT 500MSPS SFDR AT 350MSPS 80 75 70 SNR AT 500MSPS 65 SNR AT 350MSPS 60 55 50 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 -70 -75 -80 -85 -90 HD3 AT 500MSPS -95 -100 HD3 AT 350MSPS -105 -110 700 HD2 AT 500MSPS 0 100 200 300 400 500 INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) 0 100 40 SFDR (dBFS) HD2 AND HD3 MAGNITUDE SNR AND SFDR 60 SNR (dBFS) SFDR (dBc) SNR (dBc) 20 0 -60 700 FIGURE 4. HD2 AND HD3 vs fIN FIGURE 3. SNR AND SFDR vs fIN 80 600 -50 -40 -30 -20 INPUT AMPLITUDE (dBFS) FIGURE 5. SNR AND SFDR vs AIN 10 -10 0 -20 -40 HD3 (dBc) HD2 (dBc) -60 -80 HD2 (dBFS) -100 -120 -60 HD3 (dBFS) -50 -40 -30 -20 INPUT AMPLITUDE (dBFS) -10 0 FIGURE 6. HD2 AND HD3 vs AIN FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -2dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) -75 HD2 AND HD3 MAGNITUDE (dBc) SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) 90 85 80 SFDR 75 70 SNR 65 60 200 250 300 350 400 450 SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) 500 -80 -85 HD3 -90 -95 -100 HD2 -105 -110 200 550 250 300 350 400 450 SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) 500 550 FIGURE 8. HD2 AND HD3 vs fSAMPLE FIGURE 7. SNR AND SFDR vs fSAMPLE 1200 1.0 0.8 TOTAL POWER (mW) 1000 0.6 3 LANES 0.4 DNL (LSBs) 800 600 400 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 200 -0.8 0 200 250 300 350 400 450 SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) 500 -1.0 550 0 15000 FIGURE 10. DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY 4 90 SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) 3 2 INL (LSBs) 10000 CODE FIGURE 9. POWER vs fSAMPLE 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 5000 0 5000 10000 CODE FIGURE 11. INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY 11 15000 85 SFDR 80 75 SNR 70 65 60 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 VCM (mV) 1300 1400 1500 FIGURE 12. SNR AND SFDR vs VCM FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -2dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) 0 7000 5741 -20 5000 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) NUMBER OF HITS 6000 4363 4000 3186 3000 2000 1543 -40 -60 -80 1051 -100 1000 0 1 24 274 179 21 1 0 0 8166 8167 8168 8169 8170 8171 8172 8173 8174 8175 8176 8177 8178 -120 0 50 ADC CODE 0 -20 -20 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) AMPLITUDE (dBFS) 0 -40 -60 -80 -100 250 -40 -60 -80 -100 0 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 -120 250 0 FIGURE 15. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 190MHz 0 0 -20 -20 -40 -60 -80 -100 -120 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 250 FIGURE 16. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 363MHz MAGNITUDE (dBFS) MAGNITUDE (dBFS) 200 FIGURE 14. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 105MHz FIGURE 13. NOISE HISTOGRAM -120 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) -40 -60 -80 -100 0 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 250 FIGURE 17. TWO-TONE SPECTRUM (F1 = 70MHz, F2 = 71MHz AT -7dBFS) 12 -120 0 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 250 FIGURE 18. TWO-TONE SPECTRUM (F1 = 170MHz, F2 = 171MHz AT 7dBFS) FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -2dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) FIGURE 19. SERDES DATA EYE at 1.0Gbps FIGURE 20. SERDES DATA EYE at 3.0Gbps FIGURE 21. SERDES DATA EYE at 4.375Gbps FIGURE 22. SERDES BATHTUB at 1.0Gbps FIGURE 23. SERDES BATHTUB at 3.0Gbps FIGURE 24. SERDES BATHTUB at 4.375Gbps 13 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -2dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) FIGURE 25. SERDES Histogram at 1.0Gbps FIGURE 26. SERDES Histogram at 3.0Gbps FIGURE 27. SERDES Histogram at 4.375Gbps 14 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Theory of Operation A user-initiated reset can subsequently be invoked in the event that the above conditions cannot be met at power-up. Functional Description The device is based upon a 14-bit, 250MSPS ADC converter core that utilizes a pipelined successive approximation architecture (see Figure 28). The input voltage is captured by a Sample-Hold Amplifier (SHA) and converted to a unit of charge. Proprietary charge-domain techniques are used to successively compare the input to a series of reference charges. Decisions made during the successive approximation operations determine the digital code for each input value. Digital error correction is also applied. Power-On Calibration The ADC core(s) perform a self-calibration at start-up. An internal power-on-reset (POR) circuit detects the supply voltage ramps and initiates the calibration when the analog and digital supply voltages are above a threshold. The following conditions must be adhered to for the power-on calibration to execute successfully: • A frequency-stable conversion clock must be applied to the CLKP/CLKN pins After the power supply has stabilized the internal POR releases RESETN and an internal pull-up pulls it high, which starts the calibration sequence. If a subsequent user-initiated reset is desired, the RESETN pin should be connected to an open-drain driver with an off-state/high impedance state leakage of less than 0.5mA to assure exit from the reset state so calibration can start. The calibration sequence is initiated on the rising edge of RESETN, as shown in Figure 29. Calibration status can be determined by reading the cal_status bit (LSB) at 0xB6. This bit is ‘0’ during calibration and goes to a logic ‘1’ when calibration is complete. During calibration the JESD204 transmitter PLL is not locked to the ADC sample clock, so the CML outputs will toggle at an undetermined rate. Normal operation is resumed once calibration is complete. At 250MSPS the nominal calibration time is 280ms, while the maximum calibration time is 550ms. • DNC pins must not be connected • SDO has an internal pull-up and should not be driven externally • RESETN is pulled low by the ADC internally during POR. External driving of RESETN is optional. • SPI communications must not be attempted during calibration, with the only exception of performing read operations on the cal_done register at address 0xB6. CLOCK GENERATION INP 2.5-BIT FLASH SHA INN 1.25V + – 2.5-BIT FLASH 6- STAGE 1.5-BIT/ STAGE 3- STAGE 1-BIT/ STAGE 3-BIT FLASH DIGITAL ERROR CORRECTION FIGURE 28. ADC CORE BLOCK DIAGRAM 15 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 The performance of the ISLA214S50 changes with variations in temperature, supply voltage or sample rate. The extent of these changes may necessitate recalibration, depending on system performance requirements. Best performance will be achieved by recalibrating the ADC under the environmental conditions at which it will operate. CLKN CLKP CALIBRATION TIME RESETN CAL_STATUS BIT CALIBRATION BEGINS A supply voltage variation of <100mV will generally result in an SNR change of <0.5dBFS and SFDR change of <3dBc. In situations where the sample rate is not constant, best results will be obtained if the device is calibrated at the highest sample rate. Reducing the sample rate by less than 80MSPS will typically result in an SNR change of <0.5dBFS and an SFDR change of <3dBc. CALIBRATION COMPLETE FIGURE 29. CALIBRATION TIMING User Initiated Reset Recalibration of the ADC can be initiated at any time by driving the RESETN pin low for a minimum of one clock cycle. An open-drain driver with a drive strength in its high impedance state of less than 0.5mA is recommended, as RESETN has an internal high impedance pull-up to OVDD. As is the case during power-on reset, RESETN and DNC pins must be in the proper state for the calibration to successfully execute. Figures 30 through 32 show the effect of temperature on SNR and SFDR performance with power on calibration performed at -40°C, +25°C, and +85°C. Each plot shows the variation of SNR/SFDR across temperature after a single power on calibration at -40°C, +25°C and +85°C. Best performance is typically achieved by a user-initiated power on calibration at the operating conditions, as stated earlier. However, it can be seen that performance drift with temperature is not a very strong function of the temperature at which the power on calibration is performed. Temperature Calibration 100 88 86 SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) 90 SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) SFDR AT 350MSPS SFDR AT 500MSPS 80 70 60 SNR AT 350MSPS SNR AT 500MSPS 50 40 30 20 SFDR AT 500MSPS SFDR AT 350MSPS 82 80 78 76 74 72 10 0 -40 84 -35 -30 -25 TEMPERATURE (°C) FIGURE 30. TYPICAL SNR AND SFDR PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE, DEVICE CALIBRATED AT -40°C, fIN = 105MHz 16 -20 70 SNR AT 500MSPS 5 15 SNR AT 350MSPS 25 TEMPERATURE (°C) 35 45 FIGURE 31. TYPICAL SNR AND SFDR PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE, DEVICE CALIBRATED AT +25°C, fIN = 105MHz FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Temperature Calibration (Continued) 100 SNR (dBFS) AND SFDR (dBc) SFDR AT 350MSPS SFDR AT 500MSPS 90 80 70 60 SNR AT 350MSPS SNR AT 500MSPS 50 40 30 20 10 0 65 70 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) 80 85 FIGURE 32. TYPICAL SNR AND SFDR PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE, DEVICE CALIBRATED AT +85°C, fIN = 105MHz Analog Input ADTL1-12 A single fully differential input (VINP/VINN) connects to the sample and hold amplifier (SHA) of each unit ADC. The ideal full-scale input voltage is 2.0V, centered at the VCM voltage as shown in Figure 33. TX-2-5-1 1000pF ADC VCM 1000pF VINN 1.8 FIGURE 35. TRANSMISSION-LINE TRANSFORMER INPUT FOR HIGH IF APPLICATIONS VINP 1.4 VCM This dual transformer scheme is used to improve common-mode rejection, which keeps the common-mode level of the input matched to VCM. The value of the shunt resistor should be determined based on the desired load impedance. The differential input resistance of the ISLA214S50 is 600Ω. 1.0V 1.0 0.6 0.2 FIGURE 33. ANALOG INPUT RANGE Best performance is obtained when the analog inputs are driven differentially. The common-mode output voltage, VCM, should be used to properly bias the inputs as shown in Figures 34 through 36. An RF transformer will give the best noise and distortion performance for wideband and/or high intermediate frequency (IF) inputs. Two different transformer input schemes are shown in Figures 34 and 35. ADT1-1WT The SHA design uses a switched capacitor input stage (see Figure 48), which creates current spikes when the sampling capacitance is reconnected to the input voltage. This causes a disturbance at the input which must settle before the next sampling point. Lower source impedance will result in faster settling and improved performance. Therefore a 2:1 or 1:1 transformer and low shunt resistance are recommended for optimal performance. ADT1-1WT 1000pF ADC VCM ADC 0.1µF FIGURE 34. TRANSFORMER INPUT FOR GENERAL PURPOSE APPLICATIONS FIGURE 36. DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER INPUT A differential amplifier, as shown in the simplified block diagram in Figure 36, can be used in applications that require DC-coupling. In this configuration, the amplifier will typically dominate the achievable SNR and distortion performance. Intersil’s new ISL552xx differential amplifier family can also be 17 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 used in certain AC applications with minimal performance degradation. Contact the factory for more information. When an over range occurs, the data sample output bits are held at full scale (all 0’s or all 1’s), thus allowing the detection of this condition in the receiver device. 160MSPS to the maximum specified sample rate. The lane data rate is related to the ADC core sample rate by a relationship that is defined by the JESD204 transmitter configuration, and has additional frequency constraints; see“JESD204 Transmitter” on page 21 for additional details. Jitter The clock input circuit is a differential pair (see Figure 49). Driving these inputs with a high level (up to 1.8VP-P on each input) sine or square wave will provide the lowest jitter performance. A transformer with 4:1 impedance ratio will provide increased drive levels. The clock input is functional with AC-coupled LVDS, LVPECL, and CML drive levels. To maintain the lowest possible aperture jitter, it is recommended to have high slew rate at the zero crossing of the differential clock input signal. The recommended drive circuit is shown in Figure 37. A duty range of 40% to 60% is acceptable. The clock can be driven single-ended, but this will reduce the edge rate and may impact SNR performance. The clock inputs are internally self-biased to AVDD/2 through a Thevenin equivalent of 10kΩ to facilitate AC coupling. In a sampled data system, clock jitter directly impacts the achievable SNR performance. The theoretical relationship between clock jitter (tJ) and SNR is shown in Equation 1 and is illustrated in Figure 38. 1 SNR = 20 log 10 ⎛ --------------------⎞ ⎝ 2πf t ⎠ 100 95 tj = 0.1ps 90 14 BITS 85 80 tj = 1ps 75 1000pF 12 BITS 70 tj = 10ps 65 60 TC4-19G2+ (EQ. 1) IN J SNR (dB) Clock Input 10 BITS tj = 100ps 55 CLKP 50 1M 10M 100M INPUT FREQUENCY (Hz) 1G FIGURE 38. SNR vs CLOCK JITTER 0.01µF 200 CLKN 1000pF 1000pF FIGURE 37. RECOMMENDED CLOCK DRIVE A selectable 2x frequency divider is provided in series with the clock input. The divider can be used in the 2x mode with a sample clock equal to twice the desired sample rate. Use of the 2x frequency divider enables the use of the Phase Slip feature, which enables the system to be able to select the phase of the divide by 2 that causes the ADC to sample the analog input. TABLE 1. CLKDIV PIN SETTINGS CLKDIV PIN DIVIDE RATIO AVSS 2 Float 1 AVDD Not Allowed The clock divider can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the CLKDIV pin setting. See “SPI Physical Interface” on page 26. A delay-locked loop (DLL) generates internal clock signals for various stages within the charge pipeline. If the frequency of the input clock changes, the DLL may take up to 52μs to regain lock at 500MSPS. The lock time is inversely proportional to the sample rate. The DLL has two ranges of operation, slow and fast. The slow range can be used for ADC sample rates between 80MSPS and 200MSPS, while the default fast range can be used from 18 This relationship shows the SNR that would be achieved if clock jitter were the only non-ideal factor. In reality, achievable SNR is limited by internal factors such as linearity, aperture jitter and thermal noise as well. Internal aperture jitter is the uncertainty in the sampling instant. The internal aperture jitter combines with the input clock jitter in a root-sum-square fashion, since they are not statistically correlated, and this determines the total jitter in the system. The total jitter, combined with other noise sources, then determines the achievable SNR. Voltage Reference A temperature compensated internal voltage reference provides the reference charges used in the successive approximation operations. The full-scale range of each ADC is proportional to the reference voltage. The nominal value of the voltage reference is 1.25V. Digital Outputs The digital outputs are in CML format, and feature analog and digital characteristics compliant with the JESD204 standard requirements. Power Dissipation The power dissipated by the device is dependent on the ADC sample rate and the number of active lanes in the link. There is a fixed bias current drawn from the analog supply for the ADC, along with a fixed bias current drawn from the digital supply for each active lane. The remaining power dissipation is linearly related to the sample rate. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Nap/Sleep operation. Portions of the device may be shut down to save power during times when operation of the ADC is not required. Two power saving modes are available: Nap, and Sleep. Nap mode reduces power dissipation significantly while taking a very short time to return to functionality. Sleep mode reduces power consumption drastically while taking longer to return to functionality. In Nap mode the JESD204 lanes will continue to produce valid encoded data, allowing the link to remain active and thus return to a functional state quickly. The data transmitted over the lanes in nap mode is the last valid ADC sample, repeated until leaving nap mode. The 8b/10b encoder’s running disparity will prevent the potentially long time repetition of this last valid sample from creating DC bias on the lane. In sleep mode the JESD204 lanes will be deactivated to conserve power. Thus, sometime after wake up code group alignment will be required to reestablish the link. BINARY 13 12 11 GRAY CODE 13 12 •••• 11 Normal Float Nap AVDD Sleep GRAY CODE 0 13 12 11 •••• 1 0 •••• •••• BINARY The power-down mode can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the NAPSLP pin setting. However, if the ADC is powered-on with the NAPSLP pin in either Nap or Sleep modes, the pin must be first set to Normal before the SPI port will be enabled. Therefore, before the SPI port can be used to override the NAPSLP pin setting, the ADC must have been put into Normal mode at least once using the NAPSLP pin. Further details on the SPI port are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 26. 1 Converting back to offset binary from Gray code must be done recursively, using the result of each bit for the next lower bit as shown in Figure 40. TABLE 2. NAPSLP PIN SETTINGS AVSS 0 FIGURE 39. BINARY TO GRAY CODE CONVERSION By default after the device is powered on, the operational state is controlled by the NAPSLP pin as shown in Table 2. Please note that power on calibration occurs at power up time regardless of the state of the NAPSLP pin; immediately following this power on calibration routine the device will enter nap or sleep state if the NAPSLP pin voltage dictates it is to do so. MODE 1 •••• The input clock should remain running and at a fixed frequency during Nap or Sleep, and CSB should be high. The JESD204 link will only remain established during nap mode if the input clock continues to remain stable during the nap period. NAPSLP PIN •••• 13 12 11 •••• 1 0 FIGURE 40. GRAY CODE TO BINARY CONVERSION Mapping of the input voltage to the various data formats is shown in Table 3. . TABLE 3. INPUT VOLTAGE TO OUTPUT CODE MAPPING INPUT VOLTAGE OFFSET BINARY TWO’S COMPLEMENT GRAY CODE –Full Scale 00 0000 0000 0000 10 0000 0000 0000 00 0000 0000 0000 Data Format Output data can be presented in three formats: two’s complement(default), Gray code and offset binary. The data format can be controlled through the SPI port by writing to address 0x73. Details on this are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 26. Offset binary coding maps the most negative input voltage to code 0x000 (all zeros) and the most positive input to 0xFFF (all ones). Two’s complement coding simply complements the MSB of the offset binary representation. –Full Scale 00 0000 0000 0001 10 0000 0000 0001 00 0000 0000 0001 + 1LSB Mid–Scale 10 0000 0000 0000 00 0000 0000 0000 11 0000 0000 0000 +Full Scale 11 1111 1111 1110 01 1111 1111 1110 10 0000 0000 0001 – 1LSB +Full Scale 11 1111 1111 1111 01 1111 1111 1111 10 0000 0000 0000 When calculating Gray code the MSB is unchanged. The remaining bits are computed as the XOR of the current bit position and the next most significant bit. Figure 39 shows this 19 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 I2E Requirements and Restrictions Overview I2E is a blind and background capable algorithm, designed to transparently eliminate interleaving artifacts. This circuitry eliminates interleave artifacts due to offset, gain, and sample time mismatches between unit A/Ds, and across supply voltage and temperature variations in real-time. Differences in the offset, gain, and sample times of time-interleaved A/Ds create artifacts in the digital outputs. Each of these artifacts creates a unique signature that may be detectable in the captured samples. The I2E algorithm optimizes performance by detecting error signatures and adjusting each unit A/D using minimal additional power. I2E calibration is off by default at power-up. The I2E algorithm can be put in Active Run state via SPI. When the I2E algorithm is in Active Run state, it detects and corrects for offset, gain, and sample time mismatches in real time (see Track Mode description under “Active Run State” on page 20). However, certain analog input characteristics can obscure the estimation of these mismatches. The I2E algorithm is capable of detecting these obscuring analog input characteristics, and as long as they are present I2E will stop updating the correction in real time. Effectively, this freezes the current correction circuitry to the last known-good state (see Hold Mode description under “Active Run State” on page 20). Once the analog input signal stops obscuring the interleaved artifacts, the I2E algorithm will automatically start correcting for mismatch in real time again. Active Run State During the Active Run state the I2E algorithm actively suppresses artifacts due to interleaving based on statistics in the digitized data. I2E has two modes of operation in this state (described in the following), dynamically chosen in real-time by the algorithm based on the statistics of the analog input signal. 1. Track Mode refers to the default state of the algorithm, when all artifacts due to interleaving are actively being eliminated. To be in Track Mode the analog input signal to the device must adhere to the following requirements: • Possess total power greater than -20dBFS, integrated from 1MHz to Nyquist but excluding signal energy in a 100kHz band centered at fS/4 The criteria above assumes 500MSPS operation; the frequency bands should be scaled proportionally for lower sample rates. Note that the effect of excluding energy in the 100kHz band around of fS/4 exists in every Nyquist zone. This band generalizes to the form (N*fS/4 - 50kHz) to (N*fS/4 + 50kHz), where N is any odd integer. An input signal that violates these criteria briefly (approximately 10µs), before and after which it meets this criteria, will not impact system performance. The algorithm must be in Track Mode for approximately one second (defined in I2Epost_t specification) after power-up before the specifications apply. Once this requirement has been met, the specifications of the device will continue to be met while I2E remains in Track Mode, even in the presence of temperature and supply voltage changes. 20 2. Hold Mode refers to the state of the I2E algorithm when the analog input signal does not meet the requirements specified above. If the algorithm detects that the signal no longer meets the criteria, it automatically enters Hold Mode. In Hold Mode, the I2E circuitry freezes the adjustment values based on the most recent set of valid input conditions. However, in Hold Mode, the I2E circuitry will not correct for new changes in interleave artifacts induced by supply voltage and temperature changes. The I2E circuitry will remain in Hold Mode until such time as the analog input signal meets the requirements for Track Mode. Power Meter The power meter calculates the average power of the analog input, and determines if it’s within range to allow operation in Track Mode. Both AC RMS and total RMS power are calculated, and there are separate SPI programmable thresholds and hysteresis values for each. FS/4 Filter A digital filter removes the signal energy in a 100kHz band around fS/4 before the I2E circuitry uses these samples for estimating offset, gain, and sample time mismatches (data samples produced by the A/D are unaffected by this filtering). This allows the I2E algorithm to continue in Active Run state while in the presence of a large amount of input energy near the fS/4 frequency. This filter can be powered down if it’s known that the signal characteristics won’t violate the restrictions. Powering down the FS/4 filter will reduce power consumption by approximately 30mW. Nyquist Zones The I2E circuitry allows the use of any one Nyquist zone without configuration, but requires the use of only one Nyquist zone. Inputs that switch dynamically between Nyquist zones will cause poor performance for the I2E circuitry. For example, I2E will function properly for a particular application that has fS = 500MSPS and uses the 1st Nyquist zone (0MHz to 250MHz). I2E will also function properly for an application that uses fS = 500MSPS and the 2nd Nyquist zone (250MHz to 500MHz). I2E will not function properly for an application that uses fS = 500MSPS, and input frequency bands from 150MHz to 210MHz and 250MHz to 290MHz simultaneously. There is no need to configure the I2E algorithm to use a particular Nyquist zone, but no dynamic switching between Nyquist zones is permitted while I2E is running. If the analog input signal switches between multiple Nyquist zones, it may be necessary to reset I2E by turning if off and back on (via SPI register 0x31 bit 0) to properly calibrate in the new Nyquist zone. Configurability and Communication I2E can respond to status queries, be turned on and turned off, and generally configured via SPI programmable registers. Configuring of I2E is generally unnecessary unless the application cannot meet the requirements of Track Mode on or after power up. Parameters that can be adjusted and read back include FS/4 filter threshold and status, Power Meter threshold and status, and initial values for the offset, gain, and sample time values to use when I2E starts. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Clock Divider Synchronous Reset The function of clock divider synchronous reset is available as a SPI-programmable overloaded function on the SYNCP and SYNCN pins. Given that the clock divider reset and SYNC features have the same electrical and timing requirements, this overloading allows the system to generate only a single well timed signal with respect to the ADC sample clock and select the ADC’s interpretation of the signal as a SPI-programmable option (see SPI register 0x77 description for more information). By default the SYNCP and SYNCN pins will function as the JESD204 SYNC~. The use of clock divider reset function is a requirement in a system that uses the ISLA214S50, ISLA214S35, or CLKDIV = 2, and also requires time alignment or deterministic latency of multiple devices. Please contact the factory for more details about this feature and its usage. Soft Reset Soft reset is a function intended to be used when the power on reset is to be re-run. An application may decide to issue a soft calibration command after significant temperature change or after a change in the sample rate frequency to optimize performance under the new condition. Soft reset is issued by writing the Soft Reset bit at SPI address 0x00. Soft reset is a self-resetting bit in that will automatically return to 0 once the power on calibration has completed. JESD204 Transmitter Overview The conversion data is presented by a JESD204B-compliant SERDES interface. The SERDES lane data rate supports typical speeds up to 4.375Gbps, exceeding the 3.125Gbps maximum specified by the JESD204 rev A standard. Two packing modes are supported: Efficient and Simple. A SYNC input is included, which is used for lane initialization as well as time alignment of multiple converter devices. AC coupling of the SERDES lane(s) on the board is required. A block diagram of this SERDES transmitter is shown in Figure 41. For more information about the standardized characteristics and features of a JESD204 interface, please see JESD204 rev A and rev B standards. For application design support, including evaluation kit schematics and layout, reference FPGA project(s), and simulation models for functionality and signal integrity, please contact the factory and/or view application notes on the Intersil website. SERDES Block Link Layer Sample Data Analog Input Analog Input Sample Clock Transport Layer Scrambler 1+x14+x15 Encoder 8/10 SER Logic Sample Data Clock Management Lane 0 PLL Multiply - Code group Synchronization - Alignment Characters - Initial Lane Synchronization - Etc SYNC Link Layer Lane 1 Link Layer Lane 2 FIGURE 41. SERDES TRANSMITTER BLOCK DIAGRAM 21 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 To maximize flexibility at the system level, two transport layer packing modes are supported: simple and efficient. These two modes allow the system designer flexibility to trade off between the number of lanes to support a given throughput, the data rate of these lanes, and the complexity of the receiver. This translates directly into providing system level trade-offs between cost, power, and resource usage of the receiver and complexity of the solution. Simple mode packs informationless bits onto each ADC sample to form full 16-bit data. In simple mode packing, the frame clock and ADC sample clock are the same frequency, easing frequency scaling requirements at the system level, but decreasing the payload efficiency of the lanes. Decreased payload efficiency of the lanes increases the lane data rate required to support a given throughput, and may require additional lanes to support a given configuration. The degree of payload efficiency loss is dependent on the ADC resolution. Efficient mode packs sequential ADC samples into a contiguous block of an integer number of octets, and then slices the block into the octets for transport. This mode always achieves the theoretical maximum payload of the lanes (80%) regardless of the resolution of the ADC and the number of lanes used. This mode provides the minimum number of lanes at the minimum data rate that is theoretically possible given the 8b/10b encoding used in JESD204 systems. In efficient packing mode, frame clock and the ADC sample clock have an M/N relationship, where M and N are small integers and vary depending on the ADC resolution and number of lanes selected. Efficient mode packing may require additional frequency scaling elements (internal FPGA PLLs or discrete frequency scaling devices) to generate the frame clock for the receiving device. The default configuration for this device is efficient packing mode. Reconfiguration into the simple packing mode is accomplished by programming the JESD204 parameters via the SPI bus. See Table 5 for the full list of parameters values for each mode and product. Via SPI, the JESD204 transmitter is highly configurable, supporting efficient to simple mode packing reconfiguration as well as "downgrading" a given product's JESD204 interface. For example, reconfiguring a 3-lane product into 2 lanes (with each running faster than with 3 lanes), or reducing the resolution of the ADC(s) to slow down the lane data rate in systems where the full ADC resolution is not required, are supported. Please contact the factory for a full list of downgradeable configurations that are supported. Signal integrity plots, including data eye, BER bathtub curves, and edge histogram plots versus lane data rate can be found in the typical operating curves section. Initial Lane Alignment The link initialization process is started by asserting the SYNC~ signal to the ADC device. This assertion causes the JESD204 transmitter to generate comma characters, which are used by the receiver to accomplish code group synchronization (bit and octet alignment, respectively). Once code group synchronization is detected in the receiver, it de-asserts the SYNC~ signal, causing the JESD204 transmitter to generate the initial lane alignment sequence (ILA). The ILA is comprised of 4 multi-frames of data in a standard format, with the length of 22 each multi-frame determined by the K parameter as programmed into the SPI JESD204 parameter table. The ILA includes standard control character markers that can be used to perform channel bonding in the receiving device if desired. The 2nd multi-frame includes the full JESD204 parameter data, allowing the receiver to auto-detect the lane configuration if desired. After completion of the ILA the JESD204 transmitter begins transmitting ADC sample data. Continuous link and lane alignment monitoring is accomplished via an octet substitution scheme. The last octet in each frame, if identical to the last octet in the previous frame, is replaced with a specific control character. If both sides of the link support lane synchronization, the last octet in each multi-frame, if identical to the last octet in the previous frame, is replaced with a different specific control character. A more complete description of the link initialization sequence, including finite state machine implementation, can be found in the JESD204 rev A standard. LANE DATA RATE The lane data rate for this product family is constrained to be greater than or equal to 1Gbps and less than or equal to 3.125Gbps for guaranteed operation, so as to be consistent with the lane data rate limit of 3.125Gbps set by the JESD204 rev A standard. The lane data rate can typically exceed 4.2Gbps for this product family. SCRAMBLER The bypassable scrambler is compliant with the scrambler defined in the JESD204 rev A standard. This implementation seeds the scrambler with the initial lane alignment sequence, such that the first two octets following the sequence can be properly descrambled if the receiver also passes the lane alignment sequence through its descrambler. Even if the receiver does not implement this detail, the 3rd and subsequent octets can be descrambled to yield ADC data due to the self-synchronizing nature of the scrambler used. MULTI-CHIP TIME ALIGNMENT The JESD204 standard (in various revisions) provides the capability to time align multiple JESD204 ADC devices to a single logic device (FPGA or ASIC). This feature is critical in many applications that cannot tolerate the variable latency of the JESD204 link, and that must process pipeline depth correct data from more than one ADC device. Time alignment of multiple devices provides the capability to align samples from multiple JESD204 ADC devices in the system in a pipeline-depth correct manner, thus enabling the system to analyze the ADC data from multiple devices while eliminating the variable latency of the JESD204 link as a concern. This capability enables configurations of JESD204 ADCs as IQ, interleave, and/or simultaneously-sampled converters. This ADC family uses the asserted to de-asserted SYNC~ transition as the absolute time event with which to generate a known sequence of characters at the JESD204 transmitter of equal pipeline depth between all ADC devices in the system to be time aligned. This is consistent with the JESD204 rev B subclass 2 device definition. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Test Patterns The complexity of the JESD204 interface merits much more test pattern capability than less complex parallel interfaces. This device family consequently supports a much wider range of test patterns than previous ADC families. Supported test patterns include both transport and link layer patterns. Transport layer patterns are passed through the transport layer of the JESD204 transmitter, following the same sequence of being packed and sliced into octets as the ADC sample data. Link layer test patterns bypass the transport layer and are injected directly into the 8b/10b encoder, serialized, and sent out of the physical media. Test pattern generation is controlled through SPI register 0xC0. Link layer PRBS patterns are standard PRBS patterns that can be used with built-in standard PRBS checkers in, for example, FPGA SERDES-capable pins. All transport layer test patterns re-initialize their phase when the SYNC~ de-assertion occurs; consequently, a system that provides a well-timed SYNC~ signal with respect to the ADC sample clock can expect transport layer test patterns to have consistent phase with respect to that de-assertion, which can be a significant aid when debugging the system. TABLE 4. JESD204 CONFIGURATIONS AND CLOCK FREQUENCIES PACKING MODE NUMBER OF LANES 500MSPS, 14-bit Efficient 3 200 to 500 (14-bits)*(1 ADC channel)*(10/8 encoder overhead)/(3 lanes) = (140/24) = 5.8333 1.16667 to 2.916675 350MSPS, 14-bit Efficient 2 175 to 350 (14-bits)*(1 ADC channel)*(10/8 encoder overhead)/(2 lanes) = (140/16) = 8.75 1.53125 to 3.0625 Simple 2 175 to 310 (14-bits+2-bit tail)*(1 ADC channel)*(10/8 encoder overhead)/(2 lanes) = (160/16) = 10 1.75 to 3.1 PRODUCT DESCRIPTION ISLA214S50 ISLA214S35 ADC SAMPLE CLOCK LANE DATA RATE MULTIPLIER FROM ADC SAMPLE LANE DATA RATE RANGE (MHz) (Note 16) CLOCK RATE (GBPS) (Note 16) NOTE: 16. Maximum sample clock range calculated using the smaller of the maximum ADC core sample rate and the 3.125 Gbps maximum lane data rate dictated in the JESD204 rev A standard. Typically the maximum lane data rate achievable on these products far exceeds 3.125Gbps. TABLE 5. JESD204 PARAMETERS NUMBER OF JESD204 PACKING LANES PARAMETER ENCODED PRODUCT MODE ISLA214S50 Efficient 3 CF = 0 0 CS = 0 0 F=7 6 HD = 0 0 L=3 2 M=1 0 N = 14 13 N' = 14 13 S = 12 11 K >= 3 >= 2 23 JESD204 PARAMETERS AND FRAME MAP (Notes 17, 18, 19) C0S0[13:6] C0S0[5:0] C0S1[13:12] C0S4[13:6] C0S4[5:0] C0S5[13:12] C0S8[13:6] C0S8[5:0] C0S9[13:12] C0S1[11:4] C0S1[3:0] C0S2[9:2] C0S2[13:10] C0S5[11:4] C0S5[3:0] C0S6[13:10] C0S9[11:4] C0S9[3:0] C0S10[13:10] C0S2[1:0] C0S3[7:0] C0S3[13:8] C0S6[9:2] C0S6[1:0] C0S7[7:0] C0S7[13:8] C0S10[9:2] C0S10[1:0] C0S11[7:0] C0S11[13:8] FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 TABLE 5. JESD204 PARAMETERS (Continued) NUMBER OF JESD204 PACKING LANES PARAMETER ENCODED PRODUCT MODE ISLA214S35 Efficient ISLA214S35 Simple 2 2 CF = 0 0 CS = 0 0 F=7 6 HD = 0 0 L=2 1 M=1 0 N = 14 13 N' = 14 13 S=8 7 K >= 3 >= 2 CF = 0 0 CS = 0 0 F=2 1 HD = 0 0 L=2 1 M=2 1 N = 14 13 N' = 16 15 S=1 0 K >= 9 >= 8 JESD204 PARAMETERS AND FRAME MAP (Notes 17, 18, 19) C0S0[13:6] C0S0[5:0] C0S1[13:12] C0S4[13:6] C0S4[5:0] C0S5[13:12] C0S1[11:4] C0S1[3:0] C0S2[9:2] C0S2[13:10] C0S5[11:4] C0S5[3:0] C0S2[1:0] C0S3[7:0] C0S3[13:8] C0S6[9:2] C0S6[13:10] C0S6[1:0] C0S7[7:0] C0S7[13:8] C0S0[13:6] C0S0[5:0] TT C1S0[13:6] C1S0[5:0] TT NOTES: 17. The JESD204 parameters are shown as their actual values, with the JESD204 encoded values (i.e., the values that are programmed into the SPI registers) in the next column over. Typically values that must always be greater than 1 are encoded as value minus 1, and so on. 18. Frame map format decoder: "CxSy[a:b]" = Converter x, Sample y, bits a through b. For example, "C0S0[13:6]" = Converter 0, Sample 0, bits 13 through 6, etc. "T" = Tail bit (information-less bit packed in the transport layer mapping to form octets). 19. The topmost lane in the graphical frame map is Lane0, followed by Lane1 and Lane 2 (for 3-lane configurations). 24 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 CSB SCLK SDIO R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A1 A10 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 FIGURE 42. MSB-FIRST ADDRESSING CSB SCLK SDIO A0 A1 A11 A2 A12 W0 W1 R/W D1 D0 FIGURE 43. LSB-FIRST ADDRESSING tDSW CSB tCLK tHI tDHW tS tH tLO SCLK SDIO R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 SPI WRITE FIGURE 44. SPI WRITE tDSW CSB tCLK tHI tDHW tH tDVR tS tLO SCLK WRITING A READ COMMAND READING DATA ( 3 WIRE MODE ) SDIO R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A9 A2 A1 A0 D7 SDO D6 D3 D2 D1 D0 ( 4 WIRE MODE) D7 D3 D2 D1 D0 SPI READ FIGURE 45. SPI READ 25 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 CSB STALLING CSB SCLK SDIO INSTRUCTION/ADDRESS DATA WORD 1 DATA WORD 2 FIGURE 46. 2-BYTE TRANSFER LAST LEGAL CSB STALLING CSB SCLK SDIO INSTRUCTION/ADDRESS DATA WORD 1 DATA WORD N FIGURE 47. N-BYTE TRANSFER Serial Peripheral Interface A serial peripheral interface (SPI) bus is used to facilitate configuration of the device and to optimize performance. The SPI bus consists of chip select (CSB), serial clock (SCLK) serial data output (SDO), and serial data input/output (SDIO). The maximum SCLK rate is equal to the ADC sample rate (fSAMPLE) divided by 14 for write operations and fSAMPLE divided by 32 for reads. There is no minimum SCLK rate. The following sections describe various registers that are used to configure the SPI or adjust performance or functional parameters. Many registers in the available address space (0x00 to 0xFF) are not defined in this document. Additionally, within a defined register there may be certain bits or bit combinations that are reserved. Undefined registers and undefined values within defined registers are reserved and should not be selected. Setting any reserved register or value may produce indeterminate results. SPI Physical Interface The serial clock pin (SCLK) provides synchronization for the data transfer. By default, all data is presented on the serial data input/output (SDIO) pin in three-wire mode. The state of the SDIO pin is set automatically in the communication protocol (described in the following). A dedicated serial data output pin (SDO) can be activated by setting 0x00[7] high to allow operation in four-wire mode. The SPI port operates in a half duplex master/slave configuration, with the ADC functioning as a slave. Multiple slave devices can interface to a single master in three-wire mode only, since the SDO output of an unaddressed device is asserted in four wire mode. The communication protocol begins with an instruction/address phase. The first rising SCLK edge following a high-to-low transition on CSB determines the beginning of the two-byte instruction/address command; SCLK must be static low before the CSB transition. Data can be presented in MSB-first order or LSB-first order. The default is MSB-first, but this can be changed by setting 0x00[6] high. Figures 42 and 43 show the appropriate bit ordering for the MSB-first and LSB-first modes, respectively. In MSB-first mode, the address is incremented for multi-byte transfers, while in LSB-first mode it’s decremented. In the default mode, the MSB is R/W, which determines if the data is to be read (active high) or written. The next two bits, W1 and W0, determine the number of data bytes to be read or written (see Table 6). The lower 13 bits contain the first address for the data transfer. This relationship is illustrated in Figure 44, and timing values are given in “Switching Specifications” on page 9. After the instruction/address bytes have been read, the appropriate number of data bytes are written to or read from the ADC (based on the R/W bit status). The data transfer will continue as long as CSB remains low and SCLK is active. Stalling of the CSB pin is allowed at any byte boundary (instruction/address or data) if the number of bytes being transferred is three or less. For transfers of four bytes or more, CSB is allowed to stall in the middle of the instruction/address bytes or before the first data byte. If CSB transitions to a high state after that point the state machine will reset and terminate the data transfer. The chip-select bar (CSB) pin determines when a slave device is being addressed. Multiple slave devices can be written to concurrently, but only one slave device can be read from at a given time (again, only in three-wire mode). If multiple slave devices are selected for reading at the same time, the results will be indeterminate. 26 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 TABLE 6. BYTE TRANSFER SELECTION [W1:W0] BYTES TRANSFERRED 00 1 01 2 10 3 11 4 or more Figures 46 and 47 illustrate the timing relationships for 2-byte and N-byte transfers, respectively. The operation for a 3-byte transfer can be inferred from these diagrams. ADDRESS 0X20: OFFSET_COARSE_ADC0 ADDRESS 0X21: OFFSET_FINE_ADC0 The input offset of the ADC core can be adjusted in fine and coarse steps. Both adjustments are made via an 8-bit word as detailed in Table 7. The data format is twos complement. The default value of each register will be the result of the self-calibration after initial power-up. If a register is to be incremented or decremented, the user should first read the register value then write the incremented or decremented value back to the same register. TABLE 7. OFFSET ADJUSTMENTS SPI Configuration ADDRESS 0X00: CHIP_PORT_CONFIG PARAMETER 0x20[7:0] COARSE OFFSET 0x21[7:0] FINE OFFSET Bit ordering and SPI reset are controlled by this register. Bit order can be selected as MSB to LSB (MSB first) or LSB to MSB (LSB first) to accommodate various micro controllers. Steps 255 255 –Full Scale (0x00) -133LSB (-47mV) -5LSB (-1.75mV) Mid–Scale (0x80) 0.0LSB (0.0mV) 0.0LSB Bit 7 SDO Active +Full Scale (0xFF) +133LSB (+47mV) +5LSB (+1.75mV) Bit 6 LSB First Nominal Step Size 1.04LSB (0.37mV) 0.04LSB (0.014mV) Setting this bit high configures the SPI to interpret serial data as arriving in LSB to MSB order. ADDRESS 0X22: GAIN_COARSE_ADC0 Bit 5 Soft Reset ADDRESS 0X23: GAIN_MEDIUM_ADC0 Setting this bit high resets all SPI registers to default values. ADDRESS 0X24: GAIN_FINE_ADC0 Bit 4 Reserved Gain of the ADC core can be adjusted in coarse, medium and fine steps. Coarse gain is a 4-bit adjustment while medium and fine are 8-bit. Multiple Coarse Gain Bits can be set for a total adjustment range of ±4.2%. (‘0011’ ≅ -4.2% and ‘1100’ ≅ +4.2%) It is recommended to use one of the coarse gain settings (-4.2%, -2.8%, -1.4%, 0, 1.4%, 2.8%, 4.2%) and fine-tune the gain using the registers at 0x0023 and 0x24. This bit should always be set high. Bits 3:0 These bits should always mirror bits 4:7 to avoid ambiguity in bit ordering. ADDRESS 0X02: BURST_END If a series of sequential registers are to be set, burst mode can improve throughput by eliminating redundant addressing. The burst is ended by pulling the CSB pin high. Setting the burst_end address determines the end of the transfer. During a write operation, the user must be cautious to transmit the correct number of bytes based on the starting and ending addresses. The default value of each register will be the result of the self-calibration after initial power-up. If a register is to be incremented or decremented, the user should first read the register value then write the incremented or decremented value back to the same register. TABLE 8. COARSE GAIN ADJUSTMENT Bits 7:0 Burst End Address This register value determines the ending address of the burst data. Device Information ADDRESS 0X08: CHIP_ID 0x22[3:0] core 0 0x26[3:0] core 1 NOMINAL COARSE GAIN ADJUST (%) Bit3 +2.8 Bit2 +1.4 Bit1 -2.8 Bit0 -1.4 ADDRESS 0X09: CHIP_VERSION The generic die identifier and a revision number, respectively, can be read from these two registers. Device Configuration/Control A common SPI map, which can accommodate single-channel or multi-channel devices, is used for all Intersil ADC products. 27 TABLE 9. MEDIUM AND FINE GAIN ADJUSTMENTS PARAMETER 0x23[7:0] MEDIUM GAIN 0x24[7:0] FINE GAIN Steps 256 256 –Full Scale (0x00) -2% -0.20% Mid–Scale (0x80) 0.00% 0.00% +Full Scale (0xFF) +2% +0.2% Nominal Step Size 0.016% 0.0016% FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 ADDRESS 0X25: MODES Two distinct reduced power modes can be selected. By default, the tri-level NAPSLP pin can select normal operation, nap or sleep modes (refer to “Nap/Sleep” on page 19). This functionality can be overridden and controlled through the SPI. However, if the ADC is powered-on with the NAPSLP pin in either Nap or Sleep modes, the pin must first be set to Normal before the SPI port will be enabled. Therefore, before the SPI port can be used to override the NAPSLP pin setting, the ADC must have been put into Normal mode at least once using the NAPSLP pin. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. TABLE 10. POWER-DOWN CONTROL VALUE 0x25[2:0] POWER DOWN MODE 000 Pin Control 001 Normal Operation 010 Nap Mode 100 Sleep Mode ADDRESS 0X26: OFFSET_COARSE_ADC1 ADDRESS 0X27: OFFSET_FINE_ADC1 The input offset of ADC core#1 can be adjusted in fine and coarse steps in the same way that offset for core#0 can be adjusted. Both adjustments are made via an 8-bit word as detailed in Table 7. The data format is two’s complement. The default value of each register will be the result of the self-calibration after initial power-up. If a register is to be incremented or decremented, the user should first read the register value then write the incremented or decremented value back to the same register. ADDRESS 0X28: GAIN_COARSE_ADC1 ADDRESS 0X29: GAIN_MEDIUM_ADC1 ADDRESS 0X2A: GAIN_FINE_ADC1 Gain of ADC core #1 can be adjusted in coarse, medium and fine steps in the same way that core #0 can be adjusted. Coarse gain is a 4-bit adjustment while medium and fine are 8-bit. Multiple Coarse Gain Bits can be set for a total adjustment range of ±4.2. ADDRESS 0X30: I2E STATUS The I2E general status register. Bits 0 and 1 indicate if the I2E circuitry is in Active Run or Hold state. The state of the I2E circuitry is dependent on the analog input signal itself. If the input signal obscures the interleave mismatched artifacts such that I2E cannot estimate the mismatch, the algorithm will dynamically enter the Hold state. For example, a DC mid-scale input to the A/D does not contain sufficient information to estimate the gain and sample time skew mismatches, and thus the I2E algorithm will enter the Hold state. In the Hold state, the analog adjustments for interleave correction will be frozen and mismatch estimate calculations will cease until such time as the analog input achieves sufficient quality to allow the I2E algorithm to make mismatch estimates again. 28 Bit 0: 0 = I2E has not detected a low power condition. 1 = I2E has detected a low power condition, and the analog adjustments for interleave correction are frozen. Bit 1: 0 = I2E has not detected a low AC power condition. 1 = I2E has detected a low AC power condition, and I2E will continue to correct with best known information but will not update its interleave correction adjustments until the input signal achieves sufficient AC RMS power. Bit 2: When first started, the I2E algorithm can take a significant amount of time to settle (~1s), dependent on the characteristics of the analog input signal. 0 = I2E is still settling, 1 = I2E has completed settling. ADDRESS 0X31: I2E CONTROL The I2E general control register. This register can be written while I2E is running to control various parameters. Bit 0: 0 = turn I2E off, 1= turn I2E on Bit 1: 0 = no action, 1 = freeze I2E, leaving all settings in the current state. Subsequently writing a 0 to this bit will allow I2E to continue from the state it was left in. Bit 2-4: Disable any of the interleave adjustments of offset, gain, or sample time skew Bit 5: 0 = bypass notch filter, 1 = use notch filter on incoming data before estimating interleave mismatch terms ADDRESS 0X32: I2E STATIC CONTROL The I2E general static control register. This register must be written prior to turning I2E on for the settings to take effect. Bit 1-4: Reserved, always set to 0 Bit 5: 0 = normal operation, 1 = skip coarse adjustment of the offset, gain, and sample time skew analog controls when I2E is first turned on. This bit would typically be used if optimal analog adjustment values for offset, gain, and sample time skew have been preloaded in order to have the I2E algorithm converge more quickly. The system gain of the pair of interleaved core A/Ds can be set by programming the medium and fine gain of the reference A/D before turning I2E on. In this case, I2E will adjust the non-reference A/D’s gain to match the reference A/D’s gain. Bit 7: Reserved, always set to 0 ADDRESS 0X4A: I2E POWER DOWN This register provides the capability to completely power down the I2E algorithm and the Notch filter. This would typically be done to conserve power. BIT 0: Power down the I2E Algorithm BIT 1: Power down the Notch Filter ADDRESS 0X50-0X55: I2E FREEZE THRESHOLDS This group of registers provides programming access to configure I2E’s dynamic freeze control. As with any interleave mismatch correction algorithm making estimates of the interleave mismatch errors using the digitized application input signal, there are certain characteristics of the input signal that can obscure the mismatch estimates. For example, a DC input to the A/D contains no FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 information about the sample time skew mismatch between the core A/Ds, and thus should not be used by the I2E algorithm to update its sample time skew estimate. Under such circumstances, I2E enters Hold state. In the Hold state, the analog adjustments will be frozen and mismatch estimate calculations will cease until such time as the analog input achieves sufficient quality to allow the I2E algorithm to make mismatch estimates again. These registers allow the programming of the thresholds of the meters used to determine the quality of the input signal. This can be used by the application to optimize I2E’s behavior based on knowledge of the input signal. For example, if a specific application had an input signal that was typically 30dB down from full scale, and was primarily concerned about analog performance of the A/D at this input power, lowering the RMS power threshold would allow I2E to continue tracking with this input power level, thus allowing it to track over voltage and temperature changes. 0x50 (LSBs), 0x51 (MSBs) RMS Power Threshold This 16-bit quantity is the RMS power threshold at which I2E will enter Hold state. The RMS power of the analog input is calculated continuously by I2E on incoming data. Only the upper 12 bits of the ADC sample outputs are used in the averaging process for comparison to the power threshold registers. A 12-bit number squared produces a 24-bit result (for A/D resolutions under 12-bits, the A/D samples are MSB-aligned to 12-bit data). A dynamic number of these 24-bit results are averaged to compare with this threshold approximately every 1µs to decide whether or not to freeze I2E. The 24-bit threshold is constructed with bits 23 through 20 (MSBs) assigned to 0, bits 19 through 4 assigned to this 16-bit quantity, and bits 3 through 0 (LSBs) assigned to 0. As an example, if the application wanted to set this threshold to trigger near the RMS analog input of a -20dBFS sinusoidal input, the calculation to determine this register’s value would be as shown by Equations 2 and 3: 20⎞ ⎛ –--------- ⎝ 20 ⎠ 12 2 RMS codes = ------- × 10 × 2 ≅ ( 290 )codes 2 (EQ. 2) 2 hex ( ( ( 290 ) ) ) = 0x14884 TruncateMSBandLSBhexdigit = 0x1488 (EQ. 3) Therefore, programming 0x1488 into these two registers will cause I2E to freeze when the signal being digitized has less RMS power than a -20dBFS sinusoid. 0X53(LSBS), 0X54(MSBS) AC RMS POWER THRESHOLD Similar to RMS power threshold, there must be sufficient AC RMS power (or dV/dt) of the input signal to measure sample time skew mismatch for an arbitrary input. This is clear from observing the effect when a high voltage (and therefore large RMS value) DC input is applied to the A/D input. Without sufficient dV/dt in the input signal, no information about the sample time skew between the core A/Ds can be determined from the digitized samples. The AC RMS Power Meter is implemented as a high-passed (via DSP) RMS power meter. The required algorithm is documented as follows. 1. Write the MSBs of the 16-bit quantity to SPI Address 0x54 2. Write the LSBs of the 16-bit quantity to SPI Address 0x53 Only the upper 12 bits of the ADC sample outputs are used in the averaging process for comparison to the power threshold registers. A 12-bit number squared produces a 24-bit result (for A/D resolutions under 12-bits, the A/D samples are MSB-aligned to 12-bit data). A dynamic number of these 24-bit results are averaged to compare with this threshold approximately every 1µs to decide whether or not to freeze I2E. The 24-bit threshold is constructed with bits 23 through 20 (MSBs) assigned to 0, bits 19 through 4 assigned to this 16-bit quantity, and bits 3 through 0 (LSBs) assigned to 0. The calculation methodology to set this register is identical to the description in the RMS power threshold description. The freezing of I2E when the AC RMS power meter threshold is not met affects the sample time skew interleave mismatch estimate, but not the offset or gain mismatch estimates. 0x55 AC RMS Power Hysteresis In order to prevent I2E from constantly oscillating between the Hold and Track state, there is hysteresis in the comparison described above. After I2E enters a frozen state, the AC RMS input power must achieve ³ threshold value + hysteresis to again enter the Track state. The hysteresis quantity is a 24-bit value, constructed with bits 23 through 12 (MSBs) being assigned to 0, bits 11 through 4 assigned to this register’s value, and bits 3 through 0 (LSBs) assigned to 0. Address 0x60-0x64: I2E initialization The freezing of I2E by the RMS power meter threshold affects the gain and sample time skew interleave mismatch estimates, but not the offset mismatch estimate. These registers provide access to the initialization values for each of offset, gain, and sample time skew that I2E programs into the target core A/D before adjusting to minimize interleave mismatch. They can be used by the system to, for example, reduce the convergence time of the I2E algorithm by programming in the optimal values before turning I2E on. In this case, I2E only needs to adjust for temperature and voltage-induced changes since the optimal values were recorded. 0x52 RMS Power Hysteresis Global Device Configuration/Control The default value of this register is 0x1000, causing I2E to freeze when the input amplitude is less than -21.2 dBFS. In order to prevent I2E from constantly oscillating between the Hold and Track state, there is hysteresis in the comparison described above. After I2E enters a frozen state, the RMS input power must achieve ³ threshold value + hysteresis to again enter the Track state. The hysteresis quantity is a 24-bit value, constructed with bits 23 through 12 (MSBs) being assigned to 0, bits 11 through 4 assigned to this register’s value, and bits 3 through 0 (LSBs) assigned to 0. 29 ADDRESS 0X70: SKEW_DIFF The value in the skew_diff register adjusts the timing skew between the two A/D cores. The nominal range and resolution of this adjustment are given in Table 11. The default value of this register after power-up is 80h. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 TABLE 11. DIFFERENTIAL SKEW ADJUSTMENT PARAMETER 0x70[7:0] DIFFERENTIAL SKEW Steps 256 –Full Scale (0x00) -6.5ps Mid–Scale (0x80) 0.0ps +Full Scale (0xFF) +6.5ps Nominal Step Size 51fs ADDRESS 0X74: OUTPUT_MODE_B Bit 6 DLL Range This bit sets the DLL operating range to fast (default) or slow. Internal clock signals are generated by a delay-locked loop (DLL), which has a finite operating range. Table 14 shows the allowable sample rate ranges for the slow and fast settings. TABLE 14. DLL RANGES DLL RANGE MIN MAX UNIT ADDRESS 0X71: PHASE_SLIP Slow 80 200 MSPS When using the clock_divide feature, the sample clock edge that the ADC uses to sample the analog input signal can be one of several different edges on the incoming higher frequency sample clock. For example, in clock_divide = 2 mode, every other incoming sample clock edge gets used by the ADC to sample the analog input. The phase_slip feature allows the system to control which edge of the incoming sample clock signals gets used to cause the sampling event, by “slipping” the sampling event by one input clock period each time phase_slip is asserted. Fast 160 500 MSPS The clkdivrst feature can work in conjunction with phase_slip. After well-timed assertion of the clkdivrst signal (via overloading on the SYNC inputs), the sampling edge position with respect to the incoming clock rate will have been reset, allowing the system to “slip” whatever desired number of incoming clock periods from a known state. ADDRESS 0X72: CLOCK_DIVIDE The ADC has a selectable clock divider that can be set to divide by two or one (no division). By default, the tri-level CLKDIV pin selects the divisor This functionality can be overridden and controlled through the SPI, as shown in Table 12. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. TABLE 12. CLOCK DIVIDER SELECTION VALUE 0x72[2:0] CLOCK DIVIDER 000 Pin Control 001 Divide by 1 010 Divide by 2 other Not Allowed ADDRESS 0X77: SYNC_FUNCTION Bit 0 Clkdivrst This bit controls the functionality of the SYNCP, SYNCN pins on this device. By default this bit equals ‘0’, which means that the functionality of the SYNCP, SYNCN pins is the JESD204 SYNC. Setting this bit equal to ‘1’ modifies the functionality of the SYNCP, SYNCN pins to be clkdivrst, which is a synchronous divider reset on all internal dividers in the device. Usage of this clkdivrst functionality is required to support multi-chip time alignment and deterministic latency for devices that use interleaved product configurations (ISLA214S50 and ISLA214S35), and for any other product configuration that uses clkdiv > 1. In both states, the setup and hold times with respect to the sample clock remain the same. Contact the factory for more details. ADDRESS 0XB6: CALIBRATION STATUS The LSB at address 0xB6 can be read to determine calibration status. The bit is ‘0’ during calibration and goes to a logic ‘1’ when calibration is complete.This register is unique in that it can be read after POR at calibration, unlike the other registers on chip, which can’t be read until calibration is complete. DEVICE TEST The output_mode_A register controls the logical coding of the sample data. Data can be coded in three possible formats: two’s complement(default), Gray code or offset binary. See Table 13. The device can produce preset or user defined patterns on the digital outputs to facilitate in-situ testing. A user can pick from preset built-in patterns by writing to the output test mode field [7:4] at 0xC0 or user defined patterns by writing to the user test mode field [2:0] at 0xC0. The user defined patterns should be loaded at address space 0xC1 through 0xD0, see the “SPI Memory Map” on page 33 for more detail. The test mode is enabled asynchronously to the sample clock, therefore several sample clock cycles may elapse before the data is present on the output bus. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. ADDRESS 0XC0: TEST_IO ADDRESS 0X73: OUTPUT_MODE_A TABLE 13. OUTPUT FORMAT CONTROL VALUE 0x73[2:0] OUTPUT FORMAT 000 Two’s Complement (Default) 010 Gray Code 100 Offset Binary 30 Bits 7:4 Output Test Mode These bits set the test mode according to the description in “SPI Memory Map” on page 33. Bits 2:0 User Test Mode The three LSBs in this register determine the test pattern in combination with registers 0xC1 through 0xD0. Refer to the “SPI Memory Map” on page 33. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 ADDRESS 0XC1: USER_PATT1_LSB ADDRESS 0XC2: USER_PATT1_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 1. ADDRESS 0XC3: USER_PATT2_LSB ADDRESS 0XC4: USER_PATT2_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 2. ADDRESS 0XC5: USER_PATT3_LSB ADDRESS 0XC6: USER_PATT3_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 3. ADDRESS 0XC7: USER_PATT4_LSB ADDRESS 0XC8: USER_PATT4_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 4. ADDRESS 0XC9: USER_PATT5_LSB ADDRESS 0XCA: USER_PATT5_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 5. ADDRESS 0XCB: USER_PATT6_LSB ADDRESS 0XCC: USER_PATT6_MSB be written to shift between efficient and simple packing, to enable or bypass scrambling, and to reduce the number of powered up lanes used in the link. Each speed graded product allows downgrading of the JESD204 link (such as reducing the number of lanes, reducing the converter resolution, etc), but not upgrading. These parameters are communicated on every lane of the link during the 2nd multi-frame of the initial lane alignment sequence, and therefore can be used by a generic JESD204A or JESD204B receiver that supports the given configuration. See the JESD204A or JESD204B specification for additional information on how these registers are used in a JESD204 system, including encoding rules. ADDRESS 0XDF: JESD204_UPDATE_CONFIG_START Bit 0 update_start This self-resetting bit is used to indicate that some or all the JESD204 parameters (addresses 0xE0 through 0xED) are going to be written. Writing a '1' to this bit will hold the JESD204 PLL and transmitter in a reset state while these parameters are written, because these parameters can affect the transmitter's dynamic behavior (such as modifying the PLL's frequency multiplication). The bit will automatically reset to a '0' once a '1' is written to address 0xEE Bit[0] "update_complete". The recommended sequence for modifying the JESD204 transmitter is: 1. Write a '1' to 0xDF Bit[0] 2. Write some or all modified values to 0xE0 through 0xEC 3. Write a '1' to 0xEE Bit[0]. Note: 0xDF Bit[0] and 0xEE Bit[0] will automatically be reset to a '0' once configuration has been applied to the circuitry. These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 6. ADDRESS 0XE0: JESD204_CONFIG_0 ADDRESS 0XCD: USER_PATT7_LSB ADDRESS 0XE1: JESD204_CONFIG_1 ADDRESS 0XCE: USER_PATT7_MSB Bits 3:0 “BID”, JESD204 Bank ID. These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 7. ADDRESS 0XE2: JESD204_CONFIG_2 ADDRESS 0XCF: USER_PATT8_LSB ADDRESS 0XE3: JESD204_CONFIG_3 ADDRESS 0XD0: USER_PATT8_MSB Bit 7 "SCR", JESD204 SCR controls if scrambling across the SERDES lane(s) is enabled ('1' means enabled). These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the user-defined pattern 8. Bits 7:0 “DID”, JESD204 Device Identification Number. Bits 4:0 “LID” JESD204 Lane Identification Number. Bits 4:0 "L", JESD204 number of SERDES lanes in the link. ADDRESS 0xDF - 0xF3: JESD204 REGISTERS ADDRESS 0XE4: JESD204_CONFIG_4 Address 0xDF-0xEE: JESD204 Parameter Interface Bits 7:0 “F”, JESD204 number of octets per frame. This set of registers controls the JESD204 transmitter configuration. By programming these parameters, the system can select between efficient and simple packing, select the number of powered up SERDES lanes, choose the ADC resolution transmitted, and so on. Contact the factory for details. Bits 4:0 "K", JESD204 Number of frame periods per multi-frame period. This product family supports the full programmable range of K (decimal 0 through 31), although note that the JESD204 standard dictates a minimum number for this parameter that is configuration dependent. There must be at least 17 and no more than 1024 octets per multiframe. K must be set to meet this constraint. 0xE0 through 0xED are the JESD204 parameter registers. These parameters are written to set the transport layer mapping of the JESD204 transmitter in this product family. These registers can 31 ADDRESS 0XE5: JESD204_CONFIG_5 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 ADDRESS 0XE6: JESD204_CONFIG_6 ADDRESS 0XF0: JESD204_STATUS Bits 7:0 “M” JESD204 number of converters per device. Bit 2 "op_cfg_wrong" indicates if the JESD204 parameters (registers 0xE0 through 0xED) are supported by the JESD204 transmitter (a '1' indicates they are not supported, a '0' indicates they are supported). ADDRESS 0XE7: JESD204_CONFIG_7 Bits 7:6 "CS", JESD204 number of control bits per sample (Always '0' for this product family). Bits 4:0 "N", JESD204 converter resolution. ADDRESS 0XE8: JESD204_CONFIG_8 Bits 7:5 "SUBCLASSV", JESD204 Device Subclass Version 000 - Subclass 0 001 - Subclass 1 (not supported in this product family) 010 - Subclass 2 Bits 4:0 "N'", JESD204 total number of bits per sample. ADDRESS 0XE9: JESD204_CONFIG_9 Bits 7:5 "JESDV" JESD204 Version 000 - JESD204A 001 - JESD204B Bits 4:0 "S", JESD204 number of samples per converter per frame. ADDRESS 0XEA: JESD204_CONFIG_10 Bit 7 "HD", JESD204 HD indicates if a converter's sample can be split across multiple lanes in the link (always '0' for this product family). Bits 4:0 "CF", JESD204 number of control frames per frame clock (always '0' for this product family). ADDRESS 0XEB: JESD204_CONFIG_11 Bits 7:0 “RES1”, JESD204 reserved for future use. ADDRESS 0XEC: JESD204_CONFIG_12 Bits 7:0 “RES2”, JESD204 reserved for future use. ADDRESS 0XED: JESD204_CONFIG_13 Bits 7:0 "FCHK", JESD204 checksum (unsigned sum MOD 256) of the other JESD204 parameter register values (0xE0 - 0xED). This is a read-only register, as the checksum is calculated by the device. ADDRESS 0XEE: JESD204_UPDATE_CONFIG_COMPLETE Bit 0 update_complete This self-resetting bit is used to indicate that all the modifications to the JESD204 parameters are complete. ADDRESS 0XEF: JESD204_PLL_MONITOR_RESET Bit 0 “pll_lock_mon_rst”, This self resetting register resets the state of the 0xF0 Bit[0] "latched_pll_lockn" bit. The purpose of this pair of bits is as a debugging feature to the system designer. The "latched_pll_lockn" bit indicates if the JESD204 transmitter PLL inside the device has at any time lost lock since the last '1' was written to the pll_lock_mon_rst" bit. This can be used to help identify the source of intermittent link lost errors in the system. 32 Bit 1 "pll_lockn" indicates if the JESD204 transmitter PLL is currently locked (a '1' indicates it is not locked, a '0' indicates it is locked). Bit 0 "latched_pll_lockn" indicates if the JESD204 transmitter PLL has lost lock since the last assertion of the "pll_lock_mon_rst" (see register 0xEF description for more information). ADDRESS 0XF1: JESD204_SYNC Bit 0 “sync_req” this register provides a SPI-programmable interface that can be used to assert and de-assert the JESD204 SYNC~ functionality. Certain systems may benefit from the elimination of SYNC~ as a separate board-level LVDS signal (and the power, PCB space, and pins it consumes), and these systems can use this register to functionally assert and de-assert SYNC~. For this bit to have any effect, a ‘1’ must have previously been written to the SYNC_FUNCTION (Address 0x77, bit 0). A ‘1’ written to this bit will result in behavior identical to the assertion of SYNC~ (comma character generation), and ‘0’ will result in the behavior identical to the de-assertion of SYNC~ (initial lane alignment sequence followed by converter data). Usage of this SPI SYNC~ capability may compromise the system’s ability to perform multi-chip time alignment, as the SYNC~ asserted to de-asserted transition using this register is not well timed with respect to sample clock. ADDRESS 0XF2: JESD204_TRANS_PAT_CONFIG Bit 0 "no_mf_lane_sync", By default, this device family assumes that both sides of the link support lane synchronization. As per the JESD204 rev A and B standards, in this case continuous frame alignment monitoring via character substitution (section 5.3.3.4) is modified such that a different control character is substituted when the octet reoccurrence happens at the end of a multiframe. This behavior occurs when bit 0 is '0' (the power on default). writing a '1' to bit 0 will inform the JESD204 transmitter than the receiving device does not support lane synchronization, and therefore the transmitter will no longer substitute this different control character when reoccurrence of octets occurs at the end of a multi-frame. Bit 1 "trans_pat_max_len" There is some ambiguity of the proper length of the JESD204 rev A section 5.1.6.2 required transport layer test pattern. Specifically, that the description perhaps should have "max()" in place of "min()" for the equation defining the length of the pattern. Setting bit 1 in this register to a '0' (also the power-on default) and issuing this test pattern by writing to 0xC0 will cause the pattern to assume a "min()" interpretation of the pattern described in section 5.1.6.2. Setting the bit to a '1' will assume a "max()" interpretation of the described pattern. FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 ADDRESS 0XF3: JESD204_CML_POLARITY 0xF3 Bit[2:0]: “TX polarity flip lane x” This register allows the system designer to invert the sense of the SERDES pins on a per lane basis. For example, writing a ‘1’ to Bit[0] causes LANE0N to functionally become LANE0P and LANE0P to become LANE0N. This feature allows the system designer to avoid having to crossover P and N sides of the CML pair on the board to match pin out and layout of the transmitter and receiver. Typically, a trace crossover would require vias, which can degrade the signal integrity of the high-speed SERDES lanes. Device Config/Control DUT Info SPI Config/Control SPI Memory Map ADDR. (Hex) PARAMETER NAME BIT 7 (MSB) BIT 6 BIT 5 00 port_config SDO Active LSB First Soft Reset 01 Reserved Reserved 02 burst_end Burst end address [7:0] 03-07 Reserved Reserved 08 chip_id Chip ID # Read only 09 chip_version Chip Version # Read only 0A-0F Reserved Reserved 10-1F Reserved Reserved 20 offset_coarse_adc0 Coarse Offset cal. value 21 offset_fine_adc0 Fine Offset cal. value 22 gain_coarse_adc0 23 gain_medium_adc0 Medium Gain cal. value 24 gain_fine_adc0 Fine Gain cal. value 25 modes_adc0 26 offset_coarse_adc1 Coarse Offset cal. value 27 offset_fine_adc1 Fine Offset cal. value 28 gain_coarse_adc1 29 gain_medium_adc1 Medium Gain cal. value 2A gain_fine_adc1 Fine Gain cal. value 2B modes_adc1 2C-2F Reserved BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 (LSB) Mirror (bit5) Mirror (bit6) Mirror (bit7) Reserved Power Down Mode ADC0 [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = Normal Operation 010 = Nap 100 = Sleep Other codes = Reserved Reserved Coarse Gain Reserved 00h 00h Coarse Gain Reserved DEF. VALUE (HEX) Power Down Mode ADC1 [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = Normal Operation 010 = Nap 100 = Sleep Other codes = Reserved cal. value 00h NOT reset by Soft Reset cal. value 00h NOT reset by Soft Reset Reserved 33 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 I2E Control and Status SPI Memory Map (Continued) ADDR. (Hex) PARAMETER NAME BIT 7 (MSB) 30 I2E_status 31 I2E_control 32 I2E_static_control 33-49 Reserved 4A I2E_power_down Notch Filter Power Down 4B temp_counter_high Temp Counter [10:8] 4C temp_counter_low 4D temp_counter_control 4E-4F Reserved Reserved 50 I2E_rms_power_threshold_lsb RMS Power Threshold, LSBs [7:0] 00h 51 I2E_rms_power_threshold_msb RMS Power Threshold, MSBs [15:8] 10h 52 I2E_rms_hysteresis RMS Power Hysteresis FFh 53 I2E_ac_rms_power_threshold_ls b AC Power Threshold, LSBs, [7:0] 50h 54 I2E_ac_rms_power_threshold_m sb AC Power Threshold, MSBs, [15:8] 00h 55 I2E_ac_rms_hysteresis AC RMS Power Hysteresis 10h 56-5F Reserved Reserved 60 coarse_offset_init Coarse Offset Initialization value 80h 61 fine_offset_init Fine Offset Initialization value 80h 62 medium_gain_init Medium Gain Initialization value 80h 63 fine_gain_init Fine Gain Initialization value 80h 64 sample_time_skew_init Sample Time Skew Initialization value 80h 65-6F Reserved Reserved 70 skew_diff Differential Skew 71 phase_slip 72 clock_divide BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 (LSB) DEF. VALUE (HEX) I2E Settled Low AC RMS Power Low RMS Power Read only Disable Skew Freeze Run 20h Should be set to 1 01h I2E Power Down 03h BIT 3 Reserved Enable Notch Filter Disable Offset Reserved, must be set to 0 Skip coarse adj. Reserved must be set to 0 Disable Gain Reserved Temp Counter [7:0] Enable PD Reset Reserved Read only Divider [2:0] Select 00h 80h Next Clock Edge Clock Divide [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = divide by 1 010 = divide by 2 Other codes = Reserved 34 Read only 00h 00h NOT reset by Soft Reset FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Device Config/Control SPI Memory Map (Continued) ADDR. (Hex) PARAMETER NAME 73 output_mode_A 74 output_mode_B 75-76 Reserved 77 SYNC_function 78-B5 Reserved B6 cal_status B7-BF Reserved BIT 7 (MSB) BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 (LSB) Output Format [2:0] 000 = Two’s Complement (Default) 010 = Gray Code 100 = Offset Binary Other codes = Reserved DEF. VALUE (HEX) 00h NOT reset by Soft Reset 00h NOT reset by Soft Reset DLL Range 0 = Fast 1 = Slow Default=’0’ Reserved Clkdivrst Reserved Reserved 35 Calibration Done Read Only FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 SPI Memory Map (Continued) ADDR. (Hex) PARAMETER NAME C0 test_io BIT 7 (MSB) BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 Output Test Mode [7:4] BIT 3 JESD Test Device Test <7:4>=Output Test, <3> = JESD Test JESD Test=0 Output Test = 0x0= Output Test Mode Off. During calibration MSB justified constant output 0xCCCC 0x1 = Midscale adjusted by numeric format 0x2 = Plus full scale, adjusted by numeric format 0x3 = Minus full scale adjusted by numeric format 0x4 = Checkboard output - 0xAAAA, 0x5555 0x5 = reserved 0x6 = reserved 0x7 = 0xFFFF, 0x0000 all on pattern 0x8 = User pattern 8 deep, MSB justified with output 0x9 = reserved 0xA, Count-up ramp 0xB, PRBS-9 0xC, PRBS-15 0xD, PRBS-23 0xE, PRBS-31 0xF = reserved JESD Test=1 Output Test = 0x0 =Link Layer Repeat K28.5+Lane Alignment Sequence 0x1, Link Layer Repeat K28.5 0x2, Link Layer Repeat D21.5 0x3, Link Layer Repeat K28.7 0x4, Link Layer PRBS-7 0x5, Link Layer PRBS-23 0x6, Link Layer All Zeros 0x7, Link Layer All Ones 0x8-0xE, reserved 0xF, JESD204A section 5.1.6.2 Transport Layer Test Pattern BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 (LSB) User Test Mode [2:0] User Test Mode (Single ADC products only) 0 = user pattern 1 only 1 = cycle pattern 1 through 2 2 = cycle pattern 1 through 3 3 = cycle pattern 1 through 4 4 = cycle pattern 1 through 5 5 = cycle pattern 1 through 6 6 = cycle pattern 1 through 7 7 = cycle pattern 1 through 8 User Test Mode (Dual and interleaved ADC products only) 0 = cycle pattern 1 through 2 1 = cycle pattern 1 through 4 2 = cycle pattern 1 through 6 3 = cycle pattern 1 through 8 4 -7 = NA DEF. VALUE (HEX) 00h C1 user_patt1_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h C2 user_patt1_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h C3 user_patt2_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h C4 user_patt2_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h C5 user_patt3_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h C6 user_patt3_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h C7 user_patt4_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h C8 user_patt4_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h C9 user_patt5_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h CA user_patt5_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h CB user_patt6_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h CC user_patt6_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h CD user_patt7_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h CE user_patt7_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h CF user_patt8_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h D0 user_patt8_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h D1-DE Reserved Reserved 36 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 JESD204 Interface SPI Memory Map (Continued) ADDR. (Hex) PARAMETER NAME BIT 7 (MSB) DF JESD204_update_config_start E0 JESD204_config_0 E1 JESD204_config_1 E2 JESD204_config_2 E3 JESD204_config_3 E4 JESD204_config_4 E5 JESD204_config_5 E6 JESD204_config_6 E7 JESD204_config_7 E8 JESD204_config_8 E9 JESD204_config_9 EA JESD204_config_10 EB JESD204_config_11 RES1 00h EC JESD204_config_12 RES2 00h ED JESD204_config_13 FCHK (Checksum) AFh EE JESD204_update_config_compl ete update_ complete 00h EF JESD204_PLL_monitor_reset pll_lock_ mon_rst 00h F0 JESD204_status latched_ pll_lockn 00h F1 JESD204_sync F2 JESD204_trans_pat_config F3 JESD204_CML_polarity F4-FF Reserved BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 (LSB) DEF. VALUE (HEX) update_ start 00h DID (Device ID Number) 00h BID (Bank ID Number) SCR 00h LID (Lane ID Number) 00h L (Number of Lanes per Device) 82h F (Number of Octets per Frame) 06h K (Number of octets per multi-frame) 02h M (Number of Converters per Device) CS (Number of Control bits per Sample) HD 00h N (Converter Resolution in bits) 0Dh SUBCLASSV N’ (Total number of bits per Sample) 0Dh JESDV S (Number of Samples per Converter per Frame) 0Bh CF (Number of Control Words per Frame per Link) 00h op_confg_ pll_lockn wrong sync_req trans_pat_ no_mf_ max_len lane_sync lane_2_ polarity lane_1_ polarity lane_0_ polarity 00h Reserved 37 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Equivalent Circuits AVDD TO CLOCK-PHASE GENERATION AVDD CLKP AVDD AVDD CSAMP 4pF TO CHARGE PIPELINE INP E2 E1 600 AVDD TO CHARGE PIPELINE INN E2 E1 18k E3 CSAMP 4pF AVDD 11k CLKN E3 FIGURE 48. ANALOG INPUTS AVDD 18k 11k FIGURE 49. CLOCK INPUTS AVDD (20k PULL-UP ON RESETN ONLY) AVDD 75k AVDD OVDD TO SENSE LOGIC 75k 280 INPUT OVDD OVDD 20k INPUT 75k TO 280 75k LOGIC FIGURE 51. DIGITAL INPUTS FIGURE 50. TRI-LEVEL DIGITAL INPUTS OVDD 50 OVDD 50 LANE[2:0]P AVDD OVDD VCM LANE[2:0]N 1.0V DATA + – DATA 16mA FIGURE 52. CML OUTPUTS 38 FIGURE 53. VCM_OUT OUTPUT FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 ADC Evaluation Platform CML Outputs Intersil offers ADC Evaluation platforms which can be used to evaluate any of Intersil’s high speed ADC products. Each platform consists of a FPGA based data capture motherboard and a family of ADC daughtercards. The USB interface and evaluation platform control software allow a user to quickly evaluate the ADC’s performance at a user’s specific application frequency requirements. More information is available at http://www.intersil.com/converters/adc_eval_platform/ Output traces and connections must be designed for 50Ω (100Ω differential) characteristic impedance. Keep traces direct and short, and minimize bends and vias where possible. Avoid crossing ground and power-plane breaks with signal traces. Keep good clearance (at least 5 trace widths) between the SERDES traces and other signals. Given the speed of these outputs and importance of maintaining an open eye to achieve low BER, signal integrity simulations are recommended, especially when the data lane rate exceeds 3Gbps and/or the trace or cable length between the ADC and the reciever gets larger than 20cm. Layout Considerations Split Ground and Power Planes Unused Inputs Data converters operating at high sampling frequencies require extra care in PC board layout. Many complex board designs benefit from isolating the analog and digital sections. Analog supply and ground planes should be laid out under signal and clock inputs. Locate the digital planes under outputs and logic pins. Grounds should be joined under the chip. Standard logic inputs (RESETN, CSB, SCLK, SDIO, SDO) which will not be operated do not require connection to ensure optimal ADC performance. These inputs can be left floating if they are not used. Tri-level inputs (NAPSLP) accept a floating input as a valid state, and therefore should be biased according to the desired functionality. Clock Input Considerations Definitions Use matched transmission lines to the transformer inputs for the analog input and clock signals. Locate transformers and terminations as close to the chip as possible. Exposed Paddle Analog Input Bandwidth is the analog input frequency at which the spectral output power at the fundamental frequency (as determined by FFT analysis) is reduced by 3dB from its full-scale low-frequency value. This is also referred to as Full Power Bandwidth. The exposed paddle must be electrically connected to analog ground (AVSS) and should be connected to a large copper plane using numerous vias for optimal thermal performance. Aperture Delay or Sampling Delay is the time required after the rise of the clock input for the sampling switch to open, at which time the signal is held for conversion. Bypass and Filtering Aperture Jitter is the RMS variation in aperture delay for a set of samples. Bulk capacitors should have low equivalent series resistance. Tantalum is a good choice. For best performance, keep ceramic bypass capacitors very close to device pins, as longer traces between the ceramic bypass capacitors and the device pins will increase inductance, which can result in diminished dynamic performance. Best practices bypassing is especially important on the AVDD and OVDD(PLL) power supply pins. Whenever possible, each supply pin should have its own 0.1uF bypass capacitor. Make sure that connections to ground are direct and low impedance. Avoid forming ground loops. Clock Duty Cycle is the ratio of the time the clock wave is at logic high to the total time of one clock period. Differential Non-Linearity (DNL) is the deviation of any code width from an ideal 1 LSB step. Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) is an alternate method of specifying Signal to Noise-and-Distortion Ratio (SINAD). In dB, it is calculated as: ENOB = (SINAD - 1.76)/6.02 Gain Error is the ratio of the difference between the voltages that cause the lowest and highest code transitions to the full-scale voltage less than 2 LSB. It is typically expressed in percent. I2E The Intersil Interleave Engine. This highly configurable circuitry performs estimates of offset, gain, and sample time skew mismatches between the core converters, and updates analog adjustments for each to minimize interleave spurs. Integral Non-Linearity (INL) is the maximum deviation of the ADC’s transfer function from a best fit line determined by a least squares curve fit of that transfer function, measured in units of LSBs. Least Significant Bit (LSB) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight in a digital word. Its value in terms of input voltage is VFS/(2N - 1) where N is the resolution in bits. 39 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Missing Codes are output codes that are skipped and will never appear at the ADC output. These codes cannot be reached with any input value. Most Significant Bit (MSB) is the bit that has the largest value or weight. Pipeline Delay is the number of clock cycles between the initiation of a conversion and the appearance at the output pins of the data. Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR) is the ratio of the observed magnitude of a spur in the ADC FFT, caused by an AC signal superimposed on the power supply voltage. Signal-to-Noise Ratio (without Harmonics) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, excluding harmonics and DC. SNR and SINAD are either given in units of dB when the power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full scale) when the converter’s full-scale input power is used as the reference. Spurious-Free-Dynamic Range (SFDR) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS value of the largest spurious spectral component. The largest spurious spectral component may or may not be a harmonic. Signal to Noise-and-Distortion (SINAD) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS sum of all other spectral components below one half the clock frequency, including harmonics but excluding DC. Revision History The revision history provided is for informational purposes only and is believed to be accurate, but not warranted. Please go to web to make sure you have the latest Rev. DATE REVISION CHANGE April 15, 2013 FN7973.2 Pages 26, 30: Updated JESD204_config register definitions for E8, E9 Page 30: Added default values for JESD204_config registers December 21, 2011 FN7973.1 Initial Release About Intersil Intersil Corporation is a leader in the design and manufacture of high-performance analog, mixed-signal and power management semiconductors. The company's products address some of the largest markets within the industrial and infrastructure, personal computing and high-end consumer markets. For more information about Intersil, visit our website at www.intersil.com. For the most updated datasheet, application notes, related documentation and related parts, please see the respective product information page found at www.intersil.com. You may report errors or suggestions for improving this datasheet by visiting www.intersil.com/en/support/ask-an-expert.html. Reliability reports are also available from our website at http://www.intersil.com/en/support/qualandreliability.html#reliability For additional products, see www.intersil.com/en/products.html Intersil products are manufactured, assembled and tested utilizing ISO9000 quality systems as noted in the quality certifications found at www.intersil.com/en/support/qualandreliability.html Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design, software and/or specifications at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that data sheets are current before placing orders. Information furnished by Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its subsidiaries for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries. For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com 40 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013 ISLA214S50 Package Outline Drawing L48.7x7G 48 LEAD QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE Rev 0, 1/10 7.00 6 PIN 1 INDEX AREA 6 PIN #1 INDEX AREA 4X 5.5 A B 37 48 36 1 7.00 44X 0.50 (4X) EXP. DAP 5.70 SQ. 12 25 0.15 24 13 48X 0.40 48x 0.20 4 TOP VIEW BOTTOM VIEW SEE DETAIL "X" 1.00 MAX 0.10 C C 0.08 C SEATING PLANE ( 44X 0 . 5 ) 6 .80 SQ SIDE VIEW 5.70 SQ C 0 . 2 REF 5 ( 48X 0 . 20 ) 0 . 00 MIN. 0 . 05 MAX. ( 48X 0 . 60 ) TYPICAL RECOMMENDED LAND PATTERN DETAIL "X" NOTES: 1. Dimensions are in millimeters. Dimensions in ( ) for Reference Only. 2. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to ASME Y14.5m-1994. 3. Unless otherwise specified, tolerance : Decimal ± 0.05 4. Dimension applies to the metallized terminal and is measured between 0.015mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip. 5. Tiebar shown (if present) is a non-functional feature. 6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 indentifier may be either a mold or mark feature. 41 FN7973.2 April 25, 2013