AD AD5392BST-3 32-channel, 3 v/5 v, single-supply, 14-bit, voltage output dac Datasheet

32-Channel, 3 V/5 V, Single-Supply,
14-Bit, Voltage Output DAC
AD5382
FEATURES
INTEGRATED FUNCTIONS
Guaranteed monotonic
INL error: ±4 LSB max
On-chip 1.25 V/2.5 V, 10 ppm/°C reference
Temperature range: –40°C to +85°C
Rail-to-rail output amplifier
Power-down mode
Package type: 100-lead LQFP (14 mm × 14 mm)
User Interfaces:
Parallel
Serial (SPI®/QSPI™/MICROWIRE™/DSP compatible,
featuring data readback)
I2C® compatible
Channel monitor
Simultaneous output update via LDAC
Clear function to user programmable code
Amplifier boost mode to optimize slew rate
User programmable offset and gain adjust
Toggle mode enables square wave generation
Thermal monitor
APPLICATIONS
Variable optical attenuators (VOA)
Level setting (ATE)
Optical micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS)
Control systems
Instrumentation
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
DVDD (×3)
DGND (×3)
AVDD (×4)
AGND (×4)
DAC GND (×4)
REFGND
REFOUT/REFIN
SIGNAL GND (×4)
PD
SER/PAR
AD5382
1.25V/2.5V
REFERENCE
FIFO EN
CS/(SYNC/AD0)
WR/(DCEN/AD1)
14
SDO
DB0
14
INTERFACE
CONTROL
LOGIC
FIFO
+
STATE
MACHINE
+
CONTROL
LOGIC
14
14
DAC 14
REG 0
DAC 0
VOUT0
m REG 0
R
c REG 0
R
14
INPUT 14
REG 1
14
A4
A0
14
14
DAC 14
REG 1
DAC 1
VOUT1
VOUT2
m REG 1
R
c REG 1
VOUT4
14
REG 1
RESET
POWER-ON
RESET
INPUT 14
REG 6
14
14
BUSY
14
DAC 14
REG 6
VOUT5
DAC 6
VOUT6
m REG 6
R
c REG 6
R
CLR
VOUT 0………VOUT 31
MON_IN1
MON_IN2
MON_IN3
MON_IN4
VOUT3
R
REG 0
14
INPUT 14
REG 7
14
36-TO-1
MUX
14
14
DAC 14
REG 7
DAC 7
VOUT7
m REG 7
VOUT8
R
c REG 7
R
VOUT31
×4
MON_OUT
LDAC
03733-0-001
DB13/(DIN/SDA)
DB12/(SCLK/SCL)
DB11/(SPI/I2C)
DB10
INPUT 14
REG 0
Figure 1.
Rev. 0
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use.
Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781.329.4700
www.analog.com
Fax: 781.326.8703
© 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD5382
TABLE OF CONTENTS
General Description ......................................................................... 3
Asynchronous Clear Function.................................................. 25
Specifications..................................................................................... 4
BUSY and LDAC Functions...................................................... 25
AD5382-5 Specifications ............................................................. 4
FIFO Operation in Parallel Mode ............................................ 25
AD5382-3 Specifications ............................................................. 6
Power-On Reset.......................................................................... 25
AC Characteristics........................................................................ 7
Power-Down ............................................................................... 25
Timing Characteristics..................................................................... 8
AD5382 Interfaces.......................................................................... 26
SPI, QSPI, MICROWIRE, or DSP Compatible Serial
Interface .................................................................................... 8
DSP, SPI, Microwire Compatible Serial Interfaces................. 26
I2C Serial Interface ..................................................................... 28
2
I C Serial Interface...................................................................... 10
Parallel Interface......................................................................... 30
Parallel Interface ......................................................................... 11
Microprocessor Interfacing....................................................... 31
Absolute Maximum Ratings.......................................................... 13
Application Information................................................................ 33
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions........................... 14
Power Supply Decoupling ......................................................... 33
Terminology .................................................................................... 17
Typical Configuration Circuit .................................................. 33
Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 18
AD5382 Monitor Function ....................................................... 34
Functional Description .................................................................. 21
Toggle Mode Function............................................................... 34
DAC Architecture—General..................................................... 21
Thermal Monitor Function....................................................... 35
Data Decoding ............................................................................ 21
AD5382 in a MEMS Based Optical Switch............................. 35
On-Chip Special Function Registers (SFR) ............................ 22
Optical Attenuators .................................................................... 36
SFR Commands .......................................................................... 22
Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 37
Hardware Functions....................................................................... 25
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 37
Reset Function ............................................................................ 25
REVISION HISTORY
5/04—Revision 0: Initial Version
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 40
AD5382
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
speeds in excess of 30 MHz and an I2C compatible interface
that supports a 400 kHz data transfer rate.
The AD5382 is a complete, single-supply, 32-channel, 14-bit
DAC available in a 100-lead LQFP package. All 32 channels
have an on-chip output amplifier with rail-to-rail operation.
The AD5382 includes an internal software-selectable 1.25 V/
2.5 V, 10 ppm/°C reference, an on-chip channel monitor
function that multiplexes the analog outputs to a common
MON_OUT pin for external monitoring, and an output
amplifier boost mode that allows optimization of the amplifier
slew rate. The AD5382 contains a double-buffered parallel
interface that features a 20 ns WR pulse width, an SPI/QSPI/
MICROWIRE/DSP compatible serial interface with interface
An input register followed by a DAC register provides double
buffering, allowing the DAC outputs to be updated independently or simultaneously using the LDAC input.
Each channel has a programmable gain and offset adjust
register that allows the user to fully calibrate any DAC channel.
Power consumption is typically 0.25 mA/channel when
operating with boost mode disabled.
Table 1. Other High Channel Count, Low Voltage, Single Supply DACs in Product Portfolio
Model
AD5380BST-5
AD5380BST-3
AD5384BBC-5
AD5384BBC-3
AD5381BST-5
AD5381BST-3
AD5383BST-5
AD5383BST-3
AD5390BST-5
AD5390BCP-5
AD5390BST-3
AD5390BCP-3
AD5391BST-5
AD5391BCP-5
AD5391BST-3
AD5391BCP-3
AD5392BST-5
AD5392BCP-5
AD5392BST-3
AD5392BCP-3
Resolution
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
12 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
AVDD Range
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
Output Channels
40
40
40
40
40
40
32
32
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
8
8
8
8
Linearity Error (LSB)
±4
±4
±4
±4
±1
±1
±1
±1
±3
±3
±3
±3
±1
±1
±1
±1
±3
±3
±3
±3
Package Description
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead CSPBGA
100-Lead CSPBGA
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
52-Lead LQFP
64-Lead LFCSP
Package Option
ST-100
ST-100
BC-100
BC-100
ST-100
ST-100
ST-100
ST-100
ST-52
CP-64
ST-52
CP-64
ST-52
CP-64
ST-52
CP-64
ST-52
CP-64
ST-52
CP-64
Table 2. 40-Channel Bipolar Voltage Output DAC
Model
AD5379ABC
Resolution
14 Bits
Analog Supplies
±11.4 V to ±16.5 V
Output Channels
40
Linearity Error (LSB)
±3
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 40
Package
108-Lead CSPBGA
Package Option
BC-108
AD5382
SPECIFICATIONS
AD5382-5 SPECIFICATIONS
Table 3. AVDD = 4.5 V to 5.5 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V, AGND = DGND = 0 V;
External REFIN = 2.5 V; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted
Parameter
ACCURACY
Resolution
Relative Accuracy2 (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Zero-Scale Error
Offset Error
Offset Error TC
Gain Error
Gain Temperature Coefficient3
DC Crosstalk3
REFERENCE INPUT/OUTPUT
Reference Input3
Reference Input Voltage
DC Input Impedance
Input Current
Reference Range
Reference Output4
Output Voltage
Reference TC
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS3
Output Voltage Range2
Short-Circuit Current
Load Current
Capacitive Load Stability
RL = ∞
RL = 5 kΩ
DC Output Impedance
MONITOR PIN
Output Impedance
Three-State Leakage Current
LOGIC INPUTS (EXCEPT SDA/SCL)3
VIH, Input High Voltage
VIL, Input Low Voltage
Input Current
Pin Capacitance
LOGIC INPUTS (SDA, SCL ONLY)
VIH, Input High Voltage
VIL, Input Low Voltage
IIN, Input Leakage Current
VHYST, Input Hysteresis
CIN, Input Capacitance
Glitch Rejection
AD5382-51
Unit
14
±4
–1/+2
4
±4
±5
±0.024
±0.06
2
0.5
Bits
LSB max
LSB max
mV max
mV max
µV/°C typ
% FSR max
% FSR max
ppm FSR/°C typ
LSB max
2.5
1
±1
1 to VDD/2
V
MΩ min
µA max
V min/max
2.495/2.505
1.22/1.28
±10
±15
V min/max
V min/max
ppm/°C max
ppm/°C max
0/AVDD
40
±1
V min/max
mA max
mA max
200
1000
0.5
pF max
pF max
Ω max
500
100
Ω typ
nA typ
2
0.8
±10
10
V min
V max
µA max
pF max
0.7 DVDD
0.3 DVDD
±1
0.05 DVDD
8
50
V min
V max
µA max
V min
pF typ
ns max
Test Conditions/Comments
Guaranteed monotonic over temperature
Measured at Code 32 in the linear region
At 25°C
TMIN to TMAX
±1% for specified performance, AVdd=2xREFIN+50mV
Typically 100 MΩ
Typically ±30 nA
Enabled via CR10 in the AD5382 control register.
CR12 selects the reference voltage.
At ambient. CR12 = 1. Optimized for 2.5 V operation.
1.25 V reference selected. CR12 = 0
Temperature Range : +25°C to +85°C
Temperature Range : –40°C to +85°C
DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 40
Total for all pins. TA = TMIN to TMAX
SMBus compatible at DVDD < 3.6 V
SMBus compatible at DVDD < 3.6 V
Input filtering suppresses noise spikes of less than 50 ns
AD5382
Parameter
LOGIC OUTPUTS (BUSY, SDO)3
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOH, Output High Voltage
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOH, Output High Voltage
High Impedance Leakage Current
High Impedance Output Capacitance
LOGIC OUTPUT (SDA)3
VOL, Output Low Voltage
AD5382-51
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
0.4
DVDD – 1
0.4
DVDD – 0.5
±1
5
V max
V min
V max
V min
µA max
pF typ
DVDD = 5 V ± 10%, sinking 200 µA
DVDD = 5 V ± 10%, sourcing 200 µA
DVDD = 2.7 V to 3.6 V, sinking 200 µA
DVDD = 2.7 V to 3.6 V, sourcing 200 µA
SDO only
SDO only
V max
V max
µA max
pF typ
ISINK = 3 mA
ISINK = 6 mA
Three-State Leakage Current
Three-State Output Capacitance
POWER REQUIREMENTS
AVDD
DVDD
Power Supply Sensitivity3
∆Mid Scale/∆ΑVDD
AIDD
0.4
0.6
±1
8
4.5/5.5
2.7/5.5
V min/max
V min/max
–85
0.375
0.475
1
2
20
65
dB typ
mA/channel max
mA/channel max
mA max
µA max
µA max
mW max
DIDD
AIDD (Power-Down)
DIDD (Power-Down)
Power Dissipation
1
Outputs unloaded, Boost off. 0.25 mA/channel typ
Outputs unloaded, Boost on. 0.325 mA/channel typ
VIH = DVDD, VIL = DGND.
Typically 200 nA
Typically 3 µA
Outputs unloaded, Boost off, AVDD = DVDD = 5 V
AD5382-5 is calibrated using an external 2.5 V reference. Temperature range for all versions: –40°C to +85°C.
Accuracy guaranteed from VOUT = 10 mV to AVDD – 50 mV.
3
Guaranteed by characterization, not production tested.
4
Default on the AD5382-5 is 2.5 V. Programmable to 1.25 V via CR12 in the AD5382 control register; operating the AD5382-5 with a 1.25 V reference leads to degraded
accuracy specifications.
2
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 40
AD5382
AD5382-3 SPECIFICATIONS
Table 4. AVDD = 2.7 V to 3.6 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V, AGND = DGND = 0 V; external REFIN = 1.25 V;
all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted
Parameter
ACCURACY
Resolution
Relative Accuracy2 (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Zero-Scale Error
Offset Error
Offset Error TC
Gain Error
Gain Temperature Coefficient3
DC Crosstalk3
REFERENCE INPUT/OUTPUT
Reference Input3
Reference Input Voltage
DC Input Impedance
Input Current
Reference Range
AD5382-31
Unit
14
±4
–1/+2
4
±4
±5
±0.024
±0.06
2
0.5
Bits
LSB max
LSB max
mV max
mV max
µV/°C typ
% FSR max
% FSR max
ppm FSR/°C typ
LSB max
1.25
1
±10
1 to AVDD/2
V
MΩ min
µA max
V min/max
Reference Output4
Output Voltage
Reference TC
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS3
Output Voltage Range2
Short-Circuit Current
Load Current
Capacitive Load Stability
RL = ∞
RL = 5 kΩ
DC Output Impedance
MONITOR PIN (MON OUT)
Output Impedance
Three-State Leakage Current
LOGIC INPUTS (EXCEPT SDA/SCL)3
VIH, Input High Voltage
VIL, Input Low Voltage
Input Current
Pin Capacitance
LOGIC INPUTS (SDA, SCL ONLY)
VIH, Input High Voltage
VIL, Input Low Voltage
IIN, Input Leakage Current
VHYST, Input Hysteresis
CIN, Input Capacitance
Glitch Rejection
1.247/1.253
2.43/2.57
±10
±15
V min/max
V min/max
ppm/°C max
ppm/°C max
0/AVDD
40
±1
V min/max
mA max
mA max
200
1000
0.5
pF max
pF max
Ω max
500
100
Ω typ
nA typ
2
0.8
±10
10
V min
V max
µA max
pF max
0.7 DVDD
0.3 DVDD
±1
0.05 DVDD
8
50
V min
V max
µAmax
V min
pF typ
ns max
Test Conditions/Comments
Guaranteed monotonic over temperature
Measured at Code 64 in the linear region
At 25 °C
TMIN to TMAX
±1% for specified performance
Typically 100 MΩ
Typically ±30 nA
Enabled via CR10 in the AD5382 control register.
CR12 selects the reference voltage.
At ambient. CR12 = 0. Optimized for 1.25 V operation
2.5 V reference selected, CR12 = 1
Temperature Range : +25°C to +85°C
Temperature Range :–40°C to +85°C
DVDD = 2.7 V to 3.6 V
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 40
Total for all pins. TA = TMIN to TMAX
SMBus compatible at DVDD < 3.6 V
SMBus compatible at DVDD < 3.6 V
Input filtering suppresses noise spikes of less than 50 ns
AD5382
Parameter
LOGIC OUTPUTS (BUSY, SDO)3
VOL, Output Low Voltage
VOH, Output High Voltage
High Impedance Leakage Current
High Impedance Output Capacitance
LOGIC OUTPUT (SDA)3
VOL, Output Low Voltage
AD5382-31
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
0.4
DVDD – 0.5
±1
5
V max
V min
µA max
pF typ
Sinking 200 µA
Sourcing 200 µA
SDO only
SDO only
V max
V max
µA max
pF typ
ISINK = 3 mA
ISINK = 6 mA
Three-State Leakage Current
Three-State Output Capacitance
POWER REQUIREMENTS
AVDD
DVDD
Power Supply Sensitivity3
∆Midscale/∆ΑVDD
AIDD
0.4
0.6
±1
8
2.7/3.6
2.7/5.5
V min/max
V min/max
–85
0.375
0.475
1
2
20
39
dB typ
mA/channel max
mA/channel max
mA max
µA max
µA max
mW max
DIDD
AIDD (Power-Down)
DIDD (Power-Down)
Power Dissipation
Outputs unloaded, Boost off. 0.25 mA/channel typ
Outputs unloaded, Boost on. 0.325 mA/channel typ
VIH = DVDD, VIL = DGND.
Outputs unloaded, Boost off, AVDD = DVDD = 3 V
1
AD5382-3 is calibrated using an external 1.25 V reference. Temperature range is –40°C to +85°C.
Accuracy guaranteed from VOUT = 10 mV to AVDD – 50 mV.
Guaranteed by characterization, not production tested.
4
Default on the AD5382-5 is 2.5 V. Programmable to 1.25 V via CR12 in the AD5382 control register; operating the AD5382-5 with a 1.25 V reference leads to degraded
accuracy specifications.
2
3
AC CHARACTERISTICS1
Table 5. AVDD = 4.5 V to 5.5 V; DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AGND = DGND= 0 V
Parameter
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
Output Voltage Settling Time 2
Slew Rate2
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Energy
Glitch Impulse Peak Amplitude
Channel-to-Channel Isolation
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
Digital Crosstalk
Digital Feedthrough
Output Noise 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz
Output Noise Spectral Density
@ 1 kHz
@ 10 kHz
1
2
All
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
8
10
2
3
12
15
100
1
0.8
0.1
15
40
µs typ
µs max
V/µs typ
V/µs typ
nV-s typ
mV typ
dB typ
nV-s typ
nV-s typ
nV-s typ
µV p-p typ
µV p-p typ
150
100
nV/√Hz typ
nV/√Hz typ
1/4 scale to 3/4 scale change settling to ±1 LSB.
Boost mode off, CR11 = 0
Boost mode on, CR11 = 1
See Terminology section
See Terminology section
Effect of input bus activity on DAC output under test
External reference, midscale loaded to DAC
Internal reference, midscale loaded to DAC
Guaranteed by design and characterization, not production tested.
The slew rate can be programmed via the current boost control bit (CR11 ) in the AD5382 control register.
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 40
AD5382
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
SPI, QSPI, MICROWIRE, OR DSP COMPATIBLE SERIAL INTERFACE
Table 6. DVDD= 2.7 V to 5.5 V ; AVDD = 4.5 V to 5.5 V or 2.7 V to 3.6 V; AGND = DGND = 0 V; all specifications
TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted
Parameter1, 2, 3
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5 4
t6 4
t7
t7A
t8
t9
t104
t11
t12 4
t13
t14
t15
t16
t17
t18
t19
t20 5
t215
t225
t23
Limit at TMIN, TMAX
33
13
13
13
13
33
10
50
5
4.5
30
670
20
20
100
0
100
8
20
35
20
5
8
20
Unit
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns max
ns max
ns min
ns min
ns max
ns min
ns min
µs typ
ns min
µs max
ns max
ns min
ns min
ns min
Description
SCLK cycle time
SCLK high time
SCLK low time
SYNC falling edge to SCLK falling edge setup time
24th SCLK falling edge to SYNC falling edge
Minimum SYNC low time
Minimum SYNC high time
Minimum SYNC high time in Readback mode
Data setup time
Data hold time
24th SCLK falling edge to BUSY falling edge
BUSY pulse width low (single channel update)
24th SCLK falling edge to LDAC falling edge
LDAC pulse width low
BUSY rising edge to DAC output response time
BUSY rising edge to LDAC falling edge
LDAC falling edge to DAC output response time
DAC output settling time
CLR pulse width low
CLR pulse activation time
SCLK rising edge to SDO valid
SCLK falling edge to SYNC rising edge
SYNC rising edge to SCLK rising edge
SYNC rising edge to LDAC falling edge
1
Guaranteed by design and characterization, not production tested.
All input signals are specified with tr = tf = 5 ns (10% to 90% of VCC) and are timed from a voltage level of 1.2 V.
See Figure 2, Figure 3, Figure 4, and Figure 5.
4
Standalone mode only.
5
Daisy-chain mode only.
2
3
IOL
VOH (MIN) OR
VOL (MAX)
TO OUTPUT PIN
CL
50pF
200µA
IOH
Figure 2. Load Circuit for SDO Timing Diagram
(Serial Interface, Daisy-Chain Mode)
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 40
03731-0-003
200µA
AD5382
t1
24
SCLK
t3
t4
t2
24
t5
t6
SYNC
t7
t8 t9
DB0
DIN
DB23
t10
BUSY
t11
t13
t12
t17
LDAC1
t14
VOUT1
t15
t13
LDAC2
t17
t16
VOUT2
t18
CLR
03731-0-004
VOUT
t19
1LDAC ACTIVE DURING BUSY
2LDAC ACTIVE AFTER BUSY
Figure 3. Serial Interface Timing Diagram (Standalone Mode)
SCLK
24
48
t7A
SYNC
DB23
DIN
DB0
DB23
DB0
INPUT WORD SPECIFIES
REGISTER TO BE READ
NOP CONDITION
DB0
UNDEFINED
03731-0-005
DB23
SDO
SELECTED REGISTER
DATA CLOCKED OUT
Figure 4. Serial Interface Timing Diagram (Data Readback Mode)
t1
SCLK
24
t7
t3
48
t2
t21
t22
t4
SYNC
t8 t9
DIN
DB23
DB0
DB23
INPUT WORD FOR DAC N
DB0
INPUT WORD FOR DAC N+1
t20
UNDEFINED
DB0
INPUT WORD FOR DAC N
t23
LDAC
Figure 5. Serial Interface Timing Diagram (Daisy-Chain Mode)
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 40
t13
03731-0-006
DB23
SDO
AD5382
I2C SERIAL INTERFACE
Table 7. DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AVDD = 4.5 V to 5.5 V or 2.7 V to 3.6 V; AGND = DGND = 0 V; all specifications
TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted
Parameter1, 2
FSCL
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
t63
t7
t8
t9
t10
t11
Cb
Limit at TMIN, TMAX
400
2.5
0.6
1.3
0.6
100
0.9
0
0.6
0.6
1.3
300
0
300
0
300
20 + 0.1Cb 4
400
Unit
kHz max
µs min
µs min
µs min
µs min
ns min
µs max
µs min
µs min
µs min
µs min
ns max
ns min
ns max
ns min
ns max
ns min
pF max
Description
SCL clock frequency
SCL cycle time
tHIGH, SCL high time
tLOW, SCL low time
tHD,STA, start/repeated start condition hold time
tSU,DAT, data setup time
tHD,DAT, data hold time
tHD,DAT, data hold time
tSU,STA, setup time for repeated start
tSU,STO, stop condition setup time
tBUF, bus free time between a STOP and a START condition
tR, rise time of SCL and SDA when receiving
tR, rise time of SCL and SDA when receiving (CMOS compatible)
tF, fall time of SDA when transmitting
tF, fall time of SDA when receiving (CMOS compatible)
tF, fall time of SCL and SDA when receiving
tF, fall time of SCL and SDA when transmitting
Capacitive load for each bus line
1
Guaranteed by design and characterization, not production tested.
See Figure 6.
3
A master device must provide a hold time of at least 300 ns for the SDA signal (referred to the VIH min of the SCL signal) in order to bridge the undefined region of
SCL’s falling edge.
4
Cb is the total capacitance, in pF, of one bus line. tR and tF are measured between 0.3 DVDD and 0.7 DVDD.
2
SDA
t9
t3
t10
t11
t4
SCL
t6
t2
t1
t5
START
CONDITION
REPEATED
START
CONDITION
Figure 6. I2C Compatible Serial Interface Timing Diagram
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 40
t8
t7
STOP
CONDITION
03731-0-007
t4
AD5382
PARALLEL INTERFACE
Table 8. DVDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; AVDD = 4.5 V to 5.5 V or 2.7 V to 3.6 V; AGND = DGND = 0 V; all specifications
TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted
Parameter1,2,3
t0
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
t6
t7
t8
t94
t104
t114, 5
t12
t13
t14
t15
t16
t17
t18
t19
t20
Limit at TMIN, TMAX
4.5
4.5
20
20
0
0
4.5
4.5
20
700
30
670
30
20
100
20
0
100
8
20
35
Unit
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns max
ns max
ns min
ns min
ns max
ns min
ns min
ns min
µs typ
ns min
µsmax
Description
REG0, REG1, address to WR rising edge setup time
REG0, REG1, address to WR rising edge hold time
CS pulse width low
WR pulse width low
CS to WR falling edge setup time
WR to CS rising edge hold time
Data to WR rising edge setup time
Data to WR rising edge hold time
WR pulse width high
Minimum WR cycle time (single-channel write)
WR rising edge to BUSY falling edge
BUSY pulse width low (single-channel update)
WR rising edge to LDAC falling edge
LDAC pulse width low
BUSY rising edge to DAC output response time
LDAC rising edge to WR rising edge
BUSY rising edge to LDAC falling edge
LDAC falling edge to DAC output response time
DAC output settling time
CLR pulse width low
CLR pulse activation time
1
Guaranteed by design and characterization, not production tested.
All input signals are specified with tR = tR = 5 ns (10% to 90% of DVDD) and timed from a voltage level of 1.2 V.
See Figure 7.
4
See Figure 29.
5
Measured with the load circuit of Figure 2.
2
3
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 40
AD5382
t0
t1
REG0, REG1, A4..A0
t4
CS
t5
t2
t9
WR
t3
t8
t6
t15
t7
DB13..DB0
t10
t11
BUSY
t12
t13
t18
LDAC1
t14
VOUT1
t16
LDAC2
t13
t18
t17
VOUT2
CLR
t19
1LDAC ACTIVE DURING BUSY
2LDAC ACTIVE AFTER BUSY
Figure 7. Parallel Interface Timing Diagram
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 40
03731-0-008
t20
VOUT
AD5382
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Table 9. TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted1
Parameter
AVDD to AGND
DVDD to DGND
Digital Inputs to DGND
SDA/SCL to DGND
Digital Outputs to DGND
REFIN/REFOUT to AGND
AGND to DGND
VOUTx to AGND
Analog Inputs to AGND
MON_IN Inputs to AGND
MON_OUT to AGND
Operating Temperature Range
Commercial (B Version)
Storage Temperature Range
JunctionTemperature (TJ Max)
100-lead LQFP Package
θJAThermal Impedance
Reflow Soldering
Peak Temperature
1
Rating
–0.3 V to +7 V
–0.3 V to +7 V
–0.3 V to DVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to + 7 V
–0.3 V to DVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to +0.3 V
–0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
–0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings
may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress
rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any
other conditions above those listed in the operational sections
of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
–40°C to +85°C
–65°C to +150°C
150°C
44°C/W
230°C
Transient currents of up to 100 mA will not cause SCR latch-up
ESD CAUTION
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily
accumulate on the human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although
this product features proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices
subjected to high energy electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are
recommended to avoid performance degradation or loss of functionality.
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 40
AD5382
76 BUSY
77 LDAC
78 WR (DCEN/AD1)
79 PD
80 SER/PAR
81 DGND
82 DVDD
84 A0
83 DVDD
86 A2
85 A1
87 A3
89 NC
88 A4
90 DGND
91 DGND
93 SDO(A/B)
92 DVDD
94 DB8
95 DB9
96 DB10
97 DB11/(SPI/I2C)
1
75 RESET
74 DB7
PIN 1
IDENTIFIER
2
3
4
73 DB6
72 DB5
5
71 DB4
6
70 DB3
69 DB2
7
8
68 DB1
67 DB0
9
10
66 REG0
65 REG1
11
AD5382
12
13
64 VOUT23
63 VOUT22
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
14
62 VOUT21
15
61 VOUT20
60 AVDD3
16
17
59 AGND3
58 DAC_GND3
18
19
03733-0-002
50
49
48
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
NC
NC
NC
NC
VOUT5
VOUT6
VOUT7
NC
NC
MON_IN1
MON_IN2
MON_IN3
MON_IN4
NC
MON_OUT
VOUT8
VOUT9
VOUT10
VOUT11
VOUT12
DAC_GND2
SIGNAL_GND2
VOUT13
VOUT14
VOUT15
35
51 AGND2
34
25
33
53 VOUT16
52 AVDD2
32
24
31
23
30
55 VOUT18
54 VOUT17
29
21
22
28
57 SIGNAL_GND3
56 VOUT19
27
20
26
FIFO EN
CLR
VOUT24
VOUT25
VOUT26
VOUT27
SIGNAL_GND4
DAC_GND4
AGND4
AVDD4
VOUT28
VOUT29
VOUT30
VOUT31
REF GND
REFOUT/REFIN
SIGNAL_GND1
DAC_GND1
AVDD1
VOUT0
VOUT1
VOUT2
VOUT3
VOUT4
AGND1
98 DB12/(SCLK/SCL)
100 CS/(SYNC/AD0)
99 DB13/(DIN/SDA)
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Figure 8. 100-Lead LQFP Pin Configuration
Table 10. Pin Function Descriptions
Mnemonic
VOUTx
SIGNAL_GND(1–4)
DAC_GND(1–4)
AGND(1–4)
AVDD(1–4)
DGND
DVDD
REFGND
REFOUT/REFIN
MON_OUT
Function
Buffered Analog Outputs for Channel x. Each analog output is driven by a rail-to-rail output amplifier operating at a
gain of 2. Each output is capable of driving an output load of 5 kΩ to ground. Typical output impedance is 0.5 Ω.
Analog Ground Reference Points for Each Group of Eight Output Channels. All SIGNAL_GND pins are tied together
internally and should be connected to the AGND plane as close as possible to the AD5382.
Each group of eight channels contains a DAC_GND pin. This is the ground reference point for the internal 14-bit
DAC. These pins shound be connected to the AGND plane.
Analog Ground Reference Point. Each group of eight channels contains an AGND pin. All AGND pins should be
connected externally to the AGND plane.
Analog Supply Pins. Each group of eight channels has a separate AVDD pin. These pins are internally shorted and
should be decoupled with a 0.1 µF ceramic capacitor and a 10 µF tantalum capacitor. Operating range for the
AD5382-5 is 4.5 V to 5.5 V; operating range for the AD5382-3 is 2.7 V to 3.6 V.
Ground for All Digital Circuitry.
Logic Power Supply. Guaranteed operating range is 2.7 V to 5.5 V. It is recommended that these pins be decoupled
with 0.1 µF ceramic and 10 µF tantalum capacitors to DGND.
Ground Reference Point for the Internal Reference.
The AD5382 contains a common REFOUT/REFIN pin. When the internal reference is selected, this pin is the reference
output. If the application requires an external reference, it can be applied to this pin and the internal reference can
be disabled via the control register. The default for this pin is a reference input.
When the monitor function is enabled, this pin acts as the output of a 36-to-1 channel multiplexer that can be
programmed to multiplex one of channels 0 to 31 or any of the monitor input pins (MON_IN1 to MON_IN4) to the
MON_OUT pin. The MON_OUT pin’s output impedance is typically 500 Ω and is intended to drive a high input
impedance like that exhibited by SAR ADC inputs.
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 40
AD5382
Mnemonic
MON_INx
SER/PAR
CS/(SYNC/AD0)
WR/(DCEN/ AD1)
DB13–DB0
A4–A0
REG1, REG0
SDO/(A/B)
BUSY
LDAC
CLR
RESET
PD
Function
Monitor Input Pins. The AD5382 contains four monitor input pins that allow the user to connect input signals, within
the maximum ratings of the device, to these pins for monitoring purposes. Any of the signals applied to the MON_IN
pins along with the 32 output channels can be switched to the MON_OUT pin via software. For example, an external
ADC can be used to monitor these signals.
Interface Select Input. This pin allows the user to select whether the serial or parallel interface will be used. If it is tied
high, the serial interface mode is selected and Pin 97 (SPI/I2C) is used to determine if the interface mode is SPI or I2C.
Parallel interface mode is selected when SER/PAR is low.
In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as the chip select input (level sensitive, active low). When low, the AD5382 is
selected.
In serial interface mode, this is the frame synchronization input signal for the serial clocks before the addressed
register is updated.
In I2C mode, this pin acts as a hardware address pin used in conjunction with AD1 to determine the software address
for the device on the I2C bus.
Multifunction Pin. In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as write enable. In serial interface mode, this pin acts as a
daisy-chain enable in SPI mode and as a hardware address pin in I2C mode.
Parallel Interface Write Input (edge sensitive). The rising edge of WR is used in conjunction with CS low and the
address bus inputs to write to the selected device registers.
Serial Interface. Daisy-chain select input (level sensitive, active high). When high, this signal is used in conjunction
with SER/PAR high to enable the SPI serial interface Daisy-Chain mode.
I2C Mode. This pin acts as a hardware address pin used in conjunction with AD0 to determine the software address
for this device on the I2C bus.
Parallel Data Bus. DB13 is the MSB and DB0 is the LSB of the input data-word on the AD5382.
Parallel Address Inputs. A4 to A0 are decoded to address one of the AD5382’s 40 input channels. Used in conjunction
with the REG1 and REG0 pins to determine the destination register for the input data.
In parallel interface mode, REG1 and REG0 are used in decoding the destination registers for the input data. REG1
and REG0 are decoded to address the input data register, offset register, or gain register for the selected channel and
are also used to decide the special function registers.
Serial Data Output in Serial Interface Mode. Three-stateable CMOS output. SDO can be used for daisy-chaining a
number of devices together. Data is clocked out on SDO on the rising edge of SCLK, and is valid on the falling edge
of SCLK.
In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as the A or B data register select when writing data to the AD5382’s data
registers with toggle mode selected (see the Toggle Mode Function section). In toggle mode, the LDAC is used to
switch the output between the data contained in the A and B data registers. All DAC channels contain two data
registers. In normal mode, Data Register A is the default for data transfers.
Digital CMOS Output. BUSY goes low during internal calculations of the data (x2) loaded to the DAC data register.
During this time, the user can continue writing new data to the x1, c, and m registers, but no further updates to the
DAC registers and DAC outputs can take place. If LDAC is taken low while BUSY is low, this event is stored. BUSY also
goes low during power-on reset, and when the RESET pin is low. During this time, the interface is disabled and any
events on LDAC are ignored. A CLR operation also brings BUSY low.
Load DAC Logic Input (Active Low). If LDAC is taken low while BUSY is inactive (high), the contents of the input
registers are transferred to the DAC registers and the DAC outputs are updated. If LDAC is taken low while BUSY is
active and internal calculations are taking place, the LDAC event is stored and the DAC registers are updated when
BUSY goes inactive. However any events on LDAC during power-on reset or on RESET are ignored.
Asynchronous Clear Input. The CLR input is falling edge sensitive. When CLR is activated, all channels are updated
with the data contained in the CLR code register. BUSY is low for a duration of 35 µs while all channels are being
updated with the CLR code.
Asynchronous Digital Reset Input (Falling Edge Sensitive). The function of this pin is equivalent to that of the poweron reset generator. When this pin is taken low, the state machine initiates a reset sequence to digitally reset the x1,
m, c, and x2 registers to their default power-on values. This sequence takes 270 µs. The falling edge of RESET initiates
the RESET process and BUSY goes low for the duration, returning high when RESET is complete. While BUSY is low,
all interfaces are disabled and all LDAC pulses are ignored. When BUSY returns high, the part resumes normal
operation and the status of the RESET pin is ignored until the next falling edge is detected.
Power Down (Level Sensitive, Active High). PD is used to place the device in low power mode where the device
consumes 2 µA AIDD and 20 µA DIDD. In power-down mode, all internal analog circuitry is placed in low power
mode, and the analog output will be configured as a high impedance output or will provide a 100 kΩ load to
ground, depending on how the power-down mode is configured. The serial interface remains active during powerdown.
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 40
AD5382
Mnemonic
FIFOEN
DB11 (SPI/I2C)
DB12 (SCLK/SCL)
DB13/(DIN/SDA)
NC
Function
FIFO Enable (Level Sensitive, Active High). When connected to DVDD, the internal FIFO is enabled, allowing the user
to write to the device at full speed. FIFO is only available in parallel interface mode. The status of the FIFO_EN pin is
sampled on power-up, and also following a CLEAR or RESET, to determine if the FIFO is enabled. In either serial or I2C
interface modes, the FIFO_EN pin should be tied low.
Multifunction Input Pin. In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as DB11 of the parallel input data-word. In serial
interface mode, this pin acts as serial interface mode select. When serial interface mode is selected (SER/PAR = 1) and
this input is low, SPI mode is selected. In SPI mode, DB12 is the serial clock (SCLK) input and DB13 is the serial data
(DIN) input.
When serial interface mode is selected (SER/PAR = 1) and this input is high I2C Mode is selected. In this mode, DB12 is
the serial clock (SCL) input and DB13 is the serial data (SDA) input.
Multifunction Input Pin. In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as DB12 of the parallel input data-word. In serial
interface mode, this pin acts as a serial clock input.
Serial Interface Mode. In serial interface mode, data is clocked into the shift register on the falling edge of SCLK. This
operates at clock speeds up to 50 MHz.
I2C Mode. In I2C mode, this pin performs the SCL function, clocking data into the device. The data transfer rate in I2C
mode is compatible with both 100 kHz and 400 kHz operating modes.
Multifunction Data Input Pin. In parallel interface mode, this pin acts as DB13 of the parallel input data-word.
Serial Interface Mode. In serial interface mode, this pin acts as the serial data input. Data must be valid on the falling
edge of SCLK.
I2C Mode. In I2C mode, this pin is the serial data pin (SDA) operating as an open-drain input/output.
No Connect. The user is advised not to connect any signals to these pins.
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 40
AD5382
TERMINOLOGY
Relative Accuracy
DC Output Impedance
Relative accuracy or endpoint linearity is a measure of the
maximum deviation from a straight line passing through the
endpoints of the DAC transfer function. It is measured after
adjusting for zero-scale error and full-scale error, and is
expressed in LSB.
This is the effective output source resistance. It is dominated by
package lead resistance.
Differential Nonlinearity
Differential nonlinearity is the difference between the measured
change and the ideal 1 LSB change between any two adjacent
codes. A specified differential nonlinearity of 1 LSB maximum
ensures monotonicity.
Zero-Scale Error
Zero-scale error is the error in the DAC output voltage when all
0s are loaded into the DAC register. Ideally, with all 0s loaded to
the DAC and m = all 1s, c = 2n – 1:
VOUT(Zero-Scale) = 0 V
Zero-scale error is a measure of the difference between VOUT
(actual) and VOUT (ideal), expressed in mV. It is mainly due to
offsets in the output amplifier.
Output Voltage Settling Time
This is the amount of time it takes for the output of a DAC to
settle to a specified level for a ¼ to ¾ full-scale input change,
and is measured from the BUSY rising edge.
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Energy
This is the amount of energy injected into the analog output at
the major code transition. It is specified as the area of the glitch
in nV-s. It is measured by toggling the DAC register data
between 0x1FFF and 0x2000.
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
DAC-to-DAC crosstalk is the glitch impulse that appears at the
output of one DAC due to both the digital change and to the
subsequent analog output change at another DAC. The victim
channel is loaded with midscale. DAC-to-DAC crosstalk is
specified in nV-s.
Digital Crosstalk
Offset Error
Offset error is a measure of the difference between VOUT
(actual) and VOUT (ideal) in the linear region of the transfer
function, expressed in mV. Offset error is measured on the
AD5382-5 with Code 32 loaded into the DAC register, and on
the AD5382-3 with Code 64.
Gain Error
Gain Error is specified in the linear region of the output range
between VOUT = 10 mV and VOUT = AVDD – 50 mV. It is the
deviation in slope of the DAC transfer characteristic from the
ideal and is expressed in %FSR with the DAC output unloaded.
DC Crosstalk
This is the dc change in the output level of one DAC at midscale
in response to a full-scale code (all 0s to all 1s, and vice versa)
and output change of all other DACs. It is expressed in LSB.
The glitch impulse transferred to the output of one converter
due to a change in the DAC register code of another converter
is defined as the digital crosstalk and is specified in nV-s.
Digital Feedthrough
When the device is not selected, high frequency logic activity on
the device’s digital inputs can be capacitively coupled both
across and through the device to show up as noise on the
VOUT pins. It can also be coupled along the supply and ground
lines. This noise is digital feedthrough.
Output Noise Spectral Density
This is a measure of internally generated random noise.
Random noise is characterized as a spectral density (voltage per
√Hertz). It is measured by loading all DACs to midscale and
measuring noise at the output. It is measured in nV/√Hz in a
1 Hz bandwidth at 10 kHz.
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 40
AD5382
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
2.0
2.0
AVDD = DVDD = 5.5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
1.5
1.0
INL ERROR (LSB)
1.0
0
–0.5
0.5
0
–0.5
–1.0
–1.0
–1.5
–1.5
–2.0
0
4096
8192
INPUT CODE
12288
16384
–2.0
0
4096
2.539
2.538
2.537
2.536
2.535
2.534
2.533
2.532
2.531
2.530
2.529
2.528
2.527
2.526
2.525
2.524
2.523
12288
16384
Figure 12. Typical AD5382-3 INL Plot
1.254
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
14ns/SAMPLE NUMBER
1 LSB CHANGE AROUND MIDSCALE
GLITCH IMPULSE = 10nV-s
AVDD = DVDD = 3V
VREF = 1.25V
TA = 25°C
14ns/SAMPLE NUMBER
1 LSB CHANGE AROUND MIDSCALE
GLITCH IMPULSE = 5nV-s
1.253
1.252
AMPLITUDE (V)
1.251
1.250
1.249
1.248
1.247
100
150
200 250 300 350
SAMPLE NUMBER
400
450
500
550
1.245
0
Figure 10. AD5382-5 Glitch Impulse
50
100
150
200 250 300 350
SAMPLE NUMBER
400
450
500
550
Figure 13. AD5382-3 Glitch Impulse
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
VOUT
VOUT
Figure 11. Slew Rate with Boost Off
Figure 14. Slew Rate with Boost On
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 40
03731-0-036
50
03732-0-004
0
03731-0-034
1.246
03732-0-003
AMPLITUDE (V)
Figure 9. Typical AD5382-5 INL Plot
8192
INPUT CODE
03731-0-035
0.5
03731-0-033
INL ERROR (LSB)
AVDD = DVDD = 3V
VREF = 1.25V
TA = 25°C
1.5
AD5382
AVDD = 5.5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
14
PERCENTAGE OF UNITS (%)
12
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
POWER SUPPLY RAMP RATE = 10ms
10
VOUT
8
6
4
AVDD
9
10
AIDD (mA)
11
03731-0-011
8
04598-0-049
2
Figure 15. AIDD Histogram
Figure 18. AD5382 Power-Up Transient
14
DVDD = 5.5V
VIH = DVDD
VIL = DGND
TA = 25°C
10
12
NUMBER OF UNITS
8
6
4
10
8
6
4
2
0
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
DIDD (mA)
0.8
0.9
0
–2
–1
0
1
INL ERROR DISTRIBUTION (LSB)
2
Figure 19. INL Error Distribution
Figure 16. DIDD Histogram
PD
WR
BUSY
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
EXITS SOFT PD
TO MIDSCALE
VOUT
VOUT
03731-0-038
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
EXITS HARDWARE PD
TO MIDSCALE
Figure 20. Exiting Hardware Power Down
Figure 17. Exiting Soft Power Down
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 40
04598-0-051
04598-0-050
2
03731-0-045
NUMBER OF UNITS
AVDD = 5.5V
REFIN = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
AD5382
6
6
AVDD = DVDD = 3V
VREF = 1.25V
TA = 25°C
FULLSCALE
5
5
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
3/4 SCALE
4
3/4 SCALE
MIDSCALE
3
2
3
VOUT (V)
VOUT (V)
4
1/4 SCALE
FULL-SCALE
MIDSCALE
2
1
1
ZEROSCALE
0
–20
–10
–5
–2
0
2
CURRENT (mA)
5
10
20
40
ZERO-SCALE
03731-0-039
–1
–40
–1
–40
Figure 21. AD5382-5 Output Amplifier Source and Sink Capability
0.20
5
10
20
–40
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
14ns/SAMPLE NUMBER
2.454
ERROR AT ZERO SINKING CURRENT
0.05
AMPLITUDE (V)
0
–0.05
2.453
2.452
2.451
(VDD–VOUT) AT FULL-SCALE SOURCING CURRENT
0
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
1.25
ISOURCE/ISINK (mA)
1.50
1.75
2.00
03731-0-047
–0.20
2.449
0
150
200 250 300 350
SAMPLE NUMBER
400
450
500
550
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
TA = 25°C
DAC LOADED WITH MIDSCALE
EXTERNAL REFERENCE
Y AXIS = 5µV/DIV
X AXIS = 100ms/DIV
AVDD = 5V
TA = 25°C
REFOUT DECOUPLED
WITH 100nF CAPACITOR
500
100
Figure 25. Adjacent Channel DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk
Figure 22. Headroom at Rails vs. Source/Sink Current
600
50
400
300
REFOUT = 2.5V
200
0
100
REFOUT = 1.25V
1k
10k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
100k
03731-0-047
100
AVDD = DVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
EXITS SOFT PD
TO MIDSCALE
Figure 26. 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Noise Plot
Figure 23 REFOUT Noise Spectral Density
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 40
03731-0-041
2.450
03731-0-046
ERROR VOLTAGE (V)
1/4 SCALE
–2
0
2
CURRENT (mA)
2.455
–0.15
OUTPUT NOISE (nV/ Hz)
–5
2.456
0.10
–0.10
–10
Figure 24. AD5382-3 Output Amplifier Source and Sink Capability
AVDD = 5V
VREF = 2.5V
TA = 25°C
0.15
–20
03731-0-040
0
AD5382
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
DAC ARCHITECTURE—GENERAL
The AD5382 is a complete, single-supply, 32-channel voltage
output DAC that offers 14-bit resolution. The part is available in
a 100-lead LQFP package and features both a parallel and a
serial interface. This product includes an internal, software
selectable, 1.25 V/2.5 V, 10 ppm/°C reference that can be used to
drive the buffered reference inputs; alternatively, an external
reference can be used to drive these inputs. Internal/external
reference selection is via the CR10 bit in the control register;
CR12 selects the reference magnitude if the internal reference is
selected. All channels have an on-chip output amplifier with
rail-to-rail output capable of driving 5 kΩ in parallel with a
200 pF load.
VREF
AVDD
×1 INPUT
REG
×2
DAC
REG
c REG
VOUT = 2 × VREF × x2/2n
x2 is the data-word loaded to the resistor string DAC. VREF is the
internal reference voltage or the reference voltage externally
applied to the DAC REFOUT/REFIN pin. For specified
performance, an external reference voltage of 2.5 V is
recommended for the AD5380-5, and 1.25 V for the AD5380-3.
DATA DECODING
The AD5382 contains a 14-bit data bus, DB13–DB0. Depending
on the value of REG1 and REG0 (see Table 11), this data is
loaded into the addressed DAC input registers, offset (c)
registers, or gain (m) registers. The format data, offset (c), and
gain (m) register contents are shown in Table 12 to Table 14.
Table 11. Register Selection
14-BIT
DAC
VOUT
R
R
03731-0-016
INPUT DATA m REG
The complete transfer function for these devices can be
represented as
REG1
1
1
0
0
REG0
1
0
1
0
Register Selected
Input Data Register (x1)
Offset Register (c)
Gain Register (m)
Special Function Registers (SFRs)
Figure 27. Single-Channel Architecture
The architecture of a single DAC channel consists of a 14-bit
resistor-string DAC followed by an output buffer amplifier
operating at a gain of 2. This resistor-string architecture
guarantees DAC monotonicity. The 14-bit binary digital code
loaded to the DAC register determines at what node on the
string the voltage is tapped off before being fed to the output
amplifier. Each channel on these devices contains independent
offset and gain control registers that allow the user to digitally
trim offset and gain. These registers give the user the ability to
calibrate out errors in the complete signal chain, including the
DAC, using the internal m and c registers, which hold the
correction factors. All channels are double buffered, allowing
synchronous updating of all channels using the LDAC pin.
Figure 27 shows a block diagram of a single channel on the
AD5382. The digital input transfer function for each DAC can
be represented as
x2 = [(m + 2)/ 2n × x1] + (c – 2n – 1)
where:
x2 is the data-word loaded to the resistor string DAC.
x1 is the 14-bit data-word written to the DAC input register.
m is the gain coefficient (default is 0x3FFE on the AD5382).
The gain coefficient is written to the 13 most significant bits
(DB13 to DB1) and LSB (DB0) is a zero.
n = DAC resolution (n = 14 for AD5382).
c is the14-bit offset coefficient (default is 0x2000).
Table 12. DAC Data Format (REG1 = 1, REG0 = 1)
11
11
10
10
01
00
00
DB13 to DB0
1111
1111
1111
1111
0000
0000
0000
0000
1111
1111
0000
0000
0000
0000
1111
1110
0001
0000
1111
0001
0000
DAC Output (V)
2 VREF × (16383/16384)
2 VREF × (16382/16384)
2 VREF × (8193/16384)
2 VREF × (8192/16384)
2 VREF × (8191/16384)
2 VREF × (1/16384)
0
Table 13. Offset Data Format (REG1 = 1, REG0 = 0)
11
11
10
10
01
00
00
1111
1111
0000
0000
1111
0000
0000
DB13 to DB0
1111
1111
1111
1110
0000
0001
0000
0000
1111
1111
0000
0001
0000
0000
Offset (LSB)
+8191
+8190
+1
0
–1
–8191
–8192
Table 14. Gain Data Format (REG1 = 0, REG0 = 1)
11
10
01
00
00
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 40
1111
1111
1111
0111
0000
DB13 to DB0
1111
1111
1111
1111
0000
1110
1110
1110
1110
0000
Gain Factor
1
0.75
0.5
0.25
0
AD5382
ON-CHIP SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTERS (SFR)
Soft CLR
The AD5382 contains a number of special function registers
(SFRs), as outlined in Table 15. SFRs are addressed with
REG1 = REG0 = 0 and are decoded using address bits A4 to A0.
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 00010
DB13–DB0 = Don’t Care.
Table 15. SFR Register Functions (REG1 = 0, REG0 = 0)
R/W
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
Function
X
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
NOP (No Operation)
Write CLR Code
Soft CLR
Soft Power-Down
Soft Power-Up
Control Register Write
Control Register Read
Monitor Channel
Soft Reset
SFR COMMANDS
NOP (No Operation)
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 00000
Performs no operation but is useful in serial readback mode to
clock out data on DOUT for diagnostic purposes. BUSY pulses
low during a NOP operation.
Write CLR Code
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 00001
DB13–DB0 = Contain the CLR data
Bringing the CLR line low or exercising the soft clear function
will load the contents of the DAC registers with the data contained in the user configurable CLR register, and will set
VOUT0 to VOUT31 accordingly. This can be very useful for
setting up a specific output voltage in a clear condition. It is also
beneficial for calibration purposes; the user can load full scale
or zero scale to the clear code register and then issue a hardware or software clear to load this code to all DACs, removing
the need for individual writes to each DAC. Default on powerup is all zeros.
Executing this instruction performs the CLR, which is functionally the same as that provided by the external CLR pin. The
DAC outputs are loaded with the data in the CLR code register.
It takes 35 µs to fully execute the SOFT CLR and is indicated by
the BUSY low time.
Soft Power-Down
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 01000
DB13–DB0 = Don’t Care
Executing this instruction performs a global power-down
feature that puts all channels into a low power mode that
reduces the analog supply current to 2 µA max and the digital
current to 20 µA max. In power-down mode, the output
amplifier can be configured as a high impedance output or
provide a 100 kΩ load to ground. The contents of all internal
registers are retained in power-down mode. No register can be
written to while in power-down.
Soft Power-Up
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 01001
DB13–DB0 = Don’t Care
This instruction is used to power up the output amplifiers and
the internal reference. The time to exit power–down is 8 µs. The
hardware power-down and software function are internally
combined in a digital OR function.
Soft RESET
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 01111
DB13–DB0 = Don’t Care
This instruction is used to implement a software reset. All
internal registers are reset to their default values, which
correspond to m at full scale and c at zero. The contents of the
DAC registers are cleared, setting all analog outputs to 0 V. The
soft reset activation time is 135 µs max.
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 40
AD5382
Table 16. Control Register Contents
MSB
CR13
CR12
CR11
CR10
CR9
CR8
CR7
CR6
CR5
CR4
CR3
CR2
CR1
LSB
CR0
Control Register Write/Read
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 01100, R/W status determines if
the operation is a write (R/W = 0) or a read (R/W = 1). DB13 to
DB0 contains the control register data.
Control Register Contents
CR13: Power-Down Status. This bit is used to configure the
output amplifier state in power down.
CR13 = 1. Amplifier output is high impedance (default on
power-up).
CR8: Thermal Monitor Function. This function is used to
monitor the AD5382’s internal die temperature when enabled.
The thermal monitor powers down the output amplifiers when
the temperature exceeds 130°C. This function can be used to
protect the device in cases where power dissipation may be
exceeded if a number of output channels are simultaneously
short-circuited. A soft power-up will re-enable the output
amplifiers if the die temperature has dropped below 130°C.
CR8 = 1: Thermal Monitor Enabled.
CR8 = 0: Thermal Monitor Disabled (default on power- up).
CR13 = 0. Amplifier output is 100 kΩ to ground.
CR7 and CR6: Don’t Care.
CR12: REF Select. This bit selects the operating internal
reference for the AD5382. CR12 is programmed as follows:
CR12 = 1: Internal reference is 2.5 V (AD5382-5 default), the
recommended operating reference for AD5382-5.
CR12 = 0: Internal reference is 1.25 V (AD5382-3 default),
the recommended operating reference for AD5382-3.
CR11: Current Boost Control. This bit is used to boost the
current in the output amplifier, thereby altering its slew rate.
This bit is configured as follows:
CR5 to CR2: Toggle Function Enable. This function allows the
user to toggle the output between two codes loaded to the A and
B register for each DAC. Control register bits CR5 to CR2 are
used to enable individual groups of eight channels for operation in toggle mode. A Logic 1 written to any bit enables a group
of channels; a Logic 0 disables a group. LDAC is used to toggle
between the two registers. Table 17 shows the decoding for
toggle mode operation. For example, CR5 controls group 3,
which contains channels 24 to 31, CR5 = 1 enables these
channels .
CR11 = 1: Boost Mode On. This maximizes the bias current
in the output amplifier, optimizing its slew rate but increasing
the power dissipation.
CR1 and CR0: Don’t Care.
CR11 = 0: Boost Mode Off (default on power-up). This
reduces the bias current in the output amplifier and reduces
the overall power consumption.
CR Bit
CR5
CR4
CR3
CR2
CR10: Internal/External Reference. This bit determines if the
DAC uses its internal reference or an externally applied
reference.
CR10 = 1: Internal Reference Enabled. The reference output
depends on data loaded to CR12.
CR10 = 0: External Reference Selected (default on power up).
CR9: Channel Monitor Enable (see Channel Monitor Function)
CR9 = 1: Monitor Enabled. This enables the channel monitor
function. After a write to the monitor channel in the SFR
register, the selected channel output is routed to the
MON_OUT pin.
CR9 = 0: Monitor Disabled (default on power-up). When the
monitor is disabled, MON_OUT is three-stated.
Table 17.
Group
3
2
1
0
Channels
24–31
16–23
8–15
0–7
Channel Monitor Function
REG1 = REG0 = 0, A4–A0 = 01010
DB13–DB8 = Contain data to address the monitored channel.
A channel monitor function is provided on the AD5382. This
feature, which consists of a multiplexer addressed via the
interface, allows any channel output or the signals connected to
the MON_IN inputs to be routed to the MON_OUT pin for
monitoring using an external ADC. The channel monitor
function must be enabled in the control register before any
channels are routed to MON_OUT. On the AD5382, DB13 to
DB8 contain the channel address for the monitored channel.
Selecting channel address 63 three-states MON_OUT.
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 40
AD5382
Table 18. AD5382 Channel Monitor Decoding
REG0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
A4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
A3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
•
A2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
A1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
•
A0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
DB13
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
•
DB12
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
DB11
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
•
0
0
•
0
0
•
0
0
•
1
1
•
0
0
•
1
1
•
0
0
•
1
1
•
1
1
•
1
1
DB10
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
•
DB9
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
•
DB8
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
•
DB7–DB0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
•
MON_OUT
VOUT0
VOUT1
VOUT2
VOUT3
VOUT4
VOUT5
VOUT6
VOUT7
VOUT8
VOUT9
VOUT10
VOUT11
VOUT12
VOUT13
VOUT14
VOUT15
VOUT16
VOUT17
VOUT18
VOUT19
VOUT20
VOUT21
VOUT22
VOUT23
VOUT24
VOUT25
VOUT26
VOUT27
VOUT28
VOUT29
VOUT30
VOUT31
MON_IN1
MON_IN2
MON_IN3
MON_IN4
Undefined
Undefined
•
•
1
1
•
1
1
•
0
1
•
X
X
•
Undefined
Three-State
REG1 REG0 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
VOUT0
VOUT1
VOUT30
VOUT31
MON_IN1
MON_IN2
MON_IN3
MON_IN4
AD5382
CHANNEL
MONITOR
DECODING
MON_OUT
CHANNEL ADDRESS
DB13–DB8
Figure 28. Channel Monitor Decoding
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 40
03733-0-003
REG1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
•
AD5382
HARDWARE FUNCTIONS
RESET FUNCTION
FIFO OPERATION IN PARALLEL MODE
Bringing the RESET line low resets the contents of all internal
registers to their power-on reset state. Reset is a negative edgesensitive input. The default corresponds to m at full scale and to
c at zero. The contents of the DAC registers are cleared, setting
VOUT 0 to VOUT 31 to 0 V. This sequence takes 270 µs max.
The falling edge of RESET initiates the reset process; BUSY goes
low for the duration, returning high when RESET is complete.
While BUSY is low, all interfaces are disabled and all LDAC
pulses are ignored. When BUSY returns high, the part resumes
normal operation and the status of the RESET pin is ignored
until the next falling edge is detected.
The AD5382 contains a FIFO to optimize operation when
operating in parallel interface mode. The FIFO Enable (level
sensitive, active high) is used to enable the internal FIFO. When
connected to DVDD, the internal FIFO is enabled, allowing the
user to write to the device at full speed. FIFO is only available in
parallel interface mode. The status of the FIFO_EN pin is
sampled on power-up, and after a CLEAR or RESET, to
determine if the FIFO is enabled. In either serial or I2C interface
modes, FIFO_EN should be tied low. Up to 128 successive
instructions can be written to the FIFO at maximum speed in
parallel mode. When the FIFO is full, any further writes to the
device are ignored. Figure 29 shows a comparison between
FIFO mode and non-FIFO mode in terms of channel update
time. Figure 29 also outlines digital loading time.
ASYNCHRONOUS CLEAR FUNCTION
Bringing the CLR line low clears the contents of the DAC
registers to the data contained in the user configurable CLR
register and sets VOUT 0 to VOUT 31 accordingly. This function can be used in system calibration to load zero scale and full
scale to all channels. The execution time for a CLR is 35 µs.
25
WITHOUT FIFO
(CHANNEL UPDATE TIME)
20
BUSY AND LDAC FUNCTIONS
10
WITH FIFO
(CHANNEL UPDATE TIME)
5
WITH FIFO
(DIGITAL LOADING TIME)
0
1
4
7
10
13 16 19 22 25 28
NUMBER OF WRITES
31
34
37
40
03731-0-018
BUSY is a digital CMOS output that indicates the status of the
AD5382. The value of x2, the internal data loaded to the DAC
data register, is calculated each time the user writes new data to
the corresponding x1, c, or m registers. During the calculation
of x2, the BUSY output goes low. While BUSY is low, the user
can continue writing new data to the x1, m, or c registers, but no
DAC output updates can take place. The DAC outputs are
updated by taking the LDAC input low. If LDAC goes low while
BUSY is active, the LDAC event is stored and the DAC outputs
update immediately after BUSY goes high. The user may hold
the LDAC input permanently low, in which case the DAC
outputs update immediately after BUSY goes high. BUSY also
goes low during power-on reset and when a falling edge is
detected on the RESET pin. During this time, all interfaces are
disabled and any events on LDAC are ignored. The AD5382
contains an extra feature whereby a DAC register is not updated
unless its x2 register has been written to since the last time
LDAC was brought low. Normally, when LDAC is brought low,
the DAC registers are filled with the contents of the x2 registers.
However, the AD5382 will only update the DAC register if the
x2 data has changed, thereby removing unnecessary digital
crosstalk.
TIME (µs)
15
Figure 29. Channel Update Rate (FIFO vs. NON-FIFO)
POWER-ON RESET
The AD5382 contains a power-on reset generator and state
machine. The power-on reset resets all registers to a predefined
state and configures the analog outputs as high impedance. The
BUSY pin goes low during the power-on reset sequencing,
preventing data writes to the device.
POWER-DOWN
The AD5382 contains a global power-down feature that puts all
channels into a low power mode and reduces the analog power
consumption to 2 µA max and digital power consumption to
20 µA max. In power-down mode, the output amplifier can be
configured as a high impedance output or provide a 100 kΩ
load to ground. The contents of all internal registers are
retained in power-down mode. When exiting power-down, the
settling time of the amplifier will elapse before the outputs settle
to their correct values.
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 40
AD5382
AD5382 INTERFACES
The AD5382 contains both parallel and serial interfaces.
Furthermore, the serial interface can be programmed to be
either SPI, DSP, MICROWIRE, or I2C compatible. The SER/PAR
pin selects parallel and serial interface modes. In serial mode,
the SPI/I2C pin is used to select DSP, SPI, MICROWIRE, or I2C
interface mode.
Figure 3 and Figure 5 show timing diagrams for a serial write to
the AD5382 in standalone and daisy-chain modes. The 24-bit
data-word format for the serial interface is shown in Table 19
A/B. When toggle mode is enabled, this pin selects whether the
data write is to the A or B register. With toggle disabled, this bit
should be set to zero to select the A data register.
The devices use an internal FIFO memory to allow high speed
successive writes in parallel interface mode. The user can continue writing new data to the device while write instructions are
being executed. The BUSY signal indicates the current status of
the device, going low while instructions in the FIFO are being
executed. In parallel mode, up to 128 successive instructions can
be written to the FIFO at maximum speed. When the FIFO is
full, any further writes to the device are ignored.
R/W is the read or write control bit.
A4–A0 are used to address the input channels.
REG1 and REG0 select the register to which data is written, as
shown in Table 11.
DB13–DB0 contain the input data-word.
X is a don’t care condition.
To minimize both the power consumption of the device and the
on-chip digital noise, the active interface only powers up fully
when the device is being written to, i.e., on the falling edge of
WR or the falling edge of SYNC.
Standalone Mode
By connecting the DCEN (Daisy-Chain Enable) pin low, standalone mode is enabled. The serial interface works with both a
continuous and a noncontinuous serial clock. The first falling
edge of SYNC starts the write cycle and resets a counter that
counts the number of serial clocks to ensure that the correct
number of bits are shifted into the serial shift register. Any
further edges on SYNC except for a falling edge are ignored
until 24 bits are clocked in. Once 24 bits have been shifted in,
the SCLK is ignored. In order for another serial transfer to take
place, the counter must be reset by the falling edge of SYNC.
DSP, SPI, MICROWIRE COMPATIBLE SERIAL
INTERFACES
The serial interface can be operated with a minimum of three
wires in standalone mode or four wires in daisy-chain mode.
Daisy chaining allows many devices to be cascaded together to
increase system channel count. The SER/PAR pin must be tied
high and the SPI/I2C pin (Pin 97) should be tied low to enable
the DSP/SPI/MICROWIRE compatible serial interface. In serial
interface mode, the user does not need to drive the parallel
input data pins. The serial interface’s control pins are
SYNC, DIN, SCLK—Standard 3-Wire Interface Pins.
DCEN—Selects Standalone Mode or Daisy-Chain Mode.
SDO—Data Out Pin for Daisy-Chain Mode.
Table 19. 32-Channel, 14-Bit DAC Serial Input Register Configuration
MSB
A/B
R/W
0
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
REG1
REG0
DB13
DB12
DB11
DB10
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 40
DB9
DB8
DB7
DB6
DB5
DB4
DB3
DB2
DB1
LSB
DB0
AD5382
Daisy-Chain Mode
Readback Mode
For systems that contain several devices, the SDO pin may be
used to daisy-chain several devices together. This daisy-chain
mode can be useful in system diagnostics and in reducing the
number of serial interface lines.
Readback mode is invoked by setting the R/W bit = 1 in the
serial input register write. With R/W = 1, Bits A4 to A0, in
association with Bits REG1 and REG0, select the register to be
read. The remaining data bits in the write sequence are don’t
cares. During the next SPI write, the data appearing on the SDO
output will contain the data from the previously addressed
register. For a read of a single register, the NOP command can
be used in clocking out the data from the selected register on
SDO. Figure 30 shows the readback sequence. For example, to
read back the M register of channel 0 on the AD5382, the
following sequence should be implemented. First, write
0x404XXX to the AD5382 input register. This configures the
AD5382 for read mode with the m register of Channel 0
selected. Note that data bits DB13 to DB0 are don’t cares. Follow
this with a second write, a NOP condition, 0x000000. During
this write, the data from the m register is clocked out on the
DOUT line, i.e., data clocked out will contain the data from the
m register in Bits DB13 to DB0, and the top 10 bits contain the
address information as previously written. In readback mode,
the SYNC signal must frame the data. Data is clocked out on the
rising edge of SCLK and is valid on the falling edge of the SCLK
signal. If the SCLK idles high between the write and read
operations of a readback operation, the first bit of data is
clocked out on the falling edge of SYNC.
By connecting the DCEN (Daisy-Chain Enable) pin high, daisychain mode is enabled. The first falling edge of SYNC starts the
write cycle. The SCLK is continuously applied to the input shift
register when SYNC is low. If more than 24 clock pulses are
applied, the data ripples out of the shift register and appears on
the SDO line. This data is clocked out on the rising edge of
SCLK and is valid on the falling edge. By connecting the SDO of
the first device to the DIN input on the next device in the chain,
a multidevice interface is constructed. Twenty-four clock pulses
are required for each device in the system. Therefore, the total
number of clock cycles must equal 24N, where N is the total
number of AD538x devices in the chain.
When the serial transfer to all devices is complete, SYNC is
taken high. This latches the input data in each device in the
daisy-chain and prevents any further data from being clocked
into the input shift register.
If the SYNC is taken high before 24 clocks are clocked into the
part, this is considered a bad frame and the data is discarded.
The serial clock may be either a continuous or a gated clock. A
continuous SCLK source can only be used if it can be arranged
that SYNC is held low for the correct number of clock cycles. In
gated clock mode, a burst clock containing the exact number of
clock cycles must be used and SYNC must be taken high after
the final clock to latch the data.
SCLK
24
48
SYNC
DB23
DB0
DB23
INPUT WORD SPECIFIES REGISTER TO BE READ
SDO
DB23
DB0
UNDEFINED
DB0
NOP CONDITION
DB23
SELECTED REGISTER DATA CLOCKED OUT
Figure 30. Serial Readback Operation
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 40
DB0
03731-0-019
DIN
AD5382
I2C SERIAL INTERFACE
The AD5382 features an I2C compatible 2-wire interface
consisting of a serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock line
(SCL). SDA and SCL facilitate communication between the
AD5382 and the master at rates up to 400 kHz. Figure 6 shows
the 2-wire interface timing diagrams that incorporate three
different modes of operation. In selecting the I2C operating
mode, first configure serial operating mode (SER/PAR = 1) and
then select I2C mode by configuring the SPI/I2C pin to a
Logic 1. The device is connected to the I2C bus as a slave device
(i.e., no clock is generated by the AD5382). The AD5382 has a
7-bit slave address 1010 1AD1AD0. The 5 MSB are hard-coded
and the 2 LSB are determined by the state of the AD1 and AD0
pins. The facility to hardware configure AD1 and AD0 allows
four of these devices to be configured on the bus.
2
I C Data Transfer
One data bit is transferred during each SCL clock cycle. The
data on SDA must remain stable during the high period of the
SCL clock pulse. Changes in SDA while SCL is high are control
signals that configure START and STOP conditions. Both SDA
and SCL are pulled high by the external pull-up resistors when
the I2C bus is not busy.
START and STOP Conditions
A master device initiates communication by issuing a START
condition. A START condition is a high-to-low transition on
SDA with SCL high. A STOP condition is a low-to-high
transition on SDA while SCL is high. A START condition from
the master signals the beginning of a transmission to the
AD5382. The STOP condition frees the bus. If a repeated
START condition (Sr) is generated instead of a STOP condition,
the bus remains active.
Repeated START Conditions
A repeated START (Sr) condition may indicate a change of data
direction on the bus. Sr may be used when the bus master is
writing to several I2C devices and wants to maintain control of
the bus.
Acknowledge Bit (ACK)
The acknowledge bit (ACK) is the ninth bit attached to any
8-bit data-word. ACK is always generated by the receiving
device. The AD5382 devices generate an ACK when receiving
an address or data by pulling SDA low during the ninth clock
period. Monitoring ACK allows for detection of unsuccessful
data transfers. An unsuccessful data transfer occurs if a
receiving device is busy or if a system fault has occurred. In the
event of an unsuccessful data transfer, the bus master should
reattempt communication.
AD5382 Slave Addresses
A bus master initiates communication with a slave device by
issuing a START condition followed by the 7-bit slave address.
When idle, the AD5382 waits for a START condition followed
by its slave address. The LSB of the address word is the Read/
Write (R/W) bit. The AD5382 is a receive only device; when
communicating with the AD5382, R/W = 0. After receiving the
proper address 1010 1AD1AD0 , the AD5382 issues an ACK by
pulling SDA low for one clock cycle.
The AD5382 has four different user programmable addresses
determined by the AD1 and AD0 bits.
Write Operation
There are three specific modes in which data can be written to
the AD5382 DAC.
4-Byte Mode
When writing to the AD5382 DACs, the user must begin with
an address byte (R/W = 0) after which the DAC will acknowledge that it is prepared to receive data by pulling SDA low. The
address byte is followed by the pointer byte; this addresses the
specific channel in the DAC to be addressed and is also
acknowledged by the DAC. Two bytes of data are then written
to the DAC, as shown in Figure 31. A STOP condition follows.
This allows the user to update a single channel within the
AD5382 at any time and requires four bytes of data to be
transferred from the master.
3-Byte Mode
In 3-byte mode, the user can update more than one channel in a
write sequence without having to write the device address byte
each time. The device address byte is only required once; subsequent channel updates require the pointer byte and the data
bytes. In 3-byte mode, the user begins with an address byte
(R/W = 0), after which the DAC will acknowledge that it is
prepared to receive data by pulling SDA low. The address byte is
followed by the pointer byte. This addresses the specific channel
in the DAC to be addressed and is also acknowledged by the
DAC. This is then followed by the two data bytes. REG1 and
REG0 determine the register to be updated.
If a STOP condition does not follow the data bytes, another
channel can be updated by sending a new pointer byte followed
by the data bytes. This mode only requires three bytes to be sent
to update any channel once the device has been initially
addressed, and reduces the software overhead in updating the
AD5382 channels. A STOP condition at any time exits this
mode. Figure 32 shows a typical configuration.
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 40
AD5382
SCL
1
SDA
0
1
0
1
AD1
AD0
START COND
BY MASTER
R/W
0
ACK BY
AD538x
MSB
0
0
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
ACK BY
AD538x
ADDRESS BYTE
POINTER BYTE
SCL
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
ACK BY
AD538x
ACK BY
AD538x
MOST SIGNIFICANT BYTE
LEAST SIGNIFICANT BYTE
STOP
COND
BY
MASTER
03731-0-020
SDA
Figure 31. 4-Byte AD5382, I2C Write Operation
SCL
SDA
1
0
1
0
1
AD1
AD0
START COND
BY MASTER
R/W
0
ACK BY
AD538x
MSB
0
ADDRESS BYTE
0
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
ACK BY
AD538x
POINTER BYTE FOR CHANNEL "N"
SCL
SDA
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
ACK BY
AD538x
ACK BY
AD538x
MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
LEAST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
DATA FOR CHANNEL "N"
SCL
SDA
0
0
0
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
MSB
ACK BY
AD538x
POINTER BYTE FOR CHANNEL "NEXT CHANNEL"
SCL
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
ACK BY
AD538x
MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
ACK BY
AD538x
LEAST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
DATA FOR CHANNEL "NEXT CHANNEL"
Figure 32. 3-Byte AD5382, I2C Write Operation
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 40
STOP COND
BY MASTER
03731-0-021
SDA
AD5382
2-Byte Mode
PARALLEL INTERFACE
Following initialization of 2-byte mode, the user can update
channels sequentially. The device address byte is only required
once and the pointer address pointer is configured for autoincrement or burst mode.
The SER/PAR pin must be tied low to enable the parallel
interface and disable the serial interfaces. Figure 7 shows the
timing diagram for a parallel write. The parallel interface is
controlled by the following pins:
The user must begin with an address byte (R/W = 0), after
which the DAC will acknowledge that it is prepared to receive
data by pulling SDA low. The address byte is followed by a
specific pointer byte (0xFF) that initiates the burst mode of
operation. The address pointer initializes to channel zero, the
data following the pointer is loaded to Channel 0, and the
address pointer automatically increments to the next address.
CS Pin
Active Low Device Select Pin.
WR Pin
On the rising edge of WR, with CS low, the addresses on Pins
A4 to A0 are latched; data present on the data bus is loaded into
the selected input registers.
REG0, REG1 Pins
The REG0 and REG1 bits in the data byte determine which
register will be updated. In this mode, following the initialization, only the two data bytes are required to update a channel.
The channel address automatically increments from Address 0
to Channel 31 and then returns to the normal 3-byte mode of
operation. This mode allows transmission of data to all
channels in one block and reduces the software overhead in
configuring all channels. A STOP condition at any time exits
this mode. Toggle mode is not supported in 2-byte mode.
Figure 33 shows a typical configuration.
The REG0 and REG1 pins determine the destination register of
the data being written to the AD5382. See Table 11.
Pins A4 to A0
Each of the 40 DAC channels can be addressed individually.
Pins DB13 to DB0
The AD5382 accepts a straight 14-bit parallel word on DB13 to
DB0, where DB13 is the MSB and DB0 is the LSB.
SCL
SDA
1
0
1
0
1
AD1
START COND
BY MASTER
AD0
R/W
A7 = 1
ACK BY
CONVERTER
MSB
A6 = 1 A5 = 1
A4 = 1 A3 = 1 A2 = 1
A1 = 1 A0 = 1
ACK BY
CONVERTER
ADDRESS BYTE
POINTER BYTE
SCL
SDA
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
ACK BY
AD538x
ACK BY
AD538x
MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
LEAST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
CHANNEL 0 DATA
SCL
SDA
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
ACK BY
CONVERTER
ACK BY
CONVERTER
MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
LEAST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
CHANNEL 1 DATA
SCL
REG1
REG0
MSB
LSB
MSB
ACK BY
CONVERTER
MOST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
CHANNEL N DATA FOLLOWED BY STOP
Figure 33. 2-Byte, I2C Write Operation
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 40
LSB
ACK BY
STOP
CONVERTER COND
LEAST SIGNIFICANT DATA BYTE
BY
MASTER
03731-0-022
SDA
AD5382
MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACING
The AD5382 can be interfaced to a variety of 16-bit microcontrollers or DSP processors. Figure 35 shows the AD5382 family
interfaced to a generic 16-bit microcontroller/DSP processor.
The lower address lines from the processor are connected to
A0–A4 on the AD5382. The upper address lines are decoded to
provide a CS, LDAC signal for the AD5382. The fast interface
timing of the AD5382 allows direct interface to a wide variety of
microcontrollers and DSPs, as shown in Figure 35.
being transmitted to the AD5382, the SYNC line is taken low
(PC7). Data appearing on the MOSI output is valid on the
falling edge of SCK. Serial data from the 68HC11 is transmitted
in 8-bit bytes with only eight falling clock edges occurring in
the transmit cycle.
DVDD
MC68HC11
RESET
AD5382 to MC68HC11
The serial peripheral interface (SPI) on the MC68HC11 is
configured for Master Mode (MSTR = 1), Clock Polarity bit
(CPOL) = 0, and the Clock Phase bit (CPHA) = 1. The SPI is
configured by writing to the SPI control register (SPCR)—see
the 68HC11 User Manual. SCK of the 68HC11 drives the SCLK
of the AD5382, the MOSI output drives the serial data line (DIN)
of the AD5382, and the MISO input is driven from DOUT. The
SYNC signal is derived from a port line (PC7). When data is
MISO
SDO
MOSI
DIN
SCK
SCLK
PC7
SYNC
SPI/I2C
Figure 34. AD5382-to-MC68HC11 Interface
µCONTROLLER/
DSP PROCESSOR*
AD5382
D15
REG1
REG0
D13
DATA
BUS
D0
D0
ADDRESS
DECODE
CS
LDAC
A4
A4
A3
A3
A2
A2
A1
A1
A0
A0
WR
R/W
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY
Figure 35. AD5382-to-Parallel Interface
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 40
03733-0-005
UPPER BITS OF
ADDRESS BUS
AD5382
SER/PAR
03733-0-004
Parallel Interface
AD5382
AD5382 to PIC16C6x/7x
DVDD
AD5382
SER/PAR
SDO
SDO/RC5
DIN
SCK/RC3
SCLK
RA1
SYNC
SPI/I2C
03733-0-006
RESET
SDI/RC4
Figure 36. AD5382-to-PIC16C6x/7x Interface
RESET
RxD
SDO
DIN
TxD
SCLK
P1.1
SYNC
SPI/I2C
Figure 37. AD5382-to-8051 Interface
AD5382 to ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103
Figure 38 shows a serial interface between the AD5382 and the
ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103. The ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103 should
be set up to operate in SPORT transmit alternate framing mode.
The ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103 SPORT is programmed through
the SPORT control register and should be configured as follows:
internal clock operation, active low framing, and 16-bit word
length. Transmission is initiated by writing a word to the Tx
register after the SPORT has been enabled.
ADSP-2101/
ADSP-2103
AD5382 to 8051
AD5382
SER/PAR
03733-0-007
The PIC16C6x/7x synchronous serial port (SSP) is configured
as an SPI master with the Clock Polarity bit = 0. This is done by
writing to the synchronous serial port control register
(SSPCON). See the PIC16/17 Microcontroller User Manual. In
this example I/O, port RA1 is being used to pulse SYNC and
enable the serial port of the AD5382. This microcontroller
transfers only eight bits of data during each serial transfer
operation; therefore, three consecutive read/write operations
may be needed depending on the mode. Figure 36 shows the
connection diagram.
PIC16C6X/7X
DVDD
8XC51
DVDD
AD5382
SER/PAR
RESET
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 40
DR
SDO
DT
DIN
SCK
TFS
RFS
SCLK
SYNC
SPI/I2C
Figure 38. AD5382-to-ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103 Interface
03733-0-008
The AD5382 requires a clock synchronized to the serial data.
The 8051 serial interface must therefore be operated in Mode 0.
In this mode, serial data enters and exits through RxD, and a
shift clock is output on TxD. Figure 37 shows how the 8051 is
connected to the AD5382. Because the AD5382 shifts data out
on the rising edge of the shift clock and latches data in on the
falling edge, the shift clock must be inverted. The AD5382
requires its data to be MSB first. Since the 8051 outputs the LSB
first, the transmit routine must take this into account.
AD5382
APPLICATION INFORMATION
In any circuit where accuracy is important, careful consideration of the power supply and ground return layout helps to
ensure the rated performance. The printed circuit board on
which the AD5382 is mounted should be designed so that the
analog and digital sections are separated and confined to
certain areas of the board. If the AD5382 is in a system where
multiple devices require an AGND-to-DGND connection, the
connection should be made at one point only, a star ground
point established as close to the device as possible.
For supplies with multiple pins (AVDD, DVDD), these pins should
be tied together. The AD5382 should have ample supply bypassing of 10 µF in parallel with 0.1 µF on each supply, located as
close to the package as possible and ideally right up against the
device. The 10 µF capacitors are the tantalum bead type. The
0.1 µF capacitor should have low effective series resistance
(ESR) and effective series inductance (ESI), like the common
ceramic types that provide a low impedance path to ground at
high frequencies, to handle transient currents due to internal
logic switching.
The power supply lines of the AD5382 should use as large a
trace as possible to provide low impedance paths and reduce the
effects of glitches on the power supply line. Fast switching
signals such as clocks should be shielded with digital ground to
avoid radiating noise to other parts of the board, and should
never be run near the reference inputs. A ground line routed
between the DIN and SCLK lines will help reduce crosstalk
between them (this is not required on a multilayer board
because there will be a separate ground plane, but separating the
lines will help). It is essential to minimize noise on the VIN and
REFIN lines.
an ADR421 or ADR431 2.5 V reference. Suitable external
references for the AD5382-3 include the ADR280 1.2 V
reference. The reference should be decoupled at the
REFOUT/REFIN pin of the device with a 0.1 µF capacitor.
AVDD
DVDD
0.1µF
10µF
ADR431/
ADR421
0.1µF
AVDD
DVDD
REFOUT/REFIN
0.1µF
VOUT0
AD5382-5
REFGND
VOUT31
DAC
GND
SIGNAL
GND
AGND
DGND
03733-0-009
POWER SUPPLY DECOUPLING
Figure 39. Typical Configuration with External Reference
Figure 40 shows a typical configuration when using the internal
reference. On power-up, the AD5382 defaults to an external
reference; therefore, the internal reference needs to be
configured and turned on via a write to the AD5382 control
register. Control Register Bit CR12 allows the user choose the
reference value; Bit CR 10 is used to select the internal
reference. It is recommended to use the 2.5 V reference when
AVDD = 5 V, and the 1.25 V reference when AVDD = 3 V.
AVDD
DVDD
0.1µF
10µF
Avoid crossover of digital and analog signals. Traces on opposite
sides of the board should run at right angles to each other. This
reduces the effects of feedthrough through the board. A microstrip technique is by far the best, but is not always possible with
a double-sided board. In this technique, the component side of
the board is dedicated to the ground plane while signal traces
are placed on the solder side.
0.1µF
AVDD
DVDD
REFOUT/REFIN
0.1µF
VOUT0
AD5382
REFGND
VOUT31
SIGNAL
GND AGND
DGND
03733-0-010
DAC
GND
TYPICAL CONFIGURATION CIRCUIT
Figure 39 shows a typical configuration for the AD5382-5 when
configured for use with an external reference. In the circuit
shown, all AGND, SIGNAL_GND, and DAC_GND pins are tied
together to a common AGND. AGND and DGND are
connected together at the AD5382 device. On power-up, the
AD5382 defaults to external reference operation. All AVDD lines
are connected together and driven from the same 5 V source. It
is recommended to decouple close to the device with a 0.1 µF
ceramic and a 10 µF tantalum capacitor. In this application, the
reference for the AD5382-5 is provided externally from either
Figure 40. Typical Configuration with Internal Reference
Digital connections have been omitted for clarity. The AD5382
contains an internal power- on reset circuit with a 10 ms
brownout time. If the power supply ramp rate exceeds 10 ms,
the user should reset the AD5382 as part of the initialization
process to ensure the calibration data gets loaded correctly into
the device.
Rev. 0 | Page 33 of 40
AD5382
AD5382 MONITOR FUNCTION
The AD5382 contains a channel monitor function that consists
of a multiplexer addressed via the interface, allowing any channel output to be routed to this pin for monitoring using an
external ADC. The channel monitor function must be enabled
in the control register before any channels are routed to
MON_OUT. Table 18 contains the decoding information
required to route any channel to MON_OUT. External signals
within the AD5382’s absolute max input range can be connected
to the MON_IN pins and monitored at MON_OUT. Selecting
Channel Address 63 three-states MON_OUT. Figure 41 shows a
typical monitoring circuit implemented using a 12-bit SAR
ADC in a 6-lead SOT-23 package. The controller output port
selects the channel to be monitored, and the input port reads
the converted data from the ADC.
TOGGLE MODE FUNCTION
The toggle mode function allows an output signal to be generated using the LDAC control signal that switches between two
DAC data registers. This function is configured using the SFR
control register as follows. A write with REG1 = REG0 = 0 and
A4–A0 = 01100 specifies a control register write. The toggle
mode function is enabled in groups of eight channels using bits
CR5 to CR2 in the control register. See the AD5382 control
register description. Figure 42 shows a block diagram of toggle
mode implementation. Each of the 32 DAC channels on the
AD5382 contain an A and B data register. Note that the B
registers can only be loaded when toggle mode is enabled. The
sequence of events when configuring the AD5382 for toggle
mode is
1.
2.
3.
4.
Enable toggle mode for the required channels via the
control register.
Load data to A registers.
Load data to B registers.
Apply LDAC.
The LDAC is used to switch between the A and B registers in
determining the analog output. The first LDAC configures the
output to reflect the data in the A registers. This mode offers
significant advantages if the user wants to generate a square
wave at the output of all 32 channels, as might be required to
drive a liquid crystal based variable optical attenuator. In this
case, the user writes to the control register and enables the
toggle function by setting CR5 to CR2 = 1, thus enabling the
four groups of eight for toggle mode operation. The user must
then load data to all 32 A and B registers. Toggling LDAC will
set the output values to reflect the data in the A and B registers.
The frequency of the LDAC determines the frequency of the
square wave output.
Toggle mode is disabled via the control register. The first LDAC
following the disabling of the toggle mode will update the
outputs with the data contained in the A registers.
AVCC
AVCC
REFOUT/REFIN
AD780/
ADR431
DIN
SYNC
SCLK
OUTPUT PORT
MON_IN1
AVCC
MON_IN2
AD7476 CS
MON_OUT
VIN
AD5382
INPUT PORT
GND
AGND
CONTROLLER
DAC_GND SIGNAL_GND
03733-0-011
VOUT31
SCLK
SDATA
VOUT0
Figure 41. Typical Channel Monitoring Circuit
Rev. 0 | Page 34 of 40
AD5382
DATA
REGISTER
A
DAC
REGISTER
14-BIT DAC
VOUT
LDAC
CONTROL INPUT
A/B
03731-0-029
DATA
REGISTER
B
INPUT
INPUT
DATA REGISTER
Figure 42. Toggle Mode Function
+5V
OUTPUT RANGE
0–200V
0.01µF
REFOUT REFIN
AVDD
VO1
14-BIT DAC
G = 50
14-BIT DAC
VO31
ACTUATORS
FOR MEMS
MIRROR
ARRAY
SENSOR
AND
MULTIPLEXER
8-CHANNEL ADC
(AD7856)
OR
SINGLE CHANNEL
ADC (AD7671)
G = 50
ADSP-21065L
03733-0-012
AD5382
Figure 43. AD5382 in a MEMS Based Optical Switch
THERMAL MONITOR FUNCTION
AD5382 IN A MEMS BASED OPTICAL SWITCH
The AD5382 contains a temperature shutdown function to
protect the chip in case multiple outputs are shorted. The short
circuit current of each output amplifier is typically 40 mA.
Operating the AD5382 at 5 V leads to a power dissipation of
200 mW per shorted amplifier. With five channels shorted, this
leads to an extra watt of power dissipation. For the 100-lead
LQFP, the θJA is typically 44°C/W.
In their feed-forward control paths, MEMS based optical
switches require high resolution DACs that offer high channel
density with 14-bit monotonic behavior. The 32-channel, 14-bit
AD5382 DAC satisfies these requirements. In the circuit in
Figure 43, the 0 V to 5 V outputs of the AD5382 are amplified to
achieve an output range of 0 V to 200 V, which is used to control
actuators that determine the position of MEMS mirrors in an
optical switch. The exact position of each mirror is measured
using sensors. The sensor outputs are multiplexed into a high
resolution ADC in determining the mirror position. The control
loop is closed and driven by an ADSP-21065L, a 32-bit SHARC®
DSP with an SPI compatible SPORT interface. The ADSP21065L writes data to the DAC, controls the multiplexer, and
reads data from the ADC via the serial interface.
The thermal monitor is enabled by the user via CR8 in the
control register. The output amplifiers on the AD5382 are
automatically powered down if the die temperature exceeds
approximately 130°C. After a thermal shutdown has occurred,
the user can re-enable the part by executing a soft power-up if
the temperature has dropped below 130°C or by turning off the
thermal monitor function via the control register.
Rev. 0 | Page 35 of 40
AD5382
OPTICAL ATTENUATORS
Based on its high channel count, high resolution, monotonic
behavior, and high level of integration, the AD5382 is ideally
targeted at optical attenuation applications used in dynamic
gain equalizers, variable optical attenuators (VOA), and optical
add-drop multiplexers (OADM). In these applications, each
wavelength is individually extracted using an arrayed wave
ADD
PORTS
guide; its power is monitored using a photodiode, transimpedance amplifier and ADC in a closed-loop control system. The
AD5382 controls the optical attenuator for each wavelength,
ensuring that the power is equalized in all wavelengths before
being multiplexed onto the fiber. This prevents information loss
and saturation from occurring at amplification stages further
along the fiber.
DROP
PORTS
OPTICAL
SWITCH
11
12
DWDM
IN
PHOTODIODES
ATTENUATOR
DWDM
OUT
ATTENUATOR
FIBRE AWG
AWG FIBRE
1n–1
1n
ATTENUATOR
ATTENUATOR
TIA/LOG AMP
(AD8304/AD8305)
N:1 MULTIPLEXER
CONTROLLER
16-BIT ADC
ADG731
(32:1 MUX)
AD7671
(0-5V, 1MSPS)
Figure 44. OADM Using the AD5382 as Part of an Optical Attenuator
Rev. 0 | Page 36 of 40
03733-0-013
AD5382,
32-CHANNEL,
14-BIT DAC
AD5382
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
16.00 BSC SQ
1.60 MAX
0.75
0.60
0.45
SEATING
PLANE
14.00 BSC SQ
12°
TYP
100
1
76
75
PIN 1
12.00
REF
TOP VIEW
(PINS DOWN)
10°
6°
2°
1.45
1.40
1.35
0.15
0.05
SEATING
PLANE
0.20
0.09
VIEW A
7°
3.5°
0°
0.08 MAX
COPLANARITY
25
51
50
26
0.50 BSC
VIEW A
0.27
0.22
0.17
ROTATED 90° CCW
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MS-026BED
Figure 45. 100-Lead Leaded Quad Flatpack [LQFP]
(ST-100)
Dimensions shown in millimeters
ORDERING GUIDE
Model
AD5382BST-3
AD5382BST-3-REEL
AD5382BST-5
AD5382BST-5-REEL
EVAL-AD5382EB
Resolution
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
14 Bits
Temperature Range
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
AVDD
Range
2.7 V to 3.6 V
2.7 V to 3.6 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
4.5 V to 5.5 V
Rev. 0 | Page 37 of 40
Output
Channels
40
40
40
40
Linearity
Error
±4 LSB
±4 LSB
±4 LSB
±4 LSB
Package
Description
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
100-Lead LQFP
Evaluation Kit
Package
Option
ST-100
ST-100
ST-100
ST-100
AD5382
NOTES
Rev. 0 | Page 38 of 40
AD5382
NOTES
Rev. 0 | Page 39 of 40
AD5382
NOTES
Purchase of licensed I2C components of Analog Devices or one of its sublicensed Associated Companies conveys a license for the purchaser under the Philips I2C Patent
Rights to use these components in an I2C system, provided that the system conforms to the I2C Standard Specification as defined by Philips.
© 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
D03733–0–5/04(0)
Rev. 0 | Page 40 of 40
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