AD AD871SE Complete 12-bit 5 msps monolithic a/d converter Datasheet

a
FEATURES
Monolithic 12-Bit 5 MSPS A/D Converter
Low Noise: 0.17 LSB RMS Referred to Input
No Missing Codes Guaranteed
Differential Nonlinearity Error: 0.5 LSB
Signal-to-Noise and Distortion Ratio: 68 dB
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range: 73 dB
Power Dissipation: 1.03 W
Complete: On-Chip Track-and-Hold Amplifier and
Voltage Reference
Pin Compatible with the AD872
Twos Complement Binary Output Data
Out of Range Indicator
28-Lead Side Brazed Ceramic DIP or 44-Terminal
Surface Mount Package
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The AD871 is a monolithic 12-bit, 5 MSPS analog-to-digital
converter with an on-chip, high performance track-and-hold
amplifier and voltage reference. The AD871 uses a multistage
differential pipelined architecture with error correction logic to
provide 12-bit accuracy at 5 MSPS data rates and guarantees no
missing codes over the full operating temperature range. The
AD871 is a redesigned variation of the AD872 12-bit, 10 MSPS
ADC, optimized for lower noise in applications requiring sampling rates of 5 MSPS or less. The AD871 is pin compatible
with the AD872, allowing the parts to be used interchangeably
as system requirements change.
The low-noise input track-and-hold (T/H) of the AD871 is ideally suited for high-end imaging applications. In addition, the
T/H’s high input impedance and fast settling characteristics
allow the AD871 to easily interface with multiplexed systems
that switch multiple signals through a single A/D converter. The
dynamic performance of the input T/H also renders the AD871
suitable for sampling single channel inputs at frequencies up to
and beyond the Nyquist rate. The AD871 provides both reference output and reference input pins, allowing the onboard reference to serve as a system reference. An external reference can
also be chosen to suit the dc accuracy and temperature drift
requirements of the application. A single clock input is used to
control all internal conversion cycles. The digital output data is
presented in twos complement binary output format. An out-ofrange signal indicates an overflow condition, and can be used
with the most significant bit to determine low or high overflow.
Complete 12-Bit 5 MSPS
Monolithic A/D Converter
AD871
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
DVDD DGND
AVDD AGND AVSS
*DRVDD *DRGND
AD871
VINA
T/H
T/H
A/D
T/H
VINB
A/D
D/A
A/D
4
D/A
A/D
4
CLOCK
D/A
4
3
CORRECTION LOGIC
REF IN
REF OUT
+2.5V
REFERENCE
OUTPUT BUFFERS
12
REF OUT
*OUTPUT
ENABLE
OTR
*MSB
MSB–BIT 12
(LSB)
*ONLY AVAILABLE ON 44 -TERMINAL SURFACE MOUNT PACKAGE
The AD871 is fabricated on Analog Devices’ ABCMOS-1 process, which uses high speed bipolar and CMOS transistors on a
single chip. High speed, precision analog circuits are now combined with high density logic circuits.
The AD871 is packaged in a 28-lead ceramic DIP and a
44-terminal leadless ceramic surface mount package and is
specified for operation from 0°C to +70°C and –55°C to
+125°C.
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
The AD871 offers a complete single-chip sampling 12-bit,
5 MSPS analog-to-digital conversion function in a 28-lead DIP
or 44-terminal leadless ceramic surface mount package (LCC).
Low Noise—The AD871 features 0.17 LSB referred-to-input
noise, producing essentially a “1 code wide” histogram for a
code-centered dc input.
Low Power—The AD871 at 1.03 W consumes a fraction of the
power of presently available hybrids.
On-Chip Track-and-Hold (T/H)—The low noise, high impedance T/H input eliminates the need for external buffers and can
be configured for single ended or differential inputs.
Ease of Use—The AD871 is complete with T/H and voltage reference and is pin-compatible with the AD872 (12-bit, 10 MSPS
monolithic ADC).
Out of Range (OTR)—The OTR output bit indicates when the
input signal is beyond the AD871’s input range.
REV. A
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
which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or
otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781/329-4700
World Wide Web Site: http://www.analog.com
Fax: 781/326-8703
© Analog Devices, Inc., 1997
AD871–SPECIFICATIONS
AD871
(T to T with AV
DC SPECIFICATIONS noted)
MIN
MAX
DD
= +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, AVSS = –5 V, fSAMPLE = 5 MHz, unless otherwise
Parameter
J Grade1
S Gradel
Units
RESOLUTION
12
12
Bits min
MAX CONVERSION RATE
5
5
MHz min
INPUT REFERRED NOISE
0.17
0.17
LSB rms typ
ACCURACY
Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
No Missing Codes
Zero Error (@ +25°C)2
Gain Error (@ +25°C)2
± 1.5
± 0.5
12
± 0.75
± 1.25
± 1.5
± 0.5
12
± 0.75
± 1.25
LSB typ
LSB typ
Bits Guaranteed
% FSR max
% FSR max
TEMPERATURE DRIFT3
Zero Error
Gain Error3, 4
Gain Error3, 5
± 0.15
± 0.80
± 0.25
± 0.3
± 1.75
± 0.50
% FSR max
% FSR max
% FSR max
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION6
AVDD, DVDD (+5 V ± 0.25 V)
AVSS (–5 V ± 0.25 V)
± 0.125
± 0.125
± 0.125
± 0.125
% FSR max
% FSR max
ANALOG INPUT
Input Range
Input Resistance
Input Capacitance
±1
50
10
±1
50
10
Volts max
kΩ typ
pF typ
INTERNAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE
Output Voltage
Output Voltage Tolerance
Output Current (Available for External Loads)
(External load should not change during conversion.)
2.5
± 20
2.0
2.5
± 40
2.0
Volts typ
mV max
mA typ
REFERENCE INPUT RESISTANCE
5
5
kΩ typ
+5
–5
+5
+5
+5
–5
+5
+5
V (± 5% AVDD Operating)
V (± 5% AVSS Operating)
V (± 5% DVDD Operating)
V (± 5% DRVDD Operating)
87
147
20
2
88
150
21
2
mA max (82 mA typ)
mA max (115 mA typ)
mA max (7 mA typ)
mA max
1.03
1.25
1.03
1.3
W typ
W max
POWER SUPPLIES
Supply Voltages
AVDD
AVSS
DVDD
DRVDD7
Supply Current
IAVDD
IAVSS
IDVDD
IDRVDD7
POWER CONSUMPTION
NOTES
1
Temperature ranges are as follows: J Grade: 0°C to +70°C, S Grade: –55°C to +125°C.
2
Adjustable to zero with external potentiometers (see Zero and Gain Error Calibration section).
3
+25°C to TMIN and +25°C to TMAX.
4
Includes internal voltage reference error.
5
Excludes internal reference drift.
6
Change in Gain Error as a function of the dc supply voltage (V NOMINAL to VMIN, VNOMINAL to VMAX).
7
LCC package only.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
–2–
REV. A
AD871
(TMIN to TMAX with AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, AVSS = –5 V, fSAMPLE = 5 MSPS, unless otherwise
AC SPECIFICATIONS noted)
1
J Grade
S Grade
Units
68
66
63
60
68
66
62
60
dB typ
dB typ
dB min
dB typ
–72
–69
–64
–62
–72
–69
–63
–62
dB typ
dB typ
dB max
dB typ
SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR)
fINPUT = 750 kHz
fINPUT = 1 MHz
fINPUT = 2.49 MHz
73
70
62
73
70
62
dB typ
dB typ
dB typ
INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD)2
Second Order Products
Third Order Products
–80
–73
–80
–73
dB typ
dB typ
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH
15
15
MHz typ
SMALL SIGNAL BANDWIDTH
15
15
MHz typ
APERTURE DELAY
6
6
ns typ
APERTURE JITTER
16
16
ps rms typ
ACQUISITION TO FULL-SCALE STEP
80
80
ns typ
OVERVOLTAGE RECOVERY TIME
80
80
ns typ
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE AND DISTORTION RATIO (S/N+D)
fINPUT = 750 kHz
fINPUT = 1 MHz
fINPUT = 2.49 MHz
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD)
fINPUT = 750 kHz
fINPUT = 1 MHz
fINPUT = 2.49 MHz
NOTES
1
fIN amplitude = –0.5 dB full scale unless otherwise indicated. All measurements referred to a 0 dB (1 V pk) input signal unless otherwise indicated.
2
fa = 1.0 MHz, fb = 0.95 MHz with f SAMPLE = 5 MHz.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
DIGITAL SPECIFICATIONS (T
MIN
to TMAX with AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, AVSS = –5 V unless otherwise noted)
Parameter
Symbol
J, S Grades
Units
LOGIC INPUTS
High Level Input Voltage
Low Level Input Voltage
High Level Input Current (VIN = DVDD)
Low Level Input Current (VIN = 0 V)
Input Capacitance
VIH
VIL
IIH
IIL
CIN
+2.0
+0.8
± 115
± 115
5
V min
V max
µA max
µA max
pF typ
LOGIC OUTPUTS
High Level Output Voltage (IOH = 0.5 mA)
Low Level Output Voltage (IOL = 1.6 mA)
Output Capacitance
Leakage (Three-State, LCC Only)
VOH
VOL
COUT
IZ
+2.4
+0.4
5
± 10
V min
V max
pF typ
µA max
Specifications subject to change without notice.
REV. A
–3–
AD871
SWITCHING SPECIFICATIONS
(TMIN to TMAX with AVDD = +5 V, DVDD = +5 V, DRVDD = +5 V, AVSS = –5 V; VIL = 0.8 V,
VIH = 2.0 V, VOL = 0.4 V and VOH = 2.4 V)
Parameter
Symbol
J, S Grades
Units
Clock Period
CLOCK Pulsewidth High
CLOCK Pulsewidth Low
Clock Duty Cycle2
tC
tCH
tCL
Output Delay
Pipeline Delay (Latency)
Data Access Time (LCC Package Only)3
Output Float Delay (LCC Package Only)3
tOD
200
95
95
40
60
10
3
50
50
ns min
ns min
ns min
% min (50% typ)
% max
ns min (20 ns typ)
Clock Cycles
ns typ (100 pF Load)
ns typ (10 pF Load)
l
tDD
tHL
NOTES
1
Conversion rate is operational down to 10 kHz without degradation in specified performance.
2
For clock periods of 200 ns or greater, see Clock Input section.
3
See section on Three-State Outputs for timing diagrams and application information.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
N
N+1
VIN
tC
CLOCK
N
tCH
N+1
tCL
tOD
BIT 2–12
MSB, OTR
DATA
N
DATA
N+1
Figure 1. Timing Diagram
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS 1
Parameter
With Respect to
Min
Max
Units
AVDD
AVSS
DVDD, DRVDD
DRVDD2
DRGND2
AGND
AVDD
Clock Input, OEN
Digital Outputs
VINA, VINB REF IN
REF IN
Junction Temperature
Storage Temperature
Lead Temperature (10 sec)
AGND
AGND
DGND, DRGND
DVDD
DGND
DGND
DVDD
DGND
DGND
AGND
AGND
–0.5
–6.5
–0.5
–6.5
–0.3
–1.0
–6.5
–0.5
–0.5
–6.5
AVSS
+6.5
+0.5
+6.5
+6.5
+0.3
+1.0
+6.5
DVDD + 0.5
DVDD + 0.3
+6.5
AVDD
+150
+150
+300
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
Volts
°C
°C
°C
–65
NOTES
1
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of
the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum
ratings for extended periods may affect device reliability.
2
LCC Package Only.
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 the AD871 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.
–4–
WARNING!
ESD SENSITIVE DEVICE
REV. A
AD871
PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Symbol
DIP
Pin No.
LCC
Pin No.
Type
Name and Function
VINA
VINB
AVSS
AVDD
AGND
DGND
DVDD
BIT 12 (LSB)
BIT 2–BIT 11
MSB
1
2
3, 25
4
5, 24
6, 23
7, 22
8
18–9
19
1
2
5, 40
6, 38
9, 36
10
33
16
26–17
29
AI
AI
P
P
P
P
P
DO
DO
DO
OTR
20
30
DO
CLK
21
31
DI
REF OUT
REF GND
REF IN
BIT 1 (MSB)
DRVDD
DRGND
26
27
28
N/A
N/A
N/A
41
42
43
27
12, 32
11, 34
AO
AI
AI
DO
P
P
OEN
NC
N/A
N/A
13
3, 4, 7, 8, 14, 15,
28, 35, 37, 39, 44
DI
(+) Analog Input Signal on the differential input amplifier.
(–) Analog Input Signal on the differential input amplifier.
–5 V Analog Supply.
+5 V Analog Supply.
Analog Ground.
Digital Ground.
+5 V Digital Supply.
Least Significant Bit.
Data Bits 2 through 11.
Inverted Most Significant Bit. Provides twos complement output
data format.
Out of Range is Active HIGH on the leading edge of code 0 or
the trailing edge of code 4096. See Output Data Format Table III.
Clock Input. The AD871 will initiate a conversion on the rising
edge of the clock input. See the Timing Diagram for details.
+2.5 V Reference Output. Tie to REF IN for normal operation.
Reference Ground.
Reference Input. +2.5 V input gives ± 1 V full-scale range.
Most Significant Bit.
+5 V Digital Supply for the output drivers.
Digital Ground for the output drivers.
(See section on Power Supply Decoupling for details on
DRVDD and DRGND.)
Output Enable. See the Three State Output Timing Diagram for details.
No Connect.
TYPE: AI = Analog Input; AO = Analog Output; DI = Digital Input; DO = Digital Output; P = Power; N/A = Not Available on 28-lead DIP, available only on
44-terminal surface mount package.
PIN CONFIGURATIONS
DVDD
BIT 12 (LSB)
BIT 11
AD871
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
NC
AGND
DGND
DRGND
DGND
DVDD
OTR
MSB
BIT 9
BIT 2
BIT 8
BIT 3
BIT 7
BIT 4
BIT 6
BIT 5
NC
VINB
VINA
NC
9
10
11
AD871
NC
AVDD
NC
36 AGND
35 NC
38
DRGND
DVDD
32 DRVDD
34
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
33
NC 15
BIT 12 (LSB) 16
BIT 11 17
30
CLK
OTR
29
MSB
31
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
–5–
39
37
NC = NO CONNECT
REV. A
REF OUT
AVSS
NC
PIN 1
IDENTIFIER
8
DRVDD 12
OEN 13
NC 14
CLK
BIT 10
44 43 42 41 40
BIT 10
DGND
1
2
BIT 2
BIT 1 (MSB)
NC
AGND
3
BIT 3
AGND
4
BIT 5
BIT 4
AVSS
5
BIT 6
AVDD
6
NC 7
BIT 7
REF OUT
AVSS
REF GND
AVSS
AVDD
REF IN
VINB
BIT 9
BIT 8
VINA
REF IN
REF GND
44-Terminal LCC
28-Lead Side Brazed Ceramic DIP
AD871
DEFINITIONS OF SPECIFICATIONS
OVERVOLTAGE RECOVERY TIME
LINEARITY ERROR
Overvoltage recovery time is defined as that amount of time
required for the ADC to achieve a specified accuracy after an
overvoltage (50% greater than full-scale range), measured from
the time the overvoltage signal reenters the converter’s range.
Linearity error refers to the deviation of each individual code
from a line drawn from “negative full scale” through “positive
full scale.” The point used as “negative full scale” occurs
1/2 LSB before the first code transition. “Positive full scale” is
defined as a level 1 1/2 LSB beyond the last code transition.
The deviation is measured from the middle of each particular
code to the true straight line.
DIFFERENTIAL LINEARITY ERROR (DNL, NO MISSING
CODES)
An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions that are exactly 1 LSB
apart. DNL is the deviation from this ideal value. Guaranteed
no missing codes to 12-bit resolution indicates that all 4096
codes must be present over all operating ranges.
DYNAMIC SPECIFICATIONS
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE AND DISTORTION (S/N+D) RATIO
S/N+D is the ratio of the rms value of the measured input signal
to the rms sum of all other spectral components below the
Nyquist frequency, including harmonics but excluding dc. The
value for S/N+D is expressed in decibels.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD)
THD is the ratio of the rms sum of the first six harmonic components to the rms value of the measured input signal and is
expressed as a percentage or in decibels.
ZERO ERROR
The major carry transition should occur for an analog value 1/2
LSB below analog common. Zero error is defined as the deviation of the actual transition from that point. The zero error and
temperature drift specify the initial deviation and maximum
change in the zero error over temperature.
INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD)
The first code transition should occur for an analog value 1/2
LSB above nominal negative full scale. The last transition
should occur for an analog value 1 1/2 LSB below the nominal
positive full scale. Gain error is the deviation of the actual difference between first and last code transitions and the ideal difference between first and last code transitions.
With inputs consisting of sine waves at two frequencies, fa and
fb, any device with nonlinearities will create distortion products,
of order (m + n), at sum and difference frequencies of mfa ±
nfb, where m, n = 0, 1, 2, 3 . . . . Intermodulation terms are
those for which m or n is not equal to zero. For example, the
second order terms are (fa + fb) and (fa – fb), and the third order terms are (2 fa + fb), (2 fa – fb), (fa + 2 fb) and (2 fb – fa).
The IMD products are expressed as the decibel ratio of the rms
sum of the measured input signals to the rms sum of the distortion terms. The two signals are of equal amplitude and the peak
value of their sums is –0.5 dB from full scale. The IMD products are normalized to a 0 dB input signal.
TEMPERATURE DRIFT
FULL-POWER BANDWIDTH
The temperature drift for zero error and gain error specifies the
maximum change from the initial (25°C) value to the value at
TMIN or TMAX.
The full-power bandwidth is that input frequency at which the
amplitude of the reconstructed fundamental is reduced by 3 dB
for a full-scale input.
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION
SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
The specifications show the maximum change in the converter’s
full-scale as the supplies are varied from nominal to min/max
values.
The difference, in dB, between the rms amplitude of the input
signal and the peak spurious signal.
GAIN ERROR
ORDERING GUIDE
APERTURE JITTER
Aperture jitter is the variation in aperture delay for successive
samples and is manifested as noise on the input to the A/D.
APERTURE DELAY
Aperture delay is a measure of the Track-and-Hold Amplifier
(THA) performance and is measured from the rising edge of the
clock input to when the input signal is held for conversion.
Model
Temperature Range
Package Option1
AD871JD
AD871JE
AD871SD2
AD871SE2
0°C to +70°C
0°C to +70°C
–55°C to +125°C
–55°C to +125°C
D-28
E-44A
D-28
E-44A
NOTES
1
D = Side Brazed Ceramic DIP, E = Leadless Ceramic Chip Carrier.
2
MIL-STD-883 version will be available; contact factory.
–6–
REV. A
Dynamic Characteristics–Sample Rate: 5 MSPS–AD871
62
69.5
65
68.5
68
–0.5dB
66.5
65.5
THD
71
AMPLITUDE – dB
S/ (N+D) – dB
67.5
–0.6dB
64.5
3RD
HARMONIC
74
77
2ND
HARMONIC
80
83
86
89
63.5
92
62.5
95
98
61.5
10k
100k
1M
10M
10k
100k
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
1M
Figure 2. AD871 S/(N+D) vs. Input Frequency
Figure 3. AD871 Distortion vs. Input Frequency,
Full-Scale Input
1
HARMONICS – dB
fIN = 1MHz
2ND
3RD
4TH
5TH
6TH
7TH
8TH
9TH
fIN Amplitude = –0.5dB
15dB/ DIV
THD = –69dB
S/(N+D) = 66dB
SFDR = 70dB
–80
–70
–96
–85
–90
–95
–90
–101
3
2
5
6
8
7
4 9
Figure 4. AD871 Typical FFT, fIN = 1 MHz, fIN Amplitude = –0.5 dB
1
fIN = 1MHz
fIN AMPLITUDE = –6.0dB
HARMONICS – dB
2ND
3RD
4TH
5TH
6TH
7TH
8TH
9TH
15dB/ DIV
THD = –77dB
S/(N+D) = 65dB
SFDR = 74dB
–82
–79
–93
–95
–94
–95
–98
–94
2 3
5
6
4 9
7
8
Figure 5. AD871 Typical FFT, fIN = 1 MHz, fIN Amplitude = –6 dB
REV. A
10M
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
–7–
AD871–Dynamic Characteristics–Sample Rate: 5 MSPS
1
fIN = 750kHz
fIN Amplitude = –0.5dB
HARMONICS – dB
2ND
3RD
4TH
5TH
6TH
7TH
8TH
9TH
15dB/ DIV
THD = –72dB
S/(N+D) = 68dB
SFDR = 73dB
3
2
5
6
–81
–73
–94
–85
–90
–99
–90
–103
8
4
2
9
Figure 6. AD871 Typical FFT, fIN = 750 kHz
1
fIN = 2MHz
fIN AMPLITUDE = –0.5dB
HARMONICS – dB
2ND
3RD
4TH
5TH
6TH
7TH
8TH
9TH
THD = –63dB
S/(N+D) = 61dB
SFDR = 63dB
15dB/ DIV
3
5
8 2
–87
–63
–95
–83
–88
–91
–88
–95
7
6 9
Figure 7. AD871 Typical FFT, fIN = 2 MHz
100
1635819
1500000
90
100 x p ($ CODE X + 1)
NUMBER OF CODE HITS
80
1000000
500000
70
60
s = 0.166 LSB RMS
50
40
30
20
1094
10
1487
0
0
–1
0
1
DEVIATION FROM CORRECT CODE (LSB)
CODE X
Figure 8. AD871 Output Code Histogram for DC Input
CODE X + 1
Figure 9. AD871 Code Probability at a Transition
–8–
REV. A
AD871
THEORY OF OPERATION
While the part uses both clock edges for its timing, jitter is only
a significant issue for the rising edge of the clock (see CLOCK
INPUT section).
The AD871 is implemented using a 4-stage pipelined multiple
flash architecture. A differential input track-and-hold amplifier
(THA) acquires the input and converts the input voltage into a
differential current. A 4-bit approximation of the input is made
by the first flash converter, and an accurate analog representation of this 4-bit guess is generated by a digital-to-analog converter. This approximation is subtracted from the THA output
to produce a remainder, or residue. This residue is then sampled
and held by the second THA, and a 4-bit approximation is generated and subtracted by the second stage. Once the second
THA goes into hold, the first stage goes back into track to acquire a new input signal. The third stage provides a 3-bit approximation/subtraction operation, and produces the final
residue, which is passed to a final 4-bit flash converter. The 15
output bits from the four flash converters are accumulated in
the correction logic block, which adds the bits together using the
appropriate correction algorithm, to produce the 12-bit output
word. The digital output, together with overrange indicator, is
latched into an output buffer to drive the output pins.
APPLYING THE AD871
ANALOG INPUTS
The AD871 features a high impedance differential input that
can readily operate on either single-ended or differential input
signals. Table I summarizes the nominal input voltage span for
both single-ended and differential modes, assuming a 2.5 V reference input.
Table I. Input Voltage Span
Single-Ended
Differential
The additional THA inserted in each stage of the AD871 architecture allows pipelining of the conversion. In essence, the converter is simultaneously converting multiple inputs serially,
processing them through the converter chain. This means that
while the converter is capable of capturing a new input sample
every clock cycle, it actually takes three clock cycles for the conversion to be fully processed and appear at the output. This
“pipeline delay” is often referred to as latency, and is not a concern in most applications; however, there are some cases where
it may be a consideration. For example, some applications call
for the A/D converter to be placed in a high speed feedback
loop, where its input is servoed to provide a desired result at the
digital output (e.g., offset calibration or zero restoration in video
applications). In these cases the 3 clock cycle delay through
the pipeline must be accounted for in the loop stability calculations. Also, because the converter is simultaneously working on
three conversions, major disruptions to the part (such as a large
glitch on the supplies or reference) may corrupt three data
samples. Finally, there will be a minimum clock rate below
which the THA droop corrupts the signal in the pipeline. In the
case of the AD871, this minimum clock rate is 10 kHz.
VINB
VINA–VINB
+1 V
–1 V
+0.5 V
–0.5 V
GND
GND
–0.5 V
+0.5 V
+1 V (Positive Full Scale)
–1 V (Negative Full Scale)
+1 V (Positive Full Scale)
–1 V (Negative Full Scale)
Figure 10 shows an approximate model for the analog input circuit. As this model indicates, when the input exceeds 1.6 V
(with respect to AGND), the input device may saturate, causing
the input impedance to drop substantially and significantly reducing the performance of the part. Input compliance in the
negative direction is somewhat larger, showing virtually no degradation in performance for inputs as low as –1.9 V.
+5V
1.75mA
+1.6V
VINA OR VINB
61V
5pF
AD871
–1.9V
1.75mA
–5V
Figure 10. AD871 Equivalent Analog Input Circuit
Figure 11 illustrates the effect of varying the common-mode
voltage of a –0.5 dB input signal on total harmonic distortion.
The high impedance differential inputs of the AD871 allow a
variety of input configurations (see Applying the AD871). The
AD871 converts the voltage difference between the VINA and
VINB pins. For single-ended applications, one input pin (VINA or
VINB) may be grounded, but even in this case the differential input can provide a performance boost: for example, for an input
coming from a coaxial cable, VINB can be tied to the shield
ground, allowing the AD871 to reject shield noise as common
mode. The high input impedance of the device minimizes external driving requirements and allows the user to externally select
the appropriate termination impedance for the application.
0
–10
–20
THD – dB
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
The AD871 clock circuitry uses both edges of the clock in its internal timing circuitry (see Specifications page for exact timing
requirements.) The AD871 samples the analog input on the rising edge of the clock input. During the clock low time (between
the falling edge and rising edge of the clock) the input THA is in
track mode; during the clock high time it is in hold. System disturbances just prior to the rising edge of the clock may cause the
part to acquire the wrong value, and should be minimized.
REV. A
VINA
–80
–90
–100
–1
0
CM INPUT VOLTAGE – Volts
1
Figure 11. AD871 Total Harmonic Distortion vs. CM Input
Voltage, fIN = 1 MHz, FS = 5 MSPS
–9–
AD871
Figure 12 shows the common-mode rejection performance vs.
frequency for a 1 V p-p common-mode input. This excellent
common-mode rejection over a wide bandwidth affords the user
the opportunity to eliminate many potential sources of input
noise as common mode by using the differential input structure
of the AD871.
562V
562V
VINA
U1
AD871
VIN
(60.5V)
536V
–40
536V
–50
U2
VINB
CMR – dB
–60
Figure 15. Single-Ended to Differential Connections;
U1, U2 = AD811 or AD9617
–70
The use of the differential input signal can help to minimize
even-order distortion from the input THA where performance
beyond –70 dB is desired.
–80
–90
Figure 16 shows the AD871 large signal (–0.5 dB) and small
signal (–20 dB) frequency response.
–100
10k
100k
1M
10M
10
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 12. Common-Mode Rejection vs. Input Frequency,
1 V p-p Input
0
61V
1
FUND AMP – dB
Figures 13 and 14 illustrate typical input connections for single
ended inputs.
VINA
AD871
2
–10
–20
VINB
–30
104
Figure 13. AD871 Single-Ended Input Connection
105
106
107
108
INPUT FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 16. Full Power (–0.5 dB) and Small Signal
Response (–20 dB) vs. Input Frequency
61V
1
VINA
AD871
RT
2
VINB
The AD871’s wide input bandwidth facilitates rapid acquisition
of transient input signals: the input THA can typically settle to
12-bit accuracy from a full-scale input step in less than 80 ns. Figure 17 illustrates the typical acquisition of a full-scale input step.
4400
4000
Figure 14. AD871 Single-Ended Input Connection Using a
Shielded Cable
3600
3200
MAGNITUDE – LSB
The cable shield is used as the ground connection for the VINB
input, providing the best possible rejection of the cable noise
from the input signal. Note also that the high input impedance
of the AD871 allows the user to select the termination impedance, be it 50 ohms, 75 ohms, or some other value. Furthermore, unlike many flash converters, most AD871 applications
will not require an external buffer amplifier. If such an amplifier
is required, we suggest either the AD811 or AD9617.
2800
2400
2000
1600
1200
800
400
Figure 15 illustrates how external amplifiers may be used to
convert a single-ended input into a differential signal. The resistor values of 536 Ω and 562 Ω were selected to provide optimum phase matching between U1 and U2.
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
TIME – ns
Figure 17. Typical AD871 Settling Time
–10–
REV. A
AD871
The wide input bandwidth and superior dynamic performance of
the input THA make the AD871 suitable for sampling inputs at
frequencies up to the Nyquist Rate. The input THA is designed
to recover rapidly from input overdrive conditions, returning
from a 50% overdrive in less than 100 ns.
Because of the THA’s exceptionally wide input bandwidth, some
users may find the AD871 is sensitive to noise at frequencies
from 10 MHz to 50 MHz that other converters are incapable of
responding to. This sensitivity can be mitigated by careful use of
the differential inputs (see previous paragraphs). Additionally,
Figure 18 shows how a small capacitor (10 pF – 20 pF for 50 Ω
terminated inputs) may be placed between VINA and VINB to help
reduce high frequency noise in applications where limiting the
input bandwidth is acceptable.
with an rms noise of 28 µV (using an external 1 µF capacitor),
contributes 24 µV (0.05 LSB) of noise to the transfer function
of the AD871.
The full-scale peak-to-peak input voltage is a function of the reference voltage, according to the equation:
(VINA – VINB) Full Scale = 0.8 × (VREF – REF GND)
Note that the AD871’s performance was optimized for a 2.5 V
reference input: performance may degrade somewhat for other
reference voltages. Figure 20 illustrates the S/(N+D) performance vs. reference voltage for a 1 MHz, –0.5 dB input signal.
Note also that if the reference is changed during a conversion,
all three conversions in the pipeline will be invalidated.
70
61V
1
VINA
2
S/(N + D) – dB
AD871
10 OR 20pF
VINB
Figure 18. Optional High Frequency Noise Reduction
The AD871 will contribute its own wideband thermal noise. As
a result of the integrated wideband noise (0.17 LSB rms,
referred-to-input), applying a dc analog input may produce more
than one code at the output. A histogram of the ADC output
codes, for a dc input voltage, will be between 1 and 3 codes
wide, depending on how well the input is centered on a given
code and how many samples are taken. Figure 8 shows a typical
AD871 code histogram, and Figure 9 illustrates the AD871’s
transition noise.
REFERENCE INPUT
The nominal reference input should be 2.5 V, taken with respect
to REFERENCE GROUND (REF GND). Figure 19 illustrates
the equivalent model for the reference input: there is no clock or
signal-dependent activity associated with the reference input circuitry, therefore no “kickback” into the reference.
50
1.5
1
2
2.5
3
3.5
REFERENCE INPUT VOLTAGE – Volts
Figure 20. S/(N+D) vs. Reference Input Voltage,
fIN = 1 MHz, FS = 5 MHz
Table II summarizes various 2.5 V references suitable for use
with the AD871, including the onboard bandgap reference (see
REFERENCE OUTPUT section).
Table II. Suitable 2.5 V References
REF-43B
AD680JN
Internal
AD871
REF IN
60
Drift (PPM/8C)
Initial Accuracy %
6 (max)
10 (max)
30 (typ)
0.2
0.4
0.4
5kV
(620%)
REF GND
If an external reference is connected to REF IN, REF OUT
must be connected to +5 V. This should lower the current in
REF GND to less than 350 µA and eliminate the need for a
1 µF capacitor, although decoupling the reference for noise
reduction purposes is recommended.
2
AVSS
Figure 19. Equivalent Reference Input Circuit
However, in order to realize the lowest noise performance of the
AD871, care should be taken to minimize noise at the reference
input.
Alternatively, Figure 21 shows how the AD871 may be driven
from other references by use of an external resistor. The external resistor forms a resistor divider with the on-chip 5 kΩ resistor to realize 2.5 V at the reference input pin (REF IN). A trim
potentiometer is needed to accommodate the tolerance of the
AD871’s 5 kΩ resistor.
The AD871’s reference input impedance is equal to 5 kΩ (± 20%),
and its effective noise bandwidth is 10 MHz, with a referredto-input noise gain of 0.8. For example, the internal reference,
REV. A
–11–
AD871
2.55
2.5V
R
+5V REF
2kV
2.54
AD871
REF IN
REFERENCE VOLTAGE – Volts
RT
3.9kV
5kV
REF GND
Figure 21. Optional +5 V Reference Input Circuit
REFERENCE GROUND
2.53
2.52
2.51
2.50
2.49
2.48
2.47
2.46
The REF GND pin provides the reference point for both the
reference input and the reference output. When the internal reference is operating, it will draw approximately 500 µA of current
through the reference ground, so a low impedance path to the
external common is desirable. The AD871 can tolerate a fairly
large difference between REF GND and AGND, up to
± 1 V, without any performance degradation.
2.45
–55
–35
–15
5
25
45
65
85
105
125
TEMPERATURE – 8C
Figure 23. Reference Output Voltage vs. Temperature
2.50
REFERENCE OUTPUT
REFERENCE VOLTAGE – V
2.48
The AD871 features an onboard, curvature compensated bandgap reference that has been laser trimmed for both absolute
value and temperature drift. The output stage of the reference
was designed to allow the use of an external capacitor to limit
the wideband noise. As Figure 22 illustrates, a 1 µF capacitor on
the reference output is required for stability of the reference output buffer. Note: If used, an external reference may become unstable with this capacitor in place.
2.46
2.44
2.42
2.40
1k
REF IN
1M
Figure 24. Reference Output Voltage vs. Output Load
AD871
0.1mF
10k
100k
REFERENCE OUTPUT LOAD – V
REF GND
DIGITAL OUTPUTS
In 28-lead packages, the AD871 output data is presented in
twos complement format. Table III indicates offset binary and
twos complement output for various analog inputs.
1mF
+
Table III. Output Data Format
REF OUT
Figure 22. Typical Reference Decoupling Connection
With this capacitor in place, the noise on the reference output is
approximately 28 µV rms at room temperature. Figure 23 shows
the typical temperature drift performance of the reference, while
Figure 24 illustrates the variation in reference voltage with load
currents.
The output stage is designed to provide at least 2 mA of output
current, allowing a single reference to drive up to four AD871s
or other external loads. The power supply rejection of the reference is better than 54 dB at dc.
Analog Input
VINA–VINB
Digital Output
Offset Binary
Twos Complement OTR
≥0.999756 V
0.999268 V
0V
–1 V
–1.000244 V
1111 1111 1111
1111 1111 1111
1000 0000 0000
0000 0000 0000
0000 0000 0000
0111 1111 1111
0111 1111 1111
0000 0000 0000
1000 0000 0000
1000 0000 0000
1
0
0
0
1
Users requiring offset binary encoding may simply invert the
MSB pin. In the 44-terminal surface mount packages, both
MSB and MSB bits are provided.
The AD871 features a digital out-of-range (OTR) bit that goes
high when the input exceeds positive full scale or falls below
negative full scale. As Table III indicates, the output bits will be
set appropriately according to whether it is an out-of-range high
condition or an out-of-range low condition. Note that if the input is driven beyond +1.5 V, the digital outputs may not stay at
+FS, but may actually fold back to midscale.
–12–
REV. A
AD871
THREE-STATE OUTPUTS
The 44-terminal surface mount AD871 offers three-state outputs. The digital outputs can be placed into a three-state mode
by pulling the OUTPUT ENABLE (OEN) pin LOW. Note that
this function is not intended to be used to pull the AD871 on
and off a bus at 5 MHz. Rather, it is intended to allow the ADC
to be pulled off the bus for evaluation or test modes. Also, to
avoid corruption of the sampled analog signal during conversion
(three clock cycles), it is highly recommended that the AD871
be placed on the bus prior to the first sampling.
As a result, careful selection of the logic family for the clock
driver, as well as the fanout and capacitive load on the clock
line, is important. Jitter-induced errors become more pronounced at higher frequency, large amplitude inputs, where the
input slew rate is greatest.
The AD871 is designed to support a sampling rate of 5 MSPS;
running at slightly faster clock rates may be possible, although at
reduced performance levels. Conversely, some slight performance improvements might be realized by clocking the AD871
at slower clock rates. Figure 27 presents the S/(N+D) vs. clock
frequency for a 1 MHz analog input.
75
S/(N+D) – dB
The AD871’s CMOS digital output drivers are sized to provide
sufficient output current to drive a wide variety of logic families.
However, large drive currents tend to cause glitches on the supplies and may affect S/(N+D) performance. Applications requiring the AD871 to drive large capacitive loads or large fanout
may require additional decoupling capacitors on DRVDD and
DVDD. In extreme cases, external buffers or latches could be
used.
OEN
tDD
DATA
OUTPUT
65
tHL
ACTIVE
THREE-STATE
55
3
8
FREQUENCY – MHz
Figure 25. Three-State Output Timing Diagram
13
Figure 27. Typical S/(N+D) vs. Clock Frequency
fIN = 1 MHz, Full-Scale Input
For timing budgetary purposes, the typical access and float delay times for the AD871 are 50 ns.
CLOCK INPUT
The AD871 internal timing control uses the two edges of the
clock input to generate a variety of internal timing signals. The
optimal clock input should have a 50% duty cycle; however,
sensitivity to duty cycle is significantly reduced for clock rates of
less than 5 megasamples per second.
The power dissipated by the correction logic and output buffers
is largely proportional to the clock frequency; running at reduced clock rates provides a slight reduction in power consumption. Figure 28 illustrates this tradeoff.
1.03
POWER – W
+5V
R
Q
D
75XX74
Q
10MHz
CLK
1.02
S
+5V
Figure 26. Divide-by-Two Clock Circuit
1.01
0.100
Due to the nature of on-chip compensation circuitry, the duty
cycle should be maintained between 40% and 60%, even for
clock rates less than 5 MSPS. One way to realize a 50% duty
cycle clock is to divide down a clock of higher frequency, as
shown in Figure 26.
2.100
3.100
4.100
5.100
FREQUENCY – MHz
Figure 28. Typical Power Dissipation vs. Clock Frequency
ANALOG SUPPLIES AND GROUNDS
In this case, a 10 MHz clock is divided by 2 to produce the 5 MHz
clock input for the AD871. In this configuration, the duty cycle
of the 10 MHz clock is irrelevant.
The input circuitry for the CLKIN pin is designed to accommodate both TTL and CMOS inputs. The quality of the logic input, particularly the rising edge, is critical in realizing the best
possible jitter performance for the part: the faster the rising
edge, the better the jitter performance.
REV. A
1.100
The AD871 features separate analog and digital supply and
ground pins, helping to minimize digital corruption of sensitive
analog signals. In general, AVSS and AVDD, the analog supplies,
should be decoupled to AGND, the analog common, as close to
the chip as physically possible. Care has been taken to minimize
the signal dependence of the power supply currents; however,
the analog supply currents will be proportional to the reference
input. With REFIN at 2.5 V, the typical current into AVDD is
–13–
AD871
function of the load on the output bits: large capacitive loads are
to be avoided. In the 44-terminal package, the output drivers are
supplied through dedicated pins DRGND and DRVDD. Pin
count constraints in the 28-lead packages require that the digital
and driver supplies share package pins (although they have separate bond wires and on-chip routing). The decoupling shown in
Figure 34 is appropriate for a reasonable capacitive load on the
digital outputs (typically 20 pF on each pin). Applications
involving greater digital loads should consider increasing the
digital decoupling proportionately, and/or using external
buffers/latches.
82 mA, while the typical current out of AVSS is 115 mA. Typically, 33 mA will flow into the AGND pin.
Careful design and the use of differential circuitry provide the
AD871 with excellent rejection of power supply noise over a
wide range of frequencies, as illustrated in Figure 29.
–75
SUPPLY REJECTION – dB
–80
AVDD
–85
APPLICATIONS
AVSS
OPTIONAL ZERO AND GAIN TRIM
DVDD
–90
The AD871 is factory trimmed to minimize zero error, gain
error and linearity errors. In some applications the zero and gain
errors of the AD871 need to be externally adjusted to zero. If
required, both zero error and gain error can be trimmed with
external potentiometers as shown in Figure 31. Note that gain
error adjustments must be made with an external reference.
–95
–100
10k
100k
1M
10M
Zero trim should be adjusted first. Connect VINA to ground and
adjust the 10 kΩ potentiometer so that a nominal digital output
code of 0000 0000 0000 (twos complement output) exists. Note
that the zero trim should be decoupled and that the accuracy of
the ± 2.5 V reference signals will directly affect the offset.
FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 29. Power Supply Rejection vs. Frequency,
100 mV p-p Signal on Power Supplies
Figure 30 shows the degradation in SNR resulting from 100 mV
of power supply ripple at various frequencies. As Figure 30
shows, careful decoupling is required to realize the specified dynamic performance. Figure 34 demonstrates the recommended
decoupling strategy for the supply pins. Note that in extremely
noisy environments, a more elaborate supply filtering scheme
may be necessary.
Gain error may then be calibrated by adjusting the REF IN voltage. The REF IN voltage should be adjusted such that a +1 V
input on VINA results in the digital output code 01111 1111
1111 (twos complement output).
AD871
+2.5V
72
AD871
AVDD
VOUT
70
10kV
10mF
68
SNR – dB
VINB
0.1mF
REF IN
AD
REF43
TRIM
DVDD
100kV
–2.5V
66
AVSS
(a) ZERO TRIM
64
Figure 31. Zero and Gain Error Trims
62
60
10k
(b) GAIN TRIM
DIGITAL OFFSET CORRECTION
100k
1M
10M
FREQUENCY – Hz
Figure 30. SNR vs. Supply Noise Frequency (fIN = 1 MHz)
DIGITAL SUPPLIES AND GROUNDS
The digital activity on the AD871 chip falls into two general categories: CMOS correction logic, and CMOS output drivers.
The internal correction logic draws relatively small surges of
current, mainly during the clock transitions; in the 44-terminal
package, these currents flow through pins DGND and DVDD.
The output drivers draw large current impulses while the output
bits are changing. The size and duration of these currents is a
The AD871 provides differential inputs that may be used to correct for any offset voltages on the analog input. For applications
where the input signal contains a dc offset, it may be advantageous to apply a nulling voltage to the VINB input. Applying a
voltage equal to the dc offset will maximize the full-scale input
range and therefore the dynamic range. Offsets ranging from
–0.7 V to +0.5 V can be corrected.
Figure 32 shows how a dc offset can be applied using the AD568
12-bit, high speed digital-to-analog converter (DAC). This circuit can be used for applications requiring offset adjustments on
every clock cycle. The AD568 connection scheme is used to
provide a –0.512 V to +0.512 V output range. The offset voltage
must be stable on the rising edge of the AD871 clock input.
–14–
REV. A
AD871
1
VIN
The peak performance of this circuit is obtained by driving the
AD871 + AD9100 combination with a full-scale input. For
small scale input signals (–20 dB, –40 dB), the AD871 performs
better without the track-and-hold because slew-limiting effects
are no longer dominant. To gain the advantages of the added
track-and-hold, it is important to give the AD871 a full-scale
input.
VINA
AD871
8
DIGITAL
OFFSET
WORD
4
74
HC
574
8
74
HC
574
4
AD568
2
IBPO
IOUT
RL
ACOM
LCOM
REF COM
VINB
An alternative to the configuration presented above is to use the
AD9101 track-and-hold amplifier. The AD9101 provides a
built-in post amplifier with a gain of 4, providing excellent ac
characteristics in conjunction with a high level of integration.
Figure 32. Offset Correction Using the AD568
UNDERSAMPLING USING THE AD871 AND AD9100
The AD871’s on-chip THA optimizes transient response while
maintaining low noise performance. For super-Nyquist (undersampling) applications it may be necessary to use an external
THA with fast track-mode slew rate and hold mode settling
time. An excellent choice for this application is the AD9100, an
ultrahigh speed track-and-hold amplifier.
In order to maximize the spurious free dynamic range of the circuit in Figure 33, it is advantageous to present a small signal to
the input of the AD9100 and then amplify the output to the
AD871’s full-scale input range. This can be accomplished with
a low distortion, wide bandwidth amplifier such as the AD9617.
The circuit uses a gain of 3.5 to optimize S/(N+D).
As illustrated in Figure 33, it is necessary to skew the AD871
sample clock and the AD9100 sample/hold control. Clock skew
(tS) is defined as the time starting at the AD9100’s transition
into hold mode and ending at the moment the AD871 samples.
The AD871 samples on the rising edge of the sample clock, and
the AD9100 samples on the falling edge of the sample/hold control. The choice of tS is primarily determined by the settling
time of the AD9100. The droop rate of the AD9100 must also
be taken into consideration. Using these values, the ideal tS is
17 ns. When choosing clock sources, it is extremely important
that the front end track-and-hold sample/hold control is given a
very low jitter clock source. This is not as crucial for the AD871
sample clock, because it is sampling a dc signal.
+5V
+VS
+VS –VS
0.1mF
10mF
VIN
CLOCK 2
IN
3.3mF
0.1mF
RT
442V
CLOCK 1
IN
AD9100
Q
RT
AD96685
127V
Q
*
510V
–VS
510V
AIN
AD9617
*
–VS
AD871
EB
0.1mF
0.1mF
3.3mF
+VS = 5.0V
–VS = –5.2V
–5V
ALL CAPACITORS ARE 0.01mF
(LOW INDUCTANCE - DECOUPLING)
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED.
–VS
10mF
*OPTIONAL, SEE
AD9617 DATA SHEET
T = 200ns
+5V
CLOCK 2
0V
tS = 17ns
tS
T = 200ns
+1V
CLOCK 1
–1V
Figure 33. Undersampling Using the AD871 and AD9100
REV. A
–15–
AD871
+5D
CLOCK INPUT
J2
R3
10V
4
AVDD
DVDD
C12
0.1mF
DGND
7
6
JP3
C13
0.1mF
C14
0.1mF
DRVDD
AGND
ANALOG IN
J1
1
TP1
R1
2
MSB
BIT 2
BIT 3
BIT 4
BIT 5
BIT 6
BIT 7
BIT 8
BIT 9
BIT 10
BIT 11
BIT 12
27
REF GND
C18
0.1mF
JP1
28
REF IN
JP2
REF OUT
U2
REF43
+5A 1
2
V
3 IN V
OUT
4
GND
26
C21
1mF
8
7
6
5
JP
* 11
AGND
AVSS
AVSS
3
*NOTE: JP11 SHOULD BE OPEN
C22
0.1mF
R5 20V
JP7
3
C16
0.1mF
4
1
JP6
JP5
2
1
R7 20V
5
6
R8 20V
JP10
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
P1
40-PIN
IDC CONN.
R6 20V
JP9
21
CLK
20
OTR
VINB
C7
10mF
23
C15
0.1mF
R4
JP8
U3
74HC04
22
VINA
AD871
C20
10pF
49.9V
DGND
R2
49.9V
JP4
+5D
5
TP2
C1848–0–11/97
+5A
R9 20V
R10 20V
R11 20V
R12 20V
R13 20V
R14 20V
24
R15 20V
R16 20V
25
C17
0.1mF
C11
0.1mF
–5A
TP5
+5A
FB1
+5VA
C2
0.01mF
C9
0.1mF
C5
22mF
TP4
R17 20V
AGND
C1
0.01mF
C4
22mF
–5VA
FB2
+5VD
FB3
C8
0.1mF
–5A
TP3
+5D
TP6
C3
0.01mF
C6
22mF
TP7
C10
0.1mF
40
DGND
Figure 34. AD872/AD871 Evaluation Board Schematic
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
Dimensions shown in inches and (mm).
0.005 (0.13) MIN
44-Terminal LCC (E-44A)
0.100 (2.54)
0.064 (1.63)
0.100 (2.54) MAX
28
0.055 (1.40)
0.045 (1.14)
0.020 (0.51)
REF x 45°
15
1
0.060 (1.52)
0.015 (0.38)
1.490 (37.85) MAX
0.225
(5.72)
MAX
0.200 (5.08)
0.125 (3.18)
0.026 (0.66)
0.014 (0.36)
0.050
(1.27)
BSC
14
1
0.150
(3.81)
MIN
0.110 (2.79)
0.090 (2.29)
0.070 (1.78)
0.030 (0.76)
40
6
0.610 (15.49)
0.500 (12.70)
PIN 1
0.075 (1.91) REF
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
28-Lead Side Brazed Ceramic DIP (D-28)
0.028 (0.71)
0.022 (0.56)
TOP VIEW
0.620 (15.75)
0.590 (14.99)
28
18
0.018 (0.46)
0.008 (0.20)
0.662 (16.82)
0.640 (16.27) SQ
SEATING
PLANE
–16–
0.040 (1.02)
REF x 45°
3 PLACES
REV. A
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