ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 ADS1293 Low Power, 3-Channel, 24-Bit Analog Front End for Biopotential Measurements Check for Samples: ADS1293 FEATURES DESCRIPTION • The ADS1293 incorporates all features commonly required in portable, low-power medical, sports, and fitness electrocardiogram (ECG) applications. With high levels of integration and exceptional performance, the ADS1293 enables the creation of scalable medical instrumentation systems at significantly reduced size, power, and overall cost. 1 The ADS1293 features three high-resolution channels capable of operating up to 25.6ksps. Each channel can be independently programmed for a specific sample rate and bandwidth allowing users to optimize the configuration for performance and power. All input pins incorporate an EMI filter and can be routed to any channel via a flexible routing switch. Flexible routing also allows independent lead-off detection, right leg drive, and Wilson/Goldberger reference terminal generation without the need to reconnect leads externally. A fourth channel allows external analog pace detection for applications that do not utilize digital pace detection. The ADS1293 incorporates a self-diagnostics alarm system to detect when the system is out of the operating conditions range. Such events are reported to error flags. The overall status of the error flags is available as a signal on a dedicated ALARMB pin. APPLICATIONS Batt. Mon Lead off detect Test Ref VDDIO RSTB XTAL1 The device is packaged in a 5-mm × 5-mm × 0.8-mm, 28-pin LLP. Operating temperature ranges from –20°C to 85°C. CVREF VDD • • Portable 1/2/3/5/6/7/8/12-Lead ECG Patient vital sign monitoring: holter, event, stress, and telemedicine Automated External Defibrillator Sports and fitness (heart rate and ECG) VSS • • XTAL2 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3 High Resolution Digital ECG Channels with Simultaneous Pace Output EMI Hardened Inputs Low Power: 0.3mW/channel Input-Referred Noise: 7µVpp (40Hz Bandwidth) Input Bias Current: 175pA Data Rate: Up to 25.6ksps Differential Input Voltage Range: ±400mV Analog Supply Voltage: 2.7V to 5.5V Digital I/O Supply Voltage: 1.65V to 3.6V Right Leg Drive Amplifier AC and DC Lead-Off Detection Wilson and Goldberger Terminals ALARMB Pin for Interrupt Driven Diagnostics Battery Voltage Monitoring Built-In Oscillator and Reference Flexible Power-Down and Standby Modes REF CLK OSC POR LOD_EN CH2-Pace + CH3 InA - Σ∆ Modulator Digital Filter CH3-ECG CH3-Pace WILSON_CN CH4 PACE2WCT SELRLD WCT + InA - CMDET_EN Wilson ref. CM Detect CMOUT WILSON_EN SDO SDI CH2-ECG SCLK CSB DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT CH4- Analog Pace RLD Amp. ALARMB REF for CM & RLD PACE2 RLDIN VSSIO EMI filter Digital Filter DRDYB SYNCB IN6 Σ∆ Modulator RLDREF EMI filter + InA - EMI filter IN5 Flexible Routing Switch CH2 RLDIN EMI filter Digital Filter EMI filter IN4 Σ∆ Modulator RLDINV EMI filter + InA - RLDOUT IN3 CH1-ECG CH1-Pace CH1 - EMI filter EMI filter + IN1 IN2 1 Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet. PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters. Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates. Batt. Mon Lead off detect Test Ref VDDIO XTAL1 XTAL2 RSTB CVREF VSS VDD BLOCK DIAGRAM REF CLK OSC POR LOD_EN Digital Filter CH2-ECG CH2-Pace CH3 + InA - Σ∆ Modulator Digital Filter CH3-ECG CH3-Pace CH4 + InA - Flexible Routing Switch WILSON_CN PACE2WCT SELRLD ALARMB REF for CM & RLD PACE2 RLDIN VSSIO CM Detect RLD Amp. RLDOUT Wilson ref. CMOUT CMDET_EN CH4- Analog Pace + WILSON_EN CSB DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT SYNCB WCT SDI SCLK RLDREF IN6 EMI filter Σ∆ Modulator EMI filter IN5 EMI filter + InA - CH2 DRDYB SDO RLDIN IN4 EMI filter Digital Filter EMI filter IN3 EMI filter Σ∆ Modulator RLDINV IN2 EMI filter CH1-ECG CH1-Pace + InA - CH1 - IN1 EMI filter SPACER SPACER Table 1. ORDERING INFORMATION PACKAGE 28–Pin LLP PART NUMBER PACKAGE MARKING ADS1293CISQ U2XYTT ADS1293CISQx TRANSPORT MEDIA TI DRAWING 1k Units Tape and Reel SQA28A 4.5k Units Tape and Reel 2 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 CONNECTION DIAGRAM 28-PIN LLP (TOP VIEW) Table 2. Pin Descriptions PIN TYPE NO. NAME 1-6 IN1 - IN6 Analog Input 7 WCT Analog Output FUNCTION Electrode input signals Wilson reference output or analog pace channel output 8 CMOUT Output Common-mode detector output 9 RLDOUT Analog Output Right leg drive amplifier output 10 RLDINV Analog Input Right leg drive amplifier negative input 11 RLDIN Analog I/O 12 RLDREF Analog Output Right leg drive amplifier positive input or analog pace channel output 13 SYNCB Digital I/O 14 VSSIO Digital Supply Digital input/output supply ground 15 ALARMB Digital Output Alarm bar 16 CSB Digital Input Chip select bar 17 SCLK Digital Input Serial clock Serial data input Internal right leg drive reference Sync bar; multiple-chip synchronization signal input or output 18 SDI Digital Input 19 SDO Digital Output Serial data output 20 DRDYB Digital Output Data ready bar 21 CLK Digital I/O 22 VDDIO Digital Supply 23 XTAL1 Digital Input External crystal for clock oscillator 24 XTAL2 Digital Input External crystal for clock oscillator 25 RSTB Digital Input Reset bar 26 CVREF Analog I/O External cap for internal reference voltage 27 VSS Analog Supply Power supply ground 28 VDD Analog Supply Positive power supply DAP Internal clock output or external clock input Digital input/output supply No connect 3 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS (1) If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, contact the Texas Instruments Sales Office/Distributors for availability and specifications. VALUE MIN ESD Tolerance (2) MAX UNIT Human Body Model (HBM) For input pins only 1000 V Charge Device Model (CDM) 500 V Analog Supply Voltage, VDD –0.3 6.0 V Digital Supply Voltage, VDDIO –0.3 6.0 V Voltage on any Input Pin –0.3 to (VDD + 0.3) Input Current at Any Pin Storage Temperature Range Max Junction Temperature (1) (2) (3) –60 (3) V ±10 mA 150 °C 150 °C “Absolute Maximum Ratings” indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur, including inoperability and degradation of the device reliability and/or performance. Functional operation of the device and/or non-degradation at the Absolute Maximum Ratings or other conditions beyond those indicated in the Recommended Operating Conditions is not implied. The Recommended Operating Conditions indicate conditions at which the device is functional and the device should not be beyond such conditions. All voltages are measured with respect to the ground pin, unless otherwise specified. Human Body Model per MIL-STD-883, Method 3015.7. Machine Model, per JESD22-A115-A. Field-Induced Charge-Device Model, per JESD22-C101-C. The maximum power dissipation must be derated at elevated temperatures and is dictated by TJ(MAX), θJA, and the ambient temperature, TA. The maximum allowable power dissipation PDMAX = (TJ(MAX) – TA)/ θJA or the number given in Absolute Maximum Ratings, whichever is lower. RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) MIN MAX UNIT 2.7 5.5 V VDD > 3.6V 1.65 3.6 V VDD ≤ 3.6V 1.65 VDD V Analog Supply Voltage, VDD Digital I/O Supply Voltage Supply Ground VSS = VSSIO Full Scale Differential Input Voltage Range, DIVR Temperature Range ±400 (1) –20 Typical Package Thermal Resistance (1) , 28-Pin LLP (θJA) (1) 85 29 mV °C °C/W The maximum power dissipation must be derated at elevated temperatures and is dictated by TJ(MAX), θJA, and the ambient temperature, TA. The maximum allowable power dissipation PDMAX = (TJ(MAX) – TA)/ θJA or the number given in Absolute Maximum Ratings, whichever is lower. 4 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (1) Unless otherwise noted, all limits are specified at TA = +25°C, +2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ +5.5V, +1.65V ≤ VDDIO ≤ MIN(+3.6V, VDD), VREF = +2.4V, fOSC = 409.6kHz, 1µF low ESR capacitor between CVREF and GND, 0.1µF capacitor between RLDREF and GND. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX. TYP (3) MAX (2) 5.5 V 80 125 µA Stand-by mode 120 175 µA 1 chan, WILSON OFF, RLD OFF, CMDET OFF, LOD OFF, low power 205 290 1 chan, WILSON OFF, RLD OFF, CMDET OFF, LOD OFF, high-res 335 490 3 chan, WILSON OFF, RLD OFF, CMDET OFF, LOD OFF, low power 350 520 3 chan, WILSON ON, RLD ON, CMDET ON, LOD ON, low power, low cap-drive 440 595 3 chan, WILSON ON, RLD ON, CMDET ON, LOD ON, high-res, low cap-drive 835 1120 3 chan, WILSON ON, RLD ON, CMDET ON, LOD ON, high-res, high cap-drive 960 1300 PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN (2) UNIT POWER SUPPLY (VDD, VDDIO) VDD Analog Supply Voltage 2.7 Power-down mode IVDD VDDIO IVDDIO Analog Supply Current IO Supply Voltage µA VDD > 3.6V 1.65 3.6 VDD ≤ 3.6V 1.65 VDD Quiescent Current IO Supply 0.6 V V µA ANALOG INPUTS (IN1-IN6) IB Input Bias Current RIN Differential Input Resistance EMIRR (1) (2) (3) Electromagnetic Interference Rejection Ratio, IN+, IN-, and VDD TA = 25°C, LOD OFF ±175 TA = 85°C, LOD OFF ±13 pA nA 500 MΩ f = 400 MHz 92 dB f = 900 MHz 107 dB f = 1.8 GHz 98 dB f = 2.4 GHz 86 dB The Electrical Characteristics table lists specify specifications under the listed Recommended Operating Conditions except as otherwise modified or specified by the Electrical Characteristics Conditions and/or Notes. Typical specifications are estimations only and are not guaranteed. Datasheet min/max specification limits are specified by test, unless otherwise noted. Typical values represent the most likely parameter norms at TA = 25°C and at the Recommended Operation Conditions at the time of product characterization and are not guaranteed. 5 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS(1) (continued) Unless otherwise noted, all limits are specified at TA = +25°C, +2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ +5.5V, +1.65V ≤ VDDIO ≤ MIN(+3.6V, VDD), VREF = +2.4V, fOSC = 409.6kHz, 1µF low ESR capacitor between CVREF and GND, 0.1µF capacitor between RLDREF and GND. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX. PARAMETER MIN (2) TEST CONDITIONS TYP (3) MAX (2) UNIT ANALOG FRONT END DIVR Differential Input Voltage Range CMVR Common-Mode Voltage Range for full DIVR VOS Input-Referred Offset Voltage CMRR Common-Mode Rejection Ratio Ve-ECG Input-Referred Voltage Noise for ECG (4) –400 400 0.95 VDD – 0.95 V ±87 µV ±16 50 / 60Hz, VCMDC = RLDREF, VCMAC = 1.2VPP 100 23 30.5 0.1 - 215Hz, high resolution mode 15 23.95 0.1 - 40Hz, low power mode 10 23.1 7 10.3 1 - 1280Hz, high resolution mode, double pace data rate 0.4 0.1 - 215Hz, low power mode 240 315 0.1 - 215Hz, high resolution mode 155 250 Ve-PACE Input-Referred Voltage Noise for Pace Ne Input-Referred Noise Density PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio 50 / 60Hz XTLK Crosstalk between channels Crosstalk from driven channel to zero input channel ENOBECG Effective Number of Bits for ECG dB 0.1 - 215Hz, low power mode 0.1 - 40Hz, high resolution mode mV µVPP mVPP 94 nV/√Hz dB –105 dB 215Hz bandwidth, low power mode 17.4 17.8 bits 215Hz bandwidth, high resolution mode 17.8 18.4 bits 13.7 bits ENOBPACE 1280Hz bandwidth, high resolution mode, double pace data rate Effective Number of Bits for Pace RS-ECG Sample Rate ECG Channel RS-PACE Sample Rate PACE Channel TSKEW Sample Time Skew Between Channels Multichip simultaneous sampling architecture See Table 5, Table 6, Table 7 and Table 8 25 6400 sps 3.2 25.6 ksps 0 µs 2.4 V INTERNAL REFERENCE (REF) Internal Reference Voltage Internal Reference Accuracy VREF ±0.5% Internal Reference Drift ±11 Internal Reference Start-up Time ppm/°C 5 ms (VDD-VREF)/factor 3.246 V/V Division Accuracy ±0.25% BATTERY MONITOR Division TEST REFERENCE (VREF-VSS)/factor 12 Division Accuracy ±0.1% Current Consumption (4) 3.5 V/V μA At least 1000 consecutive readings are used to calculate the peak-to-peak noise in production. 6 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS(1) (continued) Unless otherwise noted, all limits are specified at TA = +25°C, +2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ +5.5V, +1.65V ≤ VDDIO ≤ MIN(+3.6V, VDD), VREF = +2.4V, fOSC = 409.6kHz, 1µF low ESR capacitor between CVREF and GND, 0.1µF capacitor between RLDREF and GND. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX. PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN (2) TYP (3) MAX (2) UNIT RIGHT LEG DRIVE AMPLIFIER (RLD Amp) VOS Input-Referred Offset Voltage CMVR Common-Mode Voltage Range GBW Programmable Gain Bandwidth ±5 0.5 50 High bandwidth mode 200 kHz Low bandwidth mode 25 mV/μs 90 mV/μs 400 pF Slew Rate ClMAX Programmable Capacitive Load Driving High bandwidth, Low cap-drive mode (see Table 11) Capability Low bandwidth, High cap-drive mode (see Table 11) Quiescent Power Consumption V Low bandwidth mode SR IVDD mV VDD – 0.5 High bandwidth mode kHz 8 nF Low bandwidth, Low cap-drive mode 20 36 μA High bandwidth, High cap-drive mode 60 91 μA RIGHT LEG DRIVE REFERENCE RLDREF Output Voltage (VDD – VSS)/2.2 Unloaded V COMMON-MODE DETECTOR AMPLIFIER (CMDET Amp) CMVR BW Common-Mode Voltage Range Programmable Bandwidth 0.5 High bandwidth mode 150 kHz Low bandwidth mode 25 mV/μs High bandwidth mode 90 mV/μs 400 pF 8 nF N leads, low bandwidth mode, low cap-drive mode 21 + 3 × N μA N leads, high bandwidth mode, high cap-drive mode 61 + 3 × N μA Slew Rate ClMAX High bandwidth mode, Low capdrive mode (see Programmable Capacitive Load Driving Table 10) Capability Low bandwidth mode, High cap- drive mode (see Table 10) Power Consumption (Selected Leads) V 50 SR IVDD VDD – 0.5 Low bandwidth mode kHz WILSON REFERENCE CIRCUIT IVR Input Voltage Range BW Bandwidth 3 buffers ON 0.5 50 VDD – 0.5 V SR Slew Rate 3 buffers ON 45 mV/μs Ne Noise Density At 10Hz 60 nV/√Hz Ve Input-Referred Noise for Wilson Reference Amp 0.1 - 200Hz, 3 buffers ON 5.5 μVPP IVDD Power Consumption (Selected Leads) N leads, low power mode 7×N μA Programmable: Min. code 0x01 (See Lead-Off Detection (LOD)) 8 nA Programmable: Max. code 0xFF (See Lead-Off Detection (LOD)) 2040 nA kHz LEAD OFF DETECTION IEXC IEXCTOL FEXC Excitation Current Excitation Current Accuracy Excitation Frequency 25% AC LOD mode, programmable, minimum (see Analog AC Lead-Off Detect ) 6.1 Hz AC LOD mode, programmable, maximum (see Analog AC Lead-Off Detect) 12.5 kHz VTHDC DC Lead Off Comparator Threshold VHYST Comparator Hysteresis DC lead off mode VDD – 0.5 55 mV V IVDD Current Consumption Programmed excl. excitation current 25 μA 7 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS(1) (continued) Unless otherwise noted, all limits are specified at TA = +25°C, +2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ +5.5V, +1.65V ≤ VDDIO ≤ MIN(+3.6V, VDD), VREF = +2.4V, fOSC = 409.6kHz, 1µF low ESR capacitor between CVREF and GND, 0.1µF capacitor between RLDREF and GND. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX. PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN (2) TYP (3) MAX (2) UNIT ANALOG PACE CHANNEL BW Gain 3.5 V/V -3dB Bandwidth 50 kHz Output Reference RLDREF V VOS Input-Referred Offset Voltage ±1.3 DIVR Differential Input Voltage Range CMVR Common-Mode Voltage Range for full DIVR CMRR Common-Mode Rejection Ratio 0.5V ≤ VCM ≤ VDD-1.5V 85 PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio 3V ≤ VDD ≤ 5V, VCM=RLDREF 80 dB SR Slew Rate 35 mV/µs 2.7V ≤ VDD < 3.3V –330 330 mV 3.3V ≤ VDD –400 400 mV 0.95 VDD – 1.1 Overload Recovery Ve-APACE Input-Referred Noise for Analog Pace IVDD Current Consumption mV VCM = RLDREF, 0.1kHz - 20kHz V dB 100 µs 105 µVPP 29 µA 409.6 kHz CLOCK fOSC Internal Clock Frequency fCRYSTAL = 4.096MHz Internal Clock Duty Cycle 50% TSTART Internal Clock Start up Time IVDD Internal Clock Power Consumption fCRYSTAL = 4.096MHz 15 ms fEXT External Clock Frequency (5) 370 409.6 450 External Clock Duty Cycle (5) 40% 50% 60% 83 µA kHz DIGITAL INPUT/OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS VIH Logical “1” Input Voltage VIL Logical “0” Input Voltage VOH Logical “1” Output Voltage VOL Logical “0” Output Voltage IIOHL Digital IO Leakage Current 0.8 × VDDIO 0.2 × VDDIO ISOURCE = 400 µA, Digital output high drive mode VDDIO – 0.075 ISOURCE = 400 µA, Digital output low drive mode VDDIO – 0.15 V V ISINK = 400 µA Digital output high drive mode VSSIO + 0.075 V ISINK = 400 µA Digital output low drive mode VSSIO + 0.15 V SYNCB and RESETB pins, with 1 MΩ internal pullup resistor Other digital I/O pins (5) V ±1 µA ±500 nA Specified by design; not production tested. 8 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 TIMING DIAGRAMS Unless otherwise noted, all limits specified at TA = 25°C, +2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ +5.5V, +1.65 ≤ VDDIO ≤ MIN(+3.6V, VDD), VREF = +2.4V, fOSC = 409.6kHz and a 10pF capacitive load in parallel with a 10kΩ load on SDO. Figure 1. Write Timing Diagram PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT 20 MHz FSCLK Serial Clock Frequency tPH SCLK Pulse Width - High FSCLK = 20MHz 0.4/FSCLK tPL SCLK Pulse Width - Low FSCLK = 20MHz 0.4/FSCLK s tSU SDI Setup Time 5 ns tH SDI Hold Time 5 ns s Figure 2. Read Timing Diagram PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT tODZ SDO Driven-to-Tristate Time Measured at 10% / 90% point 15 ns tOZD SDO Tristate-to-Driven Time Measured at 10% / 90% point 15 ns tOD SDO Output Delay Time 10 ns tCSS CSB Setup Time 5 ns tCSH CSB Hold Time 5 ns tIAG Inter-Access Gap 10 ns tDRDYB Data Ready Bar at every 1/ODR second, see Figure 25 4/fOSC s 9 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS All plots at TA = +25°C, VDD = +3.3V, VDDIO = +1.8V, VSS = VSSIO = 0V, internal VREF = +2.4V, VCM = RLDREF, internal fOSC = 409.6kHz, data rate = 1067sps, and High-Resolution mode, unless otherwise noted. VOS vs VDD VOS vs VCM 30 Input-Referred Offset Voltage (µV) Input-Referred Offset Voltage (µV) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 2.7 3.1 3.5 3.9 4.3 4.7 5.1 TA = +25°C TA = -20°C 20 15 10 TA = +85°C 5 0 0.25 5.5 Analog Supply Voltage (V) 25 0.65 1.05 1.45 1.85 2.25 2.65 Common-Mode Voltage (V) C00 Figure 3. 3.05 C01 Figure 4. VOS DISTRIBUTION VREF vs VDD 1800 2.396 Data from 1325 devices, three lots 2.3955 VDD = +5.5V VDDIO = +3.3V Internal Reference (V) Occurrences 1500 1200 900 600 300 2.395 TA = -20°C TA = +25°C 2.3945 2.394 2.3935 2.393 TA = +85°C 2.3925 2.392 50 41 32 23 14 5 -4 -13 -22 -40 0 -31 VCM = +0.5V 2.7 3.1 3.5 Input-Referred Offset Voltage (µV) 3.9 4.3 4.7 5.1 Analog Supply Voltage (V) 5.5 C01 C01 Figure 5. Figure 6. IBIAS vs VIN DIFF 1.00 100 0.95 Input Bias Current (nA) Input Bias Current (pA) IBIAS vs VIN DIFF 150 50 TA = 25°C 0 -50 TA = -20°C -100 0.90 0.85 0.80 0.75 0.70 TA = +85°C -150 0.65 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0 0.1 0.2 Differential Input Voltage (V) 0.3 0.4 -0.4 C01 Figure 7. -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0 0.1 0.2 Differential Input Voltage (V) 0.3 0.4 C01 Figure 8. 10 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) All plots at TA = +25°C, VDD = +3.3V, VDDIO = +1.8V, VSS = VSSIO = 0V, internal VREF = +2.4V, VCM = RLDREF, internal fOSC = 409.6kHz, data rate = 1067sps, and High-Resolution mode, unless otherwise noted. IBIAS vs VCM IBIAS vs VCM 140 1.00 TA = +25°C 0.95 Input Bias Current (nA) 100 TA = -20°C 80 60 40 0.90 0.85 0.80 0.75 20 0.70 TA = +85°C VIN DIFF = ±400mV VIN DIFF = ±400mV 0 0.95 1.15 1.35 1.55 1.75 1.95 2.15 Common-Mode Voltage (V) 0.65 0.95 2.35 1.15 1.35 Figure 9. PSRR vs FREQUENCY 1.95 2.15 2.35 C01 CMRR vs FREQUENCY 120 Common-Mode Rejection Ratio (dB) VDD = +5.0V 110 100 90 VDD = +3.3V 80 Data Rate = 6.4ksps VCM = +0.5V 70 110 +85°C 100 +25°C 90 VDDIO = +3.3V Data Rate = 6.4ksps VCMDC = +1.65V VCMAC = +2.75VPP 80 -20°C 70 10 100 1k Frequency (Hz) 10 100 1k Frequency (Hz) C00 Figure 11. C00 Figure 12. INPUT-REFERRED NOISE NOISE HISTOGRAM 3500 15 VDDIO = +3.3V VDDIO = +3.3V 3000 10 2500 Occurrences 5 0 -5 2000 1500 1000 -10 Time (s) 7 8 9 10 C00 12 6 10.2 5 8.4 4 6.6 3 4.8 2 -0.6 1 -2.4 0 -4.2 0 -15 -6 500 3 Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (dB) 1.75 Figure 10. 120 Input-Referred Noise (µV) 1.55 Common-Mode Voltage (V) C01 1.2 Input Bias Current (pA) 120 Input-Referred Noise (µV) C00 Figure 13. Figure 14. 11 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) All plots at TA = +25°C, VDD = +3.3V, VDDIO = +1.8V, VSS = VSSIO = 0V, internal VREF = +2.4V, VCM = RLDREF, internal fOSC = 409.6kHz, data rate = 1067sps, and High-Resolution mode, unless otherwise noted. FFT PLOT ECG CHANNEL (50Hz Signal) FFT PLOT PACE CHANNEL (50Hz Signal) 0 0 Data Rate = 1067SPS ECG BW = 215Hz VDDIO = +3.3V -20 -40 Amplitude (dBFS) Amplitude (dBFS) -40 Data Rate = 25.6kSPS PACE BW = 2550Hz VDDIO = +3.3V -20 -60 -80 -100 -120 -60 -80 -100 -120 -140 -140 -160 -160 -180 -180 0 40 80 120 Frequency (Hz) 160 200 240 0 C00 Figure 15. 400 800 1200 1600 Frequency (Hz) 2000 2400 C00 Figure 16. 12 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION The ADS1293 is a fully integrated signal chain for ECG applications. It features three low-power, 24-bit resolution channels for ECG and pace monitoring and an auxiliary fourth channel for analog pace detection. In addition, the ADS1293 features AC and DC lead-off detection, right leg drive capability, and Wilson and Goldberger terminals. Each of the three channels is synchronized and provides digital filtering with a cut-off frequency that is programmable from 5Hz to 1280Hz. Each channel filter can be set independently while maintaining synchronization. In addition, a lower resolution output is provided for each signal channel with a cut-off frequency programmable between 650Hz to 2.6kHz. These output signals are ideal for sensing a pace-maker signal. Each channel provides enough dynamic range to handle electrode offset and motion artifacts without sacrificing resolution. Each input has built-in EMI rejection that eliminates noise from RF transmitters. Flexible Routing Switch The flexible routing switch can connect the inputs of the three analog front end channels as well as the inputs of the analog pace channel to any of the 6 input pins. This allows system flexibility and even on-the-fly reconfiguration of the ECG monitoring system. For test purposes, the flexible routing switch can short the differential input pins of a channel or connect a differential reference signal to the input of a channel. This reference voltage can be applied with both positive and negative polarity. This feature allows to measure relative mismatches between channels, such as offset and gain mismatches. Additionally, there is an option to route a fraction of the battery voltage (the voltage source connected to the VDD pin) to an input channel. This allows the ADS1293 to monitor the state of charge of the battery. The switch path inside the flexible routing switch is illustrated in Figure 17. The figure shows the switch path for a single channel. All channels are completely identical. The switches are controlled by the registers FLEX_CH1_CN, FLEX_CH2_CN, FLEX_CH3_CN, and FLEX_VBAT_CN, which are described in the Input Channel Selection Registers. POSx IN1 IN2 IN3 INP_CHx IN4 IN5 IN6 TSTx=01 VREFP VDD CALx=11 VBAT_MONI_CHx NEGx CVREF VREFN TSTx=10 INN_CHx Figure 17. Flexible Routing Switch for Channel 1 It should be noted that the switches that control the input selection for the analog front end channels have a certain priority. If the battery voltage monitoring mode is enabled by programming the VBAT_MONI_CHx bit in the FLEX_VBAT_CN register, then the POSx and NEGx bits programmed in the FLEX_CHx_CN register no longer have any effect. The battery voltage monitoring mode thus takes priority; this is shown in the first row of Table 3. Furthermore, the test features take second priority over the input pin selection. If the TSTx bit of the FLEX_CHx_CN register are not zero, then the POSx and NEGx bits are essentially ignored, and the test features will take priority as seen in Table 3. The TSTx, POSx, and NEGx bits are described in the Input Channel Selection Registers. 13 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 3. Channel 1 Switch Configuration VBAT_MONI_CHx CALx POSx NEGx 1 X X X MODE CHx is in battery voltage monitoring mode 0 11 X X CHx input shorted 0 01 X X CHx input connected to positive reference 0 10 X X CHx input connected to negative reference 0 00 INx INy CHx positive input connected to pin INx and negative input connected to pin INy Battery Monitoring The battery voltage monitoring mode is enabled by setting bit VBAT_MONI_CHx = 1 in the FLEX_VBAT_CN register. Also, the instrumentation amplifier of the selected channel must be shut down by setting SHDN_INA_CHx = 1 in the AFE_SHDN_CN register. In this mode, the positive input, POSx, of the sigma-delta modulator will sample the voltage supplied on the VDD pin. At the same time, the negative input, NEGx, of the sigma-delta modulator will sample the reference voltage, VREF, generated on or provided to the CVREF pin. As a result, the output signal of the sigma-delta modulator is a measure for (VBAT-VREF). In this operation, the sigmadelta modulator works with a modified gain factor, and the battery voltage,VBAT, can be calculated as follows: 8»ºÍ L 8˾¿ ds E uätvx l #&%ÈÎÍ s F ph #&%ÆºÑ t (1) In this equation, VREF equals 2.4V if the internal reference voltage generator is used, and ADCMAX represents the maximum output code of the ADC, which would correspond to a theoretical 2.4V signal at the input of the sigmadelta modulator. The value of ADCMAX is dependent on the configuration of the digital filters, and the corresponding ADCMAX values are listed in Table 5 through Table 8. The battery monitoring mode is targeted for battery operated systems within a voltage range of 2.4V to 4.8V. The battery monitoring mode cannot be used when the ADS1293 is powered from a regulated 5V supply because it risks saturating the sigma-delta modulator. There is a also a low battery alarm that is implemented independently from the battery monitoring mode, which will trigger a battery alarm when the supply voltage is below 2.7V (see the BATLOW description in Alarm Functions). Test Mode If the battery voltage monitoring function is not enabled, and if bit TSTx = 01 (see the Input Channel Selection Registers section), then a positive DC test signal is provided to the input of the instrumentation amplifier. If TSTx = 10, then that same test signal is provided but with negative polarity. The expected ADC output code can be calculated as follows: é 3.5 VTEST 1 ù + ú ADCMAX ADCOUT = ê ± 2 VREF 2û ë (2) In Equation 2, the positive or negative DC test signal VTEST = VREF/12. Note that this test mode is not a gain calibration since VTEST and VREF are generated by the same reference; however, it can be used as a self-test or to measure gain mismatches between channels. When TSTx = 11, the inputs of the instrumentation amplifier in the channel can be shorted to provide a zero test signal. The expected ADC output code equation can be simplified to: 1 ADCOUT = ADCMAX (3) 2 For both equations, the value of ADCMAX corresponding to a given decimation configuration can be obtained from Table 5 through Table 8. 14 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Analog Front End The ADS1293 contains three analog front ends that convert a differential analog voltage into a digital signal. Each analog front end consists of an instrumentation amplifier (INA), a sigma-delta modulator (SDM), and a digital filter. Instrumentation Amplifier (INA) The instrumentation amplifier provides a high input impedance to interface with signal sources that may have relatively high output impedance, such as ECG electrodes. The maximum differential input voltage range of the Sigma-Delta Modulator (SDM) behind the INA is ±1.4V, and the gain of the INA is 3.5x. Therefore, the maximum differential input voltage of the INA is ±400mV. The input common-mode voltage range (CMVR) of the INA is 0.95V to VDD-0.95V. If the input differential voltage range is limited to smaller values, then the CMVR can be somewhat extended. If the differential input signal is limited to VINMAX, the CMVR range can be defined as: :säyw Û 8+0ÆºÑ E rätw; Q %/84 Q :8&& F rätw F säyw Û 8+0ÆºÑ ; (4) The INA can be configured to operate in a low-power mode or in a high-resolution mode. The low-power mode consumes about 3 times less power than the high-resolution mode. However, the high-resolution mode has less noise than the low-power mode. Switching between these two modes is controlled by the EN_HIRES_CHx bits in the AFE_RES register. When a channel is not in use, its INA can be shut down by programming the SHDN_INA_CHx bit in the AFE_SHDN_CN register, and its SDM can also be shut down by programming the SHDN_SDM_CHx bit in the AFE_SHDN_CN register. Instrumentation Amplifier Fault Detection The output signal of the instrumentation amplifier can be monitored to ensure its output signal is within an appropriate range. The out-of-range error flags for the INAs can be observed in the ERROR_RANGE1, ERROR_RANGE2 and ERROR_RANGE3 registers. The output signal is present at two points: OUTP and OUTN. If the input common-mode voltage or differential voltage is such that the instrumentation amplifier would have to drive the voltages at these points above the positive or below the negative supply rail, then the signal accuracy would be lost. These two points are monitored and a warning flag is raised if the voltage on these pins approaches the supply rails. If the OUTP_HIGH flag is raised, then the voltage at OUTP is close to the positive rail. This indicates the differential input signal is too large or the input common-mode voltage is too high. If the OUTP_LOW flag is raised, then the voltage at OUTP is close to the negative rail. This happens at low input common-mode voltages and large negative differential input voltages. Similar reasoning holds for the OUTN_HIGH and OUTN_LOW flags. The differential output voltage of the INA is monitored and reported to the DIF_HIGH bit. This error flag indicates that the differential signal is out-of-range and is no longer an accurate representation of the input signal. The DIF_HIGH error flag is raised if the differential output voltage of the INA exceeds ±1.4V, which is the input range of the Delta-Sigma Modulator. When this happens, the SDM will no longer sample the output of the INA, but instead will sample 0V. The sign of the input signal can still be observed in the SIGN bit of the ERROR_RANGEx registers. The fault detection circuitry for OUTP_HIGH, OUTP_LOW, OUTN_HIGH and OUTN_LOW can be shut down by programming the SHDN_FAULTDET_CHx bits in the AFE_FAULT_CN register. These shutdown bits do not affect the operation of DIF_HIGH and SIGN because the instrumentation amplifier should always provide these signals to the sigma-delta modulator. The circuitry that generates DIF_HIGH and SIGN only gets shut down when the corresponding INA is shut down. Sigma-Delta Modulator (SDM) The Sigma-Delta Modulator (SDM) takes the output signal of the INA and converts this signal into a high resolution bit stream that is further processed by the digital filters. The SDM can operate at clock frequencies of 102.4kHz or 204.8kHz; these frequencies are generated internally. Running the SDM at 204.8kHz results in a larger oversampling ratio, which improves the resolution of the signal recovered by the digital filters behind the SDM. However, running the SDM at a higher clock frequency will increase its power consumption, resulting in a trade-off between resolution and power consumption. 15 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com The 102.4kHz or 204.8kHz clock frequency can be selected for each channel individually by programming the FS_HIGH_CHx bits in the AFE_RES register. The SDM also features dithering to reduce tones in the system, a known by-product of Sigma-Delta converters. The dithering circuit is active by default and is automatically turned OFF when the input signal is larger than 40mV. Sigma-Delta Modulator Fault Detection The state of the integrators in the Sigma-Delta Modulator (SDM) are monitored to detect over-range signals that cause the SDM to become unstable. When an over-range event is detected in the SDM, the state of its integrators is reset, and the over-range error is reported to the SDM_OR_CHx bits of the ERROR_RANGE1, ERROR_RANGE2 and ERROR_RANGE3 registers. Programmable Digital Filters A programmable digital filter behind the Sigma-Delta Modulator (SDM) reconstructs the signal from the SDM output bit stream. The filter consist of three programmable SINC filters as shown in Figure 18. Each stage is a fifth order SINC filter. Figure 18. SINC Filters The decimation rates (R1, R2, and R3) of the SINC filters are programmable as described in Table 4. Each of the three stages further filters and decimates the bit stream so that the output data rate (ODR) and bandwidth (BW) of the signal is reduced, and at the same time, the resolution is enhanced. A 16-bit digital signal with relatively high ODR and BW, but with somewhat limited resolution, is available after the second stage; this signal can be used for PACE pulse detection. That signal is further decimated by the third stage and results in a very high resolution filtered 24-bit digital signal that is an accurate representation of the ECG signal. Table 4. Programmable Digital Filter Coefficients Stage 1 (R1) Stage 2 (R2) Stage 3 (R3) 4 (Standard PACE Data Rate), 2 (Double PACE Data Rate) 4, 5, 6, 8 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 32, 64, 128 The first stage sets the Standard PACE Data Rate (where the decimation rate R1 = 4) or the Double PACE Data Rate (where R1 = 2). Operating the device in the Double PACE Data Rate will double the ODR for the first stage (and therefore also for the subsequent stages). However, the BW of the first stage does not change in this mode; only the ODR is affected. By operating the device in the Double PACE Data Rate, the ODR of the PACE data is doubled, and thus, more accurate PACE pulse detection is possible. However, operating the device in the Double PACE Data Rate will increase its power consumption. The R1 decimation rate can be programmed for each of the three channels separately by using the R1_RATE register. Programming the second stage (R2) to a low decimation rate sets a relatively high ODR and BW, but doing so will also increase the noise level. For digital PACE pulse detection, smalle values for R2 are recommended. The R2 decimation rate can be programmed using the R2_RATE register. As the third stage decimation (R3) increases, the ODR and BW of the ECG decreases. When detecting an ECG signal, higher values of R3 are recommended. The R3 decimation rate for each channel can be individually programmed using the R3_RATE_CH1, R3_RATE_CH2, and R3_RATE_CH3 registers. 16 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 5, Table 6, Table 7, and Table 8 illustrate how these decimation rates R1, R2, and R3 affect the ODR, BW, and RMS Noise of the PACE and ECG signals. In addition, the ODR and BW also depend on whether the SDM is running at a low (102.4kHz) or high (204.8kHz) clock frequency (set by the FS_HIGH_CHx bits in the AFE_RES register). The RMS Noise of the PACE and ECG channels also depend on whether the instrumentation amplifier is running in low power or high resolution mode (set by the EN_HIRES bits in the AFE_RES register). In summary, the output data rate of an ECG channel can be calculated as follows: fS ODRECG = R1 R2 R3 (5) And the output data rate of a PACE channel can be calculated as follows: fS ODRPACE = R1 R2 (6) Where fS is the clock frequency of the modulator: 102.4kHz, or 204.8kHz. Filter Settling Time The low-pass filter frequency responses of the ECG and Pace SINC filters result in a settling time associated with their outputs as a response to a step input signal. This settling time is determined by the order of the filter, N, its differential delay, M, and the channel output data rate, ODR: ts = N × M / ODR (7) The ODR of the filter is a function of the sigma-delta's sampling frequency, fS, and the filter decimation rates. The value of the ODR can be calculated using Equation 5 and Equation 6. For an ECG channel, the value of NxM = 5. For a Pace channel NxM = 5 when operated in the Standard Pace Data Rate (R1 = 4), and NxM = 10 when operated in the Double Pace Data Rate (R1 = 2). As a result, an unclamped pace signal applied to the filter input results in an ECG channel minimum settling time of: tS-ECG = 5 × R1 × R2 × R3 / fS (8) A Standard Pace Data Rate operated Pace channel will go through a minimum settling time of: tS-PACE = 5 × R1 × R2 /fS (9) And a Double Pace Data Rate operated Pace channel will go through a minimum settling time of: tS-PACE = 10 × R1 × R2 / fS (10) Ouput Code (ADCOUT) The ADCOUT of the ADS1293 is due to a differential voltage applied between the positive and negative input terminals of the instrumentation amplifier and can be calculated with Equation 11: é 3.5 VINP - VINM 1 ù + ú ADCMAX ADCOUT = ê 2 VREF 2û ë (11) The reference voltage VREF, equals to 2.4V if the on-chip voltage reference is used. ADCMAX represents the maximum output code of the ADC, which corresponds to a theoretical 2.4V signal at the input of the SDM. The value of ADCMAX changes with the configuration of the digital filters, and the corresponding value can be found in Table 5, Table 6, Table 7, and Table 8. Note that ADCOUT equals ADCMAX/2 for a 0V differential input. 17 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Output Data Rate, Bandiwdth and Noise Tables Table 5. Channel Parameters with SDM Running at 102.4kHz and at Standard PACE Data Rate (R1 = 4) (1) PACE CHANNEL R2 4 5 6 8 (1) R3 RMS NOISE ADCMAX BW [Hz] LOW POWER [µV] HIGH RES [µV] 4 0x800000 1600 325 4.47 4.16 6 0xF30000 1067 215 3.42 3.05 8 0x800000 800 160 2.92 2.57 12 0xF30000 533 105 2.37 2.07 0x800000 400 80 2.06 1.81 32 0x800000 200 40 1.50 1.29 64 0x800000 100 20 1.12 0.94 128 0x800000 50 10 0.85 0.70 4 0xC35000 1280 260 3.82 3.42 6 0xB964F0 853 175 3.02 2.67 8 0xC35000 640 130 2.60 2.29 12 0xB964F0 427 85 2.13 1.86 16 16 0x8000 0xC350 6400 5120 BW [Hz] RMS NOISE [mV] ODR [Hz] ADCMAX ODR [Hz] ECG CHANNEL 1300 1040 1.612 0.572 0xC35000 320 65 1.86 1.62 32 0xC35000 160 32 1.36 1.16 64 0xC35000 80 16 1.02 0.85 128 0xC35000 40 8 0.79 0.64 4 0xF30000 1067 215 3.41 3.04 6 0xE6A900 711 145 2.74 2.42 8 0xF30000 533 110 2.38 2.07 12 0xE6A900 356 70 1.96 1.70 0xF30000 267 55 1.71 1.48 32 0xF30000 133 27 1.25 1.07 16 0xF300 4267 870 0.238 64 0xF30000 67 13 0.94 0.79 128 0xF30000 33 7 0.74 0.60 4 0x800000 800 160 2.91 2.58 6 0xF30000 533 110 2.37 2.08 8 0x800000 400 80 2.08 1.79 12 0xF30000 267 55 1.71 1.48 16 0x8000 3200 650 0.060 0x800000 200 40 1.50 1.29 32 0x800000 100 20 1.12 0.94 64 0x800000 50 10 0.85 0.70 128 0x800000 25 5 0.68 0.54 10000 consecutive readings were used to calculate the RMS noise values in this table. 18 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 6. Channel Parameters with SDM Running at 102.4kHz and at Double PACE Data Rate (R1 = 2) (1) PACE CHANNEL R2 4 5 6 8 (1) R3 RMS NOISE ADCMAX BW [Hz] LOW POWER [µV] HIGH RES [µV] 4 0x800000 3200 640 38.17 37.92 6 0xF30000 2133 430 7.04 6.72 8 0x800000 1600 320 4.35 3.93 0xF30000 1067 215 3.40 3.02 0x800000 800 160 2.92 2.57 32 0x800000 400 80 2.08 1.79 64 0x800000 200 40 1.49 1.29 12 16 0x8000 12800 BW [Hz] RMS NOISE [mV] ODR [Hz] ADCMAX ODR [Hz] ECG CHANNEL 1280 1.479 128 0x800000 100 20 1.11 0.93 4 0xC35000 2560 510 12.64 12.38 6 0xB964F0 1707 340 4.53 4.12 8 0xC35000 1280 255 3.74 3.35 12 0xB964F0 853 170 3.01 2.65 0xC35000 640 130 2.59 2.28 32 0xC35000 320 65 1.86 1.62 64 0xC35000 160 32 1.36 1.16 128 0xC35000 80 16 1.02 0.85 4 0xF30000 2133 420 6.20 5.88 6 0xE6A900 1422 285 3.94 3.57 8 0xF30000 1067 210 3.38 3.02 12 0xE6A900 711 140 2.74 2.42 16 16 0xC350 0xF300 10240 8533 1030 860 0.540 0.228 0xF30000 533 105 2.37 2.07 32 0xF30000 267 55 1.70 1.47 64 0xF30000 133 26 1.26 1.07 128 0xF30000 67 13 0.95 0.78 4 0x800000 1600 320 4.14 3.73 6 0xF30000 1067 215 3.35 2.96 8 0x800000 800 160 2.89 2.54 0xF30000 533 110 2.37 2.07 0x800000 400 80 2.06 1.79 32 0x800000 200 40 1.50 1.29 64 0x800000 100 20 1.11 0.94 128 0x800000 50 10 0.85 0.70 12 16 0x8000 6400 650 0.058 10000 consecutive readings were used to calculate the RMS noise values in this table. 19 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 7. Channel Parameters with SDM Running at 204.8kHz and at Standard PACE Data Rate (R1 = 4) (1) PACE CHANNEL R2 4 5 6 8 (1) R3 RMS NOISE ADCMAX BW [Hz] LOW POWER [µV] HIGH RES [µV] 4 0x800000 3200 640 5.20 4.59 6 0xF30000 2133 430 3.92 3.38 8 0x800000 1600 325 3.32 2.86 0xF30000 1067 215 2.69 2.31 0x800000 800 160 2.34 1.99 32 0x800000 400 80 1.68 1.43 64 0x800000 200 40 1.25 1.04 12 16 0x8000 12800 BW [Hz] RMS NOISE [mV] ODR [Hz] ADCMAX ODR [Hz] ECG CHANNEL 2600 1.738 128 0x800000 100 20 0.95 0.78 4 0xC35000 2560 520 4.36 3.81 6 0xB964F0 1707 350 3.44 2.96 8 0xC35000 1280 260 2.95 2.54 12 0xB964F0 853 170 2.41 2.06 0xC35000 640 130 2.10 1.79 32 0xC35000 320 65 1.53 1.29 64 0xC35000 160 32 1.14 0.95 128 0xC35000 80 15 0.88 0.72 4 0xF30000 2133 430 3.91 3.38 6 0xE6A900 1422 290 3.12 2.68 8 0xF30000 1067 215 2.68 2.30 12 0xE6A900 711 140 2.21 1.88 16 16 0xC350 0xF300 10240 8533 2080 1740 0.613 0.256 0xF30000 533 110 1.93 1.64 32 0xF30000 267 55 1.41 1.18 64 0xF30000 133 27 1.06 0.88 128 0xF30000 67 13 0.83 0.68 4 0x800000 1600 325 3.32 2.86 6 0xF30000 1067 215 2.69 2.31 8 0x800000 800 160 2.34 2.00 0xF30000 533 105 1.93 1.64 0x800000 400 80 1.69 1.44 32 0x800000 200 40 1.25 1.04 64 0x800000 100 20 0.96 0.78 128 0x800000 50 10 0.76 0.61 12 16 0x8000 6400 1300 0.064 10000 consecutive readings were used to calculate the RMS noise values in this table. 20 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 8. Channel Parameters with SDM Running at 204.8kHz and at Double PACE Data Rate (R1 = 2) (1) PACE CHANNEL R2 4 5 6 8 (1) R3 RMS NOISE ADCMAX BW [Hz] LOW POWER [µV] HIGH RES [µV] 4 0x800000 6400 1280 41.27 40.81 6 0xF30000 4267 850 7.79 7.32 8 0x800000 3200 640 4.97 4.35 0xF30000 2133 430 3.88 3.36 0x800000 1600 325 3.32 2.85 32 0x800000 800 160 2.34 1.98 64 0x800000 400 80 1.69 1.43 12 16 0x8000 25600 BW [Hz] RMS NOISE [mV] ODR [Hz] ADCMAX ODR [Hz] ECG CHANNEL 2550 1.592 128 0x800000 200 40 1.25 1.04 4 0xC35000 5120 1020 13.57 13.38 6 0xB964F0 3413 680 5.18 4.56 8 0xC35000 2560 510 4.30 3.73 12 0xB964F0 1707 340 3.41 2.94 0xC35000 1280 260 2.94 2.53 32 0xC35000 640 130 2.10 1.79 64 0xC35000 320 65 1.53 1.29 128 0xC35000 160 32 1.14 0.95 4 0xF30000 4267 850 6.99 6.43 6 0xE6A900 2844 570 4.53 3.94 8 0xF30000 2133 420 3.86 3.33 12 0xE6A900 1422 285 3.11 2.67 16 16 0xC350 0xF300 20480 17067 2050 1720 0.580 0.245 0xF30000 1067 215 2.69 2.29 32 0xF30000 533 110 1.93 1.64 64 0xF30000 267 55 1.41 1.18 128 0xF30000 133 26 1.06 0.88 4 0x800000 3200 640 4.74 4.15 6 0xF30000 2133 425 3.82 3.28 8 0x800000 1600 320 3.29 2.83 0xF30000 1067 215 2.68 2.30 0x800000 800 160 2.34 2.00 32 0x800000 400 80 1.69 1.42 64 0x800000 200 40 1.25 1.05 128 0x800000 100 20 0.95 0.79 12 16 0x8000 12800 1300 0.062 10000 consecutive readings were used to calculate the RMS noise values in this table. 21 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Analog Pace Channel The ADS1293 features an additional analog pace channel to process pulses from a pace maker. The analog pace channel is suitable for low power applications where the device can be configured for low data rates in ECG mode only, while an analog channel detects PACE pulses. This channel consists of a traditional three opamp instrumentation amplifier and is designed to amplify an ECG signal in a typical bandwidth, as specified in the ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS table, allowing for external circuitry to detect the PACE pulses. The analog pace implementation inside the ADS1293 is depicted in Figure 19. The analog pace channel is not limited to PACE detection; it is a full analog channel that could be used to pre-amplify signals, for instance, from a respiration sensor. The output voltage of the analog pace channel is: Vpaceout = 3.5 × (Vinp – Vinm) + RLDREF (12) Where Vinp and Vinm are the positive and negative inputs of the analog pace channel. The input pins of this channel can be selected in the FLEX_PACE_CN register and can connect to any of the IN1 through IN6 pins. Note there is no battery monitoring option available through this channel. There is, however, the reference voltage test mode available as described in Test Mode. Figure 19. Analog Pace Channel Instrumentation Amplifier The output of the analog pace channel can be multiplexed to the WCT or RLDIN pin using the AFE_PACE_CN register. When PACE2RLDIN = 1, the output is routed to the RLDIN terminal, while internally the positive input of the Right Leg Drive amplifier is connected to the RLDREF pin. When PACE2WCT = 1, the output is routed to the WCT terminal, and the WCT terminal is disconnected from the Wilson output. In this case, the Wilson output can still be connected internally to the IN6 pin using the WILSON_CN register. The analog pace channel is disabled when SHDN_PACE = 1 to save power when it is not used. The analog pace channel is designed to drive a high pass filter and can directly drive a capacitive load of 100pF. For analog pace detection, it is recommended to have a band pass filter at the output of the analog pace channel, amplify the resulting signal with a relatively high bandwidth amplifier, and compare the amplified pulses with a relatively high speed window comparator. The bandwidth of the band pass filter, gain of the amplification, and the thresholds of the window comparator should be tuned so the comparators trigger on pacemaker pulses, but not to other signals present in the ECG environment. 22 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Wilson Reference The ADS1293 features a Wilson reference block consisting of three buffer amplifiers and resistors that can generate the voltages for the Wilson Central Terminal or Goldberger terminals. Each of the three buffer amplifiers can be connected to any input pin, IN1 through IN6, by programming the WILSON_EN1, WILSON_EN2, and WILSON_EN3 registers. A buffer that is not connected to an input pin is automatically disabled. When disabled, the buffers have a high output impedance. SELWILSON1 001 010 011 100 101 110 000 enable 200kΩ PACE2WCT WCT BUF1 SELWILSON2 IN1 IN2 IN3 IN4 IN5 IN6 001 010 011 100 101 110 000 enable 200kΩ WCTOUT BUF2 SELWILSON3 001 010 011 100 101 110 000 enable 200kΩ BUF3 200kΩ 200kΩ 200kΩ 200kΩ 200kΩ 200kΩ WILSONINT GOLDINT G1 G2 G3 Figure 20. Wilson Reference Generator Circuit The output of the Wilson Reference can be routed internally to IN6, and the outputs of the Goldberger reference can be routed internally to IN4, IN5 and IN6. This is configured in the WILSON_CN register. If routed externally, it is strongly recommended to shield these connections, which due to their high output impedance, are prone to pick up external interference. Wilson Central Terminal There are three main ECG leads that are measured differentially: • Lead I: I = LA - RA • Lead II: II = LL - RA • Lead III: III = LL - LA Where LA is the left arm electrode, LL is the left leg electrode, and RA is the right arm electrode. In a standard 5-lead or 12-lead ECG, the Wilson Central Terminal is used as the reference voltage for the chest electrodes, which are measured differentially against this reference. The Wilson Central Terminal is defined as the average of the three limb electrodes, RA, LA and LL: Wilson Central Terminal = (RA + LA + LL)/3 23 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com The output of Wilson Central Terminal generated by the ADS1293, as seen in Figure 20, is defined as: WCTOUT = (BUF1 + BUF2 + BUF3)/3 The user could program the WILSON_EN1 register to connect the RA electrode to BUF1, program the WILSON_EN2 register to connect the LA electrode to BUF2, and program the WILSON_EN3 register to connect the LL electrode to BUF3. When the Wilson reference is enabled, its output is present at the WCT pin, except when the analog pace channel is routed to the WCT pin (see Analog Pace Channel). In such a configuration, the Wilson terminal can still be made available at an external pin by programming the WILSONINT bit to 1. Setting this bit connects the output of the Wilson reference internally to the IN6 pin. Goldberger Terminals Augmented leads in 3-lead, 5-lead or 12-lead ECG are typically calculated digitally based on the measurement results of Lead I and Lead II. The augmented leads are defined as: • aVR = -(I + II)/2 = RA - (LA + LL)/2 = RA - G1 • aVL = I - II/2 = LA - (RA + LL)/2 = LA - G2 • aVF = II - I/2 = LL - (RA + LA)/2 = LL - G3 Augmented leads can also be measured directly with the Goldberger terminals to give the best SNR. The Goldberger terminals generated by the ADS1293, as seen in Figure 20, are defined as: • G1 = (BUF2 + BUF3)/2 • G2 = (BUF1 + BUF3)/2 • G3 = (BUF1 + BUF2)/2 In this case, the user must program the WILSON_EN1 register to connect the RA electrode to BUF1, program the WILSON_EN2 register to connect the LA electrode to BUF2, and program the WILSON_EN3 register to connect the LL electrode to BUF3. The Goldberger output terminals, G1, G2 and G3 can be made available on external pins programming the GOLDINT bit to 1. Setting this bit connects the Goldberger terminals internally to the IN4, IN5 and IN6 pins. • IN4 = G1 • IN5 = G2 • IN6 = G3 Note that multiple ADS1293 chips are required if both the augmented leads and the three basic leads need to be converted directly. The WILSONINT and GOLDINT bits must not be programmed to 1 simultaneously because it will short-circuit the Wilson output terminal and the third Goldberger output terminal. The options described in these sections are summarized in Table 9. Table 9. Wilson and Goldberger Reference Control TERMINAL OUTPUTS GOLDINT WILSONINT PACE2WCT WCT PIN IN4 PIN IN5 PIN IN6 PIN 0 0 0 WCTOUT General input General input General input 0 1 0 WCTOUT General input General input WCTOUT 1 0 0 WCTOUT (BUF2 + BUF3)/2 (BUF1 + BUF3)/2 (BUF1 + BUF2)/2 1 1 X Illegal Illegal Illegal Illegal 0 0 1 Vpaceout General input General input General input 0 1 1 Vpaceout General input General input WCTOUT 1 0 1 Vpaceout (BUF2 + BUF3)/2 (BUF1 + BUF3)/2 (BUF1 + BUF2)/2 24 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Common-Mode (CM) Detector The Common-Mode Detector averages the voltage of up to six input pins. Its output can be used in a right leg drive feedback circuit. The selection of the input pins that contribute to the average is configured in the CMDET_EN register. The Common-Mode Detector is automatically disabled when no input pin is selected. Figure 21. Common-Mode Detector Circuit Cable Shield Driving The Common-Mode Detector also has a programmable capacitive load driving capability of up to 8nF that allows it to drive a cable shield to reduce the common-mode signal current through a cable. This effectively increases the bandwidth of the filter formed by the electrode impedance and the cable capacitance, reducing the amount of common-mode to differential mode crosstalk. As a result, the CMRR of the overall ECG system is improved. The bandwidth and capacitive load driving capability of the Common-Mode Detector can be configured in the CMDET_CN register to achieve an optimal tradeoff with power consumption. Table 10 lists the power consumption corresponding to different configuration scenarios given that all inputs are enabled by setting the CMDET_EN register = 0x3F. The lowest current consumption setting can be used when the Common-Mode Detector is only used to drive the Right Leg Driver, and no cable shield is driven. If a cable shield needs to be driven, the power can be increased to drive the cable capacitance depending on the number and type of the driven cable shields. Note that the capacitive driving capability is reduced in the higher bandwidth mode. 25 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 10. Typical Common-Mode Detector Bandwidth, Capacitive Drive and Power Consumption CMDET_BW CMDET_CAPDRIVE BW (kHz) CLOAD (nF) CMDET ISUPPLY (µA) 0: Low BW mode 00: Low Cap Drive 50 2 39 0: Low BW mode 01: Medium Low Cap Drive 50 3.3 45 0: Low BW mode 10: Medium High Cap Drive 50 4.5 56 0: Low BW mode 11: High Cap Drive 50 8 75 1: High BW mode 00: Low Cap Drive 150 0.4 43 1: High BW mode 01: Medium Low Cap Drive 150 0.65 49 1: High BW mode 10: Medium High Cap Drive 150 1 60 1: High BW mode 11: High Cap Drive 150 1.6 79 Common-Mode Output Range (CMOR) The Common-Mode Detector incorporates an out-of-range alarm to sense if the common-mode voltage is outside of the common-mode voltage range of the ADS1293. A Common-Mode Out-of-Range Alarm is created in the CMOR bit of the ERROR_STATUS register when the common-mode drops below 0.75V or exceeds VDD-0.75V. System alarms are filtered by the digital circuitry (see Error Filtering), and for this reason, the master clock must be active in order to capture an alarm. Right Leg Drive (RLD) The RLD is a programmable operational amplifier that is intended to control the common-mode level of the patient connected through electrodes to the ADS1293 and thereby improving the AC CMRR of the overall ECG system. In a typical ADS1293 application, the common-mode level of the patient's body is measured by the Common-Mode Detector described in the previous section. The CMOUT is compared by the RLD to the reference voltage present on the RLDREF pin. When used in an inverting amplifier topology, the right leg electrode is driven by the RLD to counter any differences between the reference voltage and the detected common-mode level. This reduces the amount of power-line common-mode interference. Figure 22. Right-Leg Drive Circuit 26 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 The negative input terminal of the RLD op-amp is always connected to the RLDINV pin. By default, the positive input terminal of the RLD op-amp is routed to the RLDIN pin. However, when bit PACE2RLDIN = 1 in the AFE_PACE_CN register, the positive input terminal is routed to the internally to the RLD reference. This will allow connecting the output of the analog pace instrumentation amplifier to the RLDIN pin. The output of the RLD op-amp is always connected to the RLDOUT pin, and in addition, can be connected to one of the IN1-IN6 terminals by programming the SELRLD bit in the RLD_CN register. The RLD circuit can be shut down in the same register by setting bit SHDN_RLD = 1. Capacitive Load Driving The bandwidth and capacitive load driving capability of the RLD can be configured in the RLD_CN register to achieve an optimal tradeoff of power consumption. Table 11 lists the power consumption corresponding to different configuration scenarios. Table 11. Typical Right Leg Drive Bandwidth, Capacitive Drive, and Power Consumption RLD_BW RLD_CAPDRIVE GBW (kHz) CLOAD (nF) RLD ISUPPLY (µA) 0: Low BW mode 00: Low Cap Drive 50 2 20 0: Low BW mode 01: Medium Low Cap Drive 50 3.3 25 0: Low BW mode 10: Medium High Cap Drive 50 4.5 36 0: Low BW mode 11: High Cap Drive 50 8 55 1: High BW mode 00: Low Cap Drive 200 0.4 23 1: High BW mode 01: Medium Low Cap Drive 200 0.65 29 1: High BW mode 10: Medium High Cap Drive 200 1 39 1: High BW mode 11: High Cap Drive 200 1.6 60 Error Status: RLD Rail The RLD amplifier incorporates a near to rail alarm function that is triggered when the output of the op-amp is below 0.2V or above VDD-0.2V. The alarm is reported to the RLDRAIL bit in the ERROR_STATUS register and indicates that the RLD's feedback loop has difficulty maintaining a constant voltage on the patient’s body. In this case, the common-mode on the patient’s body may drift away from its target value, but it may still be within the proper input common-mode voltage range of the ADS1293, and the ECG signal data acquisition can continue. When the common-mode on the patient’s body is outside the operation range of the ADS1293, the CMOR error will be raised, as described in the previous section. System alarms are filtered by the digital circuitry (see Error Filtering) , and for this reason, the master clock must be active in order to capture an alarm. Lead-Off Detection (LOD) The lead-off detect (LOD) block of the ADS1293 can be used to monitor the connectivity of the 6 input pins to electrodes. The LOD block injects a programmable DC or AC excitation current into selected input pins and detects the voltages that appear on the input pins in response to that current. If a lead is not making a proper contact, then the electrode impedance will be high, and as a result, the voltage in response to a small test current will be relatively large, while the voltage for a well-connected lead will be small. The LOD block can work in one of the three following modes: 1) DC lead-off detect, 2) analog AC lead-off detect or 3) digital AC lead-off detect. All three LOD modes use a common DAC that provides a programmable reference current. This reference current is used to set the magnitude of the test current for lead-off detection. The amplitude of the excitation current used for lead-off detection can be programmed in the LOD_CURRENT register, where codes 0 to 255 result in currents ranging from 0 to 2.040µA in steps of 8nA. The complete LOD block can be shut down by programming the SHDN_LOD bit to 1 in the LOD_CN register. DC Lead-Off Detect The LOD block can be configured for DC LOD mode by programming a 0 in the SELAC_LOD bit of the LOD_CN register. In the DC LOD mode, a DC test current can be injected into any of the six input pins by setting the corresponding bit EN_LOD[x] of the LOD_EN register. Programming a bit to 1 in this register enables a switch that allows a copy of the current programmed into the DAC to be injected into the desired input pins, as shown in the simplified block diagram of Figure 23. 27 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Figure 23. Simplified DC Lead-off Detect Block Diagram For the selected input pins, a Schmitt-trigger comparator then compares the voltage that appears on the pin to (VDD-0.5V). The result of this comparison can be accessed through the corresponding OUT_LOD[x] bit of the ERROR_LOD register. If a lead is off, then the injected current has no return path to ground, and as a result, the voltage on the associated input pin will rise towards VDD. This is detected by the comparator and is used as a signal to indicates the lead is not properly connected. It is important to note that the lead-off detection circuit requires a low impedance return path from the right leg electrode to ground, such as a voltage reference or the RLD amplifier output. Without a proper low impedance return path for the LOD currents, all enabled LOD pins will report a lead disconnected. Analog AC Lead-Off Detect DC lead-off detection cannot be used when using capacitively coupled electrodes, such as dry electrodes, because they have a high DC impedance that will block DC test currents. In this case, the analog AC LOD block can be used. Contrary to the DC LOD, the AC LOD injects AC excitation currents with programmable amplitudes and frequencies into the desired lead. To operate the LOD in analog AC LOD mode, the SELAC_LOD and the ACAD_LOD bits of the LOD_CN register must be set to 1. A simplified block diagram of the analog AC LOD block is shown in Figure 25. The AC excitation frequency can be programmed by a 7-bit number, ACDIV_LOD, and a division factor, ACDIV_FACTOR, in the LOD_AC_CN register. The register sets the output frequency of the divider to a rate of: Φ = 50/(4 × K × (ACDIV_LOD + 1)) kHz (13) Where K is 1 if the ACDIV_FACTOR bit equals 0, and K is 16 if the ACDIV_FACTOR bit equals 1. For instance, ACDIV_LOD = 0 and ACDIV_FACTOR = 0 result in an excitation frequency of 12.5kHz, which is the maximum excitation frequency. Complimentary driven switches, enabled by the EN_LOD[x] bits of the LOD_EN register, sink and source the AC excitation currents into the desired input pins. The resulting AC current has a frequency Φ and a peak-to-peak amplitude equal to the current programmed into the DAC. An AC coupled synchronous detector detects the amplitude of the AC voltage appearing on the lead. The detected amplitude is compared to a reference voltage by means of a Schmitt-trigger comparator. The comparator’s reference voltage level, as shown in Figure 24, is determined by a 2-bit reference DAC configured in the ACLVL_LOD bits of the LOD_CN register. 28 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 1 Threshold Voltage (V) Level 4 Level 3 Level 2 0.1 Level 1 0.01 500 1k 2k 3k 4k 5k Excitation Frequency (Hz) 10k C01 Figure 24. Analog AC Lead-Off Reference Levels The comparator outputs can be accessed at the OUT_LOD[x] bit of the ERROR_LOD register. A high comparator output signal indicates that the AC voltage at the excitation frequency is larger than the programmed threshold, which indicates that the lead is not well connected. The lead-off detection circuit requires a low impedance return path from the right leg electrode to ground, such as a voltage reference or the RLD amplifier output. Without a proper low impedance return path for the LOD currents, all enabled LOD pins will report a lead disconnected. Figure 25. Simplified Analog AC Lead-off Detect Block Diagram Digital AC Lead-Off Detect The digital AC lead-off detect (LOD) allows for measurement of the impedance of the two electrodes connected to an AFE channel by measuring a signal through the AFE. In this mode, the lead-off detect current is injected in a balanced manner at the inputs of the AFE behind the flex routing switch. The AC test current is injected into the positive input of the AFE behind the flex routing switch; while at the same time, a similar test current with opposite sign is injected into the negative input of the AFE. Since the AFE has a very high input impedance, the current injected into the positive input pin cannot flow into the AFE. Instead, it will flow through the flex routing switch, via the positive input electrode into the patient, and then back through the negative input electrode and via another path in the flex routing switch towards the negative input of the AFE, where it is cancelled by the current injected at that point. As a result of this test current, an additional AC voltage input will occur at the input of the AFE with a frequency equal to the frequency of the AC LOD test signal frequency. The magnitude of this voltage equals the magnitude of the AC LOD test current (programmed into the CUR_LOD bit in the LOD_CURRENT register) multiplied by the impedances of the two electrodes routed to the AFE input in series. 29 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com This AC voltage will be digitized by the AFE, and the result is available in the digital AFE output signals. The lead connectivity can be determined in the digital domain by applying an FFT to the digital data and by measuring the amplitude of the tone at the AC LOD excitation frequency. It should be noted that the digital AC LOD can only determine the series connectivity of the two leads attached to the inputs of a differential channel, and hence the connectivity of the individual input pins can only be determined by the DC or the analog AC LOD. Figure 26. Simplified Digital Analog AC Lead-off Detect Block Diagram Figure 26 shows a simplified block diagram of the digital AC LOD. Follow the procedures below to activate the Digital AC LOD: 1. Select the Digital AC lead-off mode by setting bit SELAC_LOD = 1 and ACAD_LOD = 0 in the LOD_CN register. 2. Program the excitation frequency Φ by using the ACDIV_LOD and ACDIV_FACTOR bits in the LOD_AC_CN register. See equation in Analog AC Lead-Off Detect 3. Enable which channel the digital AC LOD will be applied to by selecting the EN_LOD[2:0] bits in the LOD_EN register . These bits correspond to the AFE channels CH3 to CH1 from MSB to LSB, respectively. 4. Determine the phase of the injected current to the AFE channels by programming the EN_LOD[5:3] bits in the LOD_EN register. The EN_LOD[5:3] bits determine the phase of the injected current to the AFE channels CH3 to CH1 from MSB to LSB, respectively. A bit set to 1 means that the corresponding channel will receive an anti-phase excitation current in respect to the frequency divider's phase. In some applications, it may be necessary to invert the sign of the digital AC lead-off test current on a channel. Consider an example where the first AFE is configured through the flexible routing switch to measure the voltage between IN1 and IN2, and the second AFE is configured through the flexible routing switch to measure the voltage between IN2 and IN3. In this configuration, if digital AC LOD test currents are applied to the inputs of both AFEs, the test current that is applied to the negative input of the first AFE and the test current that is applied to the positive input of the second AFE are both flowing through IN2. Depending on the sign of the test current in the second AFE, these currents can add up or cancel each other. If the currents add up, the system will correctly measure the differential input impedance on both AFE channels. If the currents on IN2 cancel, the test current will only flow through IN1 and IN3, and the impedance of the electrode connected to IN2 cannot be measured. To apply the digital AC LOD to CH3 and CH2, set EN_LOD[2] = 1 and EN_LOD[1] = 1. Then, by programming EN_LOD[5] = 0 and EN_LOD[4] = 1, CH3 and CH2 will receive excitation currents in-phase and anti-phase, respectively. 30 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Clock Oscillator The ADS1293 is designed to operate from a 409.6kHz clock. This clock can be generated by an on-chip crystal oscillator or provided externally on the bidirectional CLK. The high-accuracy low-power on-chip crystal oscillator will work with an external 4.096MHz crystal connected between the XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins, each of which must be loaded with a 20pF capacitor to get an accurate oscillation frequency. The output frequency of the on-chip crystal oscillator is divided by 10 to generate the required 409.6kHz clock frequency as shown in Figure 27. VDD VDD 22 pF 22 pF XTAL2 4.096 MHz crystal oscillator XTAL1 SHDN_OSC ÷10 enable STRTCLK CLK 409.6 kHz enable to internal clock EN_CLKOUT generators SHDN_OSC Figure 27. Block Diagram of the Clock Even though the required oscillation frequency of the external crystal is rated at 4.096MHz, both the oscillator and the chip can tolerate a wider crystal oscillation frequency (3.7MHz to 4.5MHz). Note though that the output data rate and bandwidth of the SINC filters given in Table 5 through Table 8 will scale according to the crystal oscillation frequency. When the internal clock is used, the generated clock can be brought off chip through the CLK pin. Its output driver is enabled by configuring bit EN_CLKOUT = 1 in the OSC_CN register, allowing a multi-chip system to operate synchronously from a single crystal oscillator. Setting bit STRTCLK = 1 allows the internal 409.6kHz clock to propagate to the digital circuitry and to the output driver of the CLK pin. The internal crystal oscillator can be shut down to save power or when the clock of the device is provided externally. Configuring bit SHDN_OSC = 1 powers down the internal crystal oscillator and enables the input driver of the CLK pin. The external clock should have a frequency of 409.6kHz with a duty cycle of 50% to get the SINC filter bandwidth given in Table 5 through Table 8. The chip can tolerate a wider frequency range and clock duty cycle on this pin (see the External Clock Frequency and the External Clock Duty Cycle parameters in the Clock section of the ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS table) in exchange of scaling up or down the bandwidth of the SINC filters. Setting bit STRTCLK = 1 allows the external 409.6kHz clock to propagate to the digital circuitry. The STRTCLK bit is designed to ensure all critical blocks of the chip get a clean clock start. The clock source should first be configured and allowed to start up using the SHDN_OSC and EN_CLKOUT bits, and subsequently, the STRTCLK bit can be set high. The oscillator control register bits are summarized in Table 12. In a multi-chip system, the CLK pins of the master and slaves should be connected together. The master should be configured to generate a clock on the CLK pin while the slaves should use the CLK pin as a clock input source. 31 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 12. Clock Oscillator Configuration Bits STRTCLK SHDN_OS C EN_CLKO UT 0 X X No clock 1 0 0 Internal clock to digital circuitry 1 0 1 Internal clock to digital circuitry and CLK pin 1 1 X External clock to digital circuitry CLOCK PROPAGATION Serial Digital Interface A serial peripheral interface (SPI) allows access to the control registers of the ADS1293. The serial interface is a generic 4-wire synchronous interface compatible with SPI type interfaces used on many microcontrollers and DSP controllers. Digital Output Drive Strength The strength of the transistors driving the serial data out pin (SDO) can be programmed to four levels in the DIGO_STRENGTH register. The drive strength will affect the slope of the digital output signal edges, and the optimal drive strength will depend on the capacitive loading on the SDO pin, where larger capacitive loads require larger drive strength. The output drive strength configurability may help reduce interference from the SPI communication into the AFE signal path. In this sense, it is advised to use the lowest drive strength that works for a particular system. SPI Protocol A typical serial interface access cycle is exactly 16 bits long, which includes an 8-bit command field (R/WB + 7bit address) to provide for a maximum of 128 direct access addresses, and an 8-bit data field. Figure 28 shows the access protocol used by this interface. Extended access cycles are possible and they are described in the Auto-incrementing Address and Streaming sections. Figure 28. Serial Interface Protocol 32 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Each assertion of chip select bar (CSB) starts a new register access. The R/Wb bit in the command field configures the direction of the access operation; a value of 0 indicates a write operation and a value of 1 indicates a read operation. All output data is driven on the falling edge of the serial clock (SCLK), and for the 16bit protocol, SDO read data is driven on the falling edge of clocks 8 through 15. All input data on the serial data in (SDI) pin is sampled on the rising edge of SCLK and is written into the register on the rising edge of the 16th clock. The user is required to deassert CSB after the 16th clock; if CSB is deasserted before the 16th clock, no data write will occur. Random Register Access Protocol The 16-bit protocol is useful for random address access. CSB must be asserted during 16 clock cycles of SCLK. Auto-incrementing Address An access cycle may be extended to multiple registers by simply keeping the CSB asserted beyond the stated 16 clocks of the standard 16-bit protocol. In this mode, CSB must be asserted during 8*(1+N) clock cycles of SCLK, where N is the amount of bytes to write or read during the access cycle. The auto-incrementing address mode is useful to access a block of registers of incrementing addresses. For example, to read the pace and ECG data registers located from address 0x30 to address 0x3F and worth 16 bytes of data, follow the next steps: 1. Execute a read command to address 0x30. 2. Extend the CSB assertion during 136 clock cycles (8+8*16). During an auto-incrementing read access, SDO outputs the register contents every 8 clock cycles after the initial 8 clocks of the command field. During an auto-incrementing write access, the data is written to the registers every 8 clock cycles after the initial 8 clocks of the command field. Automatic address increment stops at address 0x4F for both write and read operations. Streaming A read access cycle can operate in streaming mode, also referred to as loop read back mode, by performing a read operation from the DATA_LOOP register and extending the CSB assertion beyond the standard 16 clocks. The streaming mode is supported for the DATA_STATUS, DATA_CH1_PACE, DATA_CH2_PACE, DATA_CH3_PACE, DATA_CH1_ECG, DATA_CH2_ECG and DATA_CH3_ECG registers described in Pace and ECG Data Read Back Registers. The streaming mode is useful to access the block of pace and ECG data registers when not all data needs to be read. The channels to read in this mode are selected in the CH_CNFG register. In this mode, CSB must be asserted during 8*(1+N) clock cycles, where N is the number source bytes enabled in CH_CNFG . The source for pace data is 2 bytes long; the source for ECG data is 3 bytes long, and the source for data status is 1 byte long. For example, to read the DATA_STATUS, DATA_CH3_PACE and DATA_CH3_ECG registers located at address 0x30, 0x35 and 0x3D and worth 6 bytes of data, follow the next steps: 1. Write a value of 0x49 to the CH_CNFG register (address 0x2F). 2. Read from the DATA_LOOP register (address 0x50). 3. Extend the CSB assertion for 56 clock cycles (8+8*6). 33 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Data Ready Bar Data ready bar (DRDYB) is an active low output signal and is asserted when new data is ready to be read. After DRDYB is asserted and an SPI read of ECG or PACE data occurs, DRDYB will be deasserted at the 14th rising edge of SCLK. Figure 29. DRDYB Behavior for a Complete Read Operation New data is available regardless of the serial interface being ready to read the data or not, and therefore, the data is lost if it is not read before the next DRDYB assertion. If DRDYB is asserted and the data is not read, DRDYB is automatically deasserted at least tDRDYB seconds before the next DRDYB assertion. The value for tDRDYB can be found in the TIMING DIAGRAMS. Figure 30. DRDYB Behavior for an Incomplete Read Operation The source channel driving the assertion of the DRDYB signal can be configured in the DRDYB_SRC register. In order to see the DRDYB output pin asserted, one bit of this register must be set to 1 to select the digital channel to drive it. Multiple channels should not be selected to drive the DRDYB output pin, otherwise, it will result in unexpected behavior. The selected channel should not be shut down in the AFE_SHDN_CN register, and if the source is an ECG channel, its filter should not be disabled in the DIS_EFILTER register. It is strongly recommended to select the channel with the fastest data rate as the source for the DRDYB signal to avoid loss of data. By default, the DRDYB signal is masked during the first few data samples after the start of a conversion or when a synchronization error is detected. If any ECG channel is enabled, DRDYB is masked during the first six data samples of the slowest enabled ECG channel. If all ECG channels are disabled, DRDYB is masked for the first six data samples of the slowest enabled pace channel when the data rate is 1xODR, and for the first eleven data samples of the slowest enabled pace channel when the data rate is 2xODR. Masking can be disabled in the MASK_DRDYB register. Synchronization There are three filter timing generators implemented to support independent filter settings. Under normal conditions, the filters always start synchronized when the START_CON bit in the CONFIG register is set to 1, and will remain synchronized. Synchronization can also be continually enforced for the eventuality of a channel losing synchronization, and it can be used in single-chip and multiple-chip systems. 34 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Single-Chip Multi-Channel Synchronization The filter channels are synchronized when DRDYB assertion is at a fixed frequency and new data from each source is available at some integer multiple of DRDYB. This synchronization mode requires that the fastest output data source is selected to drive DRDYB in the DRDYB_SRC register. The filter channels will start synchronized if the output data rates in all channels are the same or integer multiples of each other. Synchronization between channels will be continuously enforced as long as the slowest output source is selected as the synchronization source in the SYNCB_CN register. The SYNCB pin output driver can be disabled in a single-chip system, regardless of the synchronization source selected, and synchronization will continue to be enforced between channels. The SYNCB output driver is disabled programming bit DIS_SYNCBOUT=1 in the SYNCB_CN register. Multi-Chip Synchronization Synchronization in a multiple ADS1293 system is achieved when all the devices share a common clock and synchronization source. The common clock source, fOSC , can be driven from the CLK pin of an ADS1293 when its CLK pin output driver is enabled in the OSC_CN register. The common synchronization source can be driven from the SYNCB pin of the device with the slowest data rate in the system. An ADS1293 is configured as a synchronization source by enabling its SYNCB output driver and selecting the slowest data rate channel to drive the line in the SYNCB_CN register. The SYNCB_CN register of the other devices should be programmed to 0x40 to configure their SYNCB pins as inputs. When configured as an output, SYNCB is driven on the falling edge of fOSC and when configured as an input, SYNCB is sampled on the rising edge of fOSC. Synchronization Errors Detected synchronization events are reported to the ERROR_SYNC register. A phase error is generated when the phase of divided clocks of the timing generator has been adjusted to comply with the SYNCB input signal. A timing error is generated when the timing of the indicated channel has been updated to comply with the timing of the synchronization source, internal or external. By default, a synchronization error will propagate to the ALARMB output pin. Reporting of a synchronization error can be disabled in the MASK_ERR register. Alarm Functions The ADS1293 has multiple warning flags to diagnose possible fault conditions in the ECG monitoring application. The warning flags can be read in the Error Status Registers . The system errors are filtered by the digital circuitry (see Error Filtering), and for this reason, the master clock must be active for the alarms to be reflected in the error registers. 1. ERROR_LOD: Indicates which input has a lead-off error. The lead-off detection was described in Lead-Off Detection (LOD) . 2. ERROR_STATUS: Contains the following error flags: – SYNCEDGEERR: This flag is raised when a synchronization error occurs, as described in Synchronization Errors. – CH3ERR: This flag is raised when one of the 5 LSBs or bit 6 of the ERROR_RANGE3 register is a logic 1. It indicates an out-of-range condition at the AFE in channel 3. These error conditions are described in Instrumentation Amplifier Fault Detection and in Sigma-Delta Modulator Fault Detection . – CH2ERR: See above, but for channel 2. – CH1ERR: See above, but for channel 1. – LEADOFF: This error flag is raised when one of the OUT_LOD bits in the ERROR_LOD register is a logic 1. – BATLOW: This error flag is raised when the supply voltage of the ADS1293 drops below 2.7V. This can be used as a warning sign to the microcontroller that the state of charge of a supply battery is almost below levels of operation. The ADS1293 is designed to function within specification for supplies larger than 2.7V but communication the digital communication interface will work down to 2.4V so that this alarm condition can still be communicated to the microcontroller. A low battery error propagates to the ALARMB pin unless the MASK_BATLOW bit in the MASK_ERR register is set to 1. System alarms are filtered by the digital circuitry (see Error Filtering), and for this reason, the master clock must be active in order to capture an alarm.There is also a battery voltage monitoring feature that can be used to monitor the state of charge of the battery during normal operation described in Battery Monitoring. – RLDRAIL: This error flag is raised when the output voltage of the right leg drive amplifier is approaching 35 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com the supply rails. The flag goes high when the output voltage of the common-mode detector is 200mV away from either supply rail. This condition would occur if the common-mode on the patient’s body is far away from the target value and as a result the right leg drive amplifier needs to deliver a lot of charge to the patient’s body to restore the common-mode voltage. In this scenario, the common-mode may still be inside the range of the instrumentation amplifier and the ECG signal may still be accurately acquired. – CMOR: The CMOR error flag is raised when the output voltage of the common-mode detector is 750mV away from either supply rail. In this case, the common-mode voltage detected on the patient’s body is outside of the input CMVR where the instrumentation amplifier can process the full differential input signal (see Instrumentation Amplifier (INA)). When this flag is raised, the ECG signal accuracy may be lost. 3. ERROR_RANGE1, ERROR_RANGE2, ERROR_RANGE3: These registers contain the out-of-range error signals of the AFEs in the three channels. The flags in these registers are described in Instrumentation Amplifier Fault Detection and in Sigma-Delta Modulator Fault Detection. 4. ERROR_SYNC: This register contains flags that indicate certain synchronization errors have been detected. These errors have been described in Synchronization Errors . 5. ERROR_MISC: This register contains status flags for common-mode out-of-range, right leg drive near rail and low battery errors. Error Filtering The alarms that are generated by the analog circuitry inside the ADS1293 are filtered by digital logic. Alarms will only be accepted if they are active for a number of consecutive digital clock cycles, which toggle on the falling edge of the 409.6kHz oscillator clock. The number of digital clock cycles that an alarm will have to be active before it is accepted is programmable between 1 and 16 counts using the ALARM_FILTER register. This register contains two separate filter parameters. The 4 LSBs in this register program the filtering of the lead-off detect error bits. The 4 MSBs program the filtering of the instrumentation amplifier signal out-of-range errors, the sigmadelta input over range errors, and the CMOR, RLDRAIL and BATLOW errors. ALARMB Pin and Error Masking The ADS1293 has an ALARMB output pin. This open drain output will go low when a new alarm condition occurs in the ERROR_STATUS register. The ALARMB pin can be used as an interrupt signal to a microcontroller to warn about error conditions that can potentially corrupt the data that is being collected so that the microcontroller can take appropriate preventive action. The functionality of the ALARMB pin is flexible and programmable using the MASK_ERR register. This register allows masking some of the errors in the ERROR_STATUS register so that certain alarm events will not trigger a high to low transition on the ALARMB pin. Error Register Automatic Clearing Description All error bits in the registers 0x18 through 0x1E are latched in a high state when an error occurs and will only return to zero after being read. The error bits will remember an error until the user reads the error. The sign bits in the CH1ERR, CH2ERR and CHR3ERR registers are latched on low to high transition of the DIF_HIGH transitions in the corresponding registers. In this way, when the differential signal goes out-of-range, the sign of the signal can also be detected when the alarm register is read. Upon read, the error bits will be cleared. If the error condition has disappeared before the error is read, the error bits will remain low after being read. For all error registers, except ERROR_STATUS, the error bits will return to their high state within a few internal clock cycles if the error condition is still present after a register read. The bits in the ERROR_STATUS register only respond to new errors. If an error persists after the ERROR_STATUS register is read, the error condition will not be reflected in the error status register and the ALARMB pin will not pulse low again. Alarm Propagation Figure 31 shows how the alarms propagate through the digital circuitry inside the ADS1293. The errors propagate from left to right. Synchronization errors are not filtered because they are generated synchronously inside the digital circuitry, and if they occur, they are latched in the ERROR_SYNC register. Lead-off detect errors are filtered by a counter programmed in the 4 LSBs of the ALARM_FILTER register and are latched in the ERROR_LOD register. The instrumentation amplifier out-of-range, sigma-delta over range, right leg drive amplifier out-of-range, common-mode amplifier out-of-range and low battery signals are also filtered by a counter programmed in the MSBs of the ALARM_FILTER register. The out-of-range signals for the 3 channels are latched in the ERROR_RANGE1, ERROR_RANGE2 and ERROR_RANGE3 registers. The first 6 registers on the right hand side of the circuit latch errors until the error is being read. After being read, the error bit will be 36 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 reset, but it will return to a logic 1 if the internal alarm condition persists. After being filtered the alarms are all routed to a digital logic block that detects whether a new alarm has occurred. If this happens, the appropriate bit in the ERROR_STATUS register will be set and the ALARMB pin will be pulled down. The bits in the ERROR_STATUS register will be reset and the ALARMB pin will released when the ERROR_STATUS register is read. Figure 31. Graphical Illustration of Alarm Propagation Reference Voltage Generators The common-mode and right leg drive reference generates VDD/2.2 volts, which are present on the RLDREF pin. This reference is used as an internal common-mode reference, as the reference for the analog pace channel, and should be powered on at all times when a sigma-delta modulator is running. It can be powered down by programming bit SHDN_CMREF=1 in the REF_CN register. The RLDREF pin should have a 0.1µF bypass capacitor to ground. The internal reference, VREF, generates 2.4V, which are present on the CVREF pin. The CVREF pin must have a 1µF bypass capacitor to ground with low ESR and is not designed to be loaded with other circuitry. This reference should also be powered on at all times when a sigma-delta modulator is running. It can be powered down programming bit SHDN_REF=1 in the REF_CN register. It is possible to provide the reference voltage externally on this pin when the internal reference generator is shut down. All three voltage generators require a somewhat larger start up time compared to the other circuit blocks inside the ADS1293, which is why they are treated differently in the global power down or standby states, as will be described in the next section. 37 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Power Management The ADS1293 has many features that allow the optimization of power consumption. The common-mode detector and right leg drive amplifier can be configured to achieve the optimum AC performance to power consumption ratio in a given application environment. Almost all internal circuit blocks can be powered down to reduce power consumption. Table 13 lists the typical power consumption budget for all of the circuit blocks that can be individually powered down. There are two master control bits, PWR_DOWN and STANDBY, in addition to the power down control bits that are used to power down an individual circuit block, and they are located in the CONFIG register. In the power down mode, all circuits that can be powered down are powered down, irrespective of the state of their individual shutdown bits. With the PWR_DOWN bit, the entire ADS1293 can be quickly placed in its minimal current consumption state without needing to do many individual configuration register writes. The STANDBY bit operates in a similar manner, but it does not affect the state of the three voltage generators and the crystal oscillator inside the ADS1293, which require a somewhat longer time to start up. When placing the ADS1293 in stand-by mode, the power consumption is somewhat higher than in the power down state but the ADS1293 can return to operation quicker. The difference between the current consumption in power-down and in stand-by depends on the logic state of the shutdown bits of the two reference voltage generators and the crystal oscillator, as described in Table 13. Table 13 specifies the current consumption of the blocks that are always ON in the first row. The second group in the table specifies the current consumption of the two reference voltage generators and the crystal oscillator that are OFF in power-down mode but that remain active during stand-by mode. The last group of circuit blocks in the table specifies the current consumption of the other circuit blocks. The ADS1293 will need about 100ms to return to operation after being powered down. The time to recover from stand-by is limited by the time latency of the programmable logic filters in the AFE channels, as described in the Filter Settling Time section. Table 13. Typical Current Consumption per Block GLOBAL POWER CONTROL Always on Off in power down BLOCK NAME CURRENT µA Supporting circuitry 80 Reference voltage generator 17 Right leg drive reference 9 Crystal oscillator 7 Instrumentation amplifier Analog front end fault detect Sigma delta modulator Off in standby CONDITIONS / NOTES low power, per channel 38 high resolution, per channel 121 Per channel 2 102.4kHz, per channel 22 204.8kHz, per channel 41 Analog output channel 29 Lead-off detect Excluding excitation currents Wilson reference per channel 7 low speed, cap drive 1, 6 active leads 39 high speed, cap drive 4, 6 active leads 79 low speed, cap drive 1 20 high speed, cap drive 4 60 Common-mode detector Right leg drive amplifier 38 25 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 APPLICATION INFORMATION Example Applications 3-Lead ECG Application A 3-Lead ECG system can be implemented using two channels as shown in Figure 32. In this example, the right arm (RA), left arm (LA), left leg (LL) and right leg (RL) are connected to the IN1, IN2, IN3 and IN4 pins respectively. The ADS1293 uses the Common-Mode Detector block to measure the common-mode of the patient’s body by averaging the voltage of input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3, and uses this signal in the right leg drive feedback circuit (1). The output of the RLD amplifier is connected internally to the IN4 pin, which is connected to the right leg electrode, to drive the common-mode of the patient’s body. The chip uses an external 4.096MHz crystal oscillator connected between the XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins to create the clock sources for the device. 5V + InA - Σ∆ Modulator Digital Filter SELRLD WILSON_EN CMDET_EN Wilson ref. CM detect II SDO DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT SDI SCLK CSB RLD Amp. ALARMB REF for CM & RLD C1 R2 R1 0.1 F VSSIO WCT CMOUT LL XTAL2 DRDYB + InA RL RSTB Digital Filter CLK SYNCB IN6 Σ∆ Modulator 0.1 F I Digital Filter RLDREF IN5 + InA - 4.096 MHz RLDIN CH2 IN4 Σ∆ Modulator RLDINV LA + InA - RLDOUT IN3 RA CVREF VSS VDD CH1 IN2 1 F 22 pF 3.3V - IN1 1 MΩ + 0.1 F 5V 22 pF XTAL1 VDDIO 3.3V 5V 3.3V 1 MΩ Figure 32. 3-Lead ECG Application Follow the next steps to program the ADS1293 in a 3-lead application with an ECG bandwidth of 175Hz and an output data rate of 853Hz; it is assumed that the device registers contain their default power-up values. 1. Set address 0x01 = 0x11: Connects channel 1’s INP to IN2 and INN to IN1. 2. Set address 0x02 = 0x19: Connects channel 2’s INP to IN3 and INN to IN1. 3. Set address 0x0A = 0x07: Enables the common-mode detector on input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3. 4. Set address 0x0C = 0x04: Connects the output of the RLD amplifier internally to pin IN4. 5. Set address 0x12 = 0x04: Uses external crystal and feeds the output of the internal oscillator module to the digital. (1) The ideal values of R1, R2 and C1 will vary per system/application; typical values for these components are: R1 = 100kΩ, R2 = 1MΩ and C1 = 1.5nF. 39 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com 6. Set address 0x14 = 0x24: Shuts down unused channel 3’s signal path. 7. Set address 0x21 = 0x02: Configures the R2 decimation rate as 5 for all channels. 8. Set address 0x22 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 1. 9. Set address 0x23 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 2. 10. Set address 0x27 = 0x08: Configures the DRDYB source to channel 1 ECG (or fastest channel). 11. Set address 0x2F = 0x30: Enables channel 1 ECG and channel 2 ECG for loop read-back mode. 12. Set address 0x01 = 0x01: Starts data conversion. Follow the description in the Streaming section to read the data. The ADS1293 will measure lead I and lead II. Lead III can be calculated as follows: • Lead III = Lead II – Lead I Optionally, the third channel could be used to measure Lead III. 40 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 5-Lead ECG Application Figure 33 shows the ADS1293 in a 5-Lead ECG system setup. Similar to the 3-Lead application, the ADS1293 uses the Common-Mode Detector to measure the common-mode of the patient’s body by averaging the voltage of input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3, and uses this signal in the right leg drive feedback circuit (2). The output of the RLD amplifier is connected to the right leg electrode, which is IN4, to drive the common-mode of the patient’s body. The Wilson Central Terminal is generated by the ADS1293 and is used as a reference to measure the chest electrode, V1. The chip uses an external 4.096MHz crystal oscillator connected between the XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins to create the clock sources for the device. 5V CH1 IN2 IN3 RA LA CH2 IN4 IN5 V1 CH3 1 F + InA - Σ∆ Modulator + InA - Σ∆ Modulator Digital Filter + InA - Σ∆ Modulator Digital Filter 22 pF 3.3V XTAL2 RSTB CVREF VSS VDD IN1 1 MΩ 4.096 MHz VDDIO 22 pF 5V 0.1 F 5V XTAL1 3.3V 0.1 F I Digital Filter CLK DRDYB SDO II V DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT SDI SCLK CSB IN6 SELRLD C1 R2 R1 0.1 F VSSIO REF for CM & RLD SYNCB CM detect RLDREF Wilson ref. RLDIN CMDET_EN ALARMB RLDINV WILSON_EN RLDOUT WCT CMOUT LL RLD Amp. - + InA - + RL 3.3V 1 MΩ Figure 33. 5-Lead ECG Application The following steps configure the ADS1293 for a 5-lead application with an ECG bandwidth of 175Hz and an output data rate of 853Hz; it is assumed that the device registers contain their default power-up values. 1. Set address 0x01 = 0x11: Connects channel 1’s INP to IN2 and INN to IN1. 2. Set address 0x02 = 0x19: Connect channel 2’s INP to IN3 and INN to IN1. 3. Set address 0x03 = 0x2E: Connects channel 3’s INP to IN5 and INN to IN6. 4. Set address 0x0A = 0x07: Enables the common-mode detector on input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3. 5. Set address 0x0C = 0x04: Connects the output of the RLD amplifier internally to pin IN4. 6. Set addresses 0x0D = 0x01, 0x0E = 0x02, 0x0F = 0x03: Connects the first buffer of the Wilson reference to the IN1 pin, the second buffer to the IN2 pin, and the third buffer to the IN3 pin. 7. Set address 0x10 = 0x01: Connects the output of the Wilson reference internally to IN6. (2) The ideal values of R1, R2 and C1 will vary per system/application; typical values for these components are: R1 = 100kΩ, R2 = 1MΩ and C1 = 1.5nF. 41 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com 8. Set address 0x12 = 0x04: Uses external crystal and feeds the output of the internal oscillator module to the digital. 9. Set address 0x21 = 0x02: Configures the R2 decimation rate as 5 for all channels. 10. Set address 0x22 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 1. 11. Set address 0x23 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 2. 12. Set address 0x24 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 3. 13. Set address 0x27 = 0x08: Configures the DRDYB source to ECG channel 1 (or fastest channel). 14. Set address 0x2F = 0x70: Enables ECG channel 1, ECG channel 2, and ECG channel 3 for loop read-back mode. 15. Set address 0x01 = 0x01: Starts data conversion. Follow the description in the Streaming section to read the data. 42 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 8- or 12-Lead ECG Application Figure 34 shows the ADS1293 master/slave setup for an 8-Lead to 12-Lead ECG system. The ADS1293 uses the Common-Mode Detector to measure the common-mode of the patient’s body by averaging the voltage of input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3, and uses this signal in the right leg drive feedback circuit (3). The output of the RLD amplifier is connected to the right leg electrode to drive the common-mode of the patient’s body. The Wilson Central Terminal is generated by the ADS1293 and is used as a reference to measure the chest electrodes, V1V6; it is strongly recommended to shield the external Wilson connections, which due to the high output impedance of the Wilson reference, is prone to pick up external interference. The master ADS1293 generates a synchronization pulse on the SYNCB pin (configured as an output). This drives the SYNCB pins (configured as inputs) of the two slave ADS1293. The master chip uses an external 4.096MHz crystal oscillator connected between the XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins to create the clock sources for the device and outputs this clock on the CLK pin. The next steps will configure the master device; it is assumed that the device registers contain their default power-up values. 1. Set address 0x01 = 0x11: Connects channel 1’s INP to IN2 and INN to IN1. 2. Set address 0x02 = 0x19: Connect channel 2’s INP to IN3 and INN to IN1. 3. Set address 0x0A = 0x07: Enables the common-mode detector on input pins IN1, IN2 and IN3. 4. Set address 0x0C = 0x04: Connects the output of the RLD amplifier internally to pin IN4. 5. Set addresses 0x0D = 0x01, 0x0E = 0x02, 0x0F = 0x03: Connects the first buffer of the Wilson reference to the IN1 pin, the second buffer to the IN2 pin, and the third buffer to the IN3 pin. 6. Set address 0x12 = 0x05: Uses external crystal, feeds the output of the internal oscillator module to the digital, and enables the CLK pin output driver 7. Set address 0x14 = 0x24: Shuts down unused channel 3’s signal path. 8. Set address 0x21 = 0x02: Configures the R2 decimation rate as 5 for all channels. 9. Set address 0x22 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 1. 10. Set address 0x23 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 2. 11. Set address 0x27 = 0x08: Configures the data-ready source to channel 1 ECG (or fastest channel). 12. Set address 0x28 = 0x08: Configures the synchronization source to channel 1 ECG (or slowest channel). 13. Set address 0x2F = 0x30: Enables ECG channel 1 and ECG channel 2 for loop read-back mode. Next, configure the slave devices; it is assumed that the device registers contain their default power-up values. In this example, both devices will have the same configuration; therefore, they can potentially be configured in parallel by asserting the CSB signal of both chips. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. (3) Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address Set address mode. 0x01 = 0x0C: Connects channel 1’s INP to IN1 and INN to IN4. 0x02 = 0x14: Connects channel 2’s INP to IN2 and INN to IN4. 0x03 = 0x1C: Connects channel 3’s INP to IN3 and INN to IN4. 0x12 = 0x06: Uses external clock signal on the CLK pin and feeds it to the digital. 0x21 = 0x02: Configures the R2 decimation rate as 5 for all channels. 0x22 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 1. 0x23 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 2. 0x24 = 0x02: Configures the R3 decimation rate as 6 for channel 3. 0x27 = 0x00: DRDYB pin not asserted by slave devices. 0x28 = 0x40: Disables SYNCB driver and configures pin as input. 0x2F = 0x70: Enables ECG channel 1, ECG channel 2, and ECG channel 3 for loop read-back The ideal values of R1, R2 and C1 will vary per system/application; typical values for these components are: R1 = 100kΩ, R2 = 1MΩ and C1 = 1.5nF. 43 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Finally, start the conversion. This should be written to all three chips. 25. Set address 0x00 = 0x01: Starts data conversion (repeat this step for every device). The three devices will run synchronously using the SYNCB signal. Follow the description in the Streaming section to read the data. The ADS1293 measures lead I, lead II and leads V1-V6. For a 12-lead application, the remaining 4 leads can be calculated as follows: • • • • Lead III = Lead II – Lead I aVR = – ( I + II ) / 2 aVL = I – II / 2 aVF = II – I / 2 44 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 5V 3.3V XTAL2 1M RSTB CVREF VSS VDD 0.1 PF 5V 22 pF 5V 1 PF 22 pF 3.3V 4.096 MHz XTAL1 VDDIO www.ti.com 0.1 PF CLK IN1 IN2 + CH1 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter + CH2 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter I DRDYB V4 V5 V6 IN5 IN6 WILSON_EN CMDET_EN Wilson ref. CM detect WCT RLD Amp. SDI SCLK CSB ALARMB 3.3V VDDIO 3.3V 1 PF VSSIO 0.1 PF SYNCB R2 R1 RSTB CVREF VSS 0.1 PF VDD 5V C1 RLDINV RLDOUT CMOUT LL RLDREF REF for CM & RLD RL RLDIN V3 IN4 DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT - LA V1 V2 II + RA SELRLD SDO IN3 1M 0.1PF CLK IN1 IN2 + CH1 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter + CH2 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter V1 DRDYB SDO IN3 IN4 IN5 + CH3 InA - IN6 V2 SDI SCLK V3 Digital Filter ¨ Modulator DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT CSB ALARMB IN5 IN6 SYNCB 3.3V 0.1 PF CLK + CH1 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter + CH2 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter V4 DRDYB SDO IN3 IN4 VSSIO VDDIO 1M IN1 IN2 RLDREF RLDIN RLDINV RLDOUT 1 PF 0.1 PF 3.3V RSTB VSS 0.1 PF VDD 5V CVREF CMOUT WCT + CH3 InA - ¨ Modulator Digital Filter V5 DIGITAL CONTROL AND POWER MANAGEMENT V6 SDI SCLK CSB ALARMB SYNCB 0.1 PF RLDREF RLDIN RLDINV RLDOUT CMOUT WCT VSSIO Figure 34. 8- or 12-Lead ECG Application 45 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Simultaneous ECG and PACE Data Read Each of the three digital channels of the ADS1293 provides a high-performance path for ECG monitoring and a lower resolution path for monitoring of pace-maker signals. The digitized signals from these two paths can be read simultaneously from the Pace and ECG Data Read Back Registers. The ECG signal path achieves higher resolution than the PACE signal path by having one extra filtering stage (as shown in Figure 18). Due to the difference in filtering stages of the two paths, the PACE data is available for reading at a much higher rate than the ECG data. In this sense, the PACE channel must be selected as the driving source of the DRDYB signal. In the Streaming mode, the data from the DATA_LOOP register should be read after the DRDYB line is asserted; this means that new data is available. In order to read both ECG and PACE data from the DATA_LOOP register, the channels of interest must be enabled in the CH_CNFG register. As an example, the 3-Lead ECG Application can be reconfigured to perform simultaneous ECG and PACE data reads from channel 1: 1. Set address 0x00 = 0x00: Stops data conversion (if any). 2. Set address 0x2F = 0x32: Enables channel 1 PACE, channel 1 ECG, and channel 2 ECG for loop. read-back mode 3. Set address 0x27 = 0x01: Reconfigures the DRDYB source to channel 1 PACE . 4. Set address 0x00 = 0x01: Starts data conversion. In this case, new PACE data from channel 1 is available on every DRDYB assertion; ECG data from channel 1 and channel 2, on the other hand, is available every six DRDYB assertions (R3_RATE_CH1 = R3_RATE_CH2 = 6). There are different approaches for handling simultaneous ECG and PACE data read. One approach is to read ECG data every time that PACE data is ready, over-sampling the ECG channel. This is possible because old conversion values are retained in the data registers until new data overwrites them. A second approach is to also read the DATA_STATUS register. Continuing from the steps above: 5. Set address 0x00 = 0x00: Stops data conversion. 6. Set address 0x2F = 0x33: Enables data ready status, channel 1 PACE, channel 1 ECG, and channel 2. ECG for loop read-back mode 7. Set address 0x00 = 0x01: Starts data conversion. The DATA_STATUS register indicates the channel(s) that are updated at a given DRDYB assertion; this information can potentially be used to discard irrelevant data. A third and more complex approach is to continuously reprogram the CH_CNFG register based on the contents of DATA_STATUS register. The CH_CNFG register should be reprogrammed to read PACE+ECG data only when the DATA_STATUS register indicates ECG data is available. After reading the PACE+ECG data, the CH_CNFG register should be reprogrammed back to reading only the DATA_STATUS register and the PACE data. In this case, the ECG data is not oversampled and the SPI communication can be significantly reduced for cases where a decimation rate, R3_RATE_CHx, is large. The reconfiguration of the CH_CNFG register should be done before the next DRDYB assertion to avoid losing data. 46 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 REGISTERS 1. If written to, RESERVED bits must be written to 0 unless otherwise indicated. 2. Read back value of RESERVED bits and registers is unspecified and should be discarded. 3. Recommended values must be programmed and forbidden values must not be programmed where they are indicated in order to avoid unexpected results. 4. If written to, registers indicated as Reserved must have the indicated default value as shown in the register map. Any other value can cause unexpected results. Register Map REGISTER NAME DESCRIPTION ADDRESS ACCESS DEFAULT 0x00 R/W 0x02 Operation Mode Registers CONFIG Main Configuration Input Channel Selection Registers FLEX_CH1_CN Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 1 0x01 R/W 0x00 FLEX_CH2_CN Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 2 0x02 R/W 0x00 FLEX_CH3_CN Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 3 0x03 R/W 0x00 FLEX_PACE_CN Flex Routing Switch Control for Pace Channel 0x04 R/W 0x00 FLEX_VBAT_CN Flex Routing Switch for Battery Monitoring 0x05 R/W 0x00 Lead-off Detect Control Registers LOD_CN Lead-Off Detect Control 0x06 R/W 0x08 LOD_EN Lead-Off Detect Enable 0x07 R/W 0x00 LOD_CURRENT Lead-Off Detect Current 0x08 R/W 0x00 LOD_AC_CN AC Lead-Off Detect Control 0x09 R/W 0x00 0x0A R/W 0x00 Common-Mode Detection and Right Leg Drive Feedback Control Registers CMDET_EN Common-Mode Detect Enable CMDET_CN Common-Mode Detect Control 0x0B R/W 0x00 RLD_CN Right Leg Drive Control 0x0C R/W 0x00 WILSON_EN1 Wilson Reference Input one Selection 0x0D R/W 0x00 WILSON_EN2 Wilson Reference Input two Selection 0x0E R/W 0x00 WILSON_EN3 Wilson Reference Input three Selection 0x0F R/W 0x00 WILSON_CN Wilson Reference Control 0x10 R/W 0x00 Internal Reference Voltage Control 0x11 R/W 0x00 Clock Source and Output Clock Control 0x12 R/W 0x00 AFE_RES Analog Front-End Frequency and Resolution 0x13 R/W 0x00 AFE_SHDN_CN Analog Front-End Shutdown Control 0x14 R/W 0x00 AFE_FAULT_CN Analog Front-End Fault Detection Control 0x15 R/W 0x00 RESERVED — 0x16 R/W 0x00 AFE_PACE_CN Analog Pace Channel Output Routing Control 0x17 R/W 0x01 ERROR_LOD Lead-Off Detect Error Status 0x18 RO — ERROR_STATUS Other Error Status 0x19 RO — ERROR_RANGE1 Channel 1 AFE Out-of-Range Status 0x1A RO — ERROR_RANGE2 Channel 2 AFE Out-of-Range Status 0x1B RO — ERROR_RANGE3 Channel 3 AFE Out-of-Range Status 0x1C RO — ERROR_SYNC Synchronization Error 0x1D RO — Wilson Control Registers Reference Registers REF_CN OSC Control Registers OSC_CN AFE Control Registers Error Status Registers 47 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 REGISTER NAME www.ti.com ADDRESS ACCESS DEFAULT Miscellaneous Errors 0x1E RO 0x00 DIGO_STRENGTH Digital Output Drive Strength 0x1F R/W 0x03 R2_RATE R2 Decimation Rate 0x21 R/W 0x08 R3_RATE_CH1 R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 1 0x22 R/W 0x80 R3_RATE_CH2 R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 2 0x23 R/W 0x80 R3_RATE_CH3 R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 3 0x24 R/W 0x80 R1_RATE R1 Decimation Rate 0x25 R/W 0x00 DIS_EFILTER ECG Filter Disable 0x26 R/W 0x00 DRDYB_SRC Data Ready Pin Source 0x27 R/W 0x00 SYNCB_CN SYNCB In/Out Pin Control 0x28 R/W 0x40 MASK_DRDYB Optional Mask Control for DRDYB Output 0x29 R/W 0x00 MASK_ERR Mask Error on ALARMB Pin 0x2A R/W 0x00 Reserved — 0x2B — 0x00 Reserved — 0x2C — 0x00 Reserved — 0x2D — 0x09 ALARM_FILTER Digital Filter for Analog Alarm Signals 0x2E R/W 0x33 CH_CNFG Configure Channel for Loop Read Back Mode 0x2F R/W 0x00 ERROR_MISC DESCRIPTION Digital Registers Pace and ECG Data Read Back Registers DATA_STATUS ECG and Pace Data Ready Status 0x30 RO — DATA_CH1_PACE Channel 1 Pace Data 0x31 0x32 RO — DATA_CH2_PACE Channel 2 Pace Data 0x33 0x34 RO — DATA_CH3_PACE Channel 3 Pace Data 0x35 0x36 RO — DATA_CH1_ECG Channel 1 ECG Data 0x37 0x38 0x39 RO — DATA_CH2_ECG Channel 2 ECG Data 0x3A 0x3B 0x3C RO — DATA_CH3_ECG Channel 3 ECG Data 0x3D 0x3E 0x3F RO — REVID Revision ID 0x40 RO 0x01 DATA_LOOP Loop Read Back Address 0x50 RO — 48 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Operation Mode Registers Table 14. CONFIG: Main Configuration Addr 0x00 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 PWR_DOWN BIT1 STANDBY BIT0 START_CON [7:3] RESERVED — [2] PWR_DOWN Power-down mode 0: Disabled (default) 1: Circuit powered down [1] STANDBY Stand-by mode 0: Disabled 1: Most circuits powered down (default) [0] START_CON Start conversion 0: Disabled (default) 1: Conversion active Note: Programming START_CON = 1 locks write access to registers 0x11, 0x12, 0x13 and 0x21–0x29. Input Channel Selection Registers Table 15. FLEX_CH1_CN: Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 1 Addr 0x01 BIT7 BIT6 TST1 BIT5 BIT4 POS1 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 NEG1 [7:6] TST1 Test signal selector 00: Test signal disconnected and CH1 inputs determined by POS1 and NEG1 (default) 01: Connect channel one to positive test signal 10: Connect channel one to negative test signal 11: Connect channel one to zero test signal [5:3] POS1 Positive terminal of channel 1 000: Positive terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Positive terminal connected to input IN1 010: Positive terminal connected to input IN2 011: Positive terminal connected to input IN3 100: Positive terminal connected to input IN4 101: Positive terminal connected to input IN5 110: Positive terminal connected to input IN6 [2:0] NEG1 Negative terminal of channel 1 000: Negative terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Negative terminal connected to input IN1 010: Negative terminal connected to input IN2 011: Negative terminal connected to input IN3 100: Negative terminal connected to input IN4 101: Negative terminal connected to input IN5 110: Negative terminal connected to input IN6 BIT0 49 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 16. FLEX_CH2_CN: Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 2 Addr 0x02 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 TST2 BIT4 POS2 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 NEG2 [7:6] TST2 Test signal selector 00: Test signal disconnected and CH2 inputs determined by POS2 and NEG2 (default) 01: Connect channel two to positive test signal 10: Connect channel two to negative test signal 11: Connect channel two to zero test signal [5:3] POS2 Positive terminal of channel 2 000: Positive terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Positive terminal connected to input IN1 010: Positive terminal connected to input IN2 011: Positive terminal connected to input IN3 100: Positive terminal connected to input IN4 101: Positive terminal connected to input IN5 110: Positive terminal connected to input IN6 [2:0] NEG2 Negative terminal of channel 2 000: Negative terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Negative terminal connected to input IN1 010: Negative terminal connected to input IN2 011: Negative terminal connected to input IN3 100: Negative terminal connected to input IN4 101: Negative terminal connected to input IN5 110: Negative terminal connected to input IN6 BIT0 Table 17. FLEX_CH3_CN: Flex Routing Switch Control for Channel 3 Addr 0x03 BIT7 BIT6 TST3 BIT5 BIT4 POS3 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 NEG3 [7:6] TST3 Test signal selector 00: Test signal disconnected and CH3 inputs determined by POS3 and NEG3 (default) 01: Connect channel three to positive test signal 10: Connect channel three to negative test signal 11: Connect channel three to zero test signal [5:3] POS3 Positive terminal of channel 3 000: Positive terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Positive terminal connected to input IN1 010: Positive terminal connected to input IN2 011: Positive terminal connected to input IN3 100: Positive terminal connected to input IN4 101: Positive terminal connected to input IN5 110: Positive terminal connected to input IN6 [2:0] NEG3 Negative terminal of channel 3 000: Negative terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Negative terminal connected to input IN1 010: Negative terminal connected to input IN2 011: Negative terminal connected to input IN3 100: Negative terminal connected to input IN4 101: Negative terminal connected to input IN5 110: Negative terminal connected to input IN6 50 BIT0 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 18. FLEX_PACE_CN: Flex Routing Switch Control for Pace Channel Addr 0x04 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 TST4 BIT4 POS4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 NEG4 [7:6] TST4 Test signal selector 00: Test signal disconnected and PACE inputs determined by POS4 and NEG4 (default) 01: Connect pace channel to positive test signal 10: Connect pace channel to negative test signal 11: Connect pace channel to zero test signal [5:3] POS4 Positive terminal of pace channel 000: Positive terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Positive terminal connected to input IN1 010: Positive terminal connected to input IN2 011: Positive terminal connected to input IN3 100: Positive terminal connected to input IN4 101: Positive terminal connected to input IN5 110: Positive terminal connected to input IN6 [2:0] NEG4 Negative terminal of pace channel 000: Negative terminal is disconnected (default) 001: Negative terminal connected to input IN1 010: Negative terminal connected to input IN2 011: Negative terminal connected to input IN3 100: Negative terminal connected to input IN4 101: Negative terminal connected to input IN5 110: Negative terminal connected to input IN6 BIT0 Table 19. FLEX_VBAT_CN: Flex Routing Switch for Battery Monitoring Addr 0x05 BIT7 BIT6 RESERVED — [2] VBAT_MONI_CH3 Battery monitor configuration for channel 3 0: Battery voltage monitor disabled (default) 1: Battery voltage monitor enabled and overrides FLEX_CH3_CN register [1] VBAT_MONI_CH2 Battery monitor configuration for channel 2 0: Battery voltage monitor disabled (default) 1: Battery voltage monitor enabled and overrides FLEX_CH2_CN register [0] VBAT_MONI_CH1 [7:3] BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 VBAT_ MONI_CH3 BIT1 VBAT_ MONI_CH2 BIT0 VBAT_ MONI_CH1 Battery monitor configuration for channel 1 0: Battery voltage monitor disabled (default) 1: Battery voltage monitor enabled and overrides FLEX_CH1_CN register Note: The INA of the corresponding monitoring channel must be shut down in 0x14. 51 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Lead-Off Detect Control Registers Table 20. LOD_CN: Lead-Off Detect Control Addr 0x06 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 ACAD_LOD BIT3 SHDN_LOD [7:5] RESERVED — [4] ACAD_LOD AC analog/digital lead-off mode select 0: Digital AC lead-off detect (default) 1: Analog AC lead-off detect [3] SHDN_LOD Shut down lead-off detection 0: Lead-off detection circuitry is active 1: Lead-off detection circuitry is shut down (default) [2] SELAC_LOD Lead-off detect operation mode 0: DC lead-off mode (default) 1: AC lead-off mode [1:0] ACLVL_LOD Programmable comparator trigger level for AC lead-off detection 00: Level 1 (default) 01: Level 2 10: Level 3 11: Level 4 52 BIT2 SELAC_LOD BIT1 BIT0 ACLVL_LOD Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 21. LOD_EN: Lead-Off Detect Enable Addr 0x07 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 EN_LOD [7:6] RESERVED — [5] EN_LOD_6 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN6. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits configure the phase of the current injected into channel CH3. 0: In-phase (default) 1: Anti-phase [4] EN_LOD_5 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN5. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits configure the phase of the current injected into channel CH2. 0: In-phase (default) 1: Anti-phase [3] EN_LOD_4 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN4. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits configure the phase of the current injected into channel CH1. 0: In-phase (default) 1: Anti-phase [2] EN_LOD_3 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN3. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for channel CH3. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled [1] EN_LOD_2 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN2. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enable Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for channel CH2. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled [0] EN_LOD_1 DC or Analog AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for input IN1. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enable Digital AC Lead-off-Detection: These bits enable the lead-off-detection for channel CH1. 0: Lead-off detection disabled (default) 1: Lead-off detection enabled 53 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 22. LOD_CURRENT: Lead-Off Detect Current Addr 0x08 [7:0] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 CUR_LOD CUR_LOD Lead-off detect current select The lead-off detect current is programmable in a range of 2.04μA with steps of 8nA. 00000000: 0.000 μA (default) 00000001: 0.008 μA .. .. 11111110: 2.032 μA 11111111: 2.040 μA Table 23. LOD_AC_CN: AC Lead-Off Detect Control Addr 0x09 [7] [6:0] BIT7 ACDIV_ FACTOR BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 ACDIV_LOD BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 ACDIV_FACTOR AC lead off test frequency division factor 0: Clock divider factor K = 1 (default) 1: Clock divider factor K = 16 ACDIV_LOD Clock divider ratiio for AC lead off There are 7 bits available to program the clock divider that generates the AC lead off test frequency. Common-Mode Detection and Right Leg Drive Common-Mode Feedback Control Registers Table 24. CMDET_EN: Common-Mode Detect Enable Addr 0x0A BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 CMDET_ EN_IN6 BIT4 CMDET_ EN_IN5 BIT3 CMDET_ EN_IN4 BIT2 CMDET_ EN_IN3 BIT1 CMDET_ EN_IN2 BIT0 CMDET_ EN_IN1 [7:6] RESERVED — [5:0] CMDET_EN_INx Common-mode detect input enable There is one bit available per input pin, where the MSB corresponds to input pin IN6 and the LSB corresponds to input pin IN1. 0: Disable (default) 1: Enable the corresponding pin's voltage to contribute to the average voltage of the common-mode detect block. Table 25. CMDET_CN: Common-Mode Detect Control Addr 0x0B BIT7 BIT6 [7:6] RESERVED — [2] CMDET_BW Common-mode detect bandwidth mode 0: Low bandwidth mode (default) 1: High bandwidth mode CMDET_CAPDRIVE Common-mode detect capacitive load drive capability 00: Low cap-drive mode (default) 01: Medium low cap-drive mode 10: Medium high cap-drive mode 11: High cap-drive mode [1:0] BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 54 BIT2 CMDET_BW BIT1 BIT0 CMDET_CAPDRIVE Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 26. RLD_CN: Right Leg Drive Control Addr 0x0C BIT7 BIT6 RLD_BW BIT5 BIT4 RLD_CAPDRIVE BIT3 SHDN_RLD [7] RESERVED — [6] RLD_BW Right leg drive bandwidth mode 0: Low bandwidth mode (default) 1: High bandwidth mode RLD_CAPDRIVE Right leg drive capacitive load drive capability 00: Low cap-drive mode (default) 01: Medium low cap-drive mode 10: Medium high cap-drive mode 11: High cap-drive mode SHDN_RLD Shut down right leg drive amplifier 0: RLD amplifier powered up (default) 1: RLD amplifier powered down SELRLD Right leg drive multiplexer 000: Right leg drive output disconnected (default) 001: Right leg drive output connected to IN1 010: Right leg drive output connected to IN2 011: Right leg drive output connected to IN3 100: Right leg drive output connected to IN4 101: Right leg drive output connected to IN5 110: Right leg drive output connected to IN6 [5:4] [3] [2:0] BIT2 BIT1 SELRLD BIT0 BIT1 SELWILSON1 BIT0 Wilson Control Registers Table 27. WILSON_EN1: Wilson Reference Input One Selection Addr 0x0D [7] [2:0] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 RESERVED — SELWILSON1 Wilson reference routing for the first buffer amplifier 000: No connection to the first buffer amplifier (default) 001: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN1 010: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN2 011: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN3 100: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN4 101: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN5 110: First buffer amplifier connected to input IN6 BIT2 Table 28. WILSON_EN2: Wilson Reference Input Two Selection Addr 0x0E BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 [7:3] RESERVED — [2:0] SELWILSON2 Wilson reference routing for the second buffer amplifier 000: No connection to the second buffer amplifier (default) 001: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN1 010: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN2 011: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN3 100: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN4 101: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN5 110: Second buffer amplifier connected to input IN6 BIT2 BIT1 SELWILSON2 BIT0 55 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 29. WILSON_EN3: Wilson Reference Input three Selection Addr 0x0F BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 [7:3] RESERVED — [2:0] SELWILSON3 Wilson reference routing for the third buffer amplifier 000: No connection to the third buffer amplifier (default) 001: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN1 010: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN2 011: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN3 100: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN4 101: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN5 110: Third buffer amplifier connected to input IN6 BIT2 BIT1 SELWILSON3 BIT0 BIT1 GOLDINT BIT0 WILSONINT Table 30. WILSON_CN: Wilson Reference Control Addr 0x10 [7:2] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 RESERVED — [1] GOLDINT Goldberger reference routing 0: Goldberger reference disabled (default) 1: Goldberger reference outputs internally connected to IN4, IN5 and IN6 Note: GOLDINT bit can not be 1 when WILSONINT is 1. [0] WILSONINT Wilson reference routing 0: Wilson reference output internally disconnected from IN6 (default) 1: Wilson reference output internally connected to IN6 Note: WILSONINT bit can not be 1 when GOLDINT is 1. Reference Registers Table 31. REF_CN: Internal Reference Voltage Control Addr 0x11 BIT7 BIT6 RESERVED — [1] SHDN_CMREF Shut down the common-mode and right leg drive reference voltage circuitry 0: CM and RLD reference voltage is on (default) 1: Shut down CM and RLD reference voltage Note: Enable this bit to save power when the analog block is shut down (SHDN_REF = 1). Power-down mode automatically shuts down the common-mode and right leg drive reference. [0] SHDN_REF Shut down internal 2.4V reference voltage 0: Internal reference voltage is on (default) 1: Shut down internal reference voltage Note: Enabling this bit allows driving the IC with an external reference voltage on the CVREF pin. Power-down mode automatically shuts down the internal 2.4V reference. [7:2] BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 56 BIT2 BIT1 SHDN_ CMREF BIT0 SHDN_REF Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 OSC Control Registers Table 32. OSC_CN: Clock Source and Output Clock Control Addr 0x12 [7:3] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 STRTCLK BIT1 SHDN_OSC BIT0 EN_CLKOUT RESERVED — [2] STRTCLK Start the clock 0: Clock to digital disabled (default) 1: Enable clock to digital Note: Set this bit high only after the oscillator has started up or after the oscillator has shut down and the external clock has started up. [1] SHDN_OSC Select clock source 0: Use internal clock with external crystal on XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins (default) 1: Shut down internal oscillator and use external clock from CLK pin Note: STRTCLK bit should be low at the time this bit is reconfigured. [0] EN_CLKOUT Enable CLK pin output driver 0: Clock output driver disabled (default) 1: Clock output driver enabled AFE Control Registers Table 33. AFE_RES: Analog Front-End Frequency and Resolution Addr 0x13 BIT7 BIT6 RESERVED — [5] FS_HIGH_CH3 Clock frequency for channel 3 0: 102400Hz (default) 1: 204800Hz [4 ] FS_HIGH_CH2 Clock frequency for channel 2 0: 102400Hz (default) 1: 204800Hz [3] FS_HIGH_CH1 Clock frequency for channel 1 0: 102400Hz (default) 1: 204800Hz [2] EN_HIRES_CH3 High resolution mode for channel 3 instrumentation amplifier 0: Disabled (default) 1: Enabled [1] EN_HIRES_CH2 High resolution mode for channel 2 instrumentation amplifier 0: Disabled (default) 1: Enabled [0] EN_HIRES_CH1 High resolution mode for channel 1 instrumentation amplifier 0: Disabled (default) 1: Enabled [7:6] BIT5 FS_HIGH_ CH3 BIT4 FS_HIGH_ CH2 BIT3 FS_HIGH_ CH1 BIT2 EN_HIRES_ CH3 BIT1 EN_HIRES_ CH2 BIT0 EN_HIRES_ CH1 57 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 34. AFE_SHDN_CN: Analog Front-End Shutdown Control Addr 0x14 BIT7 BIT6 RESERVED — [5] SHDN_SDM_CH3 Shut down the sigma-delta modulator for channel 3 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [4 ] SHDN_SDM_CH2 Shut down the sigma-delta modulator for channel 2 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [3] SHDN_SDM_CH1 Shut down the sigma-delta modulator for channel 1 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [2] SHDN_INA_CH3 Shut down the instrumentation amplifier for channel 3 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [1] SHDN_INA_CH2 Shut down the instrumentation amplifier for channel 2 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [0] SHDN_INA_CH1 Shut down the instrumentation amplifier for channel 1 0: Active (default) 1: Shut down [7:6] BIT5 SHDN_ SDM_CH3 BIT4 SHDN_ SDM_CH2 BIT3 SHDN_ SDM_CH1 BIT2 SHDN_ INA_CH3 BIT1 SHDN_ INA_CH2 BIT0 SHDN_ INA_CH1 Table 35. AFE_FAULT_CN: Analog Front-End Fault Detection Control Addr 0x15 [7:3] [2] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 SHDN_ FAULTDET_ CH3 RESERVED — SHDN_ FAULTDET_CH3 Disable the instrumentation amplifier fault detection for channel 3 BIT1 SHDN_ FAULTDET_ CH2 BIT0 SHDN_ FAULTDET_ CH1 0: Fault detection active (default) 1: Disable the fault detection [1 ] SHDN_ FAULTDET_CH2 Disable the instrumentation amplifier fault detection for channel 2 0: Active (default) 1: Disable the fault detection [0] SHDN_ FAULTDET_CH1 Disable the instrumentation amplifier fault detection for channel 1 0: Active (default) 1: Disable the fault detection 58 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 36. AFE_PACE_CN: Analog Pace Channel Output Routing Control Addr 0x17 BIT7 BIT6 RESERVED — [2] PACE2RLDIN Connect the analog pace channel output to RLDIN pin 0: Analog pace channel output is disconnected from the RLDIN pin (default) 1: Connect the analog pace channel output to the RLDIN pin. Note: The right leg drive amplifier is disconnected from the RLDIN pin and connected internally to the RLDREF pin when this bit is 1. [1 ] PACE2WCT Connect the analog pace channel output to WCT pin 0: Analog pace channel output is disconnected from the WCT pin (default) 1: Connect the analog pace channel output to the WCT pin. Note: The Wilson reference output is disconnected from the WCT pin when this bit is 1. The Wilson output can be connected internally to IN6 pin with the WILSON_CN register. [0] SHDN_PACE Shut down analog pace channel 0: Analog pace channel is powered up 1: Analog pace channel is shut down (default) [7:3] BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 PACE2RLDI N BIT1 PACE2WCT BIT0 SHDN_PACE Error Status Registers Table 37. ERROR_LOD: Lead Off Detect Error Status Addr 0x18 BIT7 BIT6 [7:6] RESERVED — [5:0] OUT_LOD BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 OUT_LOD BIT1 BIT0 Lead Off Detect Status There is one bit available per input pin, where the MSB corresponds to input pin IN6 and the LSB corresponds to input pin IN1. 1: Indicates a lead off error detected on the corresponding input pin. Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. 59 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 38. ERROR_STATUS: Other Error Status Addr 0x19 BIT7 SYNC EDGEERR BIT6 CH3ERR BIT5 CH2ERR BIT4 CH1ERR BIT3 LEADOFF BIT2 BATLOW BIT1 RLDRAIL BIT0 CMOR [7] SYNCEDGEERR Digital synchronization error 1: Indicates a digital synchronization error occurred [6] CH3ERR Channel 3 out-of-range error 1: Indicates an out-of-range error detected on channel 3 [5] CH2ERR Channel 2 out-of-range error 1: Indicates an out-of-range error detected on channel 2 [4 ] CH1ERR Channel 1 out-of-range error 1: Indicates an out-of-range error detected on channel 1 [3] LEADOFF Lead off detected 1: Indicates a lead off was detected on at least one input pin [2] BATLOW Low battery 1: Indicates the battery voltage has dropped below 2.7 V [1] RLDRAIL Right leg drive near rail 1: Indicates the right leg drive amplifier output is approaching the supply rails [0] CMOR Common-mode level out-of-range 1: Indicates the level detected by the common-mode detect block is outside of the input commonmode range of the amplifiers in the analog front-end Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. Table 39. ERROR_RANGE1: Channel 1 AFE Out-of-Range Status Addr 0x1A BIT7 BIT6 SDM_ OR_CH1 BIT5 SIGN_CH1 BIT4 OUTN_ LOW_CH1 BIT3 OUTN_ HIGH_CH1 BIT2 OUTP_ LOW_CH1 BIT1 OUTP_ HIGH_CH1 BIT0 DIF_HIGH_ CH1 [7] RESERVED — [6] SDM_OR_CH1 Channel 1 sigma-delta modulator over range 1: Indicates an over range detected for channel 1 SDM [5] SIGN_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier output sign This bit specifies the sign of the output signal of the instrumentation amplifier for channel 1. 0: Positive output of INA larger than negative output 1: Positive output of INA smaller than negative output [4 ] OUTN_LOW_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier negative output near negative rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 1 [3] OUTN_HIGH_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier negative output near positive rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 1 [2] OUTP_LOW_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier positive output near negative rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 1 [1] OUTP_HIGH_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier positive output near positive rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 1 [0] DIF_HIGH_CH1 Channel 1 instrumentation amplifier output out-of-range 1: Indicates the differential output voltage of the INA is out-of-range for channel 1 Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. 60 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 40. ERROR_RANGE2: Channel 2 AFE Out-of-Range Status Addr 0x1B BIT7 BIT6 SDM_ OR_CH2 BIT5 SIGN_CH2 BIT4 OUTN_ LOW_CH2 BIT3 OUTN_ HIGH_CH2 BIT2 OUTP_ LOW_CH2 BIT1 OUTP_ HIGH_CH2 BIT0 DIF_HIGH_ CH2 [7] RESERVED — [6] SDM_OR_CH2 Channel 2 sigma-delta modulator over range 1: Indicates an over range detected for channel 2 SDM [5] SIGN_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier output sign This bit specifies the sign of the output signal of the instrumentation amplifier for channel 2. 0: Positive output of INA larger than negative output 1: Positive output of INA smaller than negative output [4 ] OUTN_LOW_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier negative output near negative rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 2 [3] OUTN_HIGH_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier negative output near positive rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 2 [2] OUTP_LOW_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier positive output near negative rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 2 [1] OUTP_HIGH_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier positive output near positive rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 2 [0] DIF_HIGH_CH2 Channel 2 instrumentation amplifier output out-of-range 1: Indicates the differential output voltage of the INA is out-of-range for channel 2 Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. 61 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 41. ERROR_RANGE3: Channel 3 AFE Out-of-Range Status Addr 0x1C BIT7 BIT6 SDM_ OR_CH3 BIT5 SIGN_CH3 BIT4 OUTN_ LOW_CH3 BIT3 OUTN_ HIGH_CH3 BIT2 OUTP_ LOW_CH3 BIT1 OUTP_ HIGH_CH3 BIT0 DIF_HIGH_ CH3 [7] RESERVED — [6] SDM_OR_CH3 Channel 3 sigma-delta modulator over range 1: Indicates an over range detected for channel 3 SDM [5] SIGN_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier output sign This bit specifies the sign of the output signal of the instrumentation amplifier for channel 3. 0: Positive output of INA larger than negative output 1: Positive output of INA smaller than negative output [4 ] OUTN_LOW_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier negative output near negative rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 3 [3] OUTN_HIGH_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier negative output near positive rail 1: Indicates the negative output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 3 [2] OUTP_LOW_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier positive output near negative rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the negative rail for channel 3 [1] OUTP_HIGH_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier positive output near positive rail 1: Indicates the positive output of the INA is close to the positive rail for channel 3 [0] DIF_HIGH_CH3 Channel 3 instrumentation amplifier output out-of-range 1: Indicates the differential output voltage of the INA is out-of-range for channel 3 Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. 62 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 42. ERROR_SYNC: Synchronization Error Addr 0x1D [7:4] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 SYNC_PHASEE RR BIT2 SYNC_ CH3ERR RESERVED — [3] SYNC_PHASEERR Clock timing generator phase error 1: Timing generator phase adjusted to comply with SYNCB signal [2] SYNC_CH3ERR Channel 3 synchronization error 1: Channel's filter timing updated to comply with synchronization source [1] SYNC_CH2ERR Channel 2 synchronization error 1: Channel's filter timing updated to comply with synchronization source [0] SYNC_CH1ERR Channel 1 synchronization error 1: Channel's filter timing updated to comply with synchronization source BIT1 SYNC_ CH2ERR BIT0 SYNC_ CH1ERR BIT1 RLDRAIL_ STATUS BIT0 CMOR_ STATUS Table 43. ERROR_MISC: Miscellaneous Error Addr 0x1E [7:3] BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BATLOW_ STATUS RESERVED — [2] BATLOW_STATUS Low battery error status 1: Indicates the battery voltage has dropped below 2.7 V [1] RLDRAIL_STATUS Right leg drive near rail error status 1: Indicates the right leg drive amplifier output is approaching the supply rails [0] CMOR_STATUS Common-mode level out-of-range error status 1: Indicates the level detected by the common-mode detect block is outside of the input commonmode range of the amplifiers in the analog front-end Note: The clock to digital (internal or external) must be enabled in 0x12[2] for this error register to update. 63 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Digital Registers Table 44. DIGO_STRENGTH: Digital Output Drive Strength Addr 0x1F BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 [7:2] RESERVED — [1:0] DIGO_STRENGTH Digital Output Drive Strength 00: Low drive mode 01: Mid-low drive mode 10: Mid-high drive mode 11: High drive mode (Default) BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 DIGO_STRENGTH Table 45. R2_RATE: R2 Decimation Rate Addr 0x21 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 R2_RATE [7:4] RESERVED — [3:0] R2_RATE R2 decimation rate 0001: 4 0010: 5 0100: 6 1000: 8 (default) Note: The register sets to its default value if none or more than one bit are enabled. Table 46. R3_RATE_CH1: R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 1 Addr 0x22 [7:0] BIT7 R3_RATE_CH1 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 R3_RATE_CH1 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 R3 decimation rate for channel 1 00000001: 4 00000010: 6 00000100: 8 00001000: 12 00010000: 16 00100000: 32 01000000: 64 10000000: 128 (default) Note: The register sets to its default value if none or more than one bit are enabled. Table 47. R3_RATE_CH2: R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 2 Addr 0x23 [7:0] BIT7 R3_RATE_CH2 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 R3_RATE_CH2 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 R3 decimation rate for channel 2 00000001: 4 00000010: 6 00000100: 8 00001000: 12 00010000: 16 00100000: 32 01000000: 64 10000000: 128 (default) Note: The register sets to its default value if none or more than one bit are enabled. 64 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 48. R3_RATE_CH3: R3 Decimation Rate for Channel 3 Addr 0x24 [7:0] BIT7 BIT6 R3_RATE_CH3 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 R3_RATE_CH3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 R3 decimation rate for channel 3 00000001: 4 00000010: 6 00000100: 8 00001000: 12 00010000: 16 00100000: 32 01000000: 64 10000000: 128 (default) Note: The register sets to its default value if none or more than one bit are enabled. Table 49. R1_RATE: R1 Decimation Rate Addr BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 0x25 [7:3] RESERVED — [2] R1_RATE_CH3 Pace data rate for channel 3 0: R1 = 4: Standard PACE Data Rate (default) 1: R1 = 2: Double PACE Data Rate [1] R1_RATE_CH2 Pace data rate for channel 2 0: R1 = 4: Standard PACE Data Rate (default) 1: R1 = 2: Double PACE Data Rate [0] R1_RATE_CH1 Pace data rate for channel 1 0: R1 = 4: Standard PACE Data Rate (default) 1: R1 = 2: Double PACE Data Rate Addr 0x26 BIT7 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 R1_RATE_ CH3 R1_RATE_ CH2 R1_RATE_ CH1 BIT1 DIS_E2 BIT0 DIS_E1 Table 50. DIS_EFILTER: ECG Filter Disable [7:3] BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 RESERVED — [2] DIS_E3 Disable the ECG filter for channel 3 0: ECG filter enabled (default) 1: ECG filter disabled [1] DIS_E2 Disable the ECG filter for channel 2 0: ECG filter enabled (default) 1: ECG filter disabled [0] DIS_E1 Disable the ECG filter for channel 1 0: ECG filter enabled (default) 1: ECG filter disabled BIT3 BIT2 DIS_E3 65 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 51. DRDYB_SRC: Data Ready Pin Source Addr 0x27 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 [7:6] RESERVED — [6:0] DRDYB_SRC Select channel to drive the DRDYB pin 000000: DRDYB pin not asserted (default) 000001: Driven by channel 1 pace 000010: Driven by channel 2 pace 000100: Driven by channel 3 pace 001000: Driven by channel 1 ECG 010000: Driven by channel 2 ECG 100000: Driven by channel 3 ECG Addr 0x28 BIT7 BIT2 DRDYB_SRC BIT1 BIT0 BIT1 BIT0 Table 52. SYNCB_CN: SYNCB In/Out Pin Control BIT6 DIS_SYNCB OUT BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 SYNCB_SRC [7] RESERVED — [6] DIS_SYNCBOUT Disable the SYNCB pin output driver 0: Driver enabled and pin configured as output 1: Driver disabled and pin configured as input (default) Note: Bit should be set to 1 for slave devices. [5:0] SYNCB_SRC Select channel to drive the SYNCB pin 000000: No source selected (default) 000001: Driven by channel 1 pace 000010: Driven by channel 2 pace 000100: Driven by channel 3 pace 001000: Driven by channel 1 ECG 010000: Driven by channel 2 ECG 100000: Driven by channel 3 ECG Note: Choose the slowest pace or ECG channel as source. Bits[5:0] must be cleared to 0 for slave devices. Addr 0x29 BIT7 Table 53. MASK_DRDYB: Optional Mask Control for DRDYB Output [7:2] BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 RESERVED — [1] DRDYBMASK_CTL1 START_CON mask control for DRDYB output 0: DRDYB signal is masked when START_CON is set (default) 1: Disable initial DRDYB masking when START_CON is set [0] DRDYBMASK_CTL0 Optional mask control for DRDYB output 0: DRDYB signal is masked after out of sync is detected (default) 1: Disable DRDYB masking after out of sync is detected BIT1 DRDYB MASK_CTL1 BIT0 DRDYB MASK_CTL0 Note: If an ECG channel is enabled, DRDYB is masked during 6 ECG output data periods. If all ECG channels are disabled, DRDYB is masked during 6 or 11 pace output data periods, for 1x pace or 2x pace mode respectively. 66 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 54. MASK_ERR: Mask Error on ALARMB Pin Addr 0x2A BIT7 MASK_SYNC EDGEERR BIT6 MASK_ CH3ERR BIT5 MASK_ CH2ERR BIT4 MASK_ CH1ERR BIT3 MASK_ OUTLOD [7] MASK_SYNCEDGEER Mask alarm condition when SYNCEDGEERR=1 R 0: Alarm condition is active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [6] MASK_CH3ERR Mask alarm condition for CH3ERR=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [5] MASK_CH2ERR Mask alarm condition for CH2ERR=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [4 ] MASK_CH1ERR Mask alarm condition for CH1ERR=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [3] MASK_LEADOFF Mask alarm condition for LEADOFF=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [2] MASK_BATLOW Mask alarm condition for BATLOW=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [1] MASK_RLDRAIL Mask alarm condition for RLDRAIL=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked [0] MASK_CMOR Mask alarm condition for CMOR=1 0: Alarm condition active (default) 1: Alarm condition is masked Addr 0x2E BIT7 BIT2 MASK_ BATLOW BIT1 MASK_ RLDRAIL BIT0 MASK_ CMOR Table 55. ALARM_FILTER: Digital Filter for Analog Alarm Signals BIT6 BIT5 AFILTER_OTHER BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 AFILTER_LOD [7:4] AFILTER_OTHER Filter for all other alarms count Number of consecutive analog alarm signal counts+1 before ALARMB is asserted. 0011: (default) [3:0] AFILTER_LOD Filter for OUT_LOD[5:0] alarm count Number of consecutive lead off alarm signal counts+1 before ALARMB is asserted. 0011: (default) BIT0 67 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 56. CH_CNFG: Configure Channel for Loop Read Back Mode Addr 0x2F BIT7 BIT6 E3_EN BIT5 E2_EN BIT4 E1_EN BIT3 P3_EN [7] RESERVED — [6] E3_EN Enable DATA_CH3_ECG read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [5] E2_EN Enable DATA_CH2_ECG read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [4 ] E1_EN Enable DATA_CH1_ECG read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [3] P3_EN Enable DATA_CH3_PACE read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [2] P2_EN Enable DATA_CH2_PACE read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [1] P1_EN Enable DATA_CH1_PACE read back 0: Disable data read back for this channel (default) 1: Enable data read back for this channel [0] STS_EN Enable DATA_STATUS read back 0: Disable data status read back (default) 1: Enable data status read back BIT2 P2_EN BIT1 P1_EN BIT0 STS_EN BIT1 ALARMB BIT0 0 Pace and ECG Data Read Back Registers Table 57. DATA_STATUS: ECG and Pace Data Ready Status Addr 0x30 BIT7 E3_DRDY BIT6 E2_DRDY BIT5 E1_DRDY BIT4 P3_DRDY BIT3 P2_DRDY [7] E3_DRDY Channel 3 ECG data ready 1: Channel 3 ECG data ready [6] E2_DRDY Channel 2 ECG data ready 1: Channel 2 ECG data ready [5] E1_DRDY Channel 1 ECG data ready 1: Channel 1 ECG data ready [4 ] P3_DRDY Channel 3 pace data ready 1: Channel 3 pace data ready [3] P2_DRDY Channel 2 pace data ready 1: Channel 2 pace data ready [2] P1_DRDY Channel 1 pace data ready 1: Channel 1 pace data ready [1] ALARMB ALARMB status 1: Alarm active (ALARMB output pin driven low) [0] Reserved — 0 68 BIT2 P1_DRDY Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 www.ti.com SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Table 58. DATA_CH1_PACE: Channel 1 Pace Data Addr 0x31 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 0x32 BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH1_PACE BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH1_PACE [15:8] DATA_CH1_PACE Channel 1 pace data Address 0x31 contains the upper byte [7:0] DATA_CH1_PACE Channel 1 pace data Address 0x32 contains the lower byte BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT18 BIT7 BIT6 BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 Table 59. DATA_CH2_PACE: Channel 2 Pace Data Addr 0x33 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 0x34 [15:8] BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH2_PACE BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH2_PACE DATA_CH2_PACE Channel 2 pace data Address 0x33 contains the upper byte DATA_CH2_PACE Channel 2 pace data Address 0x34 contains the lower byte [7:0] Table 60. DATA_CH3_PACE: Channel 3 Pace Data Addr 0x35 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 0x36 BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH3_PACE BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH3_PACE [15:8] DATA_CH3_PACE Channel 3 pace data Address 0x35 contains the upper byte [7:0] DATA_CH3_PACE Channel 3 pace data Address 0x36 contains the lower byte Table 61. DATA_CH1_ECG: Channel 1 ECG Data Addr 0x37 BIT23 BIT22 BIT21 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 0x38 0x39 BIT20 BIT19 DATA_CH1_ECG BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH1_ECG BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH1_ECG [23:16] DATA_CH1_ECG Channel 1 ECG data Address 0x37 contains the upper byte [15:8] DATA_CH1_ECG Channel 1 ECG data Address 0x38 contains the middle byte [7:0] DATA_CH1_ECG Channel 1 ECG data Address 0x39 contains the lower byte 69 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 ADS1293 SNAS602B – FEBRUARY 2013 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 62. DATA_CH2_ECG: Channel 2 ECG Data Addr 0x3A BIT23 BIT22 BIT21 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT20 BIT19 DATA_CH2_ECG BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH2_ECG BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH2_ECG 0x3B 0x3C [23:16] DATA_CH2_ECG Channel 2 ECG data Address 0x3A contains the upper byte [15:8] DATA_CH2_ECG Channel 2 ECG data Address 0x3B contains the middle byte [7:0] DATA_CH2_ECG Channel 2 ECG data Address 0x3C contains the lower byte BIT18 BIT7 BIT6 BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT18 BIT7 BIT6 BIT10 BIT9 BIT8 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0 BIT1 BIT0 Table 63. DATA_CH3_ECG: Channel 3 ECG Data Addr 0x3D BIT23 BIT22 BIT21 BIT15 BIT14 BIT13 BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT20 BIT19 DATA_CH3_ECG BIT12 BIT11 DATA_CH3_ECG BIT4 BIT3 DATA_CH3_ECG 0x3E 0x3F [23:16] DATA_CH3_ECG Channel 3 ECG data Address 0x3D contains the upper byte [15:8] DATA_CH3_ECG Channel 3 ECG data Address 0x3E contains the middle byte [7:0] DATA_CH3_ECG Channel 3 ECG data Address 0x3F contains the lower byte Table 64. REVID: Revision ID Addr 0x40 [7:0] BIT7 BIT6 REVID BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 REVID Revision ID 00000001 (Default) Table 65. DATA_LOOP: Loop Read Back Address Addr 0x50 BIT7 [7:0] PE_LPRD BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 PE_LPRD BIT2 Loop read back address Special address to read back the contents of registers 0x30 - 0x3F if they are enabled in CH_CNFG. 70 Copyright © 2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADS1293 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 11-Apr-2013 PACKAGING INFORMATION Orderable Device Status (1) Package Type Package Pins Package Drawing Qty Eco Plan Lead/Ball Finish (2) MSL Peak Temp Op Temp (°C) Top-Side Markings (3) (4) ADS1293CISQ/NOPB ACTIVE WQFN RSG 28 1000 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU SN Level-3-260C-168 HR -20 to 85 ADS1293 ADS1293CISQE/NOPB ACTIVE WQFN RSG 28 250 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU SN Level-3-260C-168 HR -20 to 85 ADS1293 ADS1293CISQX/NOPB ACTIVE WQFN RSG 28 4500 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU SN Level-3-260C-168 HR -20 to 85 ADS1293 (1) The marketing status values are defined as follows: ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs. LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect. NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design. PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available. OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device. (2) Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details. TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined. Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above. Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material) (3) MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature. (4) Multiple Top-Side Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Top-Side Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. 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Addendum-Page 1 Samples PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION www.ti.com 26-Mar-2013 TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION *All dimensions are nominal Device Package Package Pins Type Drawing ADS1293CISQ/NOPB WQFN RSG 28 ADS1293CISQE/NOPB WQFN RSG ADS1293CISQX/NOPB WQFN RSG SPQ Reel Reel A0 Diameter Width (mm) (mm) W1 (mm) B0 (mm) K0 (mm) P1 (mm) W Pin1 (mm) Quadrant 1000 178.0 12.4 5.3 5.3 1.3 8.0 12.0 Q1 28 250 178.0 12.4 5.3 5.3 1.3 8.0 12.0 Q1 28 4500 330.0 12.4 5.3 5.3 1.3 8.0 12.0 Q1 Pack Materials-Page 1 PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION www.ti.com 26-Mar-2013 *All dimensions are nominal Device Package Type Package Drawing Pins SPQ Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm) ADS1293CISQ/NOPB WQFN RSG 28 1000 213.0 191.0 55.0 ADS1293CISQE/NOPB WQFN RSG 28 250 213.0 191.0 55.0 ADS1293CISQX/NOPB WQFN RSG 28 4500 367.0 367.0 35.0 Pack Materials-Page 2 MECHANICAL DATA RSG0028A SQA28A (Rev B) www.ti.com IMPORTANT NOTICE Texas Instruments Incorporated and its subsidiaries (TI) reserve the right to make corrections, enhancements, improvements and other changes to its semiconductor products and services per JESD46, latest issue, and to discontinue any product or service per JESD48, latest issue. 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