TI1 LM97600 High performance, low power a/d Datasheet

LM97600
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SNAS600A – JULY 2012 – REVISED MARCH 2013
LM97600 7.6-Bit, 1/2/4 Channel, 5/2.5/1.25 GSPS, High Performance, Low Power A/D
Converter
Check for Samples: LM97600
FEATURES
DESCRIPTION
•
•
•
The LM97600 is a single/dual/quad, low power, high
performance
SiGe
BiCMOS
analog-to-digital
converter that digitizes signals at sampling rates up to
5.0/2.5/1.25 GSPS. Consuming a typical 3.1 Watts at
5 GSPS from 1.2 and 2.5 Volt dual supplies, this
device is ensured to have no missing codes over the
full operating temperature range. The unique folding
and interpolating architecture, the fully differential
comparator design, the innovative design of the
internal sample-and-hold amplifier and the selfcalibration scheme enable an excellent response of
all dynamic parameters, producing a high 6.6
Effective Number Of Bits, (ENOB) with a 248 MHz
input signal and a 5 GHz sample rate. The LM97600
achieves a 5 GSPS sampling rate by utilizing both the
rising and falling edge of a 2.5 GHz input clock. Data
encoding is 8 bits offset binary. Average output word
size is 7.6 bits. The serialized data is 8b10b encoded
providing DC balance and AC coupling capability.
Decoding can be accomplished using existing FPGA
serial I/O modules.
1
2
•
•
•
10 Lane High Speed Serial Data Output
Serial Interface for Extended Control
Adjustment of Input Full-Scale Range and
Offset
Duty Cycle Corrected Sample Clock
Multiple Test Patterns
Dual +1.2V ±0.06V and 2.5V ±0.125V Operation
KEY SPECIFICATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Average Output Word Size: 7.6 bits
Max Conversion Rate: 1.25/2.5/5.0 GSPS (min)
Error Rate: 10−18 (typ)
ENOB @ 998 MHz Input: 6.4 Bits (typ)
SNR @ 998 MHz: 41 dB (typ)
Full Power Bandwidth (-3dB) Dual Mode: 1.2
GHz (typ)
Power Consumption
– Operating: 3.0 W (typ)
– Power Down Mode: 60 mW (typ)
APPLICATIONS
•
•
•
•
The converter typically consumes less than 65 mW in
the Power Down Mode and is available in a 292 ball,
thermally enhanced substrate BGA, and operates
over the Industrial (-40°C ≤ TA ≤ +85°C) ambient
temperature range.
Digital Oscilloscopes
Test Instrumentation
Industrial Digitizers
Automated Test Equipment
1
2
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.
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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 © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
LM97600
SNAS600A – JULY 2012 – REVISED MARCH 2013
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Block Diagram
VIN1+
++
Lane 1
S/H
Rterm
8-BIT
-
VIN1-
8
ADC_A
Lane 2
Lane 3
VIN2+
+
S/H
Rterm
8-BIT
-
VIN2-
8
Lane 4
ADC_B
INPUT
MUX
Data
Encoder
And
Serializer
VIN3+
S/H
8-BIT
-
VIN3-
Data Bus Output
10 Lanes
High Speed Serial
Lane 6
+
Rterm
Lane 5
8
ADC_C
Lane 7
Lane 8
VIN4+
+
Rterm
S/H
-
VIN4-
8-BIT
8
Lane 9
ADC_D
Lane 10
VREF
VCMO
CLK+
Rterm
CLK-
Clock Management
SYNC Control
SYNC+
Rterm
SYNC-
2
Control
Inputs
N
Serial
Interface
3
OR
Control
Logic
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2
CalRun
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Pin Configuration
1
2
A
GND
CLK-
B
GND
C
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
CLK+
GND
SYNC+
V_O
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
V_O
GND
V_O
GND
A
GND
GND
GND
SYNC-
GND
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
B
V_TH
V_C
V_C
V_C
V_C
V_O
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
C
D
GND
V_TH
SCSb
V_C
V_C
GND
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
D
E
IN1+
GND
SCLK
GND
NC
NC
ORAC+
ORAC-
E
F
IN1-
GND
SDI
DNC
NC
NC
DS9+
DS9-
F
G
GND
V_TH
SDO
GND
NC
NC
DS8+
DS8-
G
H
IN3-
GND
V_TH
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS7+
DS7-
H
J
IN3+
GND
V_TH
V_TH
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS6+
DS6-
J
K
GND
V_TH
V_TH
V_TH
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS5+
DS5-
K
L
GND
V_TH
V_25
V_25
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS4+
DS4-
L
M
IN4+
GND
V_25
V_25
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS3+
DS3-
M
N
IN4-
GND
V_A
V_A
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
NC
NC
DS2+
DS2-
N
P
GND
V_TH
V_A
V_A
NC
NC
DS1+
DS1-
P
R
IN2-
GND
V_A
V_A
NC
NC
DS0+
DS0-
R
T
IN2+
GND
V_A
V_A
NC
NC
ORBD+
ORBD-
T
U
GND
V_TH
V_A
Tdiode-
NC
GND
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
U
V
V_TH
V_A
Vcmo
Tdiode+
CalRun
V_O
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
V
W
V_A
V_A
Rext
VBG
CAL
GND
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
W
Y
V_A
V_A
RGND
Rtrim
PD
V_O
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
V_O
GND
V_O
GND
Y
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Note: The center GND balls must be thermally and electrically connected to a ground plane to ensure rated
performance.
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS and EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
VA
50k
D3
Serial Chip Select (active low)
(Input):LVCMOS This pin functions as the serial interface chip
select. See USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE for description of the
serial interface.
SCS
GND
E3
Serial Interface Clock
(Input):LVCMOS This pin functions as the SCLK input which
clocks the serial data. See USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE for
description of the serial interface.
SCLK
VA
F3
SDI
Serial Data In
(Input):LVCMOS This pin functions as the SDATA input. See
USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE for description of the serial
interface.
Y5
PD
Power Down
(Input):LVCMOS A logic high on the PD pin puts the entire device
into the Power Down Mode.
Calibration Cycle Initiate
(Input):LVCMOS A minimum 80 input clock cycles logic low
followed by a minimum of 80 input clock cycles high on this pin
initiates the calibration sequence. See Calibration for an overview
of self-calibration and On-Command Calibration for a description of
on-command calibration.
GND
W5
CAL
VA
A3
A2
CLK+
CLK−
GND
VA
50k
RCLK
50k
VCM_CLK
Sampling Clock Input
(Input):LVDS The differential clock signal must be a.c. coupled to
these pins. The input signal is sampled on both the rising and
falling edge of CLK. See Acquiring the Input for a description of
acquiring the input and THE SAMPLE CLOCK INPUT for an
overview of the clock inputs.
GND
4
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS and EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS (continued)
Pin No.
E1
F1
Symbol
VIN1+
VIN1−
Equivalent Circuit
VA
1k
J1
H1
VIN3+
VIN3−
VCMO
GND
Configuration
Register 1, Bit 5
RIN
VA
M1
N1
VIN4+
VIN4−
1k
Signal Input 3
(Input):Analog The differential full-scale input range is determined
by the Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register for the selected ADC
Channel.
The coupling mode (AC or DC) is selected via Configuration
Register 1, Bit 5. Unused inputs should be connected to pin V3
VCMO
Signal Input 4
(Input):Analog The differential full-scale input range is determined
by the Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register for the selected ADC
Channel.
The coupling mode (AC or DC) is selected via Configuration
Register 1, Bit 5. Unused inputs should be connected to pin V3
VCMO
Signal Input 2
(Input):Analog The differential full-scale input range is determined
by the Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register for the selected ADC
Channel.
The coupling mode (AC or DC) is selected via Configuration
Register 1, Bit 5. Unused inputs should be connected to pin V3
VCMO
GND
T1
R1
Description
Signal Input 1
(Input):Analog The differential full-scale input range is determined
by the Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register for the selected ADC
Channel.
The coupling mode (AC or DC) is selected via Configuration
Register 1, Bit 5. Unused inputs should be connected to pin V3
VCMO.
VIN2+
VIN2−
VA
A5
B5
SYNC+
SYNC−
AGND
VA
100
ADC Sync
(Input):LVDS A positive differential pulse on these pins is used to
reset and synchronize multiple converters. See Multiple ADC
Synchronization for detailed description.
AGND
V3
VCMO
Common Mode Voltage
(Output):Analog - The voltage output at this pin is required to be
the common mode input voltage at VIN+ and VIN− when d.c.
coupling is used. This pin is capable of sourcing or sinking 100μA
and can drive a load up to 80 pF.
W4
VBG
Bandgap Output Voltage
(Output):Analog - Capable of 100 μA source/sink and can drive a
load up to 80 pF.
VA
GND
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS and EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS (continued)
Pin No.
Symbol
G3
SDO
V5
CalRun
Equivalent Circuit
Description
Serial Data Out
Output):LVCMOS This pin functions as the SDATA output. See
USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE for description of the serial
interface.
VA
Calibration Running
(Output):LVCMOS - This pin is at a logic high while a calibration is
running.
GND
W3
REXT
External Bias Resistor Connection
Analog - Nominal value is 3.6k-Ohms (±0.1%) to RGND pin. See
Table 13.
VA
V
Y4
External Trim Resistor Connection
Analog - Nominal value is 3.6k-Ohms (±0.1%) to RGND pin. See
Table 13.
RTRIM
GND
VA
Y3
External Resistor Connection Return
Analog - REXT and RTRIM resistors must be connected to this pin.
This pin must be isolated from all other signals and grounds. DO
NOT CONNECT TO GROUND.
RGND
RGND
GND
Tdiode_P
6
V4
U4
Tdiode+
Tdiode−
R19 / R20
P19 / P20
N19 / N20
M19 / M20
L19 / L20
K19 / K20
J19 / J20
H19 / H20
G19 / G20
F19 / F20
DS0+ / DS0−
DS1+ / DS1−
DS2+ / DS2−
DS3+ / DS3−
DS4+ / DS4−
DS5+ / DS5−
DS6+ / DS6−
DS7+ / DS7−
DS8+ / DS8−
DS9+ / DS9−
E19
E20
ORAC+
ORAC−
T19
T20
ORBD+
ORBD−
Temperature Diode
Analog - Positive (Anode) and Negative (Cathode) for die
temperature measurements. See Thermal Management
Tdiode_N
Data
(Output):LVDS High Speed Serialized Data Outputs. The data
must be 10b8b decoded and then mapped from the 10 lanes to the
corresponding 4 internal ADC converters as needed. These outputs
should always be terminated with a 100Ω differential resistor at the
receiver.
VO
-
+
-
+
GND
Out Of Range AC
(Output):LVDS - A differential high at these pins indicates that the
differential input is out of range (as defined by the FSR setting for
channels A and C). These outputs should always be terminated
with a 100Ω differential resistor at the receiver.
Out Of Range BD
(Output):LVDS - A differential high at these pins indicates that the
differential input is out of range (as defined by the FSR setting for
channels B and D). These outputs should always be terminated
with a 100Ω differential resistor at the receiver.
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS and EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS (continued)
Pin No.
Symbol
N3, N4, P3,
P4, R3, R4,
T3, T4, U3,
V2, W1,
W2, Y1, Y2
Equivalent Circuit
Description
VA
Analog power supply pins
(Power) - Bypass these pins to ground.
A6, A17,
A19, C6,
V6, Y6,
Y17, Y19
VO
Output Driver power supply pins
(Power ) - Bypass these pins to ground.
L3, L4, M3,
M4
V25
2.5V power supply pins
(Power) - Bypass these pins to ground.
C1, D2, G2,
H3, J3, J4,
K2, K3, K4,
L2, P2, U2,
V1
VTH
Track and Hold power supply pins
(Power) - Bypass these pins to ground.
C2, C3, C4,
C5, D4, D5
VC
Clock power supply pins
(Power) - Bypass these pins to ground.
A1, A4,
A18, A20,
B1, B2, B3,
B4, B6, D1,
D6, E2, E4,
F2, G1, G4,
H2, H4,
H8–H13,
J2, J8–J13,
K1,
K8–K13, L1,
L8–L13,
M2,
M8–M13,
N2,
N8–N13,
P1, R2, T2,
U1, U6, W6,
Y18, Y20
GND
(Gnd) - Ground return for all supplies.
F4
DNC
Do Not Connect to Any Circuitry, Power or Ground Signals
A7–A16,
B7–B20,
C7–C20,
D7–D20,
E17, E18,
F17, F18,
G17, G18,
H17, H18,
J17, J18,
K17, K18,
L17, L18,
M17, M18,
N17, N18,
P17, P18,
R17, R18,
T17, T18,
U5,
U7–U20,
V7–V20,
W7–W20,
Y7–Y16
NC
No Connection Make no connection to these pins
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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.
Absolute Maximum Ratings (1) (2) (3)
1.2V Supply Voltage (VA, VTH, VC)
1.32V
2.5V Supply Voltage (VO, V25)
2.75V
1.2V Supply Difference
between VA, VTH, VC.
100mV
2.5V Supply Difference
between VO, V25.
100mV
Supply Sequence
(Power-up and Power-down)
2.5V Supply ≥1.2V Supply
−0.15V to (VA + 0.15V)
Voltage on Any Input Pin (except VINx+/-)
−0.15V to +2.0V
Voltage on VINx+/-
≤1.5V
Voltage difference: Any VINx+ to VINy+ or VINx- to VINyInput Current at Any Pin (4)
Package Input Current
±25mA
(4)
±50mA
Power Dissipation at TA ≤ 85°C
ESD Susceptibility (5)
3.77W
Human Body Model
2500V
Charged Device Model
400V
Machine Model
250V
Storage Temperature
−65°C to +150°C
Soldering process must comply with Reflow Temperature Profile specifications. Refer to http://www.ti.com/packaging. See
(6)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
.
Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. There is no ensurance of operation at the
Absolute Maximum Ratings. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific
performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see Converter Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications
apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed
test conditions.
All voltages are measured with respect to GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the Texas Instruments Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and
specifications.
When the input voltage at any pin exceeds the power supply limits (that is, less than GND or greater than VA), the current at that pin
should be limited to 25 mA. The 50 mA maximum package input current rating limits the number of pins that can safely exceed the
power supplies with an input current of 25 mA to two. This limit is not placed upon the power and ground pins.
Human body model is 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5 kΩ resistor. Machine model is 220 pF discharged through ZERO
Ohms.
Reflow temperature profiles are different for lead-free and non-lead-free packages.
Operating Ratings (1) (2)
−40°C ≤ TA ≤ +85°C
Ambient Temperature Range
1.2V Supply Voltage (VA, VTH, VC)
+1.14V to +1.26V
VA ≥ VTH
2.5V Supply Voltage (VO, V25)
+2.375V to +2.625V
2.5V Supply ≥1.2V Supply
Supply Sequence (Power-up and Power-down)
Analog Input Common Mode Voltage
VCMO ±50mV
VIN+, VIN- Voltage Range (Maintaining Common Mode)
Voltage difference: Any VINx+ to VINy+ or VINx- to VINyCLK Pins Voltage Range
0.4VP-P to 2.0VP-P
VCMO − 50mV < VCMI < VCMO + 50mV
Common Mode Input Voltage
8
≤1.5V
0V to VA
Differential CLK Amplitude
(1)
(2)
+200mV to +1.85V
All voltages are measured with respect to GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. There is no ensurance of operation at the
Absolute Maximum Ratings. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific
performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see Converter Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications
apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed
test conditions.
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Package Thermal Resistance
Package
θJA
θJC1 (Top of Package)
θJC2 (Center Balls)
292–Ball BGA Thermally
Enhanced Package
15.9°C / W
5.6°C / W
5.1°C / W
Converter Electrical Characteristics
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. (1) (2)
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Typical
Limits
(3)
Units
(Limits)
(3)
STATIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS
INL
Integral Non-Linearity (Best fit)
DC Coupled, 1MHz Sine Wave
Over Ranged, Single ADC Mode
±0.6
±1
lsb (max)
DNL
Differential Non-Linearity
DC Coupled, 1MHz Sine Wave
Over Ranged, Single ADC Mode
+0.65/
−0.50
+1/−0.70
lsb (max)
Resolution with No Missing Codes
See the Selective Truncation
section
7.6
Bits
VOFF
Offset Error
VOFF_ADJ
Input Offset Adjustment Range
Extended Control Mode
(4)
PFSE
Positive Full-Scale Error
NFSE
Negative Full-Scale Error (4)
FS_ADJ
Full-Scale Adjustment Range
Extended Control Mode
−1
lsb
±28
mV
−5
±30
mV
(max)
−2
±30
mV
(max)
±20
±15
%FS
(min)
DYNAMIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS
FPBW
Full Power Bandwidth
Gain Flatness
0.0 to -1.0 dBFS
Code Error Rate
(1)
1.3
GHz
DC to
400
MHz
10−18
Errors/
Sample
The analog inputs are protected as shown below. Input voltage magnitudes beyond the Absolute Maximum Ratings may damage this
device.
V
A
TO INTERNAL
CIRCUITRY
I/O
GND
(2)
(3)
(4)
To ensure accuracy, it is required that VA, VTH, VC, V25, and VO be well bypassed. Each supply pin must be decoupled with separate
bypass capacitors.
Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are ensured to AOQL (Average Outgoing
Quality Level).
Calculation of Full-Scale Error for this device assumes that the actual reference voltage is exactly its nominal value. Full-Scale Error for
this device, therefore, is a combination of Full-Scale Error and Reference Voltage Error. See Figure 2. For relationship between Gain
Error and Full-Scale Error, see Specification Definitions.
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Typical
(3)
Limits
(3)
Units
(Limits)
Single ADC Mode (FS = 2 x FCLK)
ENOB
Effective Number of Bits
SINAD
Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion Ratio
SNR
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
THD
Total Harmonic Distortion
2nd Harm
Second Harmonic Distortion
3rd Harm
SFDR
Third Harmonic Distortion
Spurious-Free dynamic Range
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.6
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.4
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
42
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
40.5
fIN = 248MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
42.5
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
41.0
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−49
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−60
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−51
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
50
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
49
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.7
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.5
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
42.5
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
41.1
fIN = 248MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
43.8
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
41.7
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−60
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−51
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
50
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
49
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.7
Bits
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.6
Bits
fIN =248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
42.6
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
41.5
dB
fIN = 248MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
43.2
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
42.1
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−50
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−51
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−60
dB
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−49
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
−48
dB
Bits
5.8
Bits (min)
36.5
dB (min)
37.0
dB (min)
−46.5
dB (max)
dB
dB
dB
dB
41.5
dB (min)
5.9
Bits (min)
Dual ADC Mode (FS = FCLK)
ENOB
Effective Number of Bits
SINAD
Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion Ratio
SNR
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
THD
Total Harmonic Distortion
2nd Harm
Second Harmonic Distortion
3rd Harm
SFDR
Third Harmonic Distortion
Spurious-Free dynamic Range
Bits
dB
37.1
dB (min)
37.7
dB (min)
−45.7
dB (max)
dB
dB
41.5
dB (min)
Quad ADC Mode (FS = FCLK / 2)
ENOB
Effective Number of Bits
SINAD
Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion Ratio
SNR
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
THD
Total Harmonic Distortion
2nd Harm
Second Harmonic Distortion
3rd Harm
10
Third Harmonic Distortion
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Symbol
SFDR
Parameter
Typical
Conditions
Spurious-Free dynamic Range
(3)
Limits
(3)
Units
(Limits)
fIN = 248 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
49
dB
fIN = 998 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
48
dB
ANALOG INPUT AND REFERENCE CHARACTERISTICS
Min FSR Setting
VIN
490
mVP-P
(min)
610
mVP-P
(max)
760
mVP-P
(min)
930
mVP-P
(max)
560
Full Scale Analog Differential Input Range
Max FSR Setting
CIN
Analog Input Capacitance (5)
RIN
Differential Input Resistance
850
Differential
0.08
pF
Each input pin to ground
2.2
pF
100
94
107
Ω (min)
Ω (max)
1.16
1.36
V (min)
V (max)
ANALOG OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS(VCMO, VBG)
VCMO
Common Mode Output Voltage
ICMO = ±100 µA
1.26
TC VCMO
Common Mode Output Voltage Temperature
Coefficient
TA = −40°C to +85°C (6)
118
CLOAD
VCMO
Maximum VCMO load Capacitance
See
VBG
Bandgap Reference Output Voltage
IBG = ±100 µA
1.1
TC VBG
Bandgap Reference Voltage Temperature Coefficient
TA = −40°C to +85°C,
IBG = ±100 µA (6)
28
CLOAD VBG Maximum Bandgap Reference load Capacitance
See
(7)
(7)
ppm/°C
80
pF (min)
1.0
1.2
V (min)
V (max)
ppm/°C
80
pF (min)
TEMPERATURE DIODE CHARACTERISTICS
ΔVBE
Temperature Diode Voltage
192 µA vs. 12 µA,
TJ = 25°C
71.23
mV
192 µA vs. 12 µA,
TJ = 85°C
85.54
mV
LVDS INPUT CHARACTERISTICS(CLK+/-, SYNC+/-)
0.6
0.4
2.0
VP-P
(min)
VP-P
(max)
Square Wave Clock
0.6
0.4
2.0
VP-P
(min)
VP-P
(max)
Differential
0.02
pF
Each input to ground
1.5
pF
Sine Wave Clock
VID
CIN
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
Differential Clock Input Level (8)
Input Capacitance (7)
This parameter is ensured by design and is not tested in production.
This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
This parameter is ensured by design and is not tested in production.
The digital control pin capacitances are die capacitances only. Additional package capacitance of 1.6 pF each pin to ground are isolated
from the die capacitances by lead and bond wire inductances.
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Typical
(3)
Limits
(3)
Units
(Limits)
320
mVP-P
(min)
430
mVP-P
(max)
465
mVP-P
(min)
605
mVP-P
(max)
540
mVP-P
(min)
705
mVP-P
(max)
615
mVP-P
(min)
805
mVP-P
(max)
LVDS OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS (DS1–DS9+/-, ORAC+/-, ORBD+/-)
Measured differentially
Output Voltage Select = 00
VOD
Measured differentially
Output Voltage Select = 01
535
Measured differentially
Output Voltage Select = 10
625
LVDS Differential Output Voltage
Δ VO DIFF
VOS
375
Measured differentially
Output Voltage Select = 11
715
±1
mV
Output Offset Select = 00
0.77
V
Output Offset Select = 01
0.95
V
Output Offset Select = 10
1.14
V
Output Offset Select = 11
VO −
1.14
V
±1
mV
±4
mA
100
Ohms
Change in LVDS Output Swing Between Logic Levels
For Output Offset Voltage, see Figure 1
Δ VOS
Output Offset Voltage Change Between Logic Levels
IOS
Output Short Circuit Current
ZO
Differential Output Impedance
Output+ & Output- connected to
0.8V
LVCMOS INPUT CHARACTERISTICS (PD, CAL, SDI, SCLK, SCSb)
VIH
Logic High Input Voltage
See
(9)
0.85 x
VA
V (min)
VIL
Logic Low Input Voltage
See
(9)
0.15 x
VA
V (max)
CIN
(10) (11)
Input Capacitance
Each input to ground
0.5
pF
LVCMOS OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS (SDO, CalRun)
VOH
CMOS H level output
IOH = -400uA (9)
1.0
0.80
V (min)
VOL
CMOS L level output
IOH = 400uA (9)
0.15
0.3
V (max)
(9) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
(10) This parameter is ensured by design and is not tested in production.
(11) The digital control pin capacitances are die capacitances only. Additional package capacitance of 1.6 pF each pin to ground are isolated
from the die capacitances by lead and bond wire inductances.
12
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Symbol
Parameter
Typical
Conditions
(3)
Limits
(3)
Units
(Limits)
POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS
IA
Analog Supply Current
PD = Low
835
mA
ITH
Track and Hold Supply Current
PD = Low
675
mA
IC
Clock Supply Current
PD = Low
150
mA
I25
2.5V Supply current
PD = Low
290
mA
IO
Output Driver Supply Current
PD = Low
105
PD = Low
3.0
PD = High
60
mW
70
dB
50
dB
PD
Power Consumption
PSRR1
D.C. Power Supply Rejection Ratio
Change in offset with change in
supplies from Min to Max Operating
values
PSRR2
A.C. Power Supply Rejection Ratio
248 MHz, 100mVP-P riding on
supplies
mA
3.25
W (max)
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS - Sampling Clock
fCLK1
Maximum Input Clock Frequency
Sampling rate is 2x clock input
2.5
GHz
(min)
fCLK2
Minimum Input Clock Frequency
Sampling rate is 2x clock input
1.0
GHz
(max)
tCYC
Input Clock Duty Cycle
fCLK2 ≤ Input clock frequency ≤
fCLK1 (12)
30
70
% (min)
% (max)
tLC
Input Clock Low Time
fCLK = fCLK1 (13)
120
ps (min)
tHC
Input Clock High Time
fCLK = fCLK1 (13)
120
ps (min)
tAJ
Aperture Jitter
50
0.55
ps rms
(12) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
(13) This parameter is ensured by design and is not tested in production.
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VTH = VC = +1.2VDC, VO = V25 = +2.5VDC, VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) =
Default ECM setting, CL = 10 pF, Differential a.c. coupled Sinewave Input Clock, fCLK = 2.5 GHz at 0.5VP-P with 50% duty
cycle, REXT = 3600Ω ±0.1%, RTRIM = 3600Ω ±0.1%, Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100Ω Differential, after calibration.
Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Typical
(3)
Limits
(3)
tLAT_Ad1
42
tLAT_Bd1
41.5
tLAT_Cd1
41
tLAT_Dd1
40.5
Single Mode
tLAT_A1
Units
(Limits)
40
tLAT_B1
39.5
tLAT_C1
39
Pipeline Delay (Latency) (14)
tLAT_D1
38.5
tLAT_ABd1
42
tLAT_CDd1
41
Dual Mode
tLAT_AB1
Input
Clock
Cycles
40
tLAT_CD1
39
tLAT_ABCDd
42
Quad Mode
1
tLAT_ABCD1
40
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS - Output Data (15)
tLHT
LH Transition Time - Differential
10% to 90%
150
ps
tHLT
HL Transition Time - Differential
10% to 90%
150
ps
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS - Serial Interface Clock
fSCLK
Serial Clock Frequency
15
MHz
(max)
Serial Clock Low Time
30
ns (min)
30
ns (min)
tSSU
Serial Clock High Time
Serial Data to Serial Clock Rising Setup Time
See
(14)
2.5
ns (min)
tSH
Serial Data to Serial Clock Rising Hold Time
See
(14)
2.5
ns (min)
tSCS
SCSb-to-Serial Clock Rising Setup Time
2.5
ns
tHCS
SCSb-to-Serial Clock Falling Hold time
2.5
ns
tBSU
Bus turn-around time
10
ns
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS - General Signals
tPWR
Pulse Width SYNC±
See
(14)
4
CLK±
Cyc.
(min)
tLAT_SYNC
Latency SYNC transition capture to Frame Edge
See
(14)
28
CLK±
Cyc.
tWU
PD low to Rated Accuracy Conversion (Wake-Up
Time)
See
(14)
tCAL
Calibration Cycle Time
tCAL_L
CAL Pin Low Time
See Figure 9
(14)
80
CLK±
Cyc.
(min)
tCAL_H
CAL Pin High Time
See Figure 9
(14)
80
CLK±
Cyc.
(min)
100
ms
2.895 x
106
CLK±
Cyc.
(14) This parameter is ensured by design and is not tested in production.
(15) All parameters are measured through a transmission line and 100Ω termination using a 0.33pF load oscilloscope probe.
14
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Specification Definitions
APERTURE (SAMPLING) DELAY is the amount of delay, measured from the sampling edge of the Clock input,
after which the signal present at the input pin is sampled inside the device.
APERTURE JITTER (tAJ) is the variation in aperture delay from sample to sample. Aperture jitter shows up as
input noise.
CLOCK DUTY CYCLE is the ratio of the time that the clock wave form is at a logic high to the total time of one
clock period.
DIFFERENTIAL NON-LINEARITY (DNL) is the maximum deviation from the ideal step size of 1 LSB. Measured
at 4 GSPS with a sine wave input.
EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB, or EFFECTIVE BITS) is another method of specifying Signal-to-Noise
and Distortion Ratio, or SINAD. ENOB is defined as (SINAD − 1.76) / 6.02 and says that the converter is
equivalent to a perfect ADC of this (ENOB) number of bits.
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH (FPBW) is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output
fundamental drops 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full scale input.
GAIN ERROR is the deviation from the ideal slope of the transfer function. It can be calculated from Offset and
Full-Scale Errors:
• Positive Gain Error = Offset Error − Positive Full-Scale Error
• Negative Gain Error = −(Offset Error − Negative Full-Scale Error)
• Gain Error = Negative Full-Scale Error − Positive Full-Scale Error = Positive Gain Error + Negative Gain Error
INTEGRAL NON-LINEARITY (INL) is the maximum departure of the transfer curve of each individual code from
a straight line through the input to output transfer function. The deviation of any given code from this straight line
is measured from the center of that code value. The best fit method is used.
INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD) is the creation of additional spectral components as a result of two
sinusoidal frequencies being applied to the ADC input at the same time. It is defined as the ratio of the power in
the second and third order intermodulation products to the power in one of the original frequencies. IMD is
usually expressed in dBFS.
LSB (LEAST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight of all bits. This value is
VFS / 2n
(1)
where VFS is the differential full-scale amplitude of VIN as set by the FSR input (pin-14) and "n" is the ADC
resolution in bits, which is 8 for the LM97600.
LVDS DIFFERENTIAL OUTPUT VOLTAGE (VOD) is the absolute value of the difference between the VD+ & VDoutputs; each measured with respect to Ground.
VD+
VD VOD
VD+
VOS
VD GND
VOD = | VD+ - VD- |
Figure 1. LVDS Output Signal Levels
LVDS OUTPUT OFFSET VOLTAGE (VOS) is the midpoint between the D+ and D- pins output voltage; i.e.,
[(VD+) +( VD-)]/2.
MISSING CODES are those output codes that are skipped and will never appear at the ADC outputs. These
codes cannot be reached with any input value.
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MSB (MOST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the largest value or weight. Its value is one half of full scale.
NEGATIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (NFSE) is a measure of how far the first code transition is from the ideal 1/2
LSB above a differential -VIN / 2. For the LM97600 the reference voltage is assumed to be ideal, so this error is a
combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
OFFSET ERROR (VOFF) is a measure of how far the mid-scale point is from the ideal zero voltage differential
input.
Offset Error = Actual Input causing average of 8k samples to result in an average code of 128.
OVER-RANGE RECOVERY TIME is the time required after the differential input voltages goes from ±1.2V to 0V
for the converter to recover and make a conversion with its rated accuracy.
PIPELINE DELAY (LATENCY) is the number of input clock cycles between initiation of conversion and when
that data is present at the serializer output. New data words are available at every clock cycle, but the data lags
the conversion by the Pipeline Delay.
POSITIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (PFSE) is a measure of how far the last code transition is from the ideal 1-1/2
LSB below a differential +VIN / 2. For the LM97600 the reference voltage is assumed to be ideal, so this error is a
combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION RATIO (PSRR) can be one of two specifications. PSRR1 (DC PSRR) is the ratio
of the change in full-scale error that results from a power supply voltage change from 1.8V to 2.0V. PSRR2 (AC
PSRR) is a measure of how well an a.c. signal riding upon the power supply is rejected from the output and is
measured with a 248 MHz, 100 mVP-P signal riding upon the power supply. It is the ratio of the output amplitude
of that signal at the output to its amplitude on the power supply pin. PSRR is expressed in dB.
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO (SNR) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of the input signal at the output
to the rms value of the sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, not
including harmonics or d.c.
SIGNAL TO NOISE PLUS DISTORTION (S/(N+D) or SINAD) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of
the input signal at the output to the rms value of all of the other spectral components below half the input clock
frequency, including harmonics but excluding d.c.
SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the rms values of the
input signal at the output and the peak spurious signal, where a spurious signal is any signal present in the
output spectrum that is not present at the input, excluding d.c.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD) is the ratio expressed in dB, of the rms total of the first nine harmonic
levels at the output to the level of the fundamental at the output. THD is calculated as
THD = 20 x log
A 2 +... +A 2
f2
f10
A f12
(2)
where Af1 is the RMS power of the fundamental (output) frequency and Af2 through Af10 are the RMS power of
the first 9 harmonic frequencies in the output spectrum
Second Harmonic Distortion (2nd Harm) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the RMS power in the
input frequency seen at the output and the power in its 2nd harmonic level at the output.
Third Harmonic Distortion (3rd Harm) is the difference expressed in dB between the RMS power in the input
frequency seen at the output and the power in its 3rd harmonic level at the output.
WORD ERROR RATE is the probability of error and is defined as the probable number of errors per unit of time
divided by the number of words seen in that amount of time. A Word Error Rate of 10-18 corresponds to a
statistical error in one conversion about every four (4) years.
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Transfer Characteristic
IDEAL
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
TRANSITION
Output
Code
ACTUAL
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
TRANSITION
1111 1111 (255)
1111 1110 (254)
1111 1101 (253)
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
ERROR
MID-SCALE
TRANSITION
1000 0000 (128)
0111 1111 (127)
OFFSET
ERROR
IDEAL NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE TRANSITION
NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE
ERROR
0000 0010 (2)
0000 0001 (1)
0000 0000 (0)
-VIN/2
ACTUAL NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE TRANSITION
(VIN+) < (VIN-)
(VIN+) > (VIN-)
0.0V
+VIN/2
Differential Analog Input Voltage (+VIN/2) - (-VIN/2)
Figure 2. Input / Output Transfer Characteristic
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TIMING DIAGRAMS
DSx+/-
90%
90%
10%
10%
tLHT
tHLT
Frame 1
Figure 3. Output Data Timing
Word 1
Fclk
SYNC
Ad1
Lane 1
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bd1
Lane 2
Cd1
Lane 3
Dd1
Lane 4
A1
Lane 5
B1
Lane 6
C1
Lane 7
D1
Lane 8
Ad2
Lane 9
Bd2
Lane 10
tLAT_SYNC
Figure 4. SYNC Timing - Rising Edge
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Frame 1
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Word 1
Fclk
SYNC
Ad1
Lane 1
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bd1
Lane 2
Cd1
Lane 3
Dd1
Lane 4
A1
Lane 5
B1
Lane 6
C1
Lane 7
D1
Lane 8
Ad2
Lane 9
Bd2
Lane 10
tLAT_SYNC
Figure 5. SYNC Timing - Falling Edge
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Bd2
Frame 1
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Ad2
D1
B1
C1
Dd1
A1
Cd1
Bd1
Ad1
SNAS600A – JULY 2012 – REVISED MARCH 2013
Word 1
Fclk
VIN
Ad1
Lane 1
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bd1
Lane 2
Cd1
Lane 3
Dd1
Lane 4
A1
Lane 5
B1
Lane 6
C1
Lane 7
D1
Lane 8
Ad2
Lane 9
Bd2
Lane 10
tLAT_Bd2
tLAT_Ad2
tLAT_D1
tLAT_C1
tLAT_B1
tLAT_A1
tLAT_Dd1
tLAT_Cd1
tLAT_Bd1
tLAT_Ad1
Figure 6. Latency - Single ADC Mode
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C1, D1
A1, B1
Cd1, Dd1
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Word 1
Fclk
VIN1
VIN2
Ad1
Lane 1
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bd1
Lane 2
Cd1
Lane 3
Dd1
Lane 4
A1
Lane 5
B1
Lane 6
C1
Lane 7
D1
Lane 8
Ad2
Lane 9
Bd2
Lane 10
tLAT_Ad2
tLAT_D1
tLAT_C1
tLAT_B1
tLAT_A1
tLAT_Dd1
tLAT_Cd1
tLAT_Bd1
tLAT_Ad1
Figure 7. Latency - Dual ADC Mode
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Ad2, Bd2,
Cd2, Dd2
A1, B1,
C1, D1
Ad1, Bd1,
Cd1, Dd1
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Word 1
Fclk
VIN1
VIN2
VIN3
VIN4
Ad1
Lane 1
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bd1
Lane 2
Cd1
Lane 3
Dd1
Lane 4
A1
Lane 5
B1
Lane 6
C1
Lane 7
D1
Lane 8
Ad2
Lane 9
Bd2
Lane 10
tLAT_Ad2
tLAT_D1
tLAT_C1
tLAT_B1
tLAT_A1
tLAT_Dd1
tLAT_Cd1
tLAT_Bd1
tLAT_Ad1
Figure 8. Latency - Quad ADC Mode
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tCAL
tCAL
CalRun
tCAL_H
tCalDly
Calibration Delay
determined by
CalDly Pin (127)
CAL
tCAL_L
POWER
SUPPLY
Figure 9. Calibration and On-Command Calibration Timing
Single Register Access
SCS
tSCS
tHCS
tHCS
1
8
24
9
SCLK
SDI
Command Field
Data Field
LSB
MSB
tSH
tSSU
tBSU
SDO
read mode)
Data Field
High Z
MSB
High Z
LSB
Figure 10. Serial Interface Timing
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Typical Performance Characteristics
VA=VTH=VC=1.2V, VO=V25=2.5V, FCLK=2500 MHz, TA=25°C unless otherwise stated.
DNL vs. CODE
1.0
INL vs. CODE
1.0
SINGLE
0.5
INL (LSB)
DNL (LSB)
0.5
SINGLE
0.0
0.0
-0.5
-0.5
-1.0
-1.0
0
254
0
OUTPUT CODE
Figure 11.
Figure 12.
DNL vs. CODE
1.0
INL vs. CODE
1.0
DUAL
DUAL
0.5
INL (LSB)
DNL (LSB)
0.5
0.0
-0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.0
-1.0
0
254
0
OUTPUT CODE
Figure 13.
Figure 14.
INL vs. CODE
1.0
QUAD
QUAD
0.5
INL (LSB)
0.5
DNL (LSB)
254
OUTPUT CODE
DNL vs. CODE
1.0
0.0
-0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.0
-1.0
0
24
254
OUTPUT CODE
254
0
254
OUTPUT CODE
OUTPUT CODE
Figure 15.
Figure 16.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA=VTH=VC=1.2V, VO=V25=2.5V, FCLK=2500 MHz, TA=25°C unless otherwise stated.
MAX DNL vs. TEMPERATURE
MAX INL vs. TEMPERATURE
1.0
1.0
0.5
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
MAX INL (LSB)
MAX DNL (LSB)
0.5
0.0
-0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.0
-50
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
-1.0
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
-50
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Figure 17.
Figure 18.
ENOB vs. AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
8
ENOB vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
8
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
7
ENOB
ENOB
7
6
6
5
5
4
4
-50
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
1.0
Figure 19.
1.2
VA(V)
1.3
ENOB vs. INPUT FREQUENCY
8
SINGLE
DUAL
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
7
ENOB
7
6
5
6
5
4
0.00
1.1
Figure 20.
ENOB vs. SAMPLE RATE
8
ENOB
100
4
1.25
2.50
3.75
SAMPLE RATE (GSPS)
5.00
Figure 21.
0
500
1000
INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz)
1500
Figure 22.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA=VTH=VC=1.2V, VO=V25=2.5V, FCLK=2500 MHz, TA=25°C unless otherwise stated.
SNR vs. AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
44
SNR vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
44
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
42
SNR (dB)
SNR (dB)
42
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
40
38
40
38
36
36
-50
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
1.0
1.1
Figure 23.
44
42
42
SNR (dB)
SNR (dB)
SNR vs. INPUT FREQUENCY
44
40
38
40
38
SINGLE
DUAL
36
0.00
1.25
2.50
3.75
SAMPLE RATE (GSPS)
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
36
5.00
0
500
1000
INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 25.
THD vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
-40
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
-44
THD (dBc)
-44
-48
-52
-48
-52
-56
-50
1500
Figure 26.
THD vs. AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
-40
THD (dBc)
1.3
Figure 24.
SNR vs. SAMPLE RATE
-56
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
Figure 27.
26
1.2
VA(V)
1.0
1.1
1.2
VA(V)
1.3
Figure 28.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA=VTH=VC=1.2V, VO=V25=2.5V, FCLK=2500 MHz, TA=25°C unless otherwise stated.
THD vs. SAMPLE RATE
-40
THD vs. INPUT FREQUENCY
-40
SINGLE
DUAL
-44
THD (dBc)
THD (dBc)
-44
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
-48
-52
-48
-52
-56
-56
0.00
1.25
2.50
3.75
SAMPLE RATE (GSPS)
5.00
0
500
1000
INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 29.
Figure 30.
SFDR vs. AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
56
SFDR vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
56
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
52
SFDR (dBc)
SFDR (dBc)
52
48
48
44
44
40
40
-50
0
50
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
1.0
Figure 31.
1.2
VA(V)
1.3
SFDR vs. INPUT FREQUENCY
56
52
52
SFDR (dBc)
SFDR (dBc)
SFDR vs. SAMPLE RATE
48
44
0.00
1.1
Figure 32.
56
40
1500
48
44
SINGLE
DUAL
1.25
2.50
3.75
SAMPLE RATE (GSPS)
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
40
5.00
Figure 33.
0
500
1000
INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz)
1500
Figure 34.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA=VTH=VC=1.2V, VO=V25=2.5V, FCLK=2500 MHz, TA=25°C unless otherwise stated.
POWER CONSUMPTION vs. SAMPLE RATE
Spectral Response at FIN = 248 MHz
0
SINGLE
3.0
MAGNITUDE (dBFS)
POWER CONSUMPTION (W)
3.5
2.5
2.0
1.5
0.00
SINGLE
-20
-40
-60
-80
1.25
2.50
3.75
SAMPLE RATE (MSPS)
5.00
0.0
Power consumption is similar for dual and quad modes.
Figure 35.
DUAL
MAGNITUDE (dBFS)
MAGNITUDE (dBFS)
Spectral Response at FIN = 248 MHz
0
-20
-40
-60
-80
0.00
2.5
Figure 36.
Spectral Response at FIN = 248 MHz
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
INPUT FREQUENCY (GHz)
QUAD
-20
-40
-60
-80
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
INPUT FREQUENCY (GHz)
1.25
0
Figure 37.
125
250
375
500
INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz)
625
Figure 38.
INSERTION LOSS
INSERTION LOSS (dB)
6
SINGLE
DUAL
QUAD
4
2
0
0
400
800
1200
INPUT FREQUENCY (GHz)
1600
Figure 39.
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FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The LM97600 is a versatile A/D Converter with an innovative architecture permitting very high speed operation.
The controls available ease the application of the device to circuit solutions. Optimum performance requires
adherence to the provisions discussed here and in the Applications Information section.
OVERVIEW
The LM97600 uses a calibrated folding and interpolating architecture that achieves 7.0 effective bits at sampling
rates up to 5.0 GS/s.
One clock input serves all converters. Special clock duty-cycle correction and alignment circuitry plus a highbandwidth input signal MUX allows the user to operate the four converters in the following three configurations:
• Four converters operated independently (Input 1 to Channel A, Input 2 to Channel C, etc.)
• Two groups of two converters interleaved into two independent channels (Input 1 or 2 to Channel A+C; and
Input 3 or 4 to Channel B+D)
• Four converters interleaved into one channel with one input
Channel labels A, B, C, D indicate the time-order of sampling by the four converters when interleaved. Note that
each of the four ADCs is made up of two interleaved sub-ADCs, for a total of eight sub-ADCs. The outputs of
these sub-ADCs must be interleaved at the receiver in the proper order to re-create the sampled data sequence.
The digital output samples are 8B/10B encoded and serialized before being driven out at a maximum of 5-Gbps
per lane. Each 7 or 8 bit sample (see below for explanation of sample size) is encoded to a 10-bit, dc-balanced
word, and mapped to output lanes 1 to 10 in succession. Encoding and mapping is independent of whether the
device is operating as a single, dual, or quad ADC.
Selective Truncation
Each of the eight interleaved sub-ADCs digitizes its analog input to 8-bit resolution at a rate equal to 1/4th the
input clock rate (or 1/8th the fully-interleaved sample rate). The output of each sub-ADC is then truncated to 7bits for three out every eight consecutive samples. In a truncated sample the least-significant-bit (LSB) is forced
to zero.
Table 1. Truncation Pattern
Sample Number
n
n+1
8
8
n+2
LSB Truncated
Digital Word Size
n+3
n+4
X
n+5
n+6
8
8
n+7
X
7
8
X
7
7
Each of the eight sub-ADCs has its own divide-by-N (N=26) counter incrementing once every clock cycle. The
fixed truncation pattern shown above repeats continuously, but is delayed by one clock cycle every time the
counter reaches a pre-programmed value. The value that causes the pattern to delay is unique for each subADC, which reduces the occurrence of long, contiguous sequences of truncated words. Data is not truncated
when the pattern is delayed.
For N=26, there are (5/8 * 26) = 16.25 non-truncated words every 27 samples. On average this equates to (16.25
/ 27) = 0.601 (rounded to 0.6) valid bits in the LSB position at the interleaved sample rate.
The initial value of each of the eight counters is determined at power-up through a combination of random noise
and part-to-part process variation. Since each sub-ADC truncates its data at unpredictable points in time, it is not
possible to under-sample the output data stream at pre-determined instants to obtain only non-truncated data.
Table 2. Example Truncation Pattern With Delay
Sample Number
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Divide by N count
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Delay triggered
LSB truncated
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
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Calibration
A calibration is performed upon power-up and can also be invoked by the user upon command. Calibration trims
the INx and CLK input differential termination resistors and minimizes full-scale error, offset error, DNL and INL,
resulting in maximizing SNR, THD, SINAD (SNDR) and ENOB. Internal bias currents are also set with the
calibration process. All of this is true whether the calibration is performed upon power up or is performed upon
command. Running the calibration is an important part of this chip's functionality and is required in order to obtain
adequate performance. In addition to the requirement to be run at power-up, calibration must be re-run by the
user whenever the input Full Scale Range is changed significantly. For best performance, we recommend an on
command calibration be run after initial power up and the device has reached a stable temperature. Also, we
recommend that an on command calibration be run whenever the operating temperature changes significantly
relative to the specific system performance requirements.
In normal operation, calibration is performed just after application of power and whenever a valid calibration
command is given, which is holding the CAL pin low for at least 80 input clock cycles, then hold it high for at
least another 80 input clock cycles. The time taken by the calibration procedure is specified in the A.C.
Characteristics table. Holding the CAL pin high during power up will prevent the calibration process from running
until the CAL pin experiences the above-mentioned 80 input clock cycles low followed by 80 cycles high.
The CAL bit does not reset itself to zero automatically, but must be manually reset before another calibration
event can be initiated. If no further calibration event is desired, the CAL bit may be left high indefinitely, with no
negative consequences.
Acquiring the Input
Depending on operating mode, data is acquired at the rising, or both the rising and falling edges of CLK and the
digital equivalent of that data is available in the serialized data stream 38 to 42 input clock cycles later.
The LM97600 will convert as long as the input clock signal is present. The fully differential comparator design
and the innovative design of the sample-and-hold amplifier, together with calibration, enables very good
SINAD/ENOB response beyond 1.5 GHz. The LM97600 output data signaling is serialized LVDS and the data is
encoding is offset binary.
Configuration and Control
The LM97600 configuration and control is achieved via a number of logic input pins in combination with a
number configuration registers accessed via a serial interface. For more details refer to the DEVICE CONTROL
section.
The Analog Inputs
The LM97600 must be driven with a differential input signal. Operation with a single-ended signal is not
recommended as performance will suffer. It is important that the input signals are either a.c. coupled to the inputs
(Configuration Register 1 Bit 5 = 0), or d.c. coupled (Configuration Register 1, Bit 5 = 1). An input common mode
voltage equal to the VCMO output must be provided when d.c. coupling is used.
The full-scale input range for each converter can be set to values between 560 mVP-P and 840 mVP-P through the
serial interface. See THE ANALOG INPUT.
Clocking
The LM97600 sampling clock (CLK+/CLK-) must be driven with an a.c. coupled, differential clock signal. The
THE SAMPLE CLOCK INPUT section describes the use of the clock input pins.
The sampling clock CLK has duty cycle correction as part of its circuit. This circuitry allows the ADC to be
clocked with a signal source having a duty cycle of 70 to 30 % (worst case).
The LVDS Outputs
The data outputs (DS#) and Out Of Range (ORAC, ORBD) are LVDS. The differential output voltage swing is set
via the Output Voltage Select setting in Serial Config 1, Bits 11:10. The default setting of 400 mVp-p should work
for typical short distance interfaces. If large swings are necessary to compensate for additional distance, noise
pickup, etc., the output swing can be set as high as 800 mVp-p with a slight increase in device power
consumption.
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The LVDS data outputs have an adjustable common mode voltage which is set via the Output Offset Select
setting in Serial Config 1, Bits 13:12. The default output offset is approximately 0.8V which should be compatible
with most applications, especially since the serialized interface is usually AC coupled.
Power Down
The LM97600 is in the active state when the Power Down pin (PD) is low. When the PD pin is high, the device is
in the power down mode. In this power down mode the data output pins (positive and negative) including OR +/are put into a high impedance state and the device power consumption is reduced to a minimal level.
If the PD input is brought high while a calibration is running, the device will not go into power down until the
calibration sequence is complete. Additionally, if the PD input rises at the same time as initial power-up, the
device will not begin the calibration sequence until the PD input goes low. If a manual calibration is requested
while the device is powered down, the calibration will not begin at all. That is, the manual calibration input is
completely ignored in the power down state.
DEVICE CONTROL
The LM97600 is controlled via logic inputs and register control. The table below summarizes which features are
controlled via logic pin or register.
Table 3. Features and Modes
Feature
Pin Control
Register Control
LVDS output level
n/a
Selected with Output Voltage Select (11h;
Bits 11:10).
LVDS output offset
n/a
Selected with Output Offset Select (11h, Bits
13:12)
ADC Mode
n/a
ADC operating mode (Single, Dual, Quad)
set via ADC Mode. (01h, Bits 15:14)
Input Select
n/a
Selected with Input Select. (01h, Bits 13:6)
AC/DC Coupling
n/a
AC/DC coupling mode is set by the DC
Coupled Mode Select bit. (01h, Bit 5)
Channel Full-Scale Range
n/a
Up to 512 step adjustments over a nominal
range of 560 mV to 840 mV in the Full-Scale
Range Setting Registers (4,6,8,Ah; Bits
15:7).
Channel Offset
n/a
Up to ±45 mV adjustments in 512 steps in
the Offset Setting Registers (5,7,9,Bh; Bits
15:7,6).
Sampling Clock Delay
n/a
The clock phase can be adjusted manually
through the Fine, Intermediate & Coarse
Aperture Delay settings (0Ch). This feature is
enabled/disabled via the Set tAD adjust bit.
(01h, Bit 0)
ADC Test Patterns
n/a
A test pattern can be made present at the
output of each ADC by setting the ADC Test
Pattern Mode Select bit. (01h; Bit 3).
Calibration Settings
n/a
Calibration Configuration (03h)
Multi-ADC Sync
SYNC+/−, Balls A5/B5
SYNC (10h)
Clock Bump (01h, Bit 1)
Input Termination Impedance
n/a
Selected by Termination Value (02h, Bit 14)
Data Serializer Settings
n/a
Selected via Serial Config 1–4. (11h, 12h,
13h, 14h)
Initiate Training Pattern
SYNC+/−, Balls A5/B5
n/a
Initiate Calibration
CAL, Ball W5
Initiate CALibration (02h, Bit 15)
Power Down
PD, Ball Y5
n/a
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SERIAL OUTPUT DATA FORMATTING
ADC data is generated by the 4 internal ADCs. Each ADC generates a current and a delayed (sampled earlier in
time) sample. For exampled, converter A outputs a normal A sampled, and an Ad delayed sample
simultaneously. The outputs of all 4 converters (4 current and 4 delayed samples) are transferred to 8b10b
encoder blocks. To keep the sampling clock and output data clock operating at the same frequency, it is easiest
to have 10 lanes of data output . To accomplish this, the ADC output data is mapped into a frame which is 4
samples long and 10 lanes wide. This mapping function is performed before 8b10b encoding and serialization.
8b10b
Encoder
8
8-BIT
Data
Serializer
ADC_A
Data Bus Output
10 Lanes
High Speed Serial
Lane 1
Lane 2
Lane 3
8-BIT
8
Lane 4
ADC_B
Lane 5
8 to 10
Lane
Mapping
Lane 6
8
8-BIT
Lane 7
ADC_C
Lane 8
Lane 9
Lane 10
8
8-BIT
ADC_D
Figure 40. ADC Data Flow
The mapping sequence is shown below:
Table 4. Output Data Mapping
Lane
Word 1
Word 2
Word 3
Word 4
1
Ad_1
Cd_2
A_3
C_4
2
Bd_1
Dd_2
B_3
D_4
Bd_6
3
Cd_1
A_2
C_3
Ad_5
Cd_6
4
Dd_1
B_2
D_3
Bd_5
Dd_6
5
A_1
C_2
Ad_4
Cd_5
A_6
6
B_1
D_2
Bd_4
Dd_5
B_6
7
C_1
Ad_3
Cd_4
A_5
C_6
8
D_1
Bd_3
Dd_4
B_5
D_6
9
Ad_2
Cd_3
A_4
C_5
Ad_7
10
Bd_2
Dd_3
B_4
D_5
Bd_7
Frame 1
32
Word 5
Frame 2...
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The ADC Mode (Quad/Dual/Single) does not change the mapping arrangement. Data is always mapped in the
above fashion. The mapped data is then 8b10b encoded and output on the 10 serial lanes. The 8b10b encoding
provides a number of specific benefits:
• Standard encoding format, so IP is readily available in off-the-shelf FPGAs and ASIC building blocks
• Inherent DC balance allows AC coupling of lanes with small on-chip capacitors
• Inherent error checking
SYNC
The SYNC input is a differential LVDS logic input. To assert the SYNC input, a differential 1 is applied. To deassert SYNC a differential 0 must be applied. SYNC+/− has an internal 100 ohm termination resistor and must
not be AC coupled.
Serial Data Training Sequence
The SYNC input performs two key functions. The primary function, discussed here, is to enable the output of the
serial data training pattern. This pattern is necessary to allow downstream deserializer circuitry to correctly
synchronize to the output data stream. Synchronization involves clock recovery as well as data word and frame
boundary location. Once this synchronization is established, the ADC can transition to outputting normal ADC
data. The SYNC input signal, when asserted, causes the ADC to begin outputting the training sequence. The
sequence is 8 characters long, twice the length of a data frame. The sequence is repeated indefinitely while the
SYNC input is asserted and is output on all 10 lanes simultaneously. The sequence follows below:
Table 5. Serial Data Training Sequence
Word
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Character
K27.7
D5.6
K28.5
D5.6
K28.5
D5.6
K28.5
D5.6
K27.7 is a start symbol to help identify the start of frame. K28.5 is a comma symbol for alignment. D5.6 is a data
symbol with a lot of transitions to assist with bit alignment. When SYNC is de-asserted, an incomplete sync
frame will complete before outputting the first data frame.
Multiple ADC Synchronization
The second function for the SYNC input, is to facilitate the precise synchronization of multiple ADCs in a system.
The LM97600 input clock is internally process through a counter which creates a CLK/4 internal clocking system
fed to the 4 internal ADCs. To ensure synchronization between multiple LM97600 devices in a system, it is
important to align the CLK/4 counters in the multiple ADCs to the same divide by four state. The multiple ADC
synchronization features facilitate that process.
When SYNC is asserted, it is captured by the internal CLK signal and the state of the internal CLK/4 counter at
that instant is loaded in to bits-6:5 of the SYNC register. If the CLK and SYNC signals are fed into multiple
LM97600 at the same time, the relative state of the internal CLK/4 counters can be captured.
Once the relative CLK/4 states are known, it is then desired to adjust the phase of some of the LM97600 devices
until all CLK/4 counters are in the same state. Setting Configuration Register 4, bit-1 bumps or swallows one
input clock, causing the CLK/4 counter to shift one later with respect to other devices. Each time this bit is
changed from 0 to 1, the ADC will swallow one input clock, so it is a straightforward task to shift the CLK/4
counters until they are aligned.
One key challenge to making all of this work is ensuring that the SYNC inputs are captured by the input CLK in a
repeatable fashion. There are two key elements to ensuring this. First, the SYNC input must be created so that it
is synchronous to the input CLK, with a frequency relationship that is an integer multiple of CLK/4 (ie. CLK/8,
CLK/12, CLK/16, etc.) and a repeatable and fixed phase offset. Once this constraint is achieved it is easier to
capture it in a repeatable fashion. To further ease this task, the SYNC pulse is routed through a user adjustable
delay set via bits 15:7 of the SYNC register. This eases the timing requirements with respect to the input CLK
signal. As long as the SYNC pulse has a fixed timing relationship to the CLK rising edge, the internal delay can
be used to maximize the setup and hold times between the internally delayed SYNC, and the internal CLK
signal. These timing relationships are detailed in Figure 4 of the Timing Diagrams. The SYNC pulse must be of a
minimum width and its delayed assertion edge must observe setup and hold times with respect to the internal
CLK rising edge. Repetitive assertion of SYNC, and read back of the CLK/4 counter state will indicate if the
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reading is repeatable or not. If the reading is not repeatable, the setup and hold time between SYNC and CLK is
not being reliably met. To find the proper delay setting, the Delay value can be adjusted from minimum to
maximum while applying SYNC and reading the CLK/4 state. This will allow the range of delay settings where
the CLK/4 reading is stable to be found. The Delay value at the center of the stable range should be loaded as
the final Delay setting.
By default, asserting the SYNC input enables the output of the serial data training pattern. In some instances (as
when performing the multi-ADC synchronization steps above) it is not desired to output the training pattern every
time. The Disable Training Pattern bit in Serial Config 3 (Register 13h, Bit 14) allows the encoder to continue
outputting normal ADC data when SYNC is applied.
The SYNC input should NOT be asserted while the calibration process is running (while CalRun is high). Doing
so could cause a glitch in the digital circuitry, resulting in corruption and invalidation of the calibration.
TEST PATTERNS
ADC Test Patterns
To aid in system debug, the LM97600 has the capability of providing a test pattern at the output of each internal
ADC completely independent of the input signal. The test pattern is selected by setting bit-3 (ADC Test Pattern
Mode Select) in Configuration Register 1 (address 01h). The test pattern sequence can be controlled via the
16–Bit Test Pattern Register (0Dh). This pattern register sets the sequence of Low Code/High Code data values
output by the internal ADCs. See the description for the 16–Bit Test Pattern (0Dh) settings for more details.
The ADC Test Pattern data is mapped into frames and 8b10b encoded in the same manner as normal ADC data.
Serializer Test Patterns
The serializer test patterns are output directly by the serializers, and are not passed through the 8b10b encoder.
This allows direct control over specific types of test information. Two different types of serializer test patterns are
provided, as selected at Serial Config 4 (Register 14h, Bits 12:10).
The LFSR Modes provide pseudo-random sequences which can be used to debug data channel performance
issues, bit errors, etc. The LFSR patterns begin with two fixed symbols, followed by 62 pseudo-random symbols,
for a total of 64 symbols. Different LFSR modes allow all lanes to start simultaneously, or offset by either 10 or
50 bits (1 or 5 symbols).
Table 6. LFSR Test Pattern
K28.5
K28.5/K28.7
LFSR Pseudo Random Data
64 symbols total length
The Table Modes provide a user selected sequence of symbols that can be arbitrarily loaded to create any
necessary fixed data pattern. This can be used to create static 1 or 0 values, or other patterns as needed. Two
Table Modes exist. Table Mode 0 provides a user-set 4–symbol pattern that is output simultaneously on as many
lanes as desired. Lanes can be disabled on a per-lane basis as needed.
Table 7. Table Test Mode 0
Test Lane (n) Setting
Lane (n) Data Output
0
Logic 0
Logic 0
Logic 0
Logic 0
1
Test Table 0
Test Table 1
Test Table 2
Test Table 3
Table Mode 1 provides two user-set 2–symbol patterns. The user can choose on a per-lane basis which of the
two patterns are output. The specific symbols are loaded via Test Table 0 to Test Table 3 in Registers 12h, 13h,
14h. The specific per-lane enable/disable or pattern choices are set via Serial Config 1, Test Lane (Register 11h,
Bits 9:0).
Table 8. Table Test Mode 1
Test Lane (n) Setting
34
Lane (n) Data Output
0
Test Table 0
Test Table 1
1
Test Table 2
Test Table 3
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APPLICATION INFORMATION
THE REFERENCE VOLTAGE
The voltage reference for the LM97600 is derived from a 1.1 V bandgap reference, a buffered version of which is
made available at pin 31, VBG, for user convenience. This output has an output current capability of ±100 μA.
This reference voltage should be buffered if more current is required.
The internal bandgap-derived reference voltage has a nominal value of 600 mV or 820 mV, as determined by the
FSR pin and described in Configuration and Control
There is no provision for the use of an external reference voltage, but the full-scale input voltage can be adjusted
through a Configuration Register in the Extended Control mode, as explained in DEVICE CONTROL.
Differential input signals up to the chosen full-scale level will be digitized to 7.6 bits. Signal excursions beyond
the full-scale range will be clipped at the output. These large signal excursions will also activate the OR output
for the time that the signal is out of range. See THE ANALOG INPUT.
One extra feature of the VBG pin is that it can be used to raise the common mode voltage level of the LVDS
outputs. The output offset voltage (VOS) is typically 800mV when the VBG pin is used as an output or left
unconnected. To raise the LVDS offset voltage to a typical value of 1150mV the VBG pin can be connected
directly to the supply rails.
THE ANALOG INPUT
The analog input is a differential one to which the signal source may be a.c. coupled or d.c. coupled. The fullscale input range is selected with the FSR pin to be 600 mVP-P or 820 mVP-P, or can be adjusted to values
between 560 mVP-P and 840 mVP-P in the Extended Control mode through the Serial Interface. For best
performance, it is recommended that the full-scale range be kept between 595 mVP-P and 805 mVP-P in the
Extended Control mode because the internal DAC which sets the full-scale range is not as linear at the ends of
its range.
Table 9 gives the input to output relationship with the FSR pin high when the normal (non-extended) mode is
used. With the FSR pin grounded, the millivolt values in Table 9 are reduced to 75% of the values indicated. In
the Enhanced Control Mode, these values will be determined by the full scale range and offset settings in the
Control Registers.
Table 9. DIFFERENTIAL INPUT TO OUTPUT RELATIONSHIP (Non-Extended Control Mode, FSR High) (1)
(1)
VIN+
VIN−
Output Code
VCM − 205mV
VCM + 205mV
0000 0000
VCM − 102.5 mV
VCM + 102.5 mV
0100 0000
VCM
VCM
0111 1111 /
1000 0000
VCM + 102.5 mV
VCM −102.5 mV
1100 0000
VCM + 205mV
VCM − 205mV
1111 1111
The Full Scale Range registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
The buffered analog inputs simplify the task of driving these inputs and the RC pole that is generally used at
sampling ADC inputs is not required. If it is desired to use an amplifier circuit before the ADC, use care in
choosing an amplifier with adequate noise and distortion performance and adequate gain at the frequencies used
for the application.
The Input impedance of VIN+ / VIN-in the d.c. coupled mode (VCMO pin not grounded) consists of a precision 100Ω
resistor across the inputs and a capacitance from each of these inputs to ground. In the a.c. coupled mode, the
input appears the same except there is also a resistor of 50KΩ between each analog input pin and the on-chip
VCMO potential.
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Ccouple
VIN+
Ccouple
VINVCMO
Figure 41. Differential Analog Input Connection
When the d.c. coupled mode is used, a precise common mode voltage must be provided at the differential
inputs. This common mode voltage should track the VCMO output pin. Note that the VCMO output potential will
change with temperature. The common mode output of the driving device should track this change.
Full-scale distortion performance falls off rapidly as the input common mode voltage deviates from VCMO. This is
a direct result of using a very low supply voltage to minimize power. Keep the input common voltage within 50
mV of VCMO.
Performance is as good in the d.c. coupled mode as it is in the a.c. coupled mode, provided the input common
mode voltage at both analog inputs remain within 50 mV of VCMO.
Unused inputs should be connected to the VCMO pin.
Handling Single-Ended Input Signals
There is no provision for the LM97600 to adequately process single-ended input signals. The best way to handle
single-ended signals is to convert them to differential signals before presenting them to the ADC.
A.C. Coupled Input
The easiest way to accomplish single-ended a.c. input to differential a.c. signal is with an appropriate balun, as
shown in Figure 42.
Ccouple
50:
Source
VIN+
RIN
1:2 Balun
Ccouple
VIN-
Figure 42. Single-Ended to Differential signal conversion with a balun
Figure 42 is a generic depiction of a single-ended to differential signal conversion using a balun. The circuitry
specific to the balun will depend on the type of balun selected and the overall board layout. It is recommended
that the system designer contact the manufacturer of the balun they have selected to aid in designing the best
performing single-ended to differential conversion circuit using that particular balun.
When selecting a balun, it is important to understand the input architecture of the ADC. There are specific balun
parameters of which the system designer should be mindful. They should match the impedance of their analog
source to the LM97600’s on-chip 100Ω differential input termination resistor. The range of this input termination
resistor is described in the Converter Electrical Characteristics as the specification RIN.
Also, as a result of the ADC architecture, the phase and amplitude balance are important. The lowest possible
phase and amplitude imbalance is desired when selecting a balun. The phase imbalance should be no more than
±2.5° and the amplitude imbalance should be limited to less than 1dB at the desired input frequency range.
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Finally, when selecting a balun, the VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio), bandwidth and insertion loss of the
balun should also be considered. The VSWR aids in determining the overall transmission line termination
capability of the balun when interfacing to the ADC input. The insertion loss should be considered so that the
signal at the balun output is within the specified input range of the ADC as described in the Converter Electrical
Characteristics as the specification VIN.
D.C. Coupled Input
When d.c. coupling to the LM97600 analog inputs is required, single-ended to differential conversion may be
easily accomplished with the LMH6555 or a similar differential amplifier. An example of this type of circuit is
shown in Figure 43. In such applications, the LMH6555 performs the task of single-ended to differential
conversion while delivering low distortion and noise, as well as output balance, that supports the operation of the
LM97600. Connecting the LM97600 VCMO pin to the VCM_REF pin of the LMH6555, through an appropriate buffer,
will ensure that the common mode input voltage is as needed for optimum performance of the LM97600. The
LMV321 was chosen to buffer VCMO for its low voltage operation and reasonable offset voltage.
Be sure that the current drawn from the VCMO output does not exceed 100 μA.
3.3V
RADJ-
RADJ+
Signal
Input
LMH6555
RF1
RT2
50:
RG1
+
50:
VINRIN
RT1
50:
RG2
50:
50:
VIN+
RF2
VCM_REF
VCMO
+
LMV321
Figure 43. Example of Servoing the Analog Input with VCMO
In Figure 43, RADJ-and RADJ+ are used to adjust the differential offset that can be measured at the ADC inputs
VIN+ / VIN-. An unadjusted positive offset with reference to VIN-greater than |15mV| should be reduced with a
resistor in the RADJ-position. Likewise, an unadjusted negative offset with reference to VIN-greater than |15mV|
should be reduced with a resistor in the RADJ+ position. Table 10 gives suggested RADJ-and RADJ+ values for
various unadjusted differential offsets to bring the VIN+ / VIN-offset back to within |15mV|.
Table 10. D.C. Coupled Offset Adjustment
Unadjusted Offset Reading
Resistor Value
0mV to 10mV
no resistor needed
11mV to 30mV
20.0kΩ
31mV to 50mV
10.0kΩ
51mV to 70mV
6.81kΩ
71mV to 90mV
4.75kΩ
91mV to 110mV
3.92kΩ
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Out Of Range (OR) Indication
When the conversion result is clipped the Out of Range output is asserted such that ORxx+ goes high and
ORxx- goes low. This output is active as long as accurate data on either of the converters would be outside the
range of 00h to FFh. During a calibration cycle, the OR output is invalid. Refer to OVERVIEW for more details.
Please note that the Out Of Range indication feature is disabled with the default register settings. The feature
can be enabled by setting the Power Down Over-Range bit at Register 0x14h, Bit 14 = 0 (default = 1).
Full-Scale Input Range
As with all A/D Converters, the input range is determined by the value of the ADC's reference voltage. The
reference voltage of the LM97600 is derived from an internal band-gap reference. The Full Scale Range of each
converter can be set anywhere from 560mV to 840mV. Best SNR is obtained with higher Full Scale Ranges, but
better distortion and SFDR are obtained with lower Full Scale Ranges. When operating in Dual or Single ADC
mode, where multiple converters are operating in combination on a single input, it is important that the Full Scale
Range (and Offset) settings of each converter are set to the same value.
The LMH6555 is suitable for any of the available Full Scale Range settings.
THE SAMPLE CLOCK INPUT
The LM97600 has a differential LVDS clock input, CLK+ / CLK-, which must be driven with an a.c. coupled,
differential clock signal. The clock inputs are internally terminated and biased. The input clock signal must be
capacitively coupled to the clock pins as indicated in Figure 44.
Ccouple
CLK+
Ccouple
CLK-
Figure 44. Differential Sample Clock Connection
The differential sample clock line pair should have a characteristic impedance of 100Ω and be terminated at the
clock source in that (100Ω) characteristic impedance. The input clock line should be as short and as direct as
possible. By default, the LM97600 clock input is internally terminated with a trimmed 100Ω resistor. If the Select
Termination Value (Register 0x02h, Bit 14) is changed from 0 to 1 the termination value will be calibrated to 150
ohms.
Insufficient input clock levels will result in poor dynamic performance. Excessively high input clock levels could
cause a change in the analog input offset voltage. To avoid these problems, keep the input clock level within the
range specified in the Electrical Characteristics table.
The low and high times of the input clock signal can affect the performance of any A/D Converter. The LM97600
features a duty cycle clock correction circuit which can maintain performance over temperature. The ADC will
meet its performance specification if the input clock high and low times are maintained as specified in Converter
Electrical Characteristics.
High speed, high performance ADCs such as the LM97600 require a very stable input clock signal with minimum
phase noise or jitter. ADC jitter requirements are defined by the ADC resolution (number of bits), maximum ADC
input frequency and the input signal amplitude relative to the ADC input full scale range. The maximum jitter (the
sum of the jitter from all sources) allowed to prevent a jitter-induced reduction in SNR is found to be
tJ(MAX) = (VINFSR/VIN(P-P)) x (1/(2(N+1) x π x fIN))
where
•
38
tJ(MAX) is the rms total of all jitter sources in seconds, VIN(P-P) is the peak-to-peak analog input signal, VINFSR is
the full-scale range of the ADC, "N" is the ADC resolution in bits and fIN is the maximum input frequency, in
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Hertz, at the ADC analog input.
(3)
Note that the maximum jitter described above is the Root Sum Square, (RSS), of the jitter from all sources,
including that in the ADC input clock, that added by the system to the ADC input clock and input signals and that
added by the ADC itself. Since the effective jitter added by the ADC is beyond user control, the best the user can
do is to keep the sum of the externally added input clock jitter and the jitter added by the analog circuitry to the
analog signal to a minimum.
Input clock amplitudes above those specified in the Electrical Characteristics table may result in increased input
offset voltage. This would cause the converter to produce an output code other than the expected 128 when both
input pins are at the same potential.
Aperture Delay
The sample clock aperture delay can be manually increased to accommodate subtle layout differences when
synchronizing multiple ADCs. Adjustments are made via the Aperture Delay register (0Ch, Bits 15:0).
It should be noted that by just enabling the aperture delay capability (register 01h; Bit 0), degradation of dynamic
performance is expected, specifically SFDR. It is intended that very small adjustments are used. Larger
increases in phase adjustments will begin to affect SNR and ultimately ENOB. Therefore, the use of coarse
phase adjustment should be minimized in favor of better system design.
CONTROL PINS
Three control pins (without the use of the serial interface) provide control over the operation of the LM97600 and
facilitate its use. These control pins support Calibration, Synchronization of serial data and multiple ADCs, and a
Power Down feature.
Calibration
The LM97600 calibration must be run to achieve specified performance. The calibration procedure is run upon
power-up and can be run any time on command. The calibration procedure is exactly the same whether there is
an input clock present upon power up or if the clock begins some time after application of power. The CalRun
output indicator is high while a calibration is in progress. The calibration duration is nominally 1.16ms (with a 2.5
GHz input clock).
Power-On Calibration
Power-on calibration begins after a time delay following the application of power. This time delay is fixed at
8,388,608 input CLK cycles. With a 2.5 GHz input CLK, this gives an approximate delay of 3.36 ms.
The calibration process will be not be performed if the CAL pin is concurrently high with the application of power.
In this case, the calibration cycle will not begin until the on-command calibration conditions are met. The
LM97600 will function with the CAL pin held high at power up, but no calibration will be done and performance
will be impaired. A manual calibration, however, may be performed after powering up with the CAL pin high. See
the On-Command Calibration section.
On-Command Calibration
To initiate an on-command calibration, bring the CAL pin high for a minimum of 80 input clock cycles after it has
been low for a minimum of 80 input clock cycles. Holding the CAL pin high upon power up will prevent execution
of power-on calibration until the CAL pin is low for a minimum of 80 input clock cycles, then brought high for a
minimum of another 80 input clock cycles. The calibration cycle will begin 80 input clock cycles after the CAL pin
is thus brought high. The CalRun signal should be monitored to determine when the calibration cycle has
completed.
The minimum 80 input clock cycle sequences are required to ensure that random noise does not cause a
calibration to begin when it is not desired. As mentioned in the OVERVIEW section for best performance, a
calibration should be performed 20 seconds or more after power up and repeated when the operating
temperature changes significantly relative to the specific system design performance requirements. ENOB
changes slightly with increasing junction temperature and can be easily corrected by performing an on-command
calibration.
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Power Down Feature
The Power Down pin (PD) allows the LM97600 to be entirely powered down. See Power Down Feature for
details on the power down feature.
The digital data (+/-) output pins are put into a high impedance state when the PD pin is high. Upon return to
normal operation, the pipeline will contain meaningless information and must be flushed.
If the PD input is brought high while a calibration is running, the device will not go into power down until the
calibration sequence is complete. However, if power is applied and PD is concurrently high, the device will not
begin the calibration sequence until the PD input goes low. If a manual calibration is requested while the device
is powered down, the calibration will not begin at all. That is, the manual calibration input is completely ignored in
the power down state.
THE DIGITAL OUTPUTS
The LM97600 output data is transmitted on 10 high speed serial data lanes. The output data from the four
internal converters is formatted to the 10 lanes, 8b10b encoded, and serialized. Examining the resulting data
rates, we have: 5 Gigasamples/sec x 8 bits = 40 Gigabits/second.
8b10b encoding adds a 10/8 overhead, resulting in a net data rate of 50 Gigabits/second.
The serial output data clock rate is therefore the same as the total aggregate ADC sampling rate (5
Gigasamples/sec gives 5 Gigabits/sec on each of the 10 lanes).
The ADC data is encoded in Offset Binary. Accordingly, a full-scale input level with VIN+ positive with respect to
VIN− will produce an output code of all ones, a full-scale input level with VIN− positive with respect to VIN+ will
produce an output code of all zeros and when VIN+ and VIN− are equal, the output code will be 128.
POWER CONSIDERATIONS
A/D converters draw sufficient transient current to corrupt their own power supplies if not adequately bypassed. A
33 µF capacitor should be placed within an inch (2.5 cm) of the A/D converter power pins for each supply
voltage. A 0.1 µF capacitor should be placed as close as possible to each supply pin, preferably within one-half
centimeter. Leadless chip capacitors are preferred because they have low lead inductance.
As is the case with all high speed converters, the LM97600 should be assumed to have little power supply noise
rejection. Any power supply used for digital circuitry in a system where a lot of digital power is being consumed
should not be used to supply power to the LM97600. The ADC supplies should be the same supply used for
other analog circuitry, if not a dedicated supply.
Supply Voltage
The LM97600 is specified to operate with nominal supply voltages of 1.2V (VA, VTH, VC) and 2.5V (V25, VO). For
detailed information regarding the operating voltage minimums and maximums, refer to the Operating Ratings
section. It is very important to note that, while this device will function with slightly higher supply voltages, these
higher supply voltages may reduce product lifetime.
During Power-up, the voltage on all 2.5V supplies should always be equal to, or greater than the voltage on the
1.2V supplies. Similarly, during Power-down, the voltage on the 1.2V supplies should always be equal to or lower
than that of the 2.5V supplies. In general, it is simplest to supply all 2.5V buses from a single regulator, and all
1.2V buses from a single regulator. If the 1.2V buses are generated from separate regulators, they should all rise
and fall together, or the user should ensure that the VC≥VA≥VTH during power up.
No pin should ever have a voltage on it that is in excess of the supply voltage or below ground by more than 150
mV, not even on a transient basis. This can be a problem upon application of power and power shut-down. Be
sure that the supplies to circuits driving any of the input pins, analog or digital, do not come up any faster than
does the voltage at the LM97600 power pins.
The Absolute Maximum Ratings should be strictly observed, even during power up and power down. A power
supply that produces a voltage spike at turn-on and/or turn-off of power can destroy the LM97600. Please refer
to the documentation provided with the LM97600RB reference board for specific guidance on voltage regulators
and power sequencing.
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Thermal Management
The LM97600 is capable of impressive speeds and performance at very low power levels for its speed. However,
the power consumption is still high enough to require attention to thermal management. The Thermally Enhanced
BGA package has 2 primary heat transfer paths. The copper heat slug mounted to the top of the substrate, and
exposed in the center top of the package is the first path. The thermal resistance of this path is referred to as
θJC_1. The other main heat path is via the center group of ground balls on the bottom of the package. The
thermal resistance of this path is provided as θJC_2. In most applications, the center ground balls will form the
primary thermal path.
4JC_1
Copper Heat Slug
Mold Compound
Not to Scale
Cross Section Line
IC Die
Substrate
4JC_2
Figure 45. HSBGA Conceptual Drawing
For reliability reasons, the die temperature should be kept to a maximum of 130°C. That is, TA (ambient
temperature) plus ADC power consumption times the net θJA (junction to ambient thermal resistance) should not
exceed 130°C. This is not a problem if the ambient temperature is kept to a maximum of +85°C as specified in
the Operating Ratings section and the center ground balls on the bottom of the package are thermally connected
to a large enough copper area of the PC board.
Please note that the following are general recommendations for mounting Thermally Enhanced BGA devices
onto a PCB. This should be considered the starting point in PCB and assembly process development. It is
recommended that the process be developed based upon past experience in package mounting.
The package of the LM97600 has a central group of ground balls that provide the primary heat removal path as
well as excellent electrical grounding to the printed circuit board. The land pattern design for attachment to the
PCB should be as recommended for the conventional BGA package (per AN-1126), but the center balls should
be connected to internal ground planes to remove the maximum amount of heat from the package, as well as to
ensure best product parametric performance.
To minimize junction temperature, it is recommended that a simple heat sink be built into the PCB. This is done
by including a copper area of about 2 square inches (6.5 square cm) on the opposite side of the PCB. This
copper area may be plated or solder coated to prevent corrosion, but should not have a conformal coating, which
could provide some thermal insulation. Thermal vias should be used to connect these top and bottom copper
areas. These thermal vias act as "heat pipes" to carry the thermal energy from the device side of the board to the
opposite side of the board where it can be more effectively dissipated. The use of 9 to 16 thermal vias is
recommended.
LAYOUT AND GROUNDING
Proper grounding and proper routing of all signals are essential to ensure accurate conversion. A single ground
plane should be used, instead of splitting the ground plane into analog and digital areas.
Since digital switching transients are composed largely of high frequency components, the skin effect tells us that
total ground plane copper weight will have little effect upon the logic-generated noise. Total surface area is more
important than is total ground plane volume. Coupling between the typically noisy digital circuitry and the
sensitive analog circuitry can lead to poor performance that may seem impossible to isolate and remedy. The
solution is to keep the analog circuitry well separated from the digital circuitry.
High power digital components should not be located on or near any linear component or power supply trace or
plane that services analog or mixed signal components as the resulting common return current path could cause
fluctuation in the analog input “ground” return of the ADC, causing excessive noise in the conversion result.
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Generally, we assume that analog and digital lines should cross each other at 90° to avoid getting digital noise
into the analog path. In high frequency systems, however, avoid crossing analog and digital lines altogether. The
input clock lines should be isolated from ALL other lines, analog AND digital. The generally accepted 90°
crossing should be avoided as even a little coupling can cause problems at high frequencies. Best performance
at high frequencies is obtained with a straight signal path.
The analog input should be isolated from noisy signal traces to avoid coupling of spurious signals into the input.
This is especially important with the low level drive required of the LM97600. Any external component (e.g., a
filter capacitor) connected between the converter's input and ground should be connected to a very clean point in
the analog ground plane. All analog circuitry (input amplifiers, filters, etc.) should be separated from any digital
components.
Layout of the high speed serial data lines is of particular importance. These traces should be routed as tightly
coupled differential pairs, with minimal vias. Where vias must be used, care should be taken to implement control
impedance (ie. 50 Ω) vias with adjacent ground vias for image current control.
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
The LM97600 is a.c. tested and its dynamic performance is ensured. To meet the published specifications and
avoid jitter-induced noise, the clock source driving the CLK input must exhibit low rms jitter. The allowable jitter is
a function of the input frequency and the input signal level, as described in THE SAMPLE CLOCK INPUT.
It is good practice to keep the ADC input clock line as short as possible, to keep it well away from any other
signals and to treat it as a transmission line. Other signals can introduce jitter into the input clock signal. The
clock signal can also introduce noise into the analog path if not isolated from that path.
USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE
The serial interface is accessed using the following four pins; Serial Clock (SCLK), Serial Data In (SDI), Serial
Data Out (SDO) and Serial Interface Chip Select (SCS). Twenty-one registers are accessible through this serial
interface.
SCS: This signal must be asserted low to access a register through the serial interface. Setup and hold times
with respect to the SCLK must be observed.
SCLK: Serial data input is accepted at the rising edge of this signal. There is no minimum frequency requirement
for SCLK.
SDI: Each register access requires a specific 24-bit pattern at this input. This pattern consists of a header,
register address and register value. The data is shifted in MSB first. Setup and hold times with respect to the
SCLK must be observed. See Figure 10.
Each Register access consists of 24 bits, as shown in Figure 10 of the Timing Diagrams. The following header
patterns define the Write and Read operations.
Write = 010
Read = 110
The next 5 bits are the address of the register that is to be written to. During Write operations, the last 16 bits are
the data written to the addressed register. During Read operations, the last 16 bits on SDI are ignored, and the
SDO will output the data from the addressed register during this time.
Refer to REGISTER DEFINITIONS for detailed information regarding the registers.
NOTE
The Serial Interface should not be accessed when calibrating the ADC. Doing so will
impair the performance of the device until it is re-calibrated correctly. Programming the
serial registers will also reduce dynamic performance of the ADC for the duration of the
register access time.
42
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COMMON APPLICATION PITFALLS
Driving the inputs (analog or digital) beyond the power supply rails. For device reliability, no input should go
more than 150 mV below the ground pins or 150 mV above the supply pins. Exceeding these limits on even a
transient basis may not only cause faulty or erratic operation, but may impair device reliability. It is not
uncommon for high speed digital circuits to exhibit undershoot that goes more than a volt below ground.
Controlling the impedance of high speed lines and terminating these lines in their characteristic impedance
should control overshoot.
Care should be taken not to overdrive the inputs of the LM97600. Such practice may lead to conversion
inaccuracies and even to device damage.
Incorrect analog input common mode voltage in the d.c. coupled mode. As discussed in The Analog Inputs
and THE ANALOG INPUT sections, the Input common mode voltage (VCMI) must remain the specified range as
referenced to VCMO, which has a variability with temperature that must also be tracked. Distortion performance
will be degraded if the input common mode voltage is outside the specified VCMI range.
Using an inadequate amplifier to drive the analog input. Use care when choosing a high frequency amplifier
to drive the LM97600 as many high speed amplifiers will have higher distortion than will the LM97600, resulting
in overall system performance degradation.
Driving the clock input with an excessively high level signal. The ADC input clock level should not exceed
the level described in the Operating Ratings table or the input offset could change.
Inadequate input clock levels. As described in THE SAMPLE CLOCK INPUT, insufficient input clock levels can
result in poor performance. Excessive input clock levels could result in the introduction of an input offset.
Using a clock source with excessive jitter, using an excessively long input clock signal trace, or having
other signals coupled to the input clock signal trace. This will cause the sampling interval to vary, causing
excessive output noise and a reduction in SNR performance.
Failure to provide adequate heat removal. As described in Thermal Management, it is important to provide
adequate heat removal to ensure device reliability. This can be done either with adequate air flow or the use of a
simple heat sink built into the board. The backside pad should be grounded for best performance.
REGISTER DEFINITIONS
Table 11. Register Addresses
4-Bit Address
Loading Sequence:
A4 loaded after H0, A0 loaded last
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
Hex
Register Addressed
0
0
0
0
1
01h
Config 1
0
0
0
1
0
02h
Config 2
0
0
0
1
1
03h
Calibration Config
0
0
1
0
0
04h
Ch A Gain & Config
0
0
1
0
1
05h
Ch A Offset
0
0
1
1
0
06h
Ch B Gain & Config
0
0
1
1
1
07h
Ch B Offset
0
1
0
0
0
08h
Ch C Gain & Config
0
1
0
0
1
09h
Ch C Offset
0
1
0
1
0
0Ah
Ch D Gain & Config
0
1
0
1
1
0Bh
Ch D Offset
0
1
1
0
0
0Ch
Aperture Adjust
0
1
1
0
1
0Dh
ADC Test Pattern
0
1
1
1
0
0Eh
Cal Scan Register
0
1
1
1
1
0Fh
Reserved
1
0
0
0
0
10h
SYNC
1
0
0
0
1
11h
Serial Config 1
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Table 11. Register Addresses (continued)
44
1
0
0
1
0
12h
Serial Config 2
1
0
0
1
1
13h
Serial Config 3
1
0
1
0
0
14h
Serial Config 4
1
1
1
1
0
1Eh
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REGISTER DESCRIPTION
Twenty read/write registers provide several control and configuration options. Each register description below
also shows the Power-On Reset (POR) state of each control bit.
Table 12. Configuration Register 1
Addr: 01h (0 0001b)
Bit
D15
Name
POR
D14
POR state: 0000h
D13
D12
D11
Mode
0
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
Input Select
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D5
D4
DC
Res
0
0
D3
TPM
0
D2
Res
0
D1
D0
BMP
STA
0
0
Bits 15:14
ADC Mode: Selects the operating mode as follows:
00 = Single ADC (Samples at 2xFclk)
01 = Dual ADC (Samples at Fclk)
10 = Quad ADC (Samples at Fclk/2)
11 = Invalid setting. Do not use.
Bits 13:6
Input Select: Depending on the ADC Mode selection, determines which inputs are used as follows:
Mode = Single ADC
Selected input for all converters set by bits 7:6.
Other bits unused.
00 = Input 1
01 = Input 2
10 = Input 3
11 = Input 4
Mode = Dual ADC
Selected input for converters A and C set by bits 7:6
Selected input for converters B and D set by bits 9:8
Other bits unused.
00 = Input 1
01 = Input 2
10 = Input 3
11 = Input 4
Mode = Quad ADC
Selected input for converter A set by bits 7:6
Selected input for converter B set by bits 9:8
Selected input for converter C set by bits 11:10
Selected input for converter D set by bits 13:12
Other bits unused.
00 = Input 1
01 = Input 2
10 = Input 3
11 = Input 4
Bit 5
DC Coupled Mode Select
The default setting of 0b selects AC coupled mode for all inputs.
Setting this bit to 1b selects DC coupled mode for all inputs.
Bit 4
Reserved
Must be set to 0b.
Bit 3
ADC Test Pattern Mode Select
Settings this bit to 1b replaces the normal ADC output with a configurable test pattern output as set by
Register Dh.
Bit 2
Reserved
Must be set to 0b.
Bit 1
Clock Bump
Setting this bit to 1b “bumps” or “swallows” one input clock, to shift the order of the interleaved
converters one later. This bit must be cleared before setting it again.
Bit 0
Set tAD Adjust
Setting this bit to 1b enables the built in tAD adjustment circuitry. The amount of aperture delay added is
selected via Register Ch.
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Table 13. Configuration Register 2
Addr: 02h (0 0010b)
Bit
D15
D14
Name
CAL
STV
POR
0
0
POR state: 0530h
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
Res
Bit 15
Initiate CALibration
When this bit is set to 1b, an on-command calibration is initiated. This bit is not reset automatically upon
completion of the calibration. Therefore, the user must reset this bit to 0b and then set it to 1b again to
execute another calibration. This bit is logically OR'd with the CAL pin, both bit and pin must be set to 0
before either is used to initiate another calibration
Bit 14
Select Termination Value
When this bit is set to 0b (default) the analog and clock input terminations are set to 100 ohms. When
this bit is set to 1b, the analog and clock input terminations are set to 150 ohms. In either case, the
external Rtrim resistor value must be 3.6k ohms ±0.1%.
Bits 13:0
Reserved
Must be set to 00 0101 0011 0000b.
Table 14. Calibration Configuration
Addr: 03h (0 0011b)
Bit
D15
Name
D14
POR state: F580h
D13
Res
POR
1
1
D12
D11
D10
D9
0
1
0
RTE
1
D8
D7
D6
1
1
0
Res
1
D5
D4
D3
0
0
SSC
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
Res
0
Bits 15:13
Reserved
Must be set to 111b.
Bit 12
Resistor Trim Enable
When set to 1b, the input termination resistor values are calibrated normally. When set to 0b, the input
termination resistor values are not calibrated.
Bits 11:6
Reserved
Must be set to 00 0000b.
Bit 5
SPI Scan Control
When set to 1b this bit enables the readout and writeback of the SPI calibration coefficient vector,
accessed via Register 0Eh.
Bits 4:0
Reserved
Must be set to 0 0000b.
Table 15. Channel A Full Scale Range Setting (1)
Addr: 04h (0 0100b)
Bit
D15
D14
POR state: 8000h
D13
D12
Name
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D4
1
0
0
0
0
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Note: The Full Scale Range registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Full Scale Range Magnitude Setting
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel full scale range as follows:
0d = 560 mV pk-pk
255d = 700 mV pk-pk (default)
511d = 840 mV pk-pk
Bits 6:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000 0000b.
46
D5
FM
POR
(1)
D11
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Table 16. Channel A Offset Setting (1)
Addr: 05h (0 0101b)
Bit
POR state: 0000h
D15
D14
D13
D12
0
0
0
0
Name
POR
(1)
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
0
0
0
0
OM
0
D6
D5
D4
D3
0
0
0
OP
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
Note: The Offset registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Offset Magnitude
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel offset as follows:
0d = 0 mV
255d = 20 mV
511d = 45 mV
Bit 6
Offset Polarity
When set to 0b, the addressed ADC channel offset is positive. (ADC output code increases). When set
to 1b, the addressed ADC channel offset is negative. (ADC output code decreases).
Bits 5:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000000b
Table 17. Channel B Full Scale Range Setting (1)
Addr: 06h (0 0110b)
Bit
POR state: 8000h
D15
D14
D13
D12
1
0
0
0
Name
POR
(1)
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
FM
0
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
0
Note: The Full Scale Range registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Full Scale Range Magnitude Setting
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel full scale range as follows:
0d = 560 mV pk-pk
255d = 700 mV pk-pk (default)
511d = 840 mV pk-pk
Bits 6:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000 0000b.
Table 18. Channel B Offset Setting (1)
Addr: 07h (0 0111b)
Bit
D15
D14
POR state: 0000h
D13
D12
Name
POR
(1)
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
OM
0
0
0
0
0
D6
D5
D4
D3
OP
0
0
0
0
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
0
0
0
Note: The Offset registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Offset Magnitude
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel offset as follows:
0d = 0 mV
255d = 20 mV
511d = 45 mV
Bit 6
Offset Polarity
When set to 0b, the addressed ADC channel offset is positive. (ADC output code increases). When set
to 1b, the addressed ADC channel offset is negative. (ADC output code decreases).
Bits 5:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000000b
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Table 19. Channel C Full Scale Range Setting (1)
Addr: 08h (0 1000b)
Bit
POR state: 8000h
D15
D14
D13
D12
1
0
0
0
Name
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
FM
POR
(1)
D11
0
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
0
Note: The Full Scale Range registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Full Scale Range Magnitude Setting
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel full scale range as follows:
0d = 560 mV pk-pk
255d = 700 mV pk-pk (default)
511d = 840 mV pk-pk
Bits 6:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000 0000b.
Table 20. Channel C Offset Setting (1)
Addr: 09h (0 1001b)
Bit
D15
D14
POR state: 0000h
D13
D12
Name
D10
D9
D8
D7
OM
POR
(1)
D11
0
0
0
0
0
D6
D5
D4
D3
OP
0
0
0
0
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
0
0
0
Note: The Offset registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Offset Magnitude
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel offset as follows:
0d = 0 mV
255d = 20 mV
511d = 45 mV
Bit 6
Offset Polarity
When set to 0b, the addressed ADC channel offset is positive. (ADC output code increases). When set
to 1b, the addressed ADC channel offset is negative. (ADC output code decreases).
Bits 5:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000000b
Table 21. Channel D Full Scale Range Setting (1)
Addr: 0Ah (0 1010b)
Bit
D15
D14
POR state: 8000h
D13
D12
Name
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
FM
POR
(1)
D11
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
Note: The Full Scale Range registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Full Scale Range Magnitude Setting
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel full scale range as follows:
0d = 560 mV pk-pk
255d = 700 mV pk-pk (default)
511d = 840 mV pk-pk
Bits 6:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000 0000b
48
D3
Res
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Table 22. Channel D Offset Setting (1)
Addr: 0Bh (0 1011b)
Bit
POR state: 0000h
D15
D14
D13
D12
0
0
0
0
Name
D10
D9
D8
D7
0
0
0
0
OM
POR
(1)
D11
0
D6
D5
D4
D3
0
0
0
OP
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
Res
Note: The Offset registers for each of the four ADCs must be written consistent with the ADC Mode and Input Select settings
Bits 15:7
Offset Magnitude
These 9 bits set the addressed ADC channel offset as follows:
0d = 0 mV
255d = 20 mV
511d = 45 mV
Bit 6
Offset Polarity
When set to 0b, the addressed ADC channel offset is positive. (ADC output code increases). When set
to 1b, the addressed ADC channel offset is negative. (ADC output code decreases).
Bits 5:0
Reserved
Must be set to 000000b
Table 23. Aperture Delay
Addr: 0Ch (0 1100b)
Bit
POR state: 0000h
D15
D14
D13
0
0
0
Name
POR
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
0
0
0
0
0
CD
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
0
0
0
0
ID
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
FD
Bits 15:10
Coarse Delay
These 6 bits select the amount of additional coarse aperture delay.
Typical delay values are:
0d = 0 ps
1d = 20 ps
2d = 40 ps
…
63d = 1260 ps
Bits 9:5
Intermediate Delay
These 5 bits select the amount of additional intermediate aperture delay.
Typical delay values are:
0d = 0 ps
1d = 5 ps
2d = 10 ps
…
63d = 155 ps
Bits 4:0
Fine Delay
These 5 bits select the amount of additional fine aperture delay.
Typical delay values are:
0d = 0 ps
1d = 0.4 ps
2d = 0.8 ps
…
63d = 12.4 ps
0
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Table 24. 16–Bit Test Pattern
Addr: 0Dh (0 1101b)
Bit
POR state: EA68h
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
Name
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
1
0
1
0
0
0
16–Bit ADC Test Pattern
POR
Bits 15:0
0
0
1
16 Bit ADC Test Pattern
These 16 bits select the test pattern sequence that will be generated by each bank of the ADC as
follows:
0b = Low Code Selected
1b = High Code Selected
Low and High Codes for each sub-converter are defined as shown in the table below.
The pattern is output in sequence as determined by the Test Pattern Bits, starting from MSb and
running to LSb. So the pattern in time for the default register settings is: High, High, High, Low, High,
Low, High, Low, Low, etc.
ADC Bank
Low Code
High Code
Ad
01h
FEh
Bd
02h
FDh
Cd
03h
FCh
Dd
04h
FBh
A
05h
FAh
B
06h
F9h
C
07h
F8h
D
08h
F7h
Table 25. SPI Scan Read/Write
Addr: 0Eh (0 1110b)
Bit
POR state: 0000h
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Name
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SPI Scan Read/Write
POR
Bits 15:0
0
0
SPI Scan Read/Write Value
These 16 bits provide the Read/Write access to the SPI Scan Calibration Vector.
Table 26. Reserved
Addr: 0Fh (0 1111b)
Bit
D15
D14
POR state: 0001h
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
Name
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Res
POR
0
Bits 15:0
50
D7
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved
Must be set to 0000 0000 0000 0001b.
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Table 27. SYNC
Addr: 10h (1 0000b)
Bit
D15
Name
SDE
POR
1
POR state: 8000h
D14
D13
D12
D11
0
0
0
0
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
0
0
0
0
SDV
D5
D4
D3
0
0
0
D4S
0
D2
D1
D0
0
0
Res
0
Bit 15
Sync/Delay Enable
When set to 1b, the serializer training pattern and multi-ADC Sync feature is enabled along with the
Sync Delay controlled via Bits 14:7. When set to 0b, the Sync feature is disabled. (Power consumption
reduced when off)
Bits14:7
Sync Delay Value
These bits select the Sync Delay line setting as follows:
Typical delay values are:
0d = 0 ps
1d = 6.3 ps
2d = 12.5 ps
…
255d = 1600 ps
Bits 6:5
Divide by 4 State (Read Only)
These bits allow readout of the Divide by 4 counter State as register during the Sync procedure. The
value read back is indicated by these 2 bits as follows:
00 = Divider State 1
01 = Divider State 2
10 = Divider State 3
11 = Divider State 4
Bits 4:0
Reserved
Must be set to 0 0000b.
Table 28. Serial Config 1
Addr: 11h (1 0001b)
Bit
D15
Name
POR
D14
POR state: 0000h
D13
DeEm
0
D12
D11
VCM
0
0
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
VOD
0
0
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
TL[9:0]
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 15:14
DeEMphasis
These bits set the line driver de-emphasis level as follows:
00 = No de-emphasis
01 = 10” FR4 (3.3 dB)
10 = 20” FR4 (5.6 dB)
11 = 30” FR4 (7.2 dB)
Bits13:12
Output Offset Select
These bits set the line driver common mode voltage, as follows:
00 = 0.8V
01 = 1.0V
10 = 1.2V
11 = Maximum (Tracks VO)
Bits 11:10
Output Voltage Select
These bits set the line driver differential output voltage, as follows:
00 = 400 mVp-p
01 = 600 mVp-p
10 = 700 mVp-p
11 = 800 mVp-p
Bits 9:0
Test Lane
These bits configure the functionality of the serial lane test features, in conjunction with the Test Mode
settings in Serial Config 4, Bits 12:10, and the look up tables at Serial Config 2, 3 and 4.
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Table 29. Serial Config 2
Addr: 12h (1 0010b)
Bit
POR state: 0000h
D15
D14
D13
0
0
0
Name
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
TT1[5:0]
POR
0
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
TT0[9:0]
Bits15:10
Test Table 1 (Lower 6 LSBits)
These bits set the lower 6 least significant bits of Test Lookup Table 1.
Bits 9:0
Test Table 0
These bits set the 10 bits of Test Lookup Table 0.
0
Table 30. Serial Config 3
Addr: 13h (1 0011b)
Bit
D15
Name
Res
POR
0
D14
POR state: 0000h
D13
D12
D11
D10
DTP
0
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
TT2[9:0]
0
0
0
0
0
0
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
TT1[9:6]
0
0
0
0
0
Bit 15
Reserved
Must be set to 0b.
Bit 14
Disable Training Pattern
When set to 1b, the SYNC pin will not put the encoder in training pattern mode. Useful to allow reading of divide-by-4 counter
state using SYNC pin without putting the part into training mode.
Bits 13:4
Test Table 2
These bits set the 10 bits of Test Lookup Table 2.
Bits 3:0
Test Table 1 (Upper 4 MSBits)
These bits set the 4 most significant bits of Test Lookup Table 1.
Table 31. Serial Config 4
Addr: 14h (1 0100b)
Bit
D15
D14
Name
FT
PDO
POR
0
1
POR state: 4000h
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
SPD
0
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
0
0
0
0
TT3[9:0]
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bit 15
Force Test
Forces 8B10B encoders to enter Test Table mode during chip calibration (forces TestMode[2] high).
With Test Table values set to all zeros, this should create less noise during calibration.
Bit 14
Power Down Over-Range
When set to 1b, powers down the two over-range output pairs.
Bit 13
Short Circuit Protection Disable
When set to 1b, disables the serial output driver short circuit protection.
Bits 12:10
Test Mode
Configures the serial output test modes as follows:
000 = Normal ADC mode
001 = LFSR — all lanes same
010 = LFSR — all lanes different, offset = 10 bits lane to lane
011 = LFSR — all lanes different, offset = 50 bits lane to lane
For the LFSR offsets, lane_n(t) will have the same pattern as lane_n+1(t+offset)
100 = Table Mode 0
101 = Table Mode 1
In Table Mode 0, each 10 bit data value is output from MSb to LSb and all the inputs are output in the
order Test Table 0 to Test Table 3. In addition, the TestLane[9:0] settings allow individual lanes to be
disabled, by setting the appropriate TestLane[n] bit = 1.
In Table Mode 1 the TestLane[9:0] values select one of two sequences to be output on each lane. If
TestLane[n] = 0, the lane outputs data from Test Table 0 and Test Table 1. If TestLane[n]=1, the lane
outputs data from Test Table 2 and Test Table 3.
110 = Unused
111 = Unused
52
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Bits9:0
Test Table 3
These bits set the 10 bits of Test Lookup Table 3.
Table 32. Revision (Read Only)
Addr: 1Eh (1 1110b)
Bit
POR state: F708h
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
Name
POR
Bits 15:0
Revision
This register returns the revision information for this device.
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REVISION HISTORY
Changes from Original (March 2013) to Revision A
•
54
Page
Changed layout of National Data Sheet to TI format .......................................................................................................... 53
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
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7-Mar-2015
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status
(1)
LM97600CIUT/NOPB
ACTIVE
Package Type Package Pins Package
Drawing
Qty
BGA
NXA
292
40
Eco Plan
Lead/Ball Finish
MSL Peak Temp
(2)
(6)
(3)
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
SNAG
Level-3-250C-168 HR
Op Temp (°C)
Device Marking
(4/5)
-40 to 85
LM97600CIUT
(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.
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OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
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information and additional product content details.
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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)
There may be additional marking, which relates to the logo, the lot trace code information, or the environmental category on the device.
(5)
Multiple Device Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Device Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a continuation
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(6)
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Addendum-Page 1
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Addendum-Page 2
MECHANICAL DATA
NXA0292A
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