ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 12-Bit, 105MSPS Analog-To-Digital Converter FEATURES THS9001, OPA695, OPA847 1 • • • • • • • • • • • 2 12-Bit Resolution 105MSPS Sample Rate High SNR: 70 dBFS at 100 MHz fIN High SFDR: 86 dBc at 100 MHz fIN 2.3-VPP Differential Input Voltage Internal Voltage Reference 3.3-V Single-Supply Voltage Analog Power Dissipation: 571 mW Serial Programming Interface TQFP-64 PowerPAD™ Package Recommended Op Amps: THS3201, THS3202, THS4503, THS4509, APPLICATIONS • • • • • • Wireless Communication – Communication Receivers – Base Station Infrastructure Test and Measurement Instrumentation Single and Multichannel Digital Receivers Communication Instrumentation – Radar – Infrared Video and Imaging Medical Equipment DESCRIPTION The ADS5521 is a high-performance, 12-bit, 105MSPS analog-to-digital converter (ADC). To provide a complete converter solution, it includes a high-bandwidth linear sample-and-hold stage (S&H) and internal reference. Designed for applications demanding the highest speed and highest dynamic performance in little space, the ADS5521 has excellent power consumption of 571 mW at 3.3-V single-supply voltage. This allows an even higher system integration density. The provided internal reference simplifies system design requirements. Parallel CMOS-compatible output ensures seamless interfacing with common logic. The ADS5521 is available in a 64-pin TQFP PowerPAD package and in an industrial temperature grade device. Table 1. ADS5500 Product Family 80MSPS 105MSPS 125MSPS 12 Bit ADS5522 ADS5521 ADS5520 14 Bit ADS5542 ADS5541 ADS5500 AVDD CLK+ CLK− Timing Circuitry VIN+ S&H VIN− CM DRVDD 12-Bit Pipeline ADC Core Internal Reference Digital Error Correction Output Control SEN SDATA SCLK D0 . . . D11 OVR DFS Control Logic Serial Programming Register AGND CLKOUT ADS5521 DRGND 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. PowerPAD is a trademark of Texas Instruments. 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 © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated circuits be handled with appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation procedures can cause damage. ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision integrated circuits may be more susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could cause the device not to meet its published specifications. ORDERING INFORMATION (1) PRODUCT PACKAGE-LEAD ADS5521 HTQFP-64 (2) PowerPAD (1) (2) PACKAGE DESIGNATOR SPECIFIED TEMPERATURE RANGE PACKAGE MARKING PAP –40°C to 85°C ADS5521I ORDERING NUMBER TRANSPORT MEDIA, QUANTITY ADS5521IPAP Tray, 160 ADS5521IPAPR Tape and Reel, 1000 For the most current package and ordering information, see the Package Option Addendum at the end of this data sheet. Thermal pad size: 3,5 mm x 3,5 mm (min), 4 mm x 4 mm (max). θJA = 21.47°C/W and θJC = 2.99°C/W, when used with 2 oz. copper trace and pad soldered directly to a JEDEC standard, four-layer, 3 in x 3 in PCB. ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) (1) Supply Voltage AVDD to AGND, DRVDD to DRGND AGND to DRGND ADS5521 UNIT –0.3 to 3.7 V ±0.1 V –0.3 to minimum (AVDD + 0.3, 3.6) V Logic input to DRGND –0.3 to DRVDD V Digital data output to DRGND –0.3 to DRVDD V Operating temperature range –40 to 85 °C 105 °C –65 to 150 °C Analog input to AGND (2) (3) Junction temperature Storage temperature range (1) (2) (3) 2 Stresses above these ratings may cause permanent damage. Exposure to absolute maximum conditions for extended periods may degrade device reliability. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those specified is not implied. If the input signal can exceed 3.6 V, then a resistor greater than or equal to 25 W should be added in series with each of the analog input pins to support input voltages up to 3.8 V. For input voltages above 3.8 V, the device can only handle transients and the duty cycle of the overshoot should be limited to less than 5% for inputs up to 3.9 V. The overshoot duty cycle can be defined as the ratio of the total time of overshoot to the total intended device lifetime, expressed as a percentage. The total time of overshoot is the integrated time of all overshoot occurrences over the lifetime of the device. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS PARAMETER MIN TYP MAX UNIT Analog supply voltage, AVDD 3 3.3 3.6 V Output driver supply voltage, DRVDD 3 3.3 3.6 V Supplies Analog input Differential input range Input common-mode voltage, VCM 2.3 (1) 1.45 VPP 1.55 1.65 V Digital Output Maximum output load 10 pF Clock Input ADCLK input sample rate (sine wave) 1/tC DLL ON 60 105 DLL OFF 2 80 Clock amplitude, sine wave, differential (2) 1 3 Clock duty cycle (3) VPP 50% Open free-air temperature range (1) (2) (3) MSPS –40 85 °C Input common-mode should be connected to CM. See Figure 49 for more information. See Figure 48 for more information. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS Typical values given at TA = 25°C, min and max specified over the full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, sampling rate = 105MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, DLL On, 3-VPP differential clock, and –1dBFS differential input, unless otherwise noted PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN Resolution TYP MAX UNIT 12 Bits Analog Inputs Differential input range 2.3 VPP Differential input impedance See Figure 39 6.6 kΩ Differential input capacitance See Figure 39 4 pF 250 µA 750 MHz Analog input common-mode current (per input) Analog input bandwidth Source impedance = 50 Ω Voltage overload recovery time 4 Clock cycles 1 V Internal Reference Voltages Reference bottom voltage, VREFM Reference top voltage, VREFP 2.15 Reference error –4% ±0.9% V 4% 1.55 ±0.05 Common-mode voltage output, VCM V Dynamic DC Characteristics and Accuracy No missing codes Tested Differential nonlinearity error, DNL fIN = 55 MHz –0.5 ±0.25 +0.5 LSB Integral nonlinearity error, INL fIN = 55 MHz –1.5 ±0.5 +1.5 LSB –11 ±1.5 11 mV Offset error Offset temperature coefficient DC power-supply rejection ratio, DC PSRR Gain error Δoffset error/ΔAVDD from AVDD = 3 V to AVDD = 3.6 V (1) –2 Gain temperature coefficient (1) 0.02 mV/°C 0.25 mV/V ±0.3 2 –0.02 %FS Δ%/°C Gain error is specified by design and characterization; it is not tested in production. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 3 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, min and max specified over the full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, sampling rate = 105MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, DLL On, 3-VPP differential clock, and –1dBFS differential input, unless otherwise noted PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP 68 70.5 MAX UNIT Dynamic AC Characteristics fIN = 10 MHz fIN = 55 MHz Signal-to-noise ratio. SNR RMS idle channel noise 71 25°C to 85°C Full temp range 66.8 fIN = 70 MHz fIN = 100 MHz 70 fIN = 150 MHz 69.3 fIN = 220 MHz 67.8 Input tied to common-mode 0.32 fIN = 10 MHz fIN = 55 MHz Spurious-free dynamic range, SFDR 25°C 78 86 Full temp range 76 85 81 fIN = 100 MHz 86 fIN = 150 MHz 75 fIN = 220 MHz 72 fIN = 10 MHz 90 25°C 78 86 Full temp range 76 85 fIN = 70 MHz 81 fIN = 100 MHz 88 fIN = 150 MHz 75 fIN = 220 MHz 72 Third-harmonic, HD3 Worst-harmonic/spur (other than HD2 and HD3) Signal-to-noise + distortion, SINAD 4 dBc dBc 88 25°C 78 88 Full temp range 76 87 fIN = 70 MHz 87 fIN = 100 MHz 86 fIN = 150 MHz 80 fIN = 220 MHz 78 fIN = 55 MHz 87 fIN = 10 MHz 70.7 fIN = 55 MHz LSB 83 fIN = 10 MHz fIN = 55 MHz dBFS 83 fIN = 70 MHz fIN = 55 MHz Second-harmonic, HD2 69 70.3 25°C Full temp range 67 70 65.8 68.5 fIN = 70 MHz 69.6 fIN = 100 MHz 69.3 fIN = 150 MHz 68.2 fIN = 220 MHz 65.8 Submit Documentation Feedback dBc dBc dBFS Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, min and max specified over the full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, sampling rate = 105MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, DLL On, 3-VPP differential clock, and –1dBFS differential input, unless otherwise noted PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP fIN = 10 MHz Effective number of bits, ENOB Two-tone intermodulation distortion, IMD AC power supply rejection ratio, ACPSRR UNIT 79 fIN = 55 MHz Total harmonic distortion, THD MAX 25°C 76 83 Full temp range 74 82 fIN = 70 MHz 78 fIN = 100 MHz 84 fIN = 150 MHz 74 fIN = 220 MHz 70.3 fIN = 55 MHz 11.3 f = 10.1 MHz, 15.1 MHz (-7dBFS each tone) 94.6 f = 50.1 MHz, 55.1 MHz (-7dBFS each tone) 96.6 f = 150.1 MHz, 155.1 MHz (-7dBFS each tone) 84.7 Supply noise frequency ≤ 100 MHz dBc Bits dBFS 35 dB Power Supply Total supply current, ICC fIN = 55 MHz 223 250 mA Analog supply current, IAVDD fIN = 55 MHz 173 185 mA Output buffer supply current, IDRVDD fIN = 55 MHz 50 65 mA Analog only 571 611 Power dissipation Output buffer power with 10-pF load on digital output to ground 165 215 Standby power With clocks running 180 250 mW mW DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS Valid over full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT Digital Inputs High-level input voltage, VIH 2.4 V Low-level input voltage, VIL 0.8 V High-level input current, IIH 10 µA -10 µA Low-level input current, IIL Input current for RESET Input capacitance –20 µA 4 pF Digital Outputs Low-level output voltage, VOL CLOAD = 10 pF High-level output voltage, VOH CLOAD = 10 pF Output capacitance 0.3 2.4 0.4 V 3 pF Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 V 3 5 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com TIMING CHARACTERISTICS (1) (2) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, min and max specified over the full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, sampling rate = 105MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential clock, and CLOAD = 10 pF, unless otherwise noted (1) PARAMETER DESCRIPTION MIN TYP MAX UNIT Switching Specification Aperture delay, tA Input CLK falling edge to data sampling point Aperture jitter (uncertainty) Uncertainty in sampling instant (3) Data setup time, tSETUP Data valid Data hold time, tHOLD 50% of CLKOUT rising edge to data becoming invalid (3) to 50% of CLKOUT rising edge Input clock to output data valid start, tSTART (4) (5) Input clock rising edge to data valid start delay Input clock to output data valid end, tEND (4) (5) Input clock rising edge to data valid end delay Output clock jitter, tJIT Uncertainty in CLKOUT rising edge, peak-to-peak Output clock rise time, tr Rise time of CLKOUT from 20% to 80% of DRVDD Output clock fall time, tf Fall time of CLKOUT from 80% to 20% of DRVDD Input clock to output clock delay, tPDI Input clock rising edge, zero crossing, to output clock rising edge 50% Data rise time, tr 1 ns 300 fs 2.2 2.8 ns 2.2 2.5 ns 1.9 5.8 2.8 7.3 ns ns 175 250 psPP 2 2.2 ns 1.7 1.8 ns 4.7 5.5 ns Data rise time measured from 20% to 80% of DRVDD 4.4 5.1 ns Data fall time, tf Data fall time measured from 80% to 20% of DRVDD 3.3 3.8 ns Output enable(OE) to data output delay Time required for outputs to have stable timings with regard to input clock (6) after OE is activated 1000 Time to valid data after coming out of software power down 1000 Time to valid data after stopping and restarting the clock 1000 Wakeup time Latency (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) 6 4 Time for a sample to propagate to the ADC outputs 17.5 Clock cycles Clock cycles Clock cycles Timing parameters are ensured by design and characterization, and not tested in production. See Table 6 through Table 9 in the Application Information section for timing information at additional sampling frequencies. Data valid refers to 2 V for LOGIC HIGH and 0.8 V for LOGIC LOW. See the Output Information section for details on using the input clock for data capture. These specifications apply when the CLKOUT polarity is set to rising edge (according to Table 3). Add 1/2 clock period for the valid number for a falling edge CLKOUT polarity. Data outputs are available within a clock from assertion of OE; however, it takes 1000 clock cycles to ensure stable timing with respect to input clock. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 Analog Input Signal Sample N N + 1 N + 2 N + 3 N + 4 N + 14 N + 15 N + 16 N + 17 tA Input Clock tSTART Output Clock tPDI tsu Data Out (D0−D11) N − 17 N − 16 N − 15 N − 13 N−3 N−2 N−1 Data Invalid tEND A. N − 14 17.5 Clock Cycles N th It is recommended that the loading at CLKOUT and all data lines are accurately matched to ensure that the above timing matches closely with the specified values. Figure 1. Timing Diagram RESET TIMING CHARACTERISTICS Typical values given at TA = 25°C, min and max specified over the full recommended operating temperature range, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, and 3-VPP differential clock, unless otherwise noted PARAMETER DESCRIPTION MIN TYP MAX UNIT Switching Specification Power-on delay, t1 Delay from power-on of AVDD and DRVDD to RESET pulse active 10 ms Reset pulse width, t2 Pulse width of active RESET signal 2 µs Register write delay, t3 Delay from RESET disable to SEN active 2 µs Power-up time Delay from power-up of AVDD and DRVDD to output stable Power Supply (AVDD, DRVDD) 40 ms t1 10 ms t2 2 ms t3 2 ms SEN Active RESET (Pin 35) Figure 2. Reset Timing Diagram Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 7 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com SERIAL PROGRAMMING INTERFACE CHARACTERISTICS The ADS5521 has a three-wire serial interface. The ADS5521 latches serial data SDATA on the falling edge of serial clock SCLK when SEN is active. • Serial shift of bits is enabled when SEN is low. SCLK shifts serial data at the falling edge. • Minimum width of data stream for a valid loading is 16 clocks. • Data is loaded at every 16th SCLK falling edge while SEN is low. • In case the word length exceeds a multiple of 16 bits, the excess bits are ignored. • Data can be loaded in multiples of 16-bit words within a single active SEN pulse. • The first 4-bit nibble is the address of the register while the last 12 bits are the register contents. A3 SDATA A2 A1 A0 D11 D10 ADDRESS D9 D0 DATA MSB Figure 3. DATA Communication is 2-Byte, MSB First SEN tSLOADS tSLOADH tWSCLK tWSCLK tSCLK SCLK tsu(D) SDATA th(D) MSB LSB MSB LSB 16 x M Figure 4. Serial Programming Interface Timing Diagram Table 2. Serial Programming Interface Timing Characteristics (1) 8 MIN (1) TYP (1) MAX (1) 50% 75% SYMBOL PARAMETER tSCLK SCLK period tWSCLK SCLK duty cycle tSLOADS SEN to SCLK setup time 8 ns tSLOADH SCLK to SEN hold time 6 ns tDS Data setup time 8 ns tDH Data hold time 6 ns 50 25% UNIT ns Typ, min, and max values are characterized, but not production tested. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 Table 3. Serial Register Table (1) A3 A2 A1 A0 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 DLL CTRL DESCRIPTION Clock DLL 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Internal DLL is on; recommended for 60MSPS to 105MSPS clock speeds. 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Internal DLL is off; recommended for 2MSPS to 80MSPS clock speeds. TP<1> TP<0> 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 Normal mode of operation 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 All outputs forced to 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 All outputs forced to 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 Each output bit toggles between 0 and 1. Test Mode PDN (2) (3) Power Down 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 Normal mode of operation 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X 0 Device is put in power-down (low-current) mode. (1) (2) (3) The register contents default to the appropriate setting for normal operation up on RESET. The patterns given are applicable to the straight offset binary output format. If 2's complement output format is selected, the test mode outputs will be the binary 2's complement equivalent of these patterns as described in the Output Information section. While each bit toggles between 1 and 0 in this mode, there is no assured phase relationship between the data bits D0 through D13. For example, when D0 is a 1, D1 in not assured to be a 0, and vice versa. Table 4. Data Format Select (DFS) Table DFS-PIN VOLTAGE (VDFS) V DFS t 2 12 AV DD DATA FORMAT CLOCK OUTPUT POLARITY Straight Binary Data valid on rising edge 4 12 5 AV DD t V DFS t 12 AV DD 2's complement Data valid on rising edge 7 12 AV DD t V DFS t 8 12 AV DD Straight Binary Data valid on falling edge 2's complement Data valid on falling edge V DFS u 10 12 AV DD Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 9 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com PIN CONFIGURATION 10 55 54 53 52 51 50 DRVDD 56 DRGND D2 57 D3 58 D4 59 D5 60 D6 D8 61 D7 D9 62 DRGND D10 63 DRVDD D11 (MSB) 64 DRGND OVR PAP PACKAGE HTQFP-64 (TOP VIEW) 49 DRGND 1 48 DRGND SCLK 2 47 D1 SDATA 3 46 D0 (LSB) SEN 4 45 NC AVDD 5 44 NC AGND 6 43 CLKOUT AVDD 7 AGND 8 AVDD 9 42 DRGND ADS5521 PowerPAD 41 OE 40 DFS (Connected to Analog Ground) 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Submit Documentation Feedback 30 31 32 AGND 18 IREF 17 REFM 33 AVDD REFP AGND 16 AVDD 34 AVDD AGND AVDD 15 AVDD 35 RESET AGND AGND 14 AVDD 36 AGND AGND AGND 13 AVDD 37 AVDD AGND AGND 12 INM 38 AGND INP CLKM 11 AGND 39 AVDD CM CLKP 10 Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 PIN ASSIGNMENTS (1) TERMINAL NO. OF PINS I/O AVDD 5, 7, 9, 15, 22, 24, 26, 28, 33, 34, 37, 39 12 I Analog power supply AGND 6, 8, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 21, 23, 25, 27, 32, 36, 38 14 I Analog ground DRVDD 49, 58 2 I Output driver power supply DRGND 1, 42, 48, 50, 57, 59 6 I Output driver ground NC 44, 45 2 — INP 19 1 I Differential analog input (positive) INM 20 1 I Differential analog input (negative) REFP 29 1 O Reference voltage (positive); 1-µF capacitor in series with a 1-Ω resistor to GND REFM 30 1 O Reference voltage (negative); 1-µF capacitor in series with a 1-Ω resistor to GND IREF 31 1 I Current set; 56-kΩ resistor to GND; do not connect capacitors CM 17 1 O Common-mode output voltage RESET 35 1 I Reset (active high), 200-kΩ resistor to AVDD (2) OE 41 1 I Output enable (active high) (3) DFS 40 1 I Data format and clock out polarity select (4) (3) CLKP 10 1 I Data converter differential input clock (positive) CLKM 11 1 I Data converter differential input clock (negative) SEN 4 1 I Serial interface chip select (3) SDATA 3 1 I Serial interface data (3) SCLK 2 1 I Serial interface clock (3) 46, 47, 51-56, 60-63 14 O Parallel data output OVR 64 1 O Over-range indicator bit CLKOUT 43 1 O CMOS clock out in sync with data NAME NO. D0 (LSB) to D11 (MSB) (1) (2) (3) (4) DESCRIPTION Not connected PowerPAD is connected to analog ground. If unused, the RESET pin should be tied to AGND. See the serial programming interface section for details. Pins OE, DFS, SEN, SDATA, and SCLK have internal clamping diodes to the DRVDD supply. Any external circuit driving these pins must also run off the same supply voltage as DRVDD. Table 4 defines the voltage levels for each mode selectable via the DFS pin. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 11 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com DEFINITION OF SPECIFICATIONS Offset Error Analog Bandwidth The analog input frequency at which the power of the fundamental is reduced by 3 dB with respect to the low frequency value. Aperture Delay The delay in time between the falling edge of the input sampling clock and the actual time at which the sampling occurs. Aperture Uncertainty (Jitter) The sample-to-sample variation in aperture delay. Clock Pulse Width/Duty Cycle The duty cycle of a clock signal is the ratio of the time the clock signal remains at a logic high (clock pulse width) to the period of the clock signal. Duty cycle is typically expressed as a percentage. A perfect differential sine wave clock results in a 50% duty cycle. Maximum Conversion Rate The maximum sampling rate at which certified operation is given. All parametric testing is performed at this sampling rate unless otherwise noted. Minimum Conversion Rate The minimum sampling rate at which the ADC functions. Differential Nonlinearity (DNL) An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions at analog input values spaced exactly 1LSB apart. The DNL is the deviation of any single step from this ideal value, measured in units of LSBs. Integral Nonlinearity (INL) The offset error is the difference, given in number of LSBs, between the ADC's actual average idle channel output code and the ideal average idle channel output code. This quantity is often mapped into mV. Temperature Drift The temperature drift coefficient (with respect to gain error and offset error) specifies the change per degree Celsius of the parameter from TMIN to TMAX. It is calculated by dividing the maximum deviation of the parameter across the TMIN to TMAX range by the difference (TMAX – TMIN). Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) SNR is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the noise floor power (PN), excluding the power at DC and the first eight harmonics. P SNR + 10Log 10 S PN SNR is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to Full-Scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter's full-scale range. Signal-to-Noise and Distortion (SINAD) SINAD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the power of all the other spectral components including noise (PN) and distortion (PD), but excluding DC. PS SINAD + 10Log 10 PN ) PD The INL is the deviation of the ADC's transfer function from a best fit line determined by a least squares curve fit of that transfer function, measured in units of LSBs. SINAD is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to Full-Scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter's full-scale range. Gain Error Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) The gain error is the deviation of the ADC's actual input full-scale range from its ideal value. The gain error is given as a percentage of the ideal input full-scale range. Gain error does not account for variations in the internal reference voltages (see the Electrical Specifications section for limits on the variation of VREFP and VREFM). The ENOB is a measure of a converter's performance as compared to the theoretical limit based on quantization noise. ENOB + SINAD * 1.76 6.02 12 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) Two-Tone Intermodulation Distortion (IMD3) THD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the power of the first eight harmonics (PD). P THD + 10Log 10 S PD IMD3 is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (at frequencies f1 and f2) to the power of the worst spectral component at either frequency 2f1 – f2 or 2f2 –f1. IMD3 is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to Full-Scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter's full-scale range. THD is typically given in units of dBc (dB to carrier). Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (SFDR) The ratio of the power of the fundamental to the highest other spectral component (either spur or harmonic). SFDR is typically given in units of dBc (dB to carrier). DC Power Supply Rejection Ration (DC PSRR) The DC PSSR is the ratio of the change in offset error to a change in analog supply voltage. The DC PSRR is typically given in units of mV/V. Reference Error The reference error is the variation of the actual reference voltage (VREFP - VREFM) from its ideal value. The reference error is typically given as a percentage. Voltage Overload Recovery Time The voltage overload recovery time is defined as the time required for the ADC to recover to within 1% of the full-scale range in response to an input voltage overload of 10% beyond the full-scale range. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 13 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, sampling rate = 105MSPS, DLL On, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 4 MHz Input Signal) SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 16 MHz Input Signal) 0 0 SFDR = 92.6dBc SNR = 71.3dBFS THD = 88.2dBc SINAD = 71.2dBFS −40 −60 −80 −100 −60 −80 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz 0 10 30 40 Figure 5. Figure 6. SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 55 MHz Input Signal) SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 70 MHz Input Signal) 0 50 0 SFDR = 90.4dBc SNR = 71.0dBFS THD = 85.4dBc SINAD = 70.8dBFS −20 Magnitude − dB −40 SFDR = 81.7dBc SNR = 70.6dBFS THD = 80.3dBc SINAD = 70.2dBFS −20 −60 −80 −100 −40 −60 −80 −100 −120 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz 0 10 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz Figure 7. Figure 8. SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 80 MHz Input Signal) SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 100 MHz Input Signal) 0 52.5 10 52.5 −120 0 0 SFDR = 84.5dBc SNR = 70.4dBFS THD = 83.3dBc SINAD = 70.2dBFS −40 SFDR = 86.2dBc SNR = 70.1dBFS THD = 85.2dBc SINAD = 70.0dBFS −20 Magnitude − dB −20 −60 −80 −100 −40 −60 −80 −100 10 20 30 f − Frequency − MHz 40 50 0 Figure 9. 10 20 30 f − Frequency − MHz 40 50 52.5 −120 0 52.5 −120 14 20 f − Frequency − MHz 52.5 10 52.5 −120 0 Magnitude − dB −40 −100 −120 Magnitude − dB SFDR = 88.9dBc SNR = 71.1dBFS THD = 86.9dBc SINAD = 71.0dBFS −20 Magnitude − dB Magnitude − dB −20 Figure 10. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, sampling rate = 105MSPS, DLL On, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 150 MHz Input Signal) SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 220 MHz Input Signal) 0 0 SFDR = 75.3dBc SNR = 69.4dBFS THD = 75.0dBc SINAD = 68.1dBFS −40 −60 −80 −100 −60 −80 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz 0 10 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz Figure 11. Figure 12. SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE (FFT for 300 MHz Input Signal) TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION 52.5 10 52.5 −120 0 0 0 SFDR = 65.6dBc SNR = 66.6dBFS THD = 64.9dBc SINAD = 62.7dBFS −40 f1 = 10.1MHz (−7dBFS) f2 = 15.1MHz (−7dBFS) 2−Tone IMD = 94.1dBFS −20 Magnitude − dB −20 −60 −80 −100 −40 −60 −80 −100 10 20 30 40 50 f − Frequency − MHz 0 10 20 30 40 50 52.5 −120 0 52.5 −120 40 50 52.5 Magnitude − dB −40 −100 −120 f − Frequency − MHz Figure 13. Figure 14. TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION 0 0 f1 = 45.1MHz (−7dBFS) f2 = 50.1MHz (−7dBFS) 2−Tone IMD = 94.0dBc −20 f1 = 150.1MHz (−7dBFS) f2 = 155.1MHz (−7dBFS) 2−Tone IMD = 85.1dBFS −20 −40 Magnitude − dB Magnitude − dB SFDR = 73.1dBc SNR = 68.2dBFS THD = 71.9dBc SINAD = 66.6dBFS −20 Magnitude − dB Magnitude − dB −20 −60 −80 −100 −40 −60 −80 −100 −120 10 20 30 f − Frequency − MHz 40 50 52.5 −120 0 0 Figure 15. 10 20 30 f − Frequency − MHz Figure 16. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 15 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, sampling rate = 105MSPS, DLL On, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY 0.25 1.0 fIN = 10MHz AIN = −0.5dBFS 0.15 0.6 0.10 0.4 0.05 0 −0.05 0.2 0 −0.2 −0.10 −0.4 −0.15 −0.6 −0.20 −0.8 −0.25 −1.0 0 1024 2048 3072 4096 0 1024 3072 Code Figure 17. Figure 18. SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE vs INPUT FREQUENCY SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO vs INPUT FREQUENCY 95 76 90 74 4096 72 SNR − dBFS 80 75 70 70 68 66 64 65 62 60 60 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 0 50 Frequency − MHz 100 150 200 250 300 Frequency − MHz Figure 19. Figure 20. AC PERFORMANCE vs ANALOG SUPPLY VOLTAGE AC PERFORMANCE vs ANALOG SUPPLY VOLTAGE 76 95 fIN = 150MHz SFDR − dBc SFDR − dBc 2048 Code 85 SFDR − dBc f IN = 10MHz AIN = −0.5dBFS 0.8 INL − LSB DNL − LSB 0.20 75 SFDR 74 73 fIN = 70MHz 90 85 SFDR 80 SNR − dBFS SNR − dBFS 72 71 70 SNR 69 68 SNR 70 65 60 3.0 16 75 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 AVDD − Analog Supply Voltage − V AVDD − Analog Supply Voltage − V Figure 21. Figure 22. Submit Documentation Feedback 3.5 3.6 Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, sampling rate = 105MSPS, DLL On, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted AC PERFORMANCE vs DIGITAL SUPPLY VOLTAGE AC PERFORMANCE vs DIGITAL SUPPLY VOLTAGE 88 fIN = 150MHz SFDR − dBc SFDR − dBc 78 76 SFDR 74 SFDR 80 76 SNR SNR − dBFS SNR − dBFS 72 fIN = 70MHz 84 70 68 66 SNR 72 68 64 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 DVDD − Digital Supply Voltage − V DVDD − Digital Supply Voltage − V Figure 23. Figure 24. POWER DISSIPATION vs SAMPLE RATE POWER DISSIPATION vs SAMPLE RATE 800 800 fIN = 70MHz fIN = 150MHz 750 700 Power Dissipation − mW Power Dissipation − mW 750 DLL On 650 DLL Off 600 550 DLL On 650 DLL Off 600 550 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 450 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Sample Rate − MSPS Sample Rate − MSPS Figure 25. Figure 26. AC PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE AC PERFORMANCE vs INPUT AMPLITUDE 90 90 100 105 10 105 450 90 fIN = 70MHz 80 70 85 SFDR AC Performance − dB SFDR − dBc 700 500 500 80 75 SNR − dBFS 3.6 SNR 70 65 60 −40 −15 +10 +35 +60 +85 SNR (dBFS) 60 50 40 30 SFDR (dBc) 20 10 0 −10 SNR (dBc) −20 −30 −100 −90 −80 −70 −60 −50 −40 Temperature − _C fIN = 70MHz −30 −20 −10 0 Input Amplitude − dBFS Figure 27. Figure 28. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 17 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, sampling rate = 105MSPS, DLL On, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted AC PERFORMANCE vs INPUT AMPLITUDE 100 90 80 SNR (dBFS) 70 60 50 40 SFDR (dBc) 30 20 SNR (dBc) 10 0 −10 −20 f IN = 150MHz −30 −100 −90 −80 −70 −60 −50 −40 −30 −20 −10 0 90 80 70 AC Performance − dB AC Performance − dB AC PERFORMANCE vs INPUT AMPLITUDE SFDR (dBc) 30 20 SNR (dBc) 10 0 −10 f IN = 220MHz −30 −20 Input Amplitude − dBFS Figure 29. Figure 30. OUTPUT NOISE HISTOGRAM AC PERFORMANCE vs CLOCK AMPLITUDE −10 0 95 SFDR − dBc 80 70 60 fIN = 70MHz 90 SFDR 85 80 50 40 SNR − dBFS Occurrence − % 50 40 Input Amplitude − dBFS 90 30 20 75 SNR 70 65 60 2059 2057 2058 2055 2056 2053 2054 2051 2052 2049 2050 2047 2048 2045 0 2046 10 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 Code Differential Clock Amplitude − V Figure 31. Figure 32. WCDMA CARRIER AC PERFORMANCE vs CLOCK DUTY CYCLE 0 3.0 −40 −60 SFDR − dBc 100 fS = 92.16MSPS fIN = 170MHz −20 fIN = 20MHz 95 90 SFDR 85 80 −80 SNR − dBFS Magnitude − dB 60 −20 −30 −100 −90 −80 −70 −60 −50 −40 100 −100 −120 −140 75 SNR 70 65 60 0 18 SNR (dBFS) 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 35 40 45 50 55 f − Frequency − MHz Clock Duty Cycle − % Figure 33. Figure 34. Submit Documentation Feedback 60 65 Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR) (DLL On) 125 69 71 120 70.5 71 69.5 70 115 70.5 110 70.5 105 70 100 71 68.5 69 70.5 95 69.5 69.5 70.5 90 69 SNR − dBFS Sample Rate − MSPS 70.5 85 71.5 70 68.5 80 75 68.5 68 69 71 68 71 70 70.5 65 20 40 60 80 100 120 67.5 69.5 70 140 160 180 200 220 Input Frequency − MHz Figure 35. SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR) (DLL Off) 100 71 69 90 70 71 69 70 68 70 67 66 60 69 71 68 70 50 69 40 64 71 68 70 71 69 67 68 30 65 67 65 66 66 SNR − dBFS Sampe Rate − MSPS 80 63 62 64 61 20 70 69 10 20 40 67 66 68 60 80 100 63 65 120 64 140 62 61 63 160 180 200 63 60 220 Input Frequency − MHz Figure 36. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 19 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Typical values given at TA = 25°C, AVDD = DRVDD = 3.3 V, differential input amplitude = -1dBFS, and 3-V differential clock, unless otherwise noted SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) (DLL On) 81 120 115 83 87 85 89 85 81 79 77 90 79 83 75 110 Sample Rate − MSPS 85 105 90 89 87 87 85 93 83 80 85 89 83 89 79 80 70 81 87 73 79 85 85 79 65 40 60 70 75 77 81 20 75 81 83 89 75 77 81 87 75 85 81 81 85 91 77 79 83 87 95 75 81 91 100 79 77 SFDR − dBc 125 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 Input Frequency − MHz Figure 37. SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) (DLL Off) 80 82 84 88 86 78 80 74 78 88 72 82 80 86 86 70 68 66 84 88 88 82 76 86 50 76 74 86 40 88 86 84 60 90 66 84 SFDR − dBc 84 86 88 90 70 68 84 86 86 78 72 88 80 Sample Rate − MSPS 84 90 86 88 90 82 86 84 70 76 74 80 100 72 84 86 30 88 68 84 80 86 20 86 82 80 84 10 20 40 60 70 78 82 76 74 70 68 72 66 78 80 100 120 140 Input Frequency − MHz 160 66 180 200 64 64 220 Figure 38. 20 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 APPLICATION INFORMATION THEORY OF OPERATION The ADS5521 is a low-power, 12-Bit, 105MSPS, CMOS, switched capacitor, pipeline ADC that operates from a single 3.3-V supply. The conversion process is initiated by a falling edge of the external input clock. Once the signal is captured by the input S&H, the input sample is sequentially converted by a series of small resolution stages, with the outputs combined in a digital correction logic block. Both the rising and the falling clock edges are used to propagate the sample through the pipeline every half clock cycle. This process results in a data latency of 17.5 clock cycles, after which the output data is available as a 12-Bit parallel word, coded in either straight offset binary or binary 2's complement format. INPUT CONFIGURATION The analog input for the ADS5521 consists of a differential sample-and-hold architecture implemented using the switched capacitor technique shown in Figure 39. S3a L1 R1a C1a INP S1a CP1 CP3 S2 R3 CA L2 R1b INM S1b C1b VINCM 1V CP2 CP4 L1, L2: 6 nH − 10 nH effective R1a, R1b: 5W − 8W C1a, C1b: 2.2 pF − 2.6 pF CP1, CP2: 2.5 pF − 3.5 pF CP3, CP4: 1.2 pF − 1.8 pF CA: 0.8 pF − 1.2 pF R3: 80 W − 120 W Swithches: S1a, S1b: On Resistance: 35 W − 50 W S2: On Resistance: 7.5 W − 15 W S3a, S3b: On Resistance: 40 W − 60 W All switches OFF Resistance: 10 GW A. S3b All Switches are ON in sampling phase which is approximately one half of a clock period. Figure 39. Analog Input Stage Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 21 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com This differential input topology produces a high level of ac-performance for high sampling rates. It also results in a very high usable input bandwidth, especially important for high intermediate-frequency (IF) or undersampling applications. The ADS5521 requires each of the analog inputs (INP, INM) to be externally biased around the common-mode level of the internal circuitry (CM, pin 17). For a full-scale differential input, each of the differential lines of the input signal (pins 19 and 20) swings symmetrically between CM + 0.575 V and CM – 0.575 V. This means that each input is driven with a signal of up to CM + 0.575 V, so that each input has a maximum differential signal of 1.15 VPP for a total differential input signal swing of 2.3 VPP. The maximum swing is determined by the two reference voltages, the top reference (REFP, pin 29), and the bottom reference (REFM, pin 30). The ADS5521 obtains optimum performance when the analog inputs are driven differentially. The circuit shown in Figure 40 illustrates one possible configuration using an RF transformer. R0 Z0 50 W 50 W 25 W IN P 1:1 R A C S igna l 50 W S ource ADS5521 25 W IN M AD T 1−1 W T CM 1 0W 1nF 0.1 m F Figure 40. Transformer Input to Convert Single-Ended Signal to Differential Signal The single-ended signal is fed to the primary winding of an RF transformer. Placing a 25-Ω resistor in series with INP and INM is recommended to dampen ringing due to ADC kickback. Since the input signal must be biased around the common-mode voltage of the internal circuitry, the common-mode voltage (VCM) from the ADS5521 is connected to the center-tap of the secondary winding. To ensure a steady low-noise VCM reference, best performance is attained when the CM output (pin 17) is filtered to ground with a 10-Ω series resistor and parallel 0.1-µF and 0.001-µF low-inductance capacitors, as illustrated in Figure 39. Output VCM (pin 17) is designed to directly drive the ADC input. When providing a custom CM level, be aware that the input structure of the ADC sinks a common-mode current in the order of 500 µA (250 µA per input). Equation 1 describes the dependency of the common-mode current and the sampling frequency: 500mA f S (in MSPS) 105 MSPS (1) Where: fS > 2MSPS. This equation helps to design the output capability and impedance of the driving circuit accordingly. When it is necessary to buffer or apply a gain to the incoming analog signal, it is possible to combine single-ended operational amplifiers with an RF transformer, or to use a differential input/output amplifier without a transformer, to drive the input of the ADS5521. Texas Instruments offers a wide selection of single-ended operational amplifiers (including the THS3201, THS3202, OPA695, and OPA847) that can be selected depending on the application. An RF gain block amplifier, such as Texas Instruments THS9001, can also be used with an RF transformer for high input frequency applications. The THS4503 is a recommended differential input/output amplifier. Table 5 lists the recommended amplifiers. 22 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 Table 5. Recommended Amplifiers to Drive the Input of the ADS5521 INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY RECOMMENDED AMPLIFIER TYPE OF AMPLIFIER DC to 20 MHz THS4503 Differential In/Out Amp No DC to 50 MHz OPA847 Operational Amp Yes DC to 100 MHz THS4509 Differential In/Out Amp No OPA695 Operational Amp Yes THS3201 Operational Amp Yes THS3202 Operational Amp Yes THS9001 RF Gain Block Yes 10 MHz to 120 MHz Over 100 MHz USE WITH TRANSFORMER? When using single-ended operational amplifiers (such as the THS3201, THS3202, OPA695, or OPA847) to provide gain, a three-amplifier circuit is recommended with one amplifier driving the primary of an RF transformer and one amplifier in each of the legs of the secondary driving the two differential inputs of the ADS5521. These three amplifier circuits minimize even-order harmonics. For high frequency inputs, an RF gain block amplifier can be used to drive a transformer primary; in this case, the transformer secondary connections can drive the input of the ADS5521 directly, as shown in Figure 40, or with the addition of the filter circuit shown in Figure 41. Figure 41 illustrates how RIN and CIN can be placed to isolate the signal source from the switching inputs of the ADC and to implement a low-pass RC filter to limit the input noise in the ADC. It is recommended that these components be included in the ADS5521 circuit layout when any of the amplifier circuits discussed previously are used. The components allow fine-tuning of the circuit performance. Any mismatch between the differential lines of the ADS5521 input produces a degradation in performance at high input frequencies, mainly characterized by an increase in the even-order harmonics. In this case, special care should be taken to keep as much electrical symmetry as possible between both inputs. Another possible configuration for lower-frequency signals is the use of differential input/output amplifiers that can simplify the driver circuit for applications requiring dc-coupling of the input. Flexible in their configurations (see Figure 42), such amplifiers can be used for single-ended-to-differential conversion signal amplification. +5V -5V RS 100W VIN 0.1 mF 1:1 OPA695 1000 pF R1 400W RIN 25 W INP RT 100 W RIN CIN ADS5521 25 W INM CM R2 57.5 W AV = 8V/V (18dB) 10 W 0.1 mF Figure 41. Converting a Single-Ended Input Signal to a Differential Signal Using an RF Transformer Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 23 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com RS RG RF +5V RT +3.3V 10 mF 0.1 mF RIN INP VCOM 1 mF RIN INM THS4503 10 mF RG ADS5521 12-Bit / 105MSPS -5V 0.1 mF CM 10W RF 0.1 mF Figure 42. Using the THS4503 with the ADS5521 POWER-SUPPLY SEQUENCE The preferred power-up sequence is to ramp AVDD first, followed by DRVDD, including a simultaneous ramp of AVDD and DRVDD. In the event that DRVDD ramps up first in the system, care must be taken to ensure that AVDD ramps up within 10 ms. Optionally, it is recommended to put a 2-kΩ resistor from REFP (pin 29) to AVDD as shown in Figure 43. This helps to make the device more robust to power supply ramp-up timings. 28 AVDD 29 REFP 2 kW 1W 1 mF Figure 43. POWER-DOWN The device enters power-down in one of two ways: either by reducing the clock speed or by setting the PDN bit through the serial programming interface. Using the reduced clock speed, power-down may be initiated for clock frequency below 2 MSPS. The exact frequency at which the power down occurs varies from device to device. Using the serial interface PDN bit to power down the device places the outputs in a high-impedance state and only the internal reference remains on to reduce the power-up time. The power-down mode reduces power dissipation to approximately 180 mW. 24 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 REFERENCE CIRCUIT The ADS5521 has built-in internal reference generation, requiring no external circuitry on the printed circuit board (PCB). For optimum performance, it is best to connect both REFP and REFM to ground with a 1-µF decoupling capacitor (the 1-Ω resistor shown in Figure 44 is optional). In addition, an external 56.2-kΩ resistor should be connected from IREF (pin 31) to AGND to set the proper current for the operation of the ADC, as shown in Figure 44. No capacitor should be connected between pin 31 and ground; only the 56.2-kΩ resistor should be used. 1W 29 R EF P 30 R EF M 31 IR EF 1 mF 1W 1 mF 56.2 kW Figure 44. REFP, REFM, and IREF Connections for Optimum Performance CLOCK INPUT The ADS5521 clock input can be driven with either a differential clock signal or a single-ended clock input, with little or no difference in performance between both configurations. The common-mode voltage of the clock inputs is set internally to CM (pin 17) using internal 5-kΩ resistors that connect CLKP (pin 10) and CLKM (pin 11) to CM (pin 17), as shown in Figure 45. CM CM 5 kW 5 kW CLKM CLKP 6 pF 3 pF 3 pF Figure 45. Clock Inputs When driven with a single-ended CMOS clock input, it is best to connect CLKM (pin 11) to ground with a 0.01-µF capacitor, while CLKP is ac-coupled with a 0.01-µF capacitor to the clock source, as shown in Figure 46. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 25 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com Square Wave or Sine Wave (3 VPP) CLKP 0.01 mF ADS5521 CLKM 0.01 mF Figure 46. AC-Coupled, Single-Ended Clock Input The ADS5521 clock input can also be driven differentially, reducing susceptibility to common-mode noise. In this case, it is best to connect both clock inputs to the differential input clock signal with 0.01-µF capacitors, as shown in Figure 47. 0.01 mF CLKP Differential Square Wave or Sine Wave (3 VPP) ADS5521 0.01 mF CLKM Figure 47. AC-Coupled, Differential Clock Input For high input frequency sampling, it is recommended to use a clock source with low jitter. Additionally, the internal ADC core uses both edges of the clock for the conversion process. This means that, ideally, a 50% duty cycle should be provided. Figure 48 shows the performance variation of the ADC versus clock duty cycle. SFDR − dBc 100 fIN = 20MHz 95 90 SFDR 85 SNR − dBFS 80 75 SNR 70 65 60 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 Clock Duty Cycle − % Figure 48. AC Performance vs Clock Duty Cycle Bandpass filtering of the source can help produce a 50% duty cycle clock and reduce the effect of jitter. When using a sinusoidal clock, the clock jitter further improves as the amplitude is increased. In that sense, using a differential clock allows for the use of larger amplitudes without exceeding the supply rails and absolute maximum ratings of the ADC clock input. Figure 49 shows the performance variation of the device versus input clock amplitude. For detailed clocking schemes based on transformer or PECL-level clocks, see the ADS55xxEVM User's Guide (SLWU010), available for download from www.ti.com. 26 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 SFDR − dBc 95 fIN = 70MHz 90 SFDR 85 SNR − dBFS 80 75 SNR 70 65 60 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 Differential Clock Amplitude − V Figure 49. AC Performance vs Clock Amplitude INTERNAL DLL In order to obtain the fastest sampling rates achievable with the ADS5521, the device uses an internal digital delay lock loop (DLL). Nevertheless, the limited frequency range of operation of DLL degrades the performance at clock frequencies below 60 MSPS. In order to operate the device below 60 MSPS, the internal DLL must be shut off using the DLL OFF mode described in the Serial Interface Programming section. The Typical Performance Curves show the performance obtained in both modes of operation: DLL ON (default) and DLL OFF. In either of the two modes, the device enters power-down mode if no clock or slow clock is provided. The limit of the clock frequency where the device functions properly with default settings is ensured to be over 2 MHz. OUTPUT INFORMATION The ADC provides 12 data outputs (D11 to D0, with D11 being the MSB and D0 the LSB), a data-ready signal (CLKOUT, pin 43), and an out-of-range indicator (OVR, pin 64) that equals 1 when the output reaches the full-scale limits. Two different output formats (straight offset binary or 2's complement) and two different output clock polarities (latching output data on rising or falling edge of the output clock) can be selected by setting DFS (pin 40) to one of four different voltages. Table 4 details the four modes. In addition, output enable control (OE, pin 41, active high) is provided to put the outputs into a high-impedance state. In the event of an input voltage overdrive, the digital outputs go to the appropriate full-scale level. For a positive overdrive, the output code is 0xFFF in straight offset binary output format and 0x7FF in 2's complement output format. For a negative input overdrive, the output code is 0x000 in straight offset binary output format and 0x800 in 2's complement output format. These outputs to an overdrive signal are ensured through design and characterization. The output circuitry of the ADS5521, by design, minimizes the noise produced by the data switching transients, and, in particular, its coupling to the ADC analog circuitry. Output D2 (pin 51) senses the load capacitance and adjusts the drive capability of all the output pins of the ADC to maintain the same output slew rate described in the timing diagram of Figure 1. Care should be taken to ensure that all output lines (including CLKOUT) have nearly the same load as D2 (pin 51). This circuit also reduces the sensitivity of the output timing versus supply voltage or temperature. Placing external resistors in series with the outputs is not recommended. The timing characteristics of the digital outputs change for sampling rates below the 105MSPS maximum sampling frequency. Table 6 and Table 7 show the setup, hold, input clock to output data delays, and rise and fall times for different sampling frequencies with the DLL on and off, respectively. Table 8 and Table 9 show the rise and fall times at additional sampling frequencies with DLL on and off, respectively. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 27 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com To use the input clock as the data capture clock, it is necessary to delay the input clock by a delay, td, that results in the desired setup or hold time. Use either of the following equations to calculate the value of td. Desired setup time = td – tSTART Desired hold time = tEND – td Table 6. Timing Characteristics at Additional Sampling Frequencies (DLL ON) tSETUP (ns) tHOLD (ns) tSTART (ns) tEND (ns) tr (ns) tf (ns) fS (MSPS) MIN TYP MIN TYP TYP MAX MIN TYP TYP MAX TYP MAX 80 2.8 3.7 2.8 3.3 0.5 1.7 5.3 7.9 5.8 6.6 4.4 5.3 65 3.8 4.6 3.6 4.1 –0.5 0.8 5.3 8.5 6.7 7.2 5.5 6.4 MAX MAX MIN MAX MIN MIN Table 7. Timing Characteristics at Additional Sampling Frequencies (DLL OFF) tSETUP (ns) tHOLD (ns) tSTART (ns) tEND (ns) tr (ns) tf (ns) fS (MSPS) MIN TYP MIN TYP TYP MAX MIN TYP TYP MAX TYP MAX 80 3.2 4.2 1.8 3 3.8 5 8.4 11 5.8 6.6 4.4 5.3 65 4.3 5.7 2 3 2.8 4.5 8.3 11.8 6.6 7.2 5.5 6.4 40 8.5 11 2.6 3.5 –1 1.5 8.9 14.5 7.5 8 7.3 7.8 20 17 25.7 2.5 4.7 –9.8 2 9.5 21.6 7.5 8 7.6 8 10 27 51 4 6.5 -30 -3 11.5 31 2 284 370 8 19 185 320 515 576 50 82 75 150 MAX MAX MIN MAX MIN MIN Table 8. Timing Characteristics at Additional Sampling Frequencies (DLL ON) fS (MSPS) CLKOUT, Rise Time tr (ns) MIN CLKOUT Jitter, Peak-to-Peak tJIT (ps) CLKOUT, Fall Time tf (ns) MIN MIN Input-to-Output Clock Delay tPDI (ns) TYP MAX TYP MAX TYP MAX MIN TYP MAX 80 2.5 2.8 2.1 2.3 210 315 3.7 4.3 5.1 65 3.1 3.5 2.6 2.9 260 380 3.5 4.1 4.8 Table 9. Timing Characteristics at Additional Sampling Frequencies (DLL OFF) fS (MSPS) CLKOUT, Rise Time tr (ns) MIN TYP MAX 80 2.5 65 3.1 40 20 CLKOUT Jitter, Peak-to-Peak tJIT (ps) CLKOUT, Fall Time tf (ns) MIN TYP MAX 2.8 2.1 3.5 2.6 4.8 5.3 8.3 9.5 MIN Input-to-Output Clock Delay tPDI (ns) TYP MAX MIN TYP MAX 2.3 210 315 2.9 260 380 7.1 8 8.9 7.8 8.5 4 4.4 445 9.4 650 9.5 10.4 11.4 7.6 8.2 800 1200 13 15.5 18 16 20.7 25.5 537 551 567 10 2 28 31 52 36 65 Submit Documentation Feedback 2610 4400 Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 ADS5521 www.ti.com ...................................................................................................................................................... SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 SERIAL PROGRAMMING INTERFACE The ADS5521 has internal registers for the programming of some of the modes described in the previous sections. The registers should be reset after power-up by applying a 2 µs (minimum) high pulse on RESET (pin 35); this also resets the entire ADC and sets the data outputs to low. This pin has a 200-kΩ internal pullup resistor to AVDD. The programming is done through a three-wire interface. The timing diagram and serial register setting in the Serial Programing Interface section describe the programming of this register. Table 3 shows the different modes and the bit values to be written to the register to enable them. Note that some of these modes may modify the standard operation of the device and possibly vary the performance with respect to the typical data shown in this data sheet. Applying a RESET signal is absolutely essential to set the internal registers to their default states for normal operation. If the hardware RESET function is not used in the system, the RESET pin must be tied to ground and it is necessary to write the default values to the internal registers through the serial programming interface. The following registers must be written in this order. Write 9000h (Address 9, Data 000) Write A000h (Address A, Data 000) Write B000h (Address B, Data 000) Write C000h (Address C, Data 000) Write D000h (Address D, Data 000) Write E000h (Address E, Data 804) Write 0000h (Address 0, Data 000) Write 1000h (Address 1, Data 000) Write F000h (Address F, Data 000) NOTE: This procedure is only required if a RESET pulse is not provided to the device. PowerPAD PACKAGE The PowerPAD package is a thermally enhanced standard size IC package designed to eliminate the use of bulky heatsinks and slugs traditionally used in thermal packages. This package can be easily mounted using standard printed circuit board (PCB) assembly techniques and can be removed and replaced using standard repair procedures. The PowerPAD package is designed so that the lead frame die pad (or thermal pad) is exposed on the bottom of the IC. This provides a low thermal resistance path between the die and the exterior of the package. The thermal pad on the bottom of the IC can then be soldered directly to the printed circuit board (PCB), using the PCB as a heatsink. Assembly Process 1. Prepare the PCB top-side etch pattern including etch for the leads as well as the thermal pad as illustrated in the Mechanical Data section. The recommended thermal pad dimension is 8 mm x 8 mm. 2. Place a 5-by-5 array of thermal vias in the thermal pad area. These holes should be 13 mils in diameter. The small size prevents wicking of the solder through the holes. 3. It is recommended to place a small number of 25 mil diameter holes under the package, but outside the thermal pad area to provide an additional heat path. 4. Connect all holes (both those inside and outside the thermal pad area) to an internal copper plane (such as a ground plane). 5. Do not use the typical web or spoke via connection pattern when connecting the thermal vias to the ground plane. The spoke pattern increases the thermal resistance to the ground plane. 6. The top-side solder mask should leave exposed the terminals of the package and the thermal pad area. 7. Cover the entire bottom side of the PowerPAD vias to prevent solder wicking. 8. Apply solder paste to the exposed thermal pad area and all of the package terminals. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 29 ADS5521 SBAS309D – MAY 2004 – REVISED OCTOBER 2008 ...................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com For more detailed information regarding the PowerPAD package and its thermal properties, see either the application brief SLMA004B (PowerPAD Made Easy) or technical brief SLMA002 (PowerPAD Thermally Enhanced Package). Table 10. Revision History Added notes regarding the input voltage overstress requirements in the absolute maximum ratings table. Changed offset temperature coefficient to units of mV/°C. Clarified output capture test modes in Table 3. Updated the definitions section. Updated the Power Down section to reflect the newly specified 2 MSPS minimum sampling rate. Added footnotes in the Pin Assignements table or pins RESET,OE, SEN, SDATA and SCLK pins. Removed the input voltage stress section in the Application Information section. Tpdi parameter was added to the timing Table 8 and Table 9. Added note in the Serial Programming section about mandatory RESET. Added latency specification in the Timing Characteristics table. Rev C Added min/max specs for Offset and Gain errors. Rev D Output Information Section, p. 27. Changed - From: binary output format and 0x4FFF To: binary output format and 0x7FF. Changed From: binary output format and 0x2000 To: binary output format and 0x800. 30 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2004–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): ADS5521 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 26-Nov-2014 PACKAGING INFORMATION Orderable Device Status (1) Package Type Package Pins Package Drawing Qty Eco Plan Lead/Ball Finish MSL Peak Temp (2) (6) (3) Op Temp (°C) Device Marking (4/5) ADS5521IPAP ACTIVE HTQFP PAP 64 160 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU NIPDAU Level-3-260C-168 HR -40 to 85 ADS5521I ADS5521IPAPG4 ACTIVE HTQFP PAP 64 160 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU NIPDAU Level-3-260C-168 HR -40 to 85 ADS5521I ADS5521IPAPR OBSOLETE HTQFP PAP 64 TBD Call TI Call TI -40 to 85 ADS5521IPAPRG4 OBSOLETE HTQFP PAP 64 TBD Call TI Call TI -40 to 85 (1) The marketing status values are defined as follows: ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs. LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect. NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design. PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available. OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device. (2) Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details. TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined. Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above. Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material) (3) MSL, Peak Temp. - The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature. (4) 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 of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Device Marking for that device. (6) Lead/Ball Finish - Orderable Devices may have multiple material finish options. Finish options are separated by a vertical ruled line. Lead/Ball Finish values may wrap to two lines if the finish value exceeds the maximum column width. Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. 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