CS5374 Dual High-performance Amplifier & ΔΣ Modulator Features Description High Input Impedance Differential Amplifier The CS5374 combines two marine seismic analog measurement channels into one 7 mm x 7 mm QFN package. Each measurement channel consists of a high input impedance programmable gain differential amplifier that buffers analog signals into a high-performance, fourth-order ΔΣ modulator. The low-noise ΔΣ modulator converts the analog signal into a one-bit serial bit stream suitable for the CS5376A digital filter. • Ultra-low input bias: < 1 pA • Max signal amplitude: 5 Vpp differential Fourth Order Delta-Sigma (ΔΣ) Modulator • Signal Bandwidth: DC to 2 kHz • Common mode rejection: 110 dB CMRR Differential Analog Input, Digital ΔΣ Output • Multiplexed inputs: INA, INB, 800Ω termination • Selectable Gain: 1x, 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x, 64x Each amplifier has two sets of external inputs, INA and INB, to simplify system design as inputs from a hydrophone sensor or the CS4373A test DAC. An internal 800Ω termination can also be selected for noise tests. Gain settings are binary weighted (1x, 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x, 64x) and match the CS4373A test DAC output attenuation settings for full-scale testing at all gain ranges. Both the input multiplexer and gain are set by registers accessed through a standard SPI™ port. Excellent Amplifier Noise Performance • 1.5 μVpp between 0.1 Hz and 10 Hz • 11 nV / √Hz from 200 Hz to 2 kHz High Modulator Dynamic Range • 126 dB SNR @ 215 Hz BW (2 ms sampling) • 123 dB SNR @ 430 Hz BW (1 ms sampling) Low Total Harmonic Distortion Each fourth-order ΔΣ modulator has very high dynamic range combined with low total harmonic distortion and low power consumption. It converts differential analog signals from the amplifier to an oversampled ΔΣ serial bit stream which is decimated by the CS5376A digital filter to a 24-bit output at the final output word rate. • –118 dB THD typical (0.000126%) • –108 dB THD maximum (0.0004%) Low Power Consumption • Normal operation: 6.5 mA per channel • Power down: 15 μA per channel max Dual Power Supply Configuration ORDERING INFORMATION See page 43. • VA+ = +2.5 V; VA– = –2.5 V; VD = +3.3 V GUARD1 OUT1+ OUT1- VA- VA+ + INA1+ INB1+ Reset, Clock, and Synchronization 400 Ω 4th Order Modulator - INA1INB1- + CS5374 VA+ VA- + INA2+ INB2+ MDATA2 MFLAG2 GAIN2 400 Ω MUX2 400 Ω MDATA1 MFLAG1 VD GND 4th Order Modulator - INA2INB2- RST MCLK MSYNC GAIN1 400 Ω - MUX1 SPITM Serial Interface - SDO SDI SCLK CS + GUARD2 Preliminary Product Information http://www.cirrus.com INR1- INF1- INF1+INR1+ OUT2+ OUT2- INR2- INF2- INF2+INR2+ VREF+ VREF- This document contains information for a new product. Cirrus Logic reserves the right to modify this product without notice. Copyright Cirrus Logic, Inc. 2009 (All Rights Reserved) OCT '09 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. CHARACTERISTICS AND SPECIFICATIONS ....................................................................... 4 SPECIFIED OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................ 4 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS .......................................................................................... 4 THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS ............................................................................................. 5 ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS ............................................................................................... 5 PERFORMANCE SPECIFICATIONS ...................................................................................... 7 CHANNEL PERFORMANCE PLOTS ...................................................................................... 9 DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS .............................................................................................. 10 SPI™ INTERFACE TIMING (EXTERNAL MASTER) ............................................................ 12 POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS ............................................................................... 13 2. GENERAL DESCRIPTION..................................................................................................... 14 3. AMPLIFIER OPERATION ...................................................................................................... 16 3.1 Amplifier Inputs — INA, INB .......................................................................................... 16 3.1.1 Multiplexer Settings — MUX ............................................................................... 16 3.1.2 Gain Settings — GAIN ........................................................................................ 16 3.2 Amplifier Outputs — OUTR, OUTF ............................................................................... 16 3.2.1 Guard Output — GUARD.................................................................................... 16 3.3 Differential Signals ........................................................................................................ 17 4. MODULATOR OPERATION .................................................................................................. 18 4.1 Modulator Anti-Alias Filter ............................................................................................. 18 4.2 Modulator Inputs — INR, INF ........................................................................................ 19 4.2.1 Modulator Input Impedance ................................................................................ 19 4.2.2 Modulator Idle Tones — OFST ........................................................................... 19 4.3 Modulator Output — MDATA ........................................................................................ 19 4.3.1 Modulator One’s Density ..................................................................................... 19 4.3.2 Decimated 24-bit Output ..................................................................................... 19 4.4 Modulator Stability — MFLAG....................................................................................... 20 4.5 Modulator Clock Input — MCLK.................................................................................... 20 4.6 Modulator Synchronization — MSYNC ......................................................................... 20 5. SPITM SERIAL PORT ............................................................................................................. 21 5.1 SPI Pin Descriptions ..................................................................................................... 21 5.2 SPI Serial Transactions................................................................................................. 21 5.3 SPI Registers ................................................................................................................ 23 5.3.1 VERSION — 0x00............................................................................................... 23 5.3.2 AMP1CFG — 0x01 ............................................................................................. 23 5.3.3 AMP2CFG — 0x02 ............................................................................................. 23 5.3.4 ADCCFG — 0x03................................................................................................ 24 5.3.5 PWRCFG — 0x04 ............................................................................................... 24 5.4 Example: CS5374 Configuration by an External SPI Master ........................................ 24 5.5 Example: CS5374 Configuration by the CS5376A SPI 2 Port ...................................... 25 5.5.1 CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions ............................................................................. 25 6. POWER MODES .................................................................................................................... 29 6.1 Normal Operation .......................................................................................................... 29 6.2 Power Down, MCLK Enabled........................................................................................ 29 6.3 Power Down, MCLK Disabled ....................................................................................... 29 7. VOLTAGE REFERENCE ....................................................................................................... 30 7.1 VREF Power Supply ..................................................................................................... 30 7.2 VREF RC Filter ............................................................................................................. 30 7.3 VREF PCB Routing ....................................................................................................... 30 7.4 VREF Input Impedance................................................................................................. 30 7.5 VREF Accuracy............................................................................................................. 31 8. POWER SUPPLIES .............................................................................................................. 32 8.1 Analog Power Supplies ................................................................................................. 32 8.2 Digital Power Supply ..................................................................................................... 32 8.3 Power Supply Bypassing .............................................................................................. 32 2 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 8.4 PCB Layers and Routing............................................................................................... 33 8.5 Power Supply Rejection ................................................................................................ 33 8.6 SCR Latch-up Considerations....................................................................................... 33 8.7 DC-DC Converters ........................................................................................................ 33 9. SPITM REGISTER SUMMARY................................................................................................ 34 9.1 VERSION: 0x00 ............................................................................................................ 35 9.2 AMP1CFG: 0x01 ........................................................................................................... 36 9.3 AMP2CFG: 0x02 ........................................................................................................... 37 9.4 ADCCFG: 0x03 ............................................................................................................. 38 9.5 PWRCFG: 0x04 ............................................................................................................ 38 10. PIN DESCRIPTIONS ............................................................................................................. 40 11. PACKAGE DIMENSIONS ...................................................................................................... 42 12. ORDERING INFORMATION ................................................................................................. 43 13. ENVIRONMENTAL, MANUFACTURING, & HANDLING INFORMATION ........................... 43 14. REVISION HISTORY ............................................................................................................ 44 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1. External Anti-alias Filter Components.............................................................................. 6 Figure 2. CS5374 Amplifier Noise Performance ............................................................................. 7 Figure 3. CS5374 Noise Performance (1x Gain) ........................................................................... 9 Figure 4. CS5374 + CS4373A Test DAC Dynamic Performance ................................................... 9 Figure 5. Digital Rise and Fall Times SYNC from external system............................................... 10 Figure 6. System Synchronization Diagram.................................................................................. 10 Figure 7. MCLK / MSYNC Timing Detail ....................................................................................... 11 Figure 8. SDI Write Timing in SPI Slave Mode ............................................................................. 12 Figure 9. SDO Read Timing in SPI Slave Mode ........................................................................... 12 Figure 10. CS5374 System Block Diagram................................................................................... 14 Figure 11. CS5374 Connection Diagram ...................................................................................... 15 Figure 12. CS5374 to CS5376A Digital Interface.......................................................................... 15 Figure 13. CS5374 Amplifier Block Diagram................................................................................. 16 Figure 14. CS5374 Modulator Block Diagram............................................................................... 18 Figure 15. SPI Interface Block Diagram........................................................................................ 21 Figure 16. CS5374 (Slave) Serial Transactions with CS5376A (Master)...................................... 22 Figure 17. Power Mode Diagram .................................................................................................. 29 Figure 18. Voltage Reference Circuit ............................................................................................ 30 Figure 19. Power Supply Diagram ................................................................................................ 32 Figure 20. Hardware Version ID Register VERSION .................................................................... 35 Figure 21. Amplifier 1 Configuration Register AMP1CFG............................................................. 36 Figure 22. Amplifier 2 Configuration Register AMP2CFG............................................................. 37 Figure 23. Modulator 1 & 2 Configuration Register ADCCFG....................................................... 38 Figure 24. Power Configuration Register PWRCFG ..................................................................... 39 LIST OF TABLES Table 1. 24-bit Output Coding ...................................................................................................... 20 Table 2. SPI Configuration Registers ........................................................................................... 23 Table 3. Digital Selections for Gain and Input Mux Control ......................................................... 23 Table 4. Example SPI Transactions to Write and Read the CS5374 Configuration Registers .... 24 Table 5. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write and Read the GPCFG0 Register ....... 25 Table 6. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write the CS5374 AMP1CFG Register ....... 26 Table 7. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write AMP2CFG and ADCCFG .................. 27 Table 8. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write the CS5374 PWRCFG Register ......... 28 DS862F1 3 CS5374 DS862F1 1. CS5374 CHARACTERISTICS AND SPECIFICATIONS • Min/Max characteristics and specifications are guaranteed over the Specified Operating Conditions. • Typical performance characteristics and specifications are derived from measurements taken at nominal supply voltages and TA = 25°C. • GND = 0 V, all voltages with respect to 0 V. • Device connected as shown in Figure 11 and Figure 12 unless otherwise noted. SPECIFIED OPERATING CONDITIONS Parameter Bipolar Power Supplies Positive Analog Negative Analog Positive Digital Voltage Reference [VREF+] - [VREF-] VREFThermal Ambient Operating Temperature +2% (Note 1) +2% +3% (Note 2, 3) (Note 4) -CNZ Symbol Min Nom Max Unit VA+ VAVD 2.45 -2.45 3.20 2.50 -2.50 3.30 2.55 -2.55 3.40 V V V VREF VREF- - 2.500 VA - - V V TA -10 25 70 °C Notes: 1. VA- must always be the most-negative input voltage to avoid potential SCR latch-up conditions. 2. By design, a 2.500 V voltage reference input results in the best signal-to-noise performance. 3. Channel-to-channel gain accuracy is directly proportional to the voltage reference absolute accuracy. 4. VREF inputs must satisfy: VA- ≤ VREF- < VREF+ ≤ VA+. ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Parameter DC Power Supplies Positive Analog Negative Analog Digital Analog Supply Differential [(VA+) - (VA-)] Digital Supply Differential [(VD) - (VA-)] Input Current, Any Pin Except Supplies (Note 5, 6) Input Current, Power Supplies (Note 5) Output Current (Note 5) Power Dissipation Analog Input Voltages Digital Input Voltages Storage Temperature Range Symbol VA+ VAVD VADIFF VDDIFF IIN IPWR IOUT PD VINA VIND TSTG Min -0.3 -6.8 -0.3 (VA-)-0.5 -0.5 -65 Max 6.8 0.3 6.8 6.8 6.8 +10 +50 +25 500 (VA+)+0.5 (VD)+0.5 150 Unit V V V V V mA mA mA mW V V °C WARNING: Operation at or beyond these limits may result in permanent damage to the device. Normal operation is not guaranteed at these extremes. Notes: 5. Transient currents up to 100mA will not cause SCR latch-up. 6. Includes continuous over-voltage conditions on the analog input pins. 4 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit TA -10 - 70 °C Storage Temperature Range TSTR -65 - 150 °C Allowable Junction Temperature TJCT - - 125 °C θJA - 26 - °C / W Symbol Min Typ Max Unit BW DC - 2000 Hz GAIN x1 - x64 GAINCM - x1 - Vcm - (VA-)+2.5 - V VIN (VA-)+0.7 (VA-)+0.7 - (VA+)-1.25 (VA+)-1.75 V VINFS - - 5 2.5 1.25 625 312.5 156.25 78.125 Vpp Vpp Vpp mVpp mVpp mVpp mVpp Differential Input Impedance ZINDIFF - 1, 20 - TΩ, pF Common Mode Input Impedance ZINCM - 0.5, 40 - TΩ, pF IIN - 1 40 pA Ambient Operating Temperature Junction to Ambient Thermal Impedance (4-layer PCB) ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS Parameter Amplifier Inputs Signal Frequencies Differential Gain Common Mode Gain (Note 7) Common Mode Voltage Voltage Range (Signal + Vcm) Full Scale Differential Input x1 x2 - x64 x1 x2 x4 x8 x16 x32 x64 Input Bias Current Amplifier Outputs Full Scale Output, Differential VOUT - - 5 Vpp Output Voltage Range (Signal + Vcm) VRNG (VA-)+0.5 - (VA+)-0.5 V Output Impedance (Note 8) ZOUT - 40 - Ω Output Impedance Drift (Note 8) ZTC - 0.38 - Ω/°C IOUT - - +25 mA CL - - 100 nF VGUARD - Vcm - V ZGOUT - 500 - Ω IGOUT - - 40 μA CGL - - 100 pF Output Current Load Capacitance Guard Outputs Guard Output Voltage Guard Output Impedance Guard Output Current Guard Load Capacitance (Note 8) Notes: 7. Common mode signals pass through the differential amplifier architecture and are rejected by the modulator CMRR. 8. Output impedance characteristics are approximate and can vary up to ±30% depending on process parameters. DS862F1 5 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS (CONT.) Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit VBW DC - 2000 Hz Modulator Inputs Input Signal Frequencies (Note 9) Full-scale Differential AC Input VAC - - 5 Vpp Full-scale Differential DC Input VDC -2.5 - 2.5 VDC Input Common Mode Voltage VCM - (VA-)+2.5 - V Input Voltage Range (Vcm ± Signal ) VRNG (VA-)+0.7 - (VA+)-1.25 V Differential Input Impedance INR± INF± ZDIFINR ZDIFINF - 20 1 - kΩ MΩ Single-ended Input Impedance INR± INF± ZSEINR ZSEINF - 40 2 - kΩ MΩ Series Resistance Differential Capacitance RAA CDIFF - 680 20 - Ω nF (Note 2, 3) VREF - 2.500 - V External Anti-alias Filter (Note 10) VREF Inputs [VREF+] - [VREF-] VREF- (Note 4) VREF Input Current VREF Input Noise (Note 11) VREF- - VA - - V VREFII - 120 - µA VREFIN - - 1 µVrms Notes: 9. The upper bandwidth limit is determined by the selected digital filter cut-off frequency. 10. Anti-alias capacitors are discrete external components and must be of good quality (C0G, NPO, poly). Poor-quality capacitors will degrade total harmonic distortion (THD) performance. See Figure 1 for external anti-alias filter connections. 11. Maximum integrated noise over the measurement bandwidth for the voltage reference device attached to the VREF inputs. CS5374 680 INR+ OUT+ INF+ 680 AMPLIFIER 680 20nF C0G 20nF C0G MODULATOR INF- OUT- INR680 Figure 1. External Anti-alias Filter Components 6 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 PERFORMANCE SPECIFICATIONS Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Amplifier Noise Voltage Noise f0 = 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz VNPP - 1.5 3 μVpp Voltage Noise Density f0 = 200 Hz to 2 kHz VND - 11 14 nV/ Hz IND - 20 - fA/ Hz SNR 121 - 105 120 123 126 129 131 135 - dB dB dB dB dB dB dB SNR 121 - 123 122 120 116 111 105 98 - dB dB dB dB dB dB dB - -118 -119 -119 -119 -118 -115 -112 -108 - dB dB dB dB dB dB dB Current Noise Density Channel Dynamic Range Dynamic Range (1x Gain, Multiple OWRs) (Note 9, 12) (1/4 ms) DC to 1720 Hz (1/2 ms) DC to 860 Hz (1 ms) DC to 430 Hz (2 ms) DC to 215 Hz (4 ms) DC to 108 Hz (8 ms) DC to 54 Hz (16 ms) DC to 27 Hz Dynamic Range (Multiple Gains, 1 ms OWR) (Note 9, 12) 1x 2x 3x 8x 16x 32x 64x Channel Distortion Total Harmonic Distortion (Note 13) 1x 2x 4x 8x 16x 32x 64x THD Notes: 12. Dynamic Range defined as 20 log [(RMS full scale) / (RMS idle noise)] where idle noise is measured with the amplifier input terminated. Dynamic Range is dominated by high-frequency quantization noise at the 1/4 ms rate and amplifier noise at high gain. 13. Tested with a 31.25 Hz sine wave at 1 ms sampling rate and -1 dB amplitude. CS5374 Amplifier In-Band Noise CS5374 Amplifier Wide Band Noise 400 Noise Density (nV/rtHz) Noise Density (nV/rtHz) 20 15 10 5 0 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 300 200 100 0 0.1 1 10 Frequency (Hz) 100 1k 10k 100k 1M Frequency (Hz) Figure 2. CS5374 Amplifier Noise Performance DS862F1 7 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 PERFORMANCE SPECIFICATIONS (CONT.) CS5374 Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Channel Gain Accuracy Channel Gain, Offset Corrected (Note 3, 14) GAINLSB -6101194 0xA2E736 - 6101194 0x5D18CA LSB LSB Absolute Gain Accuracy (Note 3, 15) GAINABS - ±1 +2 % Relative Gain Accuracy (Note 16) 2x 4x 8x 16x 32x 64x GAINREL -0.3 - -0.1 -0.1 0.1 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.1 - % % % % % % (Note 17) GAINTC - 25 - ppm / °C Gain Drift Channel Offset Accuracy Amplifier Offset Voltage, Input Referred (Note 18) OFSTAMP - ±250 ±750 µV Amplifier Offset Drift, Input Referred (Note 17) OFSTATC - 0.3 - µV / °C Modulator Offset Voltage, Differential (OFST = 1) OFSTMOD - ±1 - mV Modulator Offset Voltage, Channel 1 (OFST = 0) OFSTMOD1 - -60 - mV Modulator Offset Voltage, Channel 2 (OFST = 0) OFSTMOD2 - -35 - mV Modulator Offset Drift (Note 17) OFSTMTC - 1 - µV / °C Offset After Calibration (Note 19) OFSTCAL - ±1 - μV Offset Calibration Range (Note 20) OFSTRNG - 100 - %FS Channel CMRR and Crosstalk Common Mode Rejection Ratio CMRR - 110 - dB Crosstalk, Amplifier Multiplexed Inputs CXTMI - -130 - dB Crosstalk, Channel-to-Channel CXTCC - -130 - dB Notes: 14. Channel Gain is the nominal full-scale 24-bit output code from the CS5376A digital filter for a 5 VPP differential signal into the CS5374 analog inputs at 1x gain. Value is offset corrected. 15. Absolute gain accuracy tests the matching of 1x gain across multiple CS5374 channels in a system. 16. Relative gain accuracy tests the tracking of 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x, 64x gain relative to 1x gain on a single CS5374 channel. 17. Specification is for the parameter over the specified temperature range and is for the CS5374 device only. It does not include the effects of external components. 18. Offset voltage is tested with the amplifier inputs connected to the internal 800 Ω termination. 19. The offset after calibration specification is measured from the digitally calibrated output codes of the CS5376A digital filter. 20. Offset calibration is performed in the CS5376A digital filter and includes the full-scale signal range. 8 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 CHANNEL PERFORMANCE PLOTS Figure 3. CS5374 Noise Performance (1x Gain) Figure 4. CS5374 + CS4373A Test DAC Dynamic Performance DS862F1 9 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit - VD V Digital Inputs High-level Input Voltage (Note 21) VIH 0.6*VD Low-level Input Voltage (Note 21) VIL 0.0 - 0.8 V Input Leakage Current IIN - ±1 ±10 μA Digital Input Capacitance CIN - 9 - pF Input Rise Times Except MCLK tRISE - - 100 ns Input Fall Times Except MCLK tFALL - - 100 ns High-level Output Voltage, Iout = -40 μA VOH VD - 0.3 - - V Low-level Output Voltage, Iout = 40 μA VOL - - 0.3 V Digital Outputs High-Z Leakage Current Digital Output Capacitance IOZ - ±1 ±10 μA COUT - 9 - pF Output Rise Times (Note 22) tRISE - - 100 ns Output Fall Times (Note 22) tFALL - - 100 ns Notes: 21. Device is intended to be driven with CMOS logic levels. 22. Guaranteed by design and/or characterization. t rise t fa ll 0.9 * VD 0.1 * V D Figure 5. Digital Rise and Fall Times SYNC from external system. SYNC MCLK MSYNC t0 MDATA MFLAG TDATA Figure 6. System Synchronization Diagram SYNC from External. MCLK, MSYNC, TDATA from CS5376A. MDATA, MFLAG from CS5374. 10 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS (CONT.) Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit fMCLK - 2.048 - MHz Master Clock Input MCLK Frequency (Note 23) MCLK Duty Cycle MCLKDTC 40 - 60 % MCLK Rise Time tRISE - - 50 ns MCLK Fall Time tFALL - - 50 ns MCLK Jitter (in-band or aliased in-band) MCLKIBJ - - 300 ps MCLK Jitter (out-of-band) MCLKOBJ - - 1 ns Master Sync Input MSYNC Setup Time to MCLK Falling (Note 24) tMSS 20 366 - ns MSYNC Period (Note 24) tMSYNC 40 976 - ns MSYNC Hold Time after MCLK Falling (Note 24) tMSH 20 610 - ns fMDATA - 512 - kbits/s % MDATA Output MDATA Output Bit Rate MDATA Output One’s Density Range (Note 22) MDAT1D 14 - 86 Full-scale Output Code, Offset Corrected (Note 25) MDATFS 0xA2E736 - 0x5D18CA Notes: 23. MCLK is generated by the CS5376A digital filter. If MCLK is disabled, the CS5374 device automatically enters a power-down state. See Power Supply Characteristics for typical power-down timing. 24. MSYNC is generated by the CS5376A digital filter and is latched by CS5374 on MCLK falling edge, synchronization instant (t0) is on the next MCLK rising edge. 25. Decimated, filtered, and offset-corrected 24-bit output word from the CS5376A digital filter. MCLK tMSS MSYNC tMSH 1 / fMCLK t0 tMSYNC MDATA 1 / fMDATA MFLAG Figure 7. MCLK / MSYNC Timing Detail DS862F1 11 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 SPI™ INTERFACE TIMING (EXTERNAL MASTER) Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit CS Enable to Valid Latch Clock t1 60 - - ns Data Set-up Time Prior to SCK Rising t2 60 - - ns Data Hold Time After SCK Rising t3 60 - - ns SCK High Time t4 120 - - ns SCK Low Time t5 120 - - ns SCK Falling Prior to CS Disable t6 60 - - ns SCK Falling to New Data Bit t7 - - 90 ns SCK High Time t8 120 - - ns SCK Low Time t9 120 - - ns SCK Falling Hold Time Prior to CS Disable t10 60 - - ns SDI Write Timing SDO Read Timing CS SDI MSB t1 MSB - 1 t2 LSB t3 t4 t5 t6 SCK Figure 8. SDI Write Timing in SPI Slave Mode CS SDO MSB MSB - 1 t7 LSB t8 t9 t10 SCK Figure 9. SDO Read Timing in SPI Slave Mode 12 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS Parameter Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Power Supply Current, ch1 + ch2 combined Analog Power Supply Current (Note 26) IA - 13 16 mA Digital Power Supply Current (Note 26) ID - 50 100 μA Analog Power Supply Current (Note 26) IA - 6.5 8 mA Digital Power Supply Current (Note 26) ID - 25 50 μA Analog Power Supply Current (Note 26) IA - 150 250 μA Digital Power Supply Current (Note 26) ID - 10 75 μA Power Supply Current, ch1 or ch2 only Power Down Current, MCLK enabled Power Down Current, MCLK disabled Analog Power Supply Current (Note 26) IA - 2 15 μA Digital Power Supply Current (Note 26) ID - 1 15 μA Power Down Timing (after MCLK disabled) (Note 22) PDTC - 40 - μS (Note 22) PSRR - 100 - dB Power Supply Rejection Power Supply Rejection Ratio Notes: 26. All outputs unloaded. Digital inputs forced to VD or GND respectively. Amplifier inputs connected to the 800 Ω internal termination. DS862F1 13 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 CS5374 Hydrophone Sensor Hydrophone Sensor M U X AMP M U X AMP DS Modulator DS Modulator CS5376A Microcontroller or Configuration EEPROM Digital Filter CS5374 Hydrophone Sensor Hydrophone Sensor M U X AMP M U X AMP System Telemetry DS Modulator CS4373A DS Modulator Test DAC Figure 10. CS5374 System Block Diagram 2. GENERAL DESCRIPTION The CS5374 combines two marine seismic analog measurement channels into one 7 mm x 7 mm QFN package. Each measurement channel consists of a high input impedance programmable gain differential amplifier that buffers analog signals into a high-performance, fourth-order ΔΣ modulator. The low-noise ΔΣ modulator converts the analog signal into a one-bit serial bit stream suitable for the CS5376A digital filter. er and gain are set by registers accessed through a standard SPI™ port. Each amplifier has two sets of external inputs, INA and INB, to simplify system design as inputs from a hydrophone sensor or the CS4373A test DAC. An internal 800 Ω termination can also be selected for noise tests. Gain settings are binary weighted (1x, 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x, 64x) and match the CS4373A test DAC output attenuation settings for full-scale testing at all gain ranges. Both the input multiplex- Figure 10 shows the system-level architecture of a 4-channel acquisition system using two CS5374, one CS5376A digital filter and one CS4373A test DAC. 14 Each fourth-order ΔΣ modulator has very high dynamic range combined with low total harmonic distortion and low power consumption. It converts differential analog signals from the amplifier to an oversampled ΔΣ serial bit stream which is decimated by the CS5376A digital filter to a 24-bit output at the final output word rate. Figure 11 and Figure 12 shows connection diagrams for the CS5374 device when connected to the CS5376A digital filter. DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 680 Ω VA- 680 Ω 0.02 μF C0G 680 Ω 0.02 μF C0G VA+ 0.1μF 680 Ω GUARD1 0.1 μF 400 Ω 4th Order ΔΣ Modulator + INB2+ 4th Order ΔΣ Modulator - Hydrophone Sensor 400 Ω MUX2 INA2+ INA2- MSYNC MDATA1 MFLAG1 GND + 400 Ω INB2- A MCLK VD+ CS5374 VA+ VA- VA0.1 μF VA- VA+ RST - INB1VA+ INR1+ OUT2+ To CS5376A Digital Control MFLAG2 SDO SPITM Serial Communications Interface + 0.01μF MDATA2 GAIN2 CS4373A Test DAC INF1+ Reset, Clock, and Synchronization MUX1 INB1+ INF1- + - 400 Ω INA1- OUT1- GAIN1 Hydrophone Sensor INR1OUT1+ INA1+ 0.1 μF SCLK CS OUT2- GUARD2 SDI INF2+ INR2- INR2+ VREF+ VREF- INF2- 680 Ω 680 Ω 680 Ω 0.02 μF C0G 0.02 μF C0G 2.5V Precision Voltage Reference 680 Ω Figure 11. CS5374 Connection Diagram EXTERNAL RESET CONTROLLER Reset, Clock, and Synchronization th 4 Order ΔΣ Modulator RST RESET MCLK MCLK MSYNC MSYNC MDATA1 MDATA1 MFLAG1 MFLAG1 CS5374 Clock and Synchronization Modulator Data Interface th 4 Order ΔΣ Modulator SPITM Serial Communications Interface MDATA2 MDATA2 MFLAG2 MFLAG2 SDO SI1 SDI SO SCLK SCK2 CS CS0 CS5376A SPI 2 Serial Peripheral Interface 2 Figure 12. CS5374 to CS5376A Digital Interface DS862F1 15 CS5374 DS862F1 GUARD1 CS5374 OUT1+ OUT1- GAIN1 + - 400 Ω INA1+ INB1+ 400 Ω MUX1 INA1INB1- + Figure 13. CS5374 Amplifier Block Diagram 3. AMPLIFIER OPERATION The CS5374 high-impedance, low-noise CMOS differential input, differential output amplifiers are optimized for precision analog signals between DC and 2 kHz. They have multiplexed inputs and programmable gains of 1x, 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x, and 64x. The performance of this amplifier makes it ideal for low-frequency, high-dynamic-range applications requiring low distortion and minimal power consumption. mode. The CS5374 mux switches will maintain good linearity only with minimal signal current. 3.1 Amplifier Inputs — INA, INB 3.2 Amplifier Outputs — OUTR, OUTF The amplifier analog inputs are designed for highimpedance differential hydrophone sensors and so have very low input bias below 1 pA. The amplifier analog outputs are externally separated into rough / fine charge signals to connect into the modulator inputs. Each differential output requires two series resistors and a differential capacitor to create the modulator anti-alias RC filter. 3.1.1 Multiplexer Settings — MUX Input multiplexing simplifies system connections by providing separate inputs for a sensor and test DAC (INA, INB) as well as an internal termination for noise tests. The multiplexer determines which input is connected to the amplifier, and is set through internal configuration registers accessed through the SPI port, see the “SPITM Register Summary” on page 34 for more information. Although a mux selection is provided to enable the INA and INB switches simultaneously, significant current should not be driven through them in this 16 3.1.2 Gain Settings — GAIN The CS5374 supports gain ranges of 1x, 2x, 4,x 8x, 16x, 32x, and 64x. Amplifier gain is selected using internal configuration registers accessed through the SPI port, see the “SPITM Register Summary” on page 34 for more information. 3.2.1 Guard Output — GUARD The GUARD pin outputs the common mode voltage of the selected analog signal input. It can be used to drive the cable shield between a high-impedance sensor and the amplifier inputs. Driving the cable shield with the analog signal common mode voltage minimizes leakage and improves signal integrity from high-impedance sensors. The GUARD output is defined as the midpoint voltage between the + and – halves of the currently DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 selected differential input signal, and will vary as the signal common mode varies. The GUARD output will not drive a significant load, as it can only provide a shielding voltage. 3.3 Differential Signals Analog signals into and out of the amplifiers are differential, consisting of two halves with equal but opposite magnitude varying about a common mode voltage. A full-scale 5 Vpp differential signal centered on a –0.15 V common mode can have: SIG+ = –0.15 V + 1.25 V = 1.1 V SIG– = –0.15 V – 1.25 V = –1.4 V SIG+ is +2.5 V relative to SIGFor the reverse case: SIG+ = –0.15 V – 1.25 V = –1.4 V SIG– = –0.15 V + 1.25 V = 1.1 V SIG+ is –2.5 V relative to SIGThe total swing for SIG+ relative to SIG– is (+2.5 V) – (–2.5 V) = 5 Vpp. A similar calculation can be done for SIG– relative to SIG+. Note that a 5 Vpp differential signal centered on a –0.15 V common mode voltage never exceeds 1.1 V and never drops below –1.4 V on either half of the signal. By definition, differential voltages are to be measured with respect to the opposite half, not relative to ground. A multi-meter differentially measuring between SIG+ and SIG– in the above example would properly read 1.767 Vrms, or 5 Vpp. DS862F1 17 CS5374 DS862F1 INR1- INF1- INF1+INR1+ CS5374 VREF+ VREF- Reset, Clock, and Synchronization 4th Order Modulator RST MCLK MSYNC MDATA1 MFLAG1 Figure 14. CS5374 Modulator Block Diagram 4. MODULATOR OPERATION The CS5374 modulators are fourth-order ΔΣ type optimized for extremely high-resolution measurement of signals between DC and 2000 Hz. When combined with the internal differential amplifiers, the CS4373A test DAC and CS5376A digital filter, a small, low-power, self-testing, high-accuracy, multi-channel measurement system results. The modulators have high dynamic range and low total harmonic distortion with very low power consumption. They are optimized for extremely highresolution measurement of 5 Vp-p or smaller differential signals. They convert analog input signals from the differential amplifiers to an oversampled serial bit stream which is then passed to the digital filter. The companion CS5376A digital filter generates the clock and synchronization inputs for the modulators while receiving the one-bit data and overrange flag outputs. The digital filter decimates the modulator’s oversampled output bit stream to a high-resolution, 24-bit output at the final selected output word rate. 4.1 Modulator Anti-Alias Filter The modulator inputs are required to be bandwidth limited to ensure modulator loop stability and pre18 vent high-frequency signals from aliasing into the measurement bandwidth. The use of simple, single-pole, differential, low-pass RC filters across the INR± and INF± inputs ensures high-frequency signals are rejected before they can alias into the measurement bandwidth. The approximate –3 dB corner of the input antialias filter is nominally set to the internal analog sampling rate divided by 64, which itself is a division by 4 of the MCLK rate. • MCLK Frequency = 2.048 MHz • Sampling Frequency = MCLK / 4 = 512 kHz • –3 dB Filter Corner = Sampling Freq / 64 = 8 kHz • RC filter = 1 / [ 2π x (2 x Rseries) x Cdiff ] ~ 8 kHz Figure 1 on page 6 illustrates the CS5374 amplifier-to-modulator analog connections with input anti-alias filter components. Filter components on the rough and fine pins should be identical values for optimum performance, with the capacitor values a minimum of 0.02 μF. The rough input can use either X7R or C0G-type capacitors, while the fine input requires C0G-type capacitors for optimal linearity. Using X7R-type capacitors on the fine analog inputs will significantly degrade total harmonic distortion performance. DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 4.2 Modulator Inputs — INR, INF The modulator analog inputs are separated into differential rough and fine signals (INR±, INF±) to maximize sampling accuracy. The positive half of the differential input signal is connected to INR+ and INF+, while the negative half is attached to INF– and INR–. The INR± pins are switched-capacitor ‘rough charge’ inputs that pre-charge the internal analog sampling capacitor before it is connected to the INF± fine input pins. 4.2.1 Modulator Input Impedance The modulator inputs have a dynamic switched-capacitor architecture and so have a rough charge input impedance that is inversely proportional to the input master clock frequency and the input capacitor size, [1 / (f · C)]. • MCLK = 2.048 MHz • INR± Internal Input Capacitor = 20 pF • Impedance = [1 / (2.048 MHz * 20 pF)] = 24 kΩ Internal to the modulator, the rough inputs (INR±) pre-charge the sampling capacitor used by the fine inputs (INF±), therefore the input current to the fine inputs is typically very low and the effective input impedance is an order of magnitude above the impedance of the rough inputs. 4.2.2 Modulator Idle Tones — OFST The modulators are delta-sigma-type and so can produce “idle tones” in the measurement bandwidth when the differential input signal is a steadystate DC signal near mid-scale. Idle tones result from low-frequency patterns in the output data stream and appear in the measurement spectrum as small tones about -135 dB down from full scale. By default the OFST bit in the ADCCFG register is low and idle tones are eliminated within the modulator by adding –60 mV (channel 1) and –35 mV DS862F1 CS5374 (channel 2) of internal differential offset during conversion to push idle tones out of the measurement bandwidth. Care should be taken to ensure external offset voltages do not negate the internally added differential offset, or idle tones will reappear. 4.3 Modulator Output — MDATA The CS5374 modulators are designed to operate with the CS5376A digital filter. The digital filter generates the modulator clock and synchronization signals (MCLK and MSYNC) while receiving back the modulator one-bit ΔΣ conversion data and over-range flag (MDATA and MFLAG). 4.3.1 Modulator One’s Density During normal operation the CS5374 modulators output a ΔΣ serial bit stream to the MDATA pin, with a one’s density proportional to the differential amplitude of the analog input signal. The output bit rate from the MDATA output is a divide-by-four of the input MCLK, and so is nominally 512 kHz. The MDATA output has a 50% one’s density for a mid-scale analog input, approximately 86% one’s density for a positive full-scale analog input, and approximately 14% one’s density for a negative full-scale analog input. One’s density of the MDATA output is defined as the ratio of ‘1’ bits to total bits in the serial bit stream output; i.e. an 86% one’s density has, on average, a ‘1’ value in 86 of every 100 output data bits. 4.3.2 Decimated 24-bit Output When the CS5374 modulators operate with the CS5376A digital filter, the final decimated, 24-bit, full-scale output code range depends if digital offset correction is enabled. With digital offset correction enabled within the digital filter, amplifier 19 CS5374 DS862F1 offset and the modulator internal offset are removed from the final conversion result. Modulator Differential Analog Input Signal > + (VREF+5%) CS5376A Digital Filter 24-Bit Output Code Offset Corrected CH1 –60 mV Offset CH2 –35 mV Offset Error Flag Possible + VREF 5D18CA 5ADCCE 5BCB22 0V 000000 FDC404 FEB258 – VREF A2E736 A0AB3A A1998E > – (VREF+5%) Error Flag Possible Table 1. 24-bit Output Coding for the CS5374 Modulator and CS5376A Digital Filter Combination 4.4 Modulator Stability — MFLAG The CS5374 ΔΣ modulators have a fourth-order architecture which is conditionally stable and may go into an oscillatory condition if the analog inputs are over-ranged more than 5% past either positive or negative full scale. If an unstable condition is detected, the modulator collapses to a first-order system to regain stability and transitions the MFLAG output low-to-high to signal an error condition to the CS5376A digital filter. The MFLAG output connects to a dedicated input on the digital filter, causing an error flag to be set in the status byte of the next output data word. The analog input signal must be reduced to within the full-scale range for at least 32 MCLK cycles for the modulator to recover from an oscillatory condition. If the analog input remains over-ranged for an extended period, the modulator will cycle between fourth-order and first- order operation and the MFLAG output will be seen to pulse. 20 CS5374 4.5 Modulator Clock Input — MCLK The CS5376A digital filter generates the master clock for the CS5374, typically 2.048 MHz, from a synchronous clock input from the external system. If MCLK is disabled during operation, the CS5374 will enter a power down state after approximately 40 µS. By default, MCLK is disabled at reset and is enabled by writing the digital filter CONFIG register. MCLK must have low jitter to guarantee full analog performance, requiring a crystal- or VCXObased system clock input to the digital filter. Clock jitter on the digital filter CLK input directly translates to jitter on MCLK. 4.6 Modulator Synchronization — MSYNC The CS5374 modulators are designed to operate synchronously with other modulators in a distributed measurement network, so a rising edge on the MSYNC input resets the internal conversion state machine to synchronize analog sample timing. MSYNC is automatically generated by the CS5376A digital filter after receiving a synchronization signal from the external system, and is chipto-chip accurate within ± 1 MCLK period. The input SYNC signal to the CS5376A digital filter sets a common reference time t0 for measurement events, thereby synchronizing analog sampling across a measurement network. By default, MSYNC generation is disabled at reset and is enabled by writing the digital filter CONFIG register. The CS5374 MSYNC input is rising-edge triggered and resets the internal MCLK counter/divider to guarantee synchronous operation with other system devices. While the MSYNC signal synchronizes the internal operation of the modulators, by default, it does not synchronize the phase of the sine wave from the CS4373A test DAC unless enabled in the digital filter TBSCFG register. DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 RST Hardware Configuration SPI Registers Serial Pin Logic CS SCLK SDI SDO Figure 15. SPI Interface Block Diagram 5. SPITM SERIAL PORT The CS5374 SPI interface is a slave serial port designed to interface with the CS5376A SPI 2 port. SPI commands from the CS5376A write and read the CS5374 configuration registers to control hardware operation. 5.2 SPI Serial Transactions A block diagram of the CS5374 SPI serial interface is shown in Figure 15, and connections to the CS5376A SPI 2 port are shown in Figure 12 on page 15. The CS5374 serial port operates in SPI mode 0 (0,0) and reads or writes configuration registers using standard 8-bit SPI opcodes. Each individual serial transaction is 24-bits long and is generated by concatenating an 8-bit SPI command opcode, an 8bit register address, and an 8-bit data byte as shown in Figure 16 on page 22. 5.1 SPI Pin Descriptions RST — Pin 37 Hardware reset input pin, active low. Defaults the configuration registers and SPI state machine. CS — Pin 25 Chip select input pin, active low. SCLK — Pin 26 Serial clock input pin. Maximum 4.096 MHz. SDI — Pin 27 Following reset, master mode serial transactions to CS5374 assert CS and write serial clocks to SCLK while writing serial data into SDI or reading serial data out from SDO. The CS5374 SPI state machine requires 24 clocks with CS asserted to fully shift out the SPI data or else SPI clock synchronization can be lost. The CS5376A SPI 2 hardware generates 24 clocks per transaction and will keep the CS5374 serial port synchronized at all times. However, if another SPI master is used and clock synchronization is lost, two methods are available to recover: Serial data input pin. Data expected valid on rising edge of SCLK, transition on falling edge. 1. Hold CS high (inactive) and apply 24 clocks to shift out any cached SPI data bits. This method retains the existing CS5374 register configuration. SDO — Pin 28 ... or ... Serial data output pin. Data valid on rising edge of SCLK, transition on falling edge. 2. Apply a hardware reset (toggle RST) and then rewrite all CS5374 register configuration values. DS862F1 21 CS5374 DS862F1 Instruction Opcode CS5374 Address Definition Write 0x02 ADDR[7:0] Write SPI register specified by the address in ADDR. Read 0x03 ADDR[7:0] Read SPI register specified by the address in ADDR. CS5374 SPI Write from CS5376A SPI2 CS 0x02 SDI SPI2CMD[15:8] ADDR DATA SPI2CMD[7:0] SPI2DAT[23:16] SDO CS5374 SPI Read from CS5376A SPI2 CS 0x03 SDI SPI2CMD[15:8] ADDR SPI2CMD[7:0] DATA SDO SPI2DAT[23:16] SPI Mode 0 Transaction Details Cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 MSB 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB SCLK SDI SDO MSB X CS Figure 16. CS5374 (Slave) Serial Transactions with CS5376A (Master) 22 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 Name CS5374 Addr. Type # Bits Description VERSION 0x00 R 8 Device Version ID AMP1CFG 0x01 R/W 8 Amplifier 1 configuration AMP2CFG 0x02 R/W 8 Amplifier 2 configuration ADCCFG 0x03 R/W 8 Modulator 1 & 2 configuration PWRCFG 0x04 R/W 8 Power configuration Table 2. SPI Configuration Registers 5.3 SPI Registers 5.3.2 The CS5374 SPI registers are 8-bit registers that control the CS5374 hardware configuration. See “SPITM Register Summary” on page 34 for detailed bit definitions of the SPI registers listed in Table 2. The AMP1CFG register controls the amplifier MUX and GAIN settings for channel 1. It also enables PWDN mode for the channel 1 amplifier plus enables the GUARD output for channels 1 & 2. 5.3.1 AMP1CFG — 0x01 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 Normal Operation : 00MM_0GGG VERSION — 0x00 The VERSION register indicates the hardware revision of the CS5374 device. Read only. Reset Condition : 0000_0001 Normal Operation : 0000_0001 Power Down Operation : 0000_0001 Power Down Operation : 1000_0000 5.3.3 AMP2CFG — 0x02 The AMP2CFG register controls the amplifier MUX and GAIN settings for channel 2. It also enables PWDN mode for the channel 2 amplifier. Reset Condition : 0000_0000 Normal Operation : 00MM_0GGG Power Down Operation : 1000_0000 Input Selection MUX1 MUX0 Gain Selection GAIN2 GAIN1 GAIN0 800 Ω termination 0 0 1x 0 0 0 0 0 1 INA only 1 0 2x INB only 0 1 4x 0 1 0 INA + INB 1 1 8x 0 1 1 16x 1 0 0 32x 1 0 1 64x 1 1 0 reserved 1 1 1 Table 3. Digital Selections for Gain and Input Mux Control DS862F1 23 CS5374 DS862F1 5.3.4 ADCCFG — 0x03 5.3.5 CS5374 PWRCFG — 0x04 The ADCCFG register can disable modulator OFST and enable HP mode. It also enables PWDN mode for the channel 1 & 2 modulators. The PWRCFG register can vary bias currents for the amplifier and modulator to minimize power consumption. Reset Condition : 0000_0000 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 Normal Operation : 0100_0000 Normal Operation : 1000_1111 Power Down Operation : 0011_0000 Power Down Operation : 0000_0000 5.4 Example: CS5374 Configuration by an External SPI Master Any SPI master that supports mode 0 (0,0) communication can write and read the configuration registers and control CS5374. The following example SPI read and write transactions show how to configure the CS5374 for normal operation. SPI Write Transactions Transaction CS5374 SPI Write Description 01 SI: 02 | 01 | 20 SO: ----------------- Write AMP1CFG register (0x01). CH1 INA enabled, 1x gain (0x20). 02 SI: 02 | 02 | 20 SO: ----------------- Write AMP2CFG register (0x02). CH2 INA enabled, 1x gain (0x20). 03 SI: 02 | 03 | 40 SO: ----------------- Write ADCCFG register (0x03). Normal operation (0x40). 04 SI: 02 | 04 | 8F SO: ----------------- Write PWRCFG register (0x04). Normal operation (0x8F). SPI Read Transactions Transaction CS5374 SPI Read Description 01 SI: 03 | 00 | 00 SO: ---------- | 01 Read VERSION register (0x00). Returned data byte on the SO pin. 02 SI: 03 | 01 | 00 SO: ---------- | 20 Read AMP1CFG register (0x01). Returned data byte on the SO pin. 03 SI: 03 | 02 | 00 SO: ---------- | 20 Read AMP2CFG register (0x02). Returned data byte on the SO pin. 04 SI: 03 | 03 | 00 SO: ---------- | 40 Read ADCCFG register (0x03). Returned data byte on the SO pin. 05 SI: 03 | 04 | 00 SO: ---------- | 8F Read PWRCFG register (0x04). Returned data byte on the SO pin. Table 4. Example SPI Transactions to Write and Read the CS5374 Configuration Registers 24 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 5.5 Example: CS5374 Configuration by the CS5376A SPI 2 Port The CS5374 SPI port was designed to connect to the CS5376A secondary SPI 2 port as shown in Figure 12 on page 15. contain internal commands to write the CS5376A digital filter registers that control the SPI 2 hardware and enable the chip selects. The CS5376A SPI 2 hardware is controlled by writing internal digital filter registers SPI2CTRL, SPI2CMD, and SPI2DAT through a primary SPI 1 port. Chip selects are enabled by writing the GPCFG0 digital filter register prior to initiating SPI 2 transactions. A full description of how to write the CS5376A internal digital filter registers using the primary SPI 1 port is described in the CS5376A data sheet. Configuring CS5374 using SPI 2 is more complex than using an external SPI master, but has the advantage of a single standardized hardware interface (the primary SPI 1 port on CS5376A) to control the entire chipset. 5.5.1 CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions The CS5376A primary SPI 1 port is controlled by an external SPI master writing commands and data into the SPI 1 registers (SPICMD, SPIDAT1, and SPIDAT2). Serial transactions into the CS5376A primary SPI 1 port start with an SPI opcode, followed by an SPI address, and then data bytes written starting at that SPI address. These data bytes GPIO Register Certain GPIO pins on the CS5376A have dual-use as chip selects for the SPI 2 port. The GPIO0:CS0 and GPIO1:CS1 pins are recommended as dedicated chip selects when connecting two CS5374 devices to the CS5376A SPI 2 port. To operate the CS0 and CS1 pins as SPI 2 chip selects they must be programmed as outputs in the GPCFG0 digital filter register, as shown in Table 5. SPI2 Registers Three digital filter registers control the CS5376A SPI 2 hardware. The SPI2CMD register is 16-bits wide and contains the first two bytes of the SPI 2 transaction, the SPI opcode and SPI address, in the lower two bytes (i.e. 0x000204). Transaction CS5376A Primary SPI 1 Write Description 01 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 0E | 03 FF FF MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001 : Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x00000E : GPCFG0 SPIDAT2 : 0x03FFFF : CS as Output 02 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 03 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 02 | 00 00 0E | 00 00 00 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 04 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 05 MOSI: 03 | 06 |---------------| MISO: -------------| 03 FF FF | See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000002: Read Register SPIDAT1 : 0x00000E : GPCFG0 SPIDAT2 : 0x000000 : Dummy See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x03 : Read SPI Address : 0x06 : SPIDAT1 SPIDAT1 : 0x03FFFF : GPCFG0 Table 5. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write and Read the GPCFG0 Register DS862F1 25 CS5374 DS862F1 The SPI2DAT register is 24-bits wide and can contain up to three bytes of data to follow the SPI opcode and address. For configuring the CS5374, however, only one data byte per register address is required and is written aligned with the upper byte (i.e. 0x8F0000). The SPI2CTRL register is 24-bits wide and configures/controls the SPI 2 hardware, with bit assignments detailed in the CS5376A data sheet. If the CS5374 GPIO:CS0 and GPIO1:CS1 pins are used as chip selects, separate SPI2CTRL values can initiate serial transactions to each device (i.e. 0x3F0161, 0x3F4162). Tables 6, 7, and 8 show the CS5376A primary SPI 1 transactions required to write the SPI 2 digital filter registers and configure two CS5374 devices for normal operation using the CS0 and CS1 chip selects. Transaction CS5376A Primary SPI 1 Write 01 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 11 | 00 02 01 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 02 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 03 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 12 | 20 00 00 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 04 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 05 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 01 61 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 06 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 07 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 41 62 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- Description SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001 : Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000011 : SPI2CMD SPIDAT2 : 0x000201 : Write AMP1CFG See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000012 : SPI2DAT SPIDAT2 : 0x200000 : INA, x1 Gain See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F0161 : CS0 Transaction See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F4162 : CS1 Transaction Table 6. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write the CS5374 AMP1CFG Register 26 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 Transaction CS5376A Primary SPI 1 Write 01 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 11 | 00 02 02 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 02 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 03 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 12 | 20 00 00 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 04 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 05 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 01 61 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 06 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 07 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 41 62 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- Transaction CS5376A Primary SPI 1 Write 01 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 11 | 00 02 03 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 02 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 03 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 12 | 40 00 00 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 04 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 05 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 01 61 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 06 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 07 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 41 62 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- CS5374 Description SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001 : Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000011 : SPI2CMD SPIDAT2 : 0x000202 : Write AMP2CFG See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000012 : SPI2DAT SPIDAT2 : 0x200000 : INA, x1 Gain See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F0161 : CS0 Transaction See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F4162 : CS1 Transaction Description SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001 : Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000011 : SPI2CMD SPIDAT2 : 0x000203 : Write ADCCFG See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000012 : SPI2DAT SPIDAT2 : 0x400000 : Normal Operation See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F0161 : CS0 Transaction See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F4162 : CS1 Transaction Table 7. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write AMP2CFG and ADCCFG DS862F1 27 CS5374 DS862F1 Transaction CS5376A Primary SPI 1 Write 01 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 11 | 00 02 04 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 02 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 03 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 12 | 8F 00 00 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 04 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 05 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 01 61 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- 06 Delay 1ms, monitor SINT, or poll E2DREQ 07 MOSI: 02 | 03 | 00 00 01 | 00 00 10 | 3F 41 62 MISO: ----------------------------------------------------------- CS5374 Description SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001 : Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000011 : SPI2CMD SPIDAT2 : 0x000204 : Write PWRCFG See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000012 : SPI2DAT SPIDAT2 : 0x8F0000 : Normal Operation See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F0161 : CS0 Transaction See the CS5376A data sheet. SPI Command : 0x02 : Write SPI Address : 0x03 : SPICMD SPICMD : 0x000001: Write Register SPIDAT1 : 0x000010 : SPI2CTRL SPIDAT2 : 0x3F4162 : CS1 Transaction Table 8. Example CS5376A SPI 1 Transactions to Write the CS5374 PWRCFG Register 28 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 POWER DOWN MODE MCLK = OFF PWDN registers = X NORMAL OPERATION POWER DOWN MODE MCLK = ON PWDN registers = disabled MCLK = ON PWDN registers = enabled Figure 17. Power Mode Diagram 6. POWER MODES The CS5374 amplifiers and modulators have three power modes. Normal operation, power down with MCLK enabled, and power down with MCLK disabled. Power down mode is controlled by PWDN bits in the SPI registers, and are active high. When PWDN is enabled, internal circuitry is disabled, the analog inputs and outputs go high-impedance, and the device enters a micro-power state. 6.1 Normal Operation With MCLK active and the amplifiers and modulators enabled (PWDN = 0) the CS5374 performs normal data acquisition. A differential analog input signal is converted to an oversampled 1-bit ΔΣ bit stream at 512 kHz. This ΔΣ bit stream is then digitally filtered and decimated by the CS5376A device to a high-precision 24-bit output. 6.2 Power Down, MCLK Enabled With MCLK active and all amplifiers and modulators disabled (PWDN = 1) the CS5374 is placed into a power-down state. During this power-down state the amplifiers and modulators are disabled DS862F1 and all outputs are high impedance. In this mode power consumption is reduced, but not reduced as low as with MCLK inactive, as sections of the digital state machine are kept awake to support SPI communications. Any unused amplifier/modulator channels can be turned off individually through the configuration registers. 6.3 Power Down, MCLK Disabled If MCLK is stopped, an internal loss-of-clock detection circuit automatically places the CS5374 into a power-down state. This power-down state is independent of the amplifier and modulator internal configuration registers, and is automatically invoked after approximately 40 μs without receiving an incoming MCLK edge. During this power-down state, the amplifiers and modulators are disabled and all outputs are high impedance. The entire digital state machine goes inactive but configuration register values are retained, with a reset required to clear them. When used with the CS5376A digital filter, the CS5374 is in this lowest power-down state immediately after reset since MCLK is disabled by default. 29 CS5374 DS862F1 From VA+ Regulator 100 μF 0.1 μF 10 Ω 2.500 V VREF From VARegulator 100 μF 0.1 μF CS5374 Route VREF± as a differential pair from the 100uF RC filter capacitor + 100 μF 0.1 μF 0.1 μF 0.1 μF To VREF+ To VREF- Figure 18. Voltage Reference Circuit 7. VOLTAGE REFERENCE The CS5374 modulators require a 2.500 V precision voltage reference to be supplied to the VREF± pins. 7.1 VREF Power Supply To guarantee proper regulation headroom for the voltage reference device, the voltage reference GND pin should be connected to VA– instead of system ground, as shown in Figure 18. This connection results in a VREF– voltage equal to VA– and a VREF+ voltage very near ground potential [(VA–) + 2.500 VREF]. Power supply inputs to the voltage reference device should be bypassed to system ground with 0.1 μF capacitors placed as close as possible to the power and ground pins. In addition to 0.1 μF local bypass capacitors, at least 100 μF of bulk capacitance to system ground should be placed on each power supply near the voltage regulator outputs. Bypass capacitors should be X7R, C0G, tantalum, or other high-quality dielectric type. A separate RC filter is required for each device connected to the voltage reference output. Signaldependent sampling of the voltage reference by one system device could cause unwanted tones to appear in the measurement bandwidth of another system device if a single VREF RC filter is common to both. 7.3 VREF PCB Routing To minimize the possibility of outside noise coupling into the CS5374 voltage reference input, the VREF± traces should be routed as a differential pair from the large capacitor of the voltage reference RC filter. Careful control of the voltage reference source and return currents by routing VREF± as a differential pair will significantly improve immunity from external noise. To further improve noise rejection of the VREF± differential route, include 0.1 μF bypass capacitors to system ground as close as possible to the VREF+ and VREF– pins of the CS5374. 7.2 VREF RC Filter 7.4 VREF Input Impedance A primary concern in selecting a precision voltage reference device is noise performance in the measurement bandwidth. The Linear Technology LT1019AIS8-2.5 voltage reference yields acceptable noise levels if the output is filtered with a lowpass RC filter. The switched-capacitor input architecture of the VREF± inputs results in an input impedance that depends on the internal capacitor size and the MCLK frequency. With a 15 pF internal capacitor and a 2.048 MHz MCLK, the VREF input impedance is approximately 30 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 1 / [(2.048 MHz) x (15 pF)] = 32 kΩ. While the size of the internal capacitor is fixed, the voltage reference input impedance can vary with MCLK. The voltage reference external RC filter series resistor creates a voltage divider with the VREF input impedance to reduce the effective applied input voltage. To minimize gain error resulting from this voltage divider effect, the RC filter series resistor should be the minimum size recommended in the voltage reference device data sheet. 7.5 VREF Accuracy The nominal voltage reference input is specified as 2.500 V across the VREF± pins, and all CS5374 gain accuracy specifications are measured using a nominal voltage reference input. Any variation from a nominal VREF input will proportionally vary the analog full-scale gain accuracy. Since temperature drift of the voltage reference results in gain drift of the analog full-scale amplitude, care should be taken to minimize temperature drift effects through careful selection of passive components and the voltage reference device itself. Gain drift specifications of the CS5374 do not include the temperature drift effects of external passive components or of the voltage reference device itself. DS862F1 31 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 0.1 uF To VA+ Regulator To VD Regulator 100 uF 0.1 uF 0.01 uF VA+ VA+ 100 uF VD+ CS5374 VA- VA- GND To VARegulator 0.1 uF 100 uF 0.1 uF Figure 19. Power Supply Diagram 8. POWER SUPPLIES The CS5374 has two positive analog power supply pins (VA+), two negative analog power supply pins (VA–), a digital power supply pin (VD+), and a ground pin (GND). For proper operation, power must be supplied to all power supply pins, and the ground pin must be connected to system ground. The CS5374 digital power supply (VD+) and the CS5376A digital power supply (VD) must share a common voltage. 8.1 Analog Power Supplies The analog power pins of the CS5374 are to be supplied with a total of 5 V between VA+ and VA– from a bipolar ±2.5 V supply. When using bipolar supplies the analog signal common mode voltage should be biased to 0 V. The analog power supplies are recommended to be bypassed to system ground using 0.1 μF X7R type capacitors. The VA– supply is connected to the CMOS substrate and as such must remain the most negative applied voltage to prevent potential latch-up conditions. It is recommended to clamp the VA– supply to system ground using a reverse biased Schottky diode to prevent possible latch-up conditions related to mismatched supply rail initialization. 32 Care should be taken to connect the CS5374 thermal pad on the bottom of the package to VA–, not system ground (GND), since it internally connects to VA– and is expected to be the most negative applied voltage. 8.2 Digital Power Supply The digital power supply across the VD and GND pins is specified for a +3.3 V power supply. The digital power supply should be bypassed to system ground using a 0.01 μF X7R type capacitor. The digital power supply across the VD+ and GND pins is specified to be +3.3 V. 8.3 Power Supply Bypassing The VA+ and VA– power supplies should be bypassed to system ground with 0.1 μF capacitors placed as close as possible to the power pins of the device. The VD+ power supply should be bypassed to system ground with 0.1 μF capacitors placed as close as possible to the power pins of the device. Bypass capacitors should be X7R, C0G, tantalum, or other high-quality dielectric type. In addition to the local bypass capacitors, at least 100 μF bulk capacitance to system ground should be placed on each power supply near the voltage DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 regulator output, with additional power supply bulk capacitance placed among the analog component route if space permits. 8.4 PCB Layers and Routing The CS5374 is a high-performance device, and special care must be taken to ensure power and ground routing is correct. Power can be supplied either through dedicated power planes or routed traces. When routing power traces, it is recommended to use a “star” routing scheme with the star point either at the voltage regulator output or at a local power supply bulk capacitor. It is also recommended to dedicate a full PCB layer to a solid ground plane, without splits or routing. All bypass capacitors should connect between the power supply circuit and the solid ground plane as near as possible to the device power supply pins. The CS5374 analog signals are differentially routed and do not normally require connection to a separate analog ground. However, if a separate analog ground is required, it should be routed using a “star” routing scheme on a separate layer from the solid ground plane and connected to the ground plane only at a single point. Be sure all active devices and passive components connected to the separate analog ground are included in the “star” route to ensure sensitive analog currents do not return through the ground plane. 8.5 Power Supply Rejection Power supply rejection of the CS5374 is frequency dependent. The CS5376A digital filter fully rejects power supply noise for frequencies above the selected digital filter corner frequency. Power supply noise frequencies between DC and the digital filter corner frequency are rejected as specified in the “Power Supply Characteristics” on page 13. DS862F1 CS5374 8.6 SCR Latch-up Considerations It is recommended to connect the VA– power supply to system ground (GND) through a reverse-biased Schottky diode. At power up, if the VA+ power supply ramps up before the VA– supply is established, the VA- pin voltage could be pulled above ground potential through the CS5374 device. If the VA– supply is pulled 0.7 V or more above GND, SCR latch-up can occur. A reverse-biased Schottky diode will clamp the VA– voltage a maximum of 0.3 V above ground to ensure SCR latch-up does not occur at power up. For similar reasons, care should be taken to connect the CS5374 thermal pad on the bottom of the package to VA–, not system ground (GND), since it internally connects to VA– and is expected to be the most negative applied voltage. 8.7 DC-DC Converters Many low-frequency measurement systems are battery powered and utilize DC-DC converters to efficiently generate power supply voltages. To minimize interference effects, operate the DC-DC converter at a frequency which is rejected by the digital filter, or operate it synchronous to the MCLK rate. A synchronous DC-DC converter whose operating frequency is derived from MCLK will theoretically minimize the potential for “beat frequencies” to appear in the measurement bandwidth. However this requires the source clock to remain jitter free within the DC-DC converter circuitry. If clock jitter can occur within the DC-DC converter (as in a PLLbased architecture), it’s better to use a non-synchronous DC-DC converter whose switching frequency is rejected by the digital filter. During PCB layout, do not place high-current DCDC converters near sensitive analog components. Carefully routing a separate DC-DC “star” ground will help isolate noisy switching currents away from the sensitive analog components. 33 CS5374 DS862F1 9. CS5374 SPITM REGISTER SUMMARY The CS5374 Configuration Registers contain the hardware configuration settings. Name 34 Addr. Type # Bits Description VERSION 0x00 R 8 Device Version ID AMP1CFG 0x01 R/W 8 Amplifier 1 configuration AMP2CFG 0x02 R/W 8 Amplifier 2 configuration ADCCFG 0x03 R/W 8 Modulator 1 & 2 configuration PWRCFG 0x04 R/W 8 Power configuration DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 9.1 VERSION: 0x00 Figure 20. Hardware Version ID Register VERSION (MSB)7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (LSB)0 VER7 VER6 VER5 VER4 VER3 VER2 VER1 VER0 R R R R R R R R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Reset Condition : 0000_0001 (0x01) : Default value Normal Operation : 0000_0001 (0x01) : Default value Power Down Operation : 0000_0001 (0x01) : Default value Address: 0x00 -- Not defined (read as 0) R Readable W Writable R/W Readable and Writable Bits in bottom rows are reset condition Bit definitions: 7:0 DS862F1 VERS Hardware revision ID register 0x01: Revision A 35 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 9.2 AMP1CFG: 0x01 Figure 21. Amplifier 1 Configuration Register AMP1CFG (MSB)7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (LSB)0 PWDN1 HP1 MUX1_1 MUX1_0 GUARD GAIN1_2 GAIN1_1 GAIN1_0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 (0x00) : Default value Normal Operation : 00MM_GGGG : MUX, GUARD and GAIN select Power Down Operation : 1000_0000 (0x80) : PWDN enabled Address: 0x01 -- Not defined (read as 0) R Readable W Writable R/W Readable and Writable Bits in bottom rows are reset condition Bit definitions: 36 7 PWDN1 Amplifier 1 Power Down 1: enable 0: disable 6 HP1 Amplifier 1 High Precision 1: enable 0: disable 5:4 MUX1[1:0] Input Multiplexer 11: INA1 + INB1 10: INA1 only 01: INB1 only 00: 800 ohm termination 3 GUARD 2:0 GAIN1[2:0] Amplifier 1 Gain 111: reserved 110: 64x 101: 32x 100: 16x 011: 8x 010: 4x 001: 2x 000: 1x GUARD Output 1: disable 0: enable DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 9.3 AMP2CFG: 0x02 Figure 22. Amplifier 2 Configuration Register AMP2CFG (MSB)7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (LSB)0 PWDN2 HP2 MUX2_1 MUX2_0 --- GAIN2_2 GAIN2_1 GAIN2_0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 (0x00) : Default value Address: 0x02 -- Not defined (read as 0) R Readable W Writable R/W Readable and Writable Normal Operation : 00MM_0GGG : MUX and GAIN select Power Down Operation : 1000_0000 (0x80) : PWDN enabled Bits in bottom rows are reset condition Bit definitions: 7 PWDN2 Amplifier 2 Power Down 1: enable 0: disable 6 HP2 Amplifier 2 High Precision 1: enable 0: disable 5:4 MUX2[1:0] Input Multiplexer 11: INA2 + INB2 10: INA2 only 01: INB2 only 00: 800 ohm termination 3 --- 2:0 GAIN2[2:0] Amplifier 2 Gain 111: reserved 110: 64x 101: 32x 100: 16x 011: 8x 010: 4x 001: 2x 000: 1x DS862F1 Reserved 37 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 9.4 ADCCFG: 0x03 Figure 23. Modulator 1 & 2 Configuration Register ADCCFG (MSB)7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (LSB)0 OFST HP PWDN2 PWDN1 --- --- --- --- R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 (0x00) : Default value Normal Operation : 0100_0000 (0x40) : HP mode enabled Power Down Operation : 0011_0000 (0x30) : PWDN enabled Address: 0x03 -- Not defined (read as 0) R Readable W Writable R/W Readable and Writable Bits in bottom rows are reset condition Bit definitions: 7 OFST Modulator Offset (add -60mV to Channel 1, add -35mV to Channel 2) 1: disable 0: enable 6 HP Modulator High Precision 1: enable 0: disable 5 PWDN2 Modulator 2 Power Down 1: enable 0: disable 4 PWDN1 Modulator 1 Power Down 1: enable 0: disable 3:0 --- Reserved 9.5 PWRCFG: 0x04 38 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 Figure 24. Power Configuration Register PWRCFG (MSB)7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (LSB)0 adc_lpwr --- amp_i1_1 amp_i1_0 rough i1_tail amp_i5_1 amp_i5_0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Reset Condition : 0000_0000 (0x00) : Default value Normal Operation : 1000_1111 (0x8F) : Reduced power Power Down Operation : 0000_0000 (0x00) : Default value Address: 0x04 --- Not defined (read as 0) R Readable W Writable R/W Readable and Writable Bits in bottom rows are reset condition. Bit definitions: 7 adc_lpwr Modulator Bias 1: reduced current 0: nominal current 6 --- reserved 5:4 amp_i1 Amplifier i1 Bias 11: 2/3 10: 1/3 01: 4/3 00: nominal current 3 rough Modulator Rough Phase 1: reduced current 0: nominal current 2 i1_tail Amplifier i1 Tail Current 1: reduced current 0: nominal current 1:0 amp_i5 Amplifier i5 Bias 11: 7/11 10: 9/13 01: 15/13 00: nominal current DS862F1 39 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 1 36 2 35 3 34 4 33 THERMAL PAD 5 6 7 32 31 30 CONNECT TO VA- 8 9 29 28 24 23 22 21 20 MCLK MSYNC MDATA1 MFLAG1 VD+ GND MDATA2 MFLAG2 SDO SDI SCLK CS GUARD2 OUT2+ OUT2INR2INF2INF2+ INR2+ NC VREF+ VREFNC NC 19 25 18 12 17 26 16 11 15 27 14 10 13 INA1+ INA1INB1INB1+ DNC VA+ VADNC INB2+ INB2INA2INA2+ 46 48 Pin 1 Location Indicators 47 GUARD1 OUT1+ OUT1INR1INF1INF1+ INR1+ NC VAVA+ NC RST 10. PIN DESCRIPTIONS Top-Down (Though Package) View Pin Name Pin Number Pin Type Pin Description Power Supplies VA+ VA– 6, 39 7, 40 I Analog power supply. Refer to the Specified Operating Conditions. VD+, GND 32, 31 I Digital power supply. Refer to the Specified Operating Conditions. Differential Amplifier Analog Inputs 40 INA1+ INA1– 1 2 I Channel 1 differential analog input A. Selected via Serial Communications Interface. INB1–, INB1+ 3 4 I Channel 1 differential analog input B. Selected via Serial Communications Interface. INB2+, INB2– 9 10 I Channel 2 differential analog input B. Selected via Serial Communications Interface. INA2–, INA2+ 11 12 I Channel 2 differential analog input A. Selected via Serial Communications Interface. DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 Differential Amplifier Analog Outputs OUT1–, OUT1+ 46 47 O Channel 1 differential analog output. GUARD1 48 O Guard output voltage for analog input Channel 1. GUARD2 13 O Guard output voltage for analog input Channel 2. OUT2+, OUT2– 14 15 O Channel 2 differential analog output. Modulator Analog Inputs INR1+, INF1+, INF1–, INR1– 42 43 44 45 I Channel 1 analog differential rough and fine inputs. From the Channel 1 differential anti-alias filter. INR2–, INF2–, INF2+, INR2+ 16 17 18 19 I Channel 2 analog differential rough and fine inputs. From the Channel 2 differential anti-alias filter. Voltage Reference VREF+, VREF– 21 22 I Voltage reference input. Refer to the Specified Operating Conditions. Serial Interface CS 25 I Chip select. Active low. SCLK 26 I Serial clock. SDI 27 I Serial data in to device. SDO 28 O Serial data out of device. Modulator Interface MCLK 36 I Modulator clock input. MSYNC 35 I Modulator sync input. MFLAG1 33 O Channel 1 modulator flag output. MDATA1 34 O Channel 1 modulator data output. MFLAG2 29 O Channel 2 modulator flag output. MDATA2 30 O Channel 2 modulator data output. Device Reset RST 37 I Reset. Active low. Other NC 20, 23, 24, 38, 41 --- No connect. DNC 5, 8 --- Do Not Connect. Thermal Pad 49 I DS862F1 Connect to VA–. Do not connect to GND. 41 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 11. PACKAGE DIMENSIONS 48-PIN QFN (7MM X 7MM) 42 DS862F1 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 12. ORDERING INFORMATION Model Number Temperature Package CS5374-CNZ, lead (Pb) free -10 to +70 °C 48-Pin QFN 13. ENVIRONMENTAL, MANUFACTURING, & HANDLING INFORMATION Model Number Peak Reflow Temp MSL Rating* Max Floor Life CS5374-CNZ, lead (Pb) free 260 °C 3 7 Days * MSL (Moisture Sensitivity Level) as specified by IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020. DS862F1 43 CS5374 DS862F1 CS5374 14. REVISION HISTORY Revision Date Changes T1 AUG 2008 Initial release of Target data sheet. A1 DEC 2008 Initial release of Advanced data sheet. A2 JAN 2009 Update to include more complete characterization data. PP1 APR 2009 Specify operation for 2.048 MHz MCLK and HP mode. Add PWRCFG register. Update to include more complete characterization data. F1 OCT 2009 Update to include final characterization data. 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