AD AD9981KSTZ-95

High Performance
10-Bit Display Interface
AD9981
10-bit analog-to-digital converter
95 MSPS maximum conversion rate
9% or less p-p PLL clock jitter at 95 MSPS
Automated offset adjustment
2:1 input mux
Power-down via dedicated pin or serial register
4:4:4, 4:2:2, and DDR output format modes
Variable output drive strength
Odd/even field detection
External clock input
Regenerated Hsync output
Programmable output high impedance control
Hsyncs per Vsyncs counter
Pb-free package
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
10
PR/REDIN1
PR/REDIN0
2:1
MUX
CLAMP
Y/GREENIN1
Y/GREENIN0
2:1
MUX
CLAMP
PB/BLUEIN0
HSYNC1
HSYNC2
VSYNC1
VSYNC2
2:1
MUX
CLAMP
10
AUTO OFFSET
10-BIT
ADC
PGA
10
PB/BLUEIN1
10-BIT
ADC
PGA
10
AD9981
AUTO OFFSET
10
AUTO OFFSET
PGA
10-BIT
ADC
10
10
OUPUT DATA FORMATTER
FEATURES
10
10
2:1
MUX
2:1
MUX
REDOUT
GREENOUT
BLUEOUT
DATACK
SOGOUT
SYNC
PROCESSING
O/E FIELD
PLL
Advanced TVs
Plasma display panels
LCDTV
HDTV
RGB graphics processing
LCD monitors and projectors
Scan converters
SOGIN1
SOGIN2
2:1
MUX
HSOUT
POWER
MANAGEMENT
VSOUT/A0
EXTCLK/COAST
CLAMP
FILT
REFHI
VOLTAGE
REFS
SDA
SCL
SERIAL REGISTER
REFCM
REFLO
04739-001
APPLICATIONS
Figure 1.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD9981 is a complete, 10-bit, 95 MSPS, monolithic analog
interface optimized for capturing YPbPr video and RGB
graphics signals. Its 95 MSPS encode rate capability and fullpower analog bandwidth of 200 MHz supports all HDTV
video modes and graphics resolutions up to XGA (1024 × 768
at 85 Hz).
The AD9981 includes a 95 MHz triple ADC with an internal
reference, a PLL, programmable gain, offset, and clamp controls.
The user provides only 3.3 V and 1.8 V power supplies and an
analog input. Three-state CMOS outputs may be powered from
1.8 V to 3.3 V.
The AD9981’s on-chip PLL generates a sample clock from
the three-level sync (for YPbPr video) or the horizontal sync
(for RGB graphics). Sample clock output frequencies range from
10 MHz to 95 MHz. PLL clock jitter is 9% or less p-p typical at
95 MSPS.
With internal Coast generation, the PLL maintains its output
frequency in the absence of sync input. A 32-step sampling
clock phase adjustment is provided. Output data, sync, and
clock phase relationships are maintained.
The auto-offset feature can be enabled to automatically restore
the signal reference levels and to automatically calibrate out any
offset differences between the three channels. The AD9981 also
offers full sync processing for composite sync and sync-ongreen applications. A clamp signal is generated internally or
may be provided by the user through the CLAMP input pin.
Fabricated in an advanced CMOS process, the AD9981 is
provided in a space-saving, 80-pin, Pb-free, LQFP surface
mount plastic package. It is specified over the 0°C to +70°C
temperature range.
Rev. 0
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use.
Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781.329.4700
www.analog.com
Fax: 781.326.8703
© 2005 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD9981
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Analog Interface Specifications ...................................................... 3
Detailed 2-Wire Serial Control Register Descriptions .............. 29
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 5
Chip Identification ..................................................................... 29
Explanation of Test Levels........................................................... 5
PLL Divider Control .................................................................. 29
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 5
Clock Generator Control .......................................................... 29
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 6
Phase Adjust................................................................................ 30
Design Guide................................................................................... 11
Input Gain ................................................................................... 30
General Description................................................................... 11
Input Offset ................................................................................. 30
Digital Inputs .............................................................................. 11
Hsync Controls ........................................................................... 31
Input Signal Handling................................................................ 11
Vsync Controls ........................................................................... 31
Hsync and Vsync Inputs............................................................ 11
Coast and Clamp Controls........................................................ 32
Serial Control Port ..................................................................... 11
SOG Control ............................................................................... 34
Output Signal Handling............................................................. 11
Input and Power Control........................................................... 34
Clamping ..................................................................................... 11
Output Control ........................................................................... 35
Gain and Offset Control............................................................ 12
Two-Wire Serial Control Port....................................................... 40
Timing Diagrams........................................................................ 20
Data Transfer via Serial Interface............................................. 40
Hsync Timing ............................................................................. 21
PCB Layout Recommendations ............................................... 42
Coast Timing............................................................................... 21
PLL ............................................................................................... 42
Output Formatter ....................................................................... 21
Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 44
Two-Wire Serial Register Map...................................................... 23
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 44
REVISION HISTORY
1/05—Initial Version: Revision 0
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 44
AD9981
ANALOG INTERFACE SPECIFICATIONS
VD = 3.3 V, VDD = 3.3 V, PVD = 1.8 V, DAVDD = 1.8 V, ADC clock = maximum conversion rate , full temperature range = 0°C to 70°C.
Table 1. Electrical Characteristics
AD9981KSTZ-801
Parameter
RESOLUTION
Number of Bits
LSB Size
DC ACCURACY
Differential Nonlinearity
80 MSPS Conversion Rate
Differential Nonlinearity
95 MSPS Conversion Rate
Integral Nonlinearity
80 MSPS Conversion Rate
Integral Nonlinearity
95 MSPS Conversion Rate
No Missing Codes
ANALOG INPUT
Input Voltage Range
Minimum
Maximum
Gain Tempco
Input Bias Current
Input Full-Scale Matching
Offset Adjustment Range
SWITCHING PERFORMANCE
Maximum Conversion Rate
Minimum Conversion Rate
Clock to Data Skew tSKEW
tBUFF
tSTAH
tDHO
tDAL
tDAH
tDSU
tSTASU
tSTOSU
Maximum PLL Clock Rate
Minimum PLL Clock Rate
PLL Jitter
Sampling Phase Tempco
DIGITAL INPUTS3
Input Voltage, High (VIH)
Input Voltage, Low (VIL)
Input Current, High (IIH)
Input Current, Low (IIL)
Input Capacitance
Temp
Test
Level
Min
Typ
Max
AD9981KSTZ-952
Min
10
0..098
25°C
Full
25°C
Full
25°C
Full
25°C
Full
25°C
I
VI
I
VI
I
VI
I
VI
I
Full
Full
25°C
25°C
Full
Full
Full
VI
VI
V
V
V
VI
VI
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
25°C
Full
Full
VI
IV
IV
VI
VI
VI
VI
VI
VI
VI
VI
VI
IV
IV
IV
IV
Full
Full
Full
Full
25°C
VI
VI
V
V
V
0.3
0.4
±1.4
±1.4
Typ
Max
10
0.098
1.0
1.8
0.3
1.0
0.4
1.8
1.3
2.75
1.75
5.4
±1.4
±3.75
±1.4
±5.0
±2.7
±4.75
±3.7
±8.6
Guaranteed
±3.75
±5.0
Guaranteed
0.5
1.0
0.5
1.0
105
1
44
105
1
1
9
80
1
44
1
1
10
95
10
+2
−0.5
4.7
4.0
0
4.7
4.0
250
4.7
4.0
80
10
+2
−0.5
4.7
4.0
0
4.7
4.0
250
4.7
4.0
95
10
10
750
980
15
15
2.5
2.5
0.8
–82
82
2
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 44
0.8
–82
82
2
Unit
Bits
% of full
scale
LSB
LSB
LSB
LSB
LSB
V p-p
V p-p
ppm/°C
µA
µA
% FS
% FS
MSPS
MSPS
ns
µS
µS
µS
µS
µS
nS
µS
µS
MHz
MHz
ps p-p
ps p-p
ps/°C
V
V
µA
µA
pF
AD9981
AD9981KSTZ-801
Parameter
DIGITAL OUTPUTS
Output Voltage, High (VOH)
Output Voltage, Low (VOL)
Duty Cycle, DATACK
Output Coding
POWER SUPPLY
VD Supply Voltage
VDD Supply Voltage
PVD Supply Voltage
DAVD Supply Voltage
ID Supply Current (VD)
IDD Supply Current (VDD)4
IPVD Supply Current (PVD)
IDAVD Supply Current (DAVD)
Total Power Dissipation
Power-Down Supply Current
Power-Down Dissipation
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
Analog Bandwidth, Full Power
Crosstalk
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
θJC, Junction-to-Case
Thermal Resistance
θJA, Junction-to-Ambient
Thermal Resistance
AD9981KSTZ-952
Temp
Test
Level
Full
Full
Full
VI
VI
IV
VDD − 0.2
Full
Full
Full
Full
25°C
25°C
25°C
25°C
Full
Full
Full
IV
IV
IV
IV
V
V
V
V
VI
VI
VI
3.13
1.7
1.7
1.7
25°C
Full
V
V
200
60
200
60
MHz
dBc
V
16
16
°C/W
V
35
35
°C/W
Min
Typ
Max
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
0.1
V
V
%
VDD − 0.2
0.2
50
Binary
3.3
3.3
1.8
1.8
233
42
11
10
953
18
55
1
Output drive strength = 0 was used for all 80 MHz parameters.
Output drive strength = 1 was used for all 95 MHz parameters.
3
Digital inputs are: HSYNC0, HSYNC1, VSYNC0, VSYNC1, SDA, SCL, EXTCLK, CLAMP, PWRDN, COAST
4
DATACK load = 10 pF, data load = 5 pF
2
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 44
50
Binary
3.47
3.47
1.9
1.9
1070
27
81
3.13
1.7
1.7
1.7
3.3
3.3
1.8
1.8
205
49
8
12
993
18
55
3.47
3.47
1.9
1.9
1114
28
88
V
V
V
V
mA
mA
mA
mA
mW
mA
mW
AD9981
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Table 2.
Parameter
VD
VDD
PVD
DAVDD
Analog Inputs
REFHI
REFCM
REFLO
Digital Inputs
Digital Output Current
Operating Temperature
Storage Temperature
Maximum Junction Temperature
Rating
3.6 V
3.6 V
1.98 V
1.98 V
VD to 0.0 V
VD to 0.0 V
VD to 0.0 V
VD to 0.0 V
5 V to 0.0 V
20 mA
−25°C to +85°C
−65°C to +150°C
150°C
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings
may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress
rating only and functional operation of the device at these or
any other conditions outside of those indicated in the operation
sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to
absolute maximum ratings for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
EXPLANATION OF TEST LEVELS
Test Level
I.
100% production tested.
II. 100% production tested at 25°C and sample tested at
specified temperatures.
III. Sample tested only.
IV. Parameter is guaranteed by design and characterization
testing.
V. Parameter is a typical value only.
VI. 100% production tested at 25°C; guaranteed by design and
characterization testing.
ESD CAUTION
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on
the human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although this product features
proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high energy
electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance
degradation or loss of functionality.
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 44
AD9981
BLUE <2>
BLUE <1>
BLUE <0>
VDD (3.3V)
GND
SDA
SCL
HSYNC1
VSYNC1
HSYNC0
VSYNC0
EXTCLK/COAST
CCLAMP
PVD (1.8V)
GND
PVD (1.8V)
GND
FILT
PVD (1.8V)
GND
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 61
VD (3.3V)
1
BAIN0
2
GND
60
BLUE <3>
59
BLUE <4>
3
58
BLUE <5>
BAIN1
4
57
BLUE <6>
VD (3.3V)
5
56
BLUE <7>
GAIN0
6
55
BLUE <8>
GND
7
54
BLUE <9>
SOGIN0
8
53
GND
VD (3.3V)
9
52
VDD (3.3V)
GAIN1 10
51
GREEN <0>
GND 11
50
GREEN <1>
SOGIN1 12
49
GREEN <2>
VD (3.3V) 13
48
GREEN <3>
RAIN0 14
47
GREEN <4>
GND 15
46
GREEN <5>
RAIN1 16
45
GREEN <6>
PWRDN 17
44
GREEN <7>
REFLO 18
43
GREEN <8>
REFCM 19
42
GREEN <9>
REFHI 20
41
DAVDD (1.8)
PIN 1
AD9981
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
04739-002
GND
GND
VDD (3.3V)
RED <0>
RED <1>
RED <2>
RED <3>
RED <4>
RED <5>
RED <6>
RED <7>
RED <8>
RED <9>
GND
VDD (3.3V)
DATACK
SOGOUT
HSOUT
O/E FIELD
VSOUT/A0
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
Figure 2. Top View (Pins Down)
Table 3. Complete Pinout List
Pin Type
Inputs
Outputs
Mnemonic
RAIN0
RAIN1
GAIN0
GAIN1
BAIN0
BAIN1
HSYNC0
HSYNC1
VSYNC0
VSYNC1
SOGIN0
SOGIN1
EXTCK
CLAMP
COAST
PWRDN
RED [9:0]
GREEN [9:0]
BLUE [9:0]
DATACK
Function
Channel 0 Analog Input for Converter R
Channel 1 Analog Input for Converter R
Channel 0 Analog Input for Converter G
Channel 1 Analog Input for Converter G
Channel 0 Analog Input for Converter B
Channel 1 Analog Input for Converter B
Horizontal Sync Input for Channel 0
Horizontal Sync Input for Channel 1
Vertical Sync Input for Channel 0
Vertical Sync Input for Channel 1
Input for Sync-on-Green Channel 0
Input for Sync-on-Green Channel 1
External Clock Input
External Clamp Input Signal
External PLL Coast Signal Input
Power-Down Control
Outputs of Converter R, Bit 9 is the MSB
Outputs of Converter G, Bit 9 is the MSB
Outputs of Converter B, Bit 9 is the MSB
Data Output Clock
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 44
Value
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
0.0 V to 1.0 V
0.0 V to 1.0 V
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
Pin No.
14
16
6
10
2
4
70
68
71
69
8
12
721
73
72
17
28 to 37
42 to 51
54 to 63
25
1
AD9981
Pin Type
References
Power Supply
Control
1
2
Mnemonic
HSOUT
VSOUT
SOGOUT
O/E FIELD
FILT
REFLO
REFCM
REFHI
VD
VDD
PVD
DAVDD
GND
Function
Hsync Output Clock (Phase-Aligned with DATACK)
Vsync Output Clock
Sync-on-Green Slicer Output
Odd/Even Field Output
Connection for External Filter Components for Internal PLL
Connection for External Capacitor for Input Amplifier
Connection for External Capacitor for Input Amplifier
Connection for External Capacitor for Input Amplifier
Analog Power Supply
Output Power Supply
PLL Power Supply
Digital Logic Power Supply
Ground
Value
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3V CMOS
SDA
SCL
A0
Serial Port Data I/O
Serial Port Data Clock (100 kHz maximum)
Serial Port Address Input
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
EXTCLK and COAST share the same pin.
VSOUT and A0 share the same pin.
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 44
3.3 V
1.8 V or 3.3 V
1.8 V
1.8 V
0V
Pin No.
23
222
24
21
78
18
19
20
1, 5, 9, 13
26, 38, 52, 64
74, 76, 79
41
3, 7, 11, 15, 27,
39, 40, 53, 65,
75, 77, 80
66
67
22
2
AD9981
Table 4. Pin Function Descriptions
Pin
INPUTS
RAIN0
GAIN0
BAIN0
RAIN1
GAIN1
BAIN1
HSYNC0
HSYNC1
VSYNC0
VSYNC1
SOGIN0
SOGIN1
CLAMP
EXTCLK/COAST
EXTCLK/COAST
PWRDN
Description
Analog Input for the Red Channel 0.
Analog Input for the Green Channel 0.
Analog Input for the Blue Channel 0.
Analog Input for the Red Channel 1.
Analog Input for the Green Channel 1.
Analog Input for the Blue Channel 1.
High impedance inputs that accept the red, green, and blue channel graphics signals, respectively. The three
channels are identical and can be used for any colors, but colors are assigned for convenient reference. They
accommodate input signals ranging from 0.5 V to 1.0 V full scale. Signals should be ac-coupled to these pins to
support clamp operation.
Horizontal Sync Input Channel 0.
Horizontal Sync Input Channel 1.
These inputs receive a logic signal that establishes the horizontal timing reference and provides the frequency
reference for pixel clock generation. The logic sense of this pin can be automatically determined by the chip or
manually controlled by Serial Register 0x12, Bits [5:4] (Hsync polarity). Only the leading edge of Hsync is used by the
PLL; the trailing edge is used in clamp timing. When Hsync polarity = 0, the falling edge of Hsync is used. When Hsync
Polarity = 1, the rising edge is active. The input includes a Schmitt trigger for noise immunity.
Vertical Sync Input Channel 0.
Vertical Sync Input Channel 1.
These are the inputs for vertical sync and provide timing information for generation of the field (odd/even) and
internal Coast generation. The logic sense of this pin can be automatically determined by the chip or manually
controlled by Serial Register 0x14, Bits [5:4] (Vsync polarity).
Sync-on-Green Input Channel 0.
Sync-on-Green Input Channel 1.
These inputs are provided to assist with processing signals with embedded sync, typically on the green channel. The
pin is connected to a high speed comparator with an internally generated threshold. The threshold level can be
programmed in 8 mV steps to any voltage between 8 mV and 256 mV above the negative peak of the input signal.
The default voltage threshold is 128 mV. When connected to an ac-coupled graphics signal with embedded sync, it
produces a noninverting digital output on SOGOUT. This is usually a composite sync signal, containing both vertical
and horizontal sync information that must be separated before passing the horizontal sync signal for Hsync
processing. When not used, this input should be left unconnected. For more details on this function and how it
should be configured, refer to the Sync-on-Green section.
External Clamp Input (Optional).
This logic input may be used to define the time during which the input signal is clamped to ground or midscale. It
should be exercised when the reference dc level is known to be present on the analog input channels, typically
during the back porch of the graphics signal. The CLAMP pin is enabled by setting the control bit clamp function to 1,
(Register 0x18, Bit 4; default is 0). When disabled, this pin is ignored and the clamp timing is determined internally by
counting a delay and duration from the trailing edge of the Hsync input. The logic sense of this pin can be automatically determined by the chip or controlled by clamp polarity Register 0x1B, Bits [7:6]. When not used, this pin may
be left unconnected (there is an internal pull-down resistor) and the clamp function programmed to 0.
Coast Input to Clock Generator (Optional).
This input may be used to cause the pixel clock generator to stop synchronizing with Hsync and continue producing a
clock at its current frequency and phase. This is useful when processing signals from sources that fail to produce
Hsync pulses during the vertical interval. The Coast signal is generally not required for PC-generated signals. The logic
sense of this pin can be determined automatically or controlled by Coast polarity (Register 0x18, Bits [7:6]). When not
used and EXTCLK is not used, this pin may be grounded and Coast polarity programmed to 1. Input Coast polarity
defaults to1 at power-up. This pin is shared with the EXTCLK function, which does not affect Coast functionality. For
more details on EXTCLK, see the description in this section.
External Clock.
This allows the insertion of an external clock source rather than the internally generated, PLL locked clock. EXTCLK is
enabled by programming Register 0x03, Bit 2 to 1. This pin is shared with the Coast function, which does not affect
EXTCLK functionality. For more details on Coast, see the above description in this section.
Power-Down Control
This pin can be used along with Register 0x1E, Bit 3 for manual power-down control. If manual power-down control is
selected (Register 0x1E, Bit 4) and this pin is not used, it is recommended to set the pin polarity (Register 0x1E, Bit 2) to
active high and hardwire this pin to ground with a 10 kΩ resistor.
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 44
AD9981
Pin
REFLO
REFCM
REFHI
FILT
OUTPUTS
HSOUT
VSOUT/A0
SOGOUT
O/E FIELD
SERIAL PORT
SDA
SCL
VSOUT/A0
DATA OUTPUTS
RED [9:0]
GREEN [9:0]
BLUE [9:0]
DATA CLOCK
OUTPUT
DATACK
Description
Input Amplifier Reference.
REFLO and REFHI are connected together through a 10 µF capacitor; REFCM is connected through a 10 µF capacitor to
ground. These are used for stability in the input PGA (programmable gain amplifier) circuitry. See Figure 4.
External Filter Connection.
For proper operation, the pixel clock generator PLL requires an external filter. Connect the filter shown in Figure 5to
this pin. For optimal performance, minimize noise and parasitics on this node. For more information, see the PCB
Layout Recommendations section.
Horizontal Sync Output.
A reconstructed and phase-aligned version of the Hsync input. Both the polarity and duration of this output can be
programmed via serial bus registers. By maintaining alignment with DATACK and Data Output, data timing with
respect to Hsync can always be determined.
Vertical Sync Output.
Pin shared with A0, serial port address. This can be either a separated Vsync from a composite signal or a direct pass
through of the Vsync signal. The polarity of this output can be controlled via a serial bus bit. The placement and
duration in all modes can be set by the graphics transmitter or the duration can be set by Register 0x14 and Register
0x15. This pin is shared with the A0 function, which does not affect Vsync Output functionality. For more details on
A0, see the description in the Serial Control Port section.
Sync-On-Green Slicer Output.
This pin outputs one of four possible signals (controlled by Register 0x1D, Bits [1:0]): raw SOG, raw Hsync, regenerated
Hsync from the filter, or the filtered Hsync. See the sync processing block diagram (see Figure 8) to view how this pin
is connected. Other than slicing off SOG, the output from this pin gets no other additional processing on the AD9981.
Vsync separation is performed via the sync separator.
Odd/Even Field Bit for Interlaced Video. This output will identify whether the current field (in an interlaced signal) is
odd or even.
Serial Port Data I/O.
Serial Port Data Clock.
Serial Port Address Input 0.
Pin shared with VSOUT. This pin selects the LSB of the serial port device address, allowing two Analog Devices parts to
be on the same serial bus. A high impedance external pull-up resistor enables this pin to be read at power-up as 1, or
a high impedance, external pull-down resistor enables this pin to be read at power-up as a 0 and not interfere with
the VSOUT functionality. For more details on VSOUT, see the Data Outputs section in this table.
Data Output, Red Channel.
Data Output, Green Channel.
Data Output, Blue Channel.
The main data outputs.
Bit 9 is the MSB. The delay from pixel sampling time to output is fixed. When the sampling time is changed by
adjusting the phase register, the output timing is shifted as well. The DATACK and HSOUT outputs are also moved, so
the timing relationship among the signals is maintained.
Data Clock Output.
This is the main clock output signal used to strobe the output data and HSOUT into external logic. Four possible
output clocks can be selected with Register 0x20, Bits [7:6]. Three of these are related to the pixel clock (pixel clock,
90° phase-shifted pixel clock and 2× frequency pixel clock). They are produced either by the internal PLL clock
generator or EXTCLK and are synchronous with the pixel sampling clock. The fourth option for the data clock output is
an internally generated 40 MHz clock.
The sampling time of the internal pixel clock can be changed by adjusting the phase register (Register 0x04). When
this is changed, the pixel related DATACK timing is also shifted. The Data, DATACK, and HSOUT outputs are all moved
so that the timing relationship among the signals is maintained.
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 44
AD9981
Pin
POWER SUPPLY
VD (3.3 V)
VDD (1.8 V–3.3 V)
PVD (1.8 V)
DAVDD (1.8 V)
GND
Description
Main Power Supply.
These pins supply power to the main elements of the circuit. They should be as quiet and filtered as possible.
Digital Output Power Supply.
A large number of output pins (up to 35) switching at high speed (up to 95 MHz) generate a lot of power supply
transients (noise). These supply pins are identified separately from the VD pins, so special care can be taken to
minimize output noise transferred into the sensitive analog circuitry. If the AD9981 is interfacing with lower voltage
logic, VDD may be connected to a lower supply voltage (as low as 1.8 V) for compatibility.
Clock Generator Power Supply.
The most sensitive portion of the AD9981 is the clock generation circuitry. These pins provide power to the clock PLL
and help the user design for optimal performance. The designer should provide quiet, noise-free power to these pins.
Digital Input Power Supply. This supplies power to the digital logic.
Ground.
The ground return for all circuitry on-chip. It is recommended that the AD9981 be assembled on a single solid ground
plane, with careful attention to ground current paths.
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 44
AD9981
DESIGN GUIDE
The AD9981 is a fully integrated solution for capturing analog
RGB or YPbPr signals and digitizing them for display on
advanced TVs, flat panel monitors, projectors, and other types
of digital displays. Implemented in a high-performance CMOS
process, the interface can capture signals with pixel rates of up
to 95 MHz.
The AD9981 includes all necessary input buffering, signal DC
restoration (clamping), offset and gain (brightness and contrast)
adjustment, pixel clock generation, sampling phase control, and
output data formatting. All controls are programmable via a
two-wire serial interface (I2C®). Full integration of these
sensitive analog functions makes system design straightforward
and less sensitive to the physical and electrical environment.
With a typical power dissipation of less than 900 mW and an
operating temperature range of 0°C to 70°C, the device requires
no special environmental considerations.
DIGITAL INPUTS
All digital inputs on the AD9981 operate to 3.3 V CMOS levels.
The following digital inputs are 5 V tolerant (Applying 5 V to
them will not cause any damage.): HSYNC0, HSYNC1,
VSYNC0, VSYNC1, SOGIN0, SOGIN1, SDA, SCL and CLAMP.
slightly and providing a high quality signal over a wider range
of conditions. Using a Fair-Rite #2508051217Z0-High Speed,
Signal Chip Bead Inductor in the circuit shown in Figure 3 gives
good results in most applications.
47nF
RGB
INPUT
75Ω
RAIN
GAIN
BAIN
04739-003
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Figure 3. Analog Input Interface Circuit
HSYNC AND VSYNC INPUTS
The interface also accepts Hsync and Vsync signals, which are
used to generate the pixel clock, clamp timing, Coast and field
information. These can be either a sync signal directly from the
graphics source, or a preprocessed TTL or CMOS level signal.
The Hsync input includes a Schmitt trigger buffer for immunity
to noise and signals with long rise times. In typical PC-based
graphic systems, the sync signals are simply TTL-level drivers
feeding unshielded wires in the monitor cable. As such, no
termination is required.
SERIAL CONTROL PORT
The serial control port is designed for 3.3 V logic; however, it is
tolerant of 5 V logic signals.
INPUT SIGNAL HANDLING
OUTPUT SIGNAL HANDLING
The AD9981 has six high-impedance analog input pins for the
red, green, and blue channels. They accommodate signals
ranging from 0.5 V to 1.0 V p-p.
The digital outputs are designed to operate from 1.8 V to
3.3 V (VDD).
Signals are typically brought onto the interface board with a
DVI-I connector, a 15-pin D connector, or RCA connectors.
The AD9981 should be located as close as possible to the input
connector. Signals should be routed using matched-impedance
traces (normally 75 Ω) to the IC input pins.
RGB Clamping
At the input pins the signal should be resistively terminated
(75 Ω to the signal ground return) and capacitively coupled to
the AD9981 inputs through 47 nF capacitors. These capacitors
form part of the DC restoration circuit.
In an ideal world of perfectly matched impedances, the best
performance can be obtained with the widest possible signal
bandwidth. The wide bandwidth inputs of the AD9981
(200 MHz) can continuously track the input signal as it moves
from one pixel level to the next and can digitize the pixel during
a long, flat pixel time. In many systems, however, there are
mismatches, reflections, and noise, which can result in excessive
ringing and distortion of the input waveform. This makes it
more difficult to establish a sampling phase that provides good
image quality. It has been shown that a small inductor in series
with the input is effective in rolling off the input bandwidth
CLAMPING
To properly digitize the incoming signal, the dc offset of the
input must be adjusted to fit the range of the on-board ADCs.
Most graphics systems produce RGB signals with black at
ground and white at approximately 0.75 V. However, if sync
signals are embedded in the graphics, the sync tip is often at
ground and black is at 300 mV; then white is at approximately
1.0 V. Some common RGB line amplifier boxes use emitterfollower buffers to split signals and increase drive capability.
This introduces a 700 mV dc offset to the signal, which must be
removed for proper capture by the AD9981.
The key to clamping is to identify a portion (time) of the signal
when the graphic system is known to be producing black. An
offset is then introduced that results in the ADC producing a
black output (Code 0x00) when the known black input is
present. The offset then remains in place when other signal
levels are processed, and the entire signal is shifted to eliminate
offset errors.
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 44
AD9981
In most PC graphics systems, black is transmitted between
active video lines. With CRT displays, when the electron beam
has completed writing a horizontal line on the screen (at the
right side), the beam is deflected quickly to the left side of the
screen (called horizontal retrace) and a black signal is provided
to prevent the beam from disturbing the image.
Clamping to midscale rather than ground can be accomplished
by setting the clamp select bits in the serial bus register. Each of
the three converters has its own selection bit so that they can be
independently clamped to either midscale or ground. These bits
are located in Register 0x18, Bits [3:1]. The midscale reference
voltage is internally generated for each converter.
In systems with embedded sync, a blacker-than-black signal
(Hsync) is produced briefly to signal the CRT that it is time to
begin a retrace. Because the input is not at black level at this
time, it is important to avoid clamping during Hsync. Fortunately, there is virtually always a period following Hsync, called
the ‘back porch’, where a good black reference is provided. This
is the time when clamping should be done.
GAIN AND OFFSET CONTROL
The clamp timing can be established by simply exercising the
CLAMP pin at the appropriate time with clamp source
(Register 0x18, Bit 4) = 1. The polarity of this signal is set by
the clamp polarity bit (Register 0x1B, Bits [7:6]).
A simpler method of clamp timing employs the AD9981
internal clamp timing generator. The clamp placement register
(Register 0x19) is programmed with the number of pixel
periods that should pass after the trailing edge of Hsync
before clamping starts. A second register, clamp duration,
(Register 0x1A) sets the duration of the clamp. These are both
8-bit values, providing considerable flexibility in clamp
generation. The clamp timing is referenced to the trailing edge
of Hsync because, though Hsync duration can vary widely, the
back porch (black reference) always follows Hsync. A good
starting point for establishing clamping is to set the clamp
placement to 0x04 (providing 4 pixel periods for the graphics
signal to stabilize after sync) and set the clamp duration to
0x28 (giving the clamp 40 pixel periods to reestablish the
black reference).
Clamping is accomplished by placing an appropriate charge on
the external input coupling capacitor. The value of this capacitor
affects the performance of the clamp. If it is too small, there will
be a significant amplitude change during a horizontal line time
(between clamping intervals). If the capacitor is too large, then
it will take excessively long for the clamp to recover from a large
change in incoming signal offset. The recommended value
(47 nF) results in recovering from a step error of 100 mV to
within 1 LSB in 30 lines with a clamp duration of 20 pixel
periods on a 85 Hz XGA signal.
YPbPr Clamping
YPbPr graphic signals are slightly different from RGB signals in
that the dc reference level (black level in RGB signals) of color
difference signals is at the midpoint of the video signal rather
than at the bottom. The three inputs are composed of
luminance (Y) and color difference (Pb and Pr) signals. For
color difference signals it is necessary to clamp to the midscale
range of the ADC range (512) rather than to the bottom of the
ADC range (0), while the Y channel is clamped to ground.
The AD9981 contains three programmable gain amplifiers
(PGAs), one for each of the three analog inputs. The range of
the PGA is sufficient to accommodate input signals with inputs
ranging from 0.5 V to 1.0 V full scale. The gain is set in three
9-bit registers (red gain [0x05, 0x06], green gain [0x07, 0x08],
blue gain [0x09, 0x0A]). For each of these registers, a gain
setting of 0 corresponds to the highest gain, while a gain setting
of 511 corresponds to the lowest gain. Note that increasing the
gain setting results in an image with less contrast.
The offset control shifts the analog input, resulting in a change
in brightness. Three 11-bit registers (red offset [0x0B, 0x0C],
green offset [0x0D, 0x0E], blue offset [0x0F, 0x10]) provide
independent settings for each channel. Note that the function of
the offset register depends on whether auto-offset is enabled
(Register 0x1B, Bit 5).
If manual offset is used, nine bits of the offset registers (for
the red channel Register 0x0B, Bits [6:0] plus Register 0x0C,
Bits [7:6]) control the absolute offset added to the channel. The
offset control provides ±255 LSBs of adjustment range, with one
LSB of offset corresponding to one LSB of output code.
Automatic Offset
In addition to the manual offset adjustment mode, the AD9981
also includes circuitry to automatically calibrate the offset for
each channel. By monitoring the output of each ADC during
the back porch of the input signals, the AD9981 can self-adjust
to eliminate any offset errors in its own ADC channels and any
offset errors present on the incoming graphics or video signals.
To activate the auto-offset mode, set Register 0x1B, Bit 5 to 1.
Next, the target code registers (0x0B through 0x10) must be
programmed. The values programmed into the target code
registers should be the output code desired from the AD9981
during the back porch reference time. For example, for RGB
signals, all three registers would normally be programmed to
Code 1, while for YPbPr signals the green (Y) channel is normally set to Code 1 and the blue and red channels (Pb and Pr)
are set to 512. The target code registers have 11 bits per channel
and are in twos complement format. This allows any value
between –1024 and +1023 to be programmed. Although any
value in this range can be programmed, the AD9981’s offset
range may not be able to reach every value. Intended target code
values range from (but are not limited to) –160 to –1 and +1 to
+160 when ground clamping, and +350 to +670 when midscale
clamping. Note that a target code of 0 is not valid.
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 44
AD9981
The internal logic for the auto-offset circuit requires 16 data
clock cycles to perform its function. This operation is executed
immediately after the clamping pulse. Therefore, it is important
to end the clamping pulse signal at least 16 data clock cycles
before active video. This is true whether using the AD9981’s
internal clamp circuit or an external clamp signal. The autooffset function can be programmed to run continuously or on a
one-time basis (see auto-offset hold, Register 0x2C, Bit 4). In
continuous mode, the update frequency can be programmed
(Register 0x1B, Bits [4:3]). Continuous operation with updates
every 64 Hsyncs is recommended.
A guideline for basic auto-offset operation is shown in Table 5
and Table 6.
Table 5. RGB Auto-Offset Register Settings
Register
0x0B
0x0C
0x0D
0x0E
0x0F
0x10
0x18, Bits [3:1]
Value
0x00
0x80
0x00
0x80
0x00
0x80
000
0x1B, Bit [5:3]
110
Comments
Sets red target to 4
Must be written
Sets green target to 4
Must be written
Sets blue target to 4
Must be written
Sets red, green, and blue
channels to ground clamp
Selects update rate and
enables auto-offset.
Table 6. PbPr Auto-Offset Register Settings
Register
0x0B
0x0C
0x0D
0x0E
0x0F
0x10
0x18 Bits [3:1]
Value
0x40
0x00
0x00
0x80
0x40
0x00
101
0x1B, Bit [5:3]
110
Comments
Sets Pr (red) target to 512
Must be written
Sets Y (green) target to 4
Must be written
Sets Pb (blue) target to 512
Must be written
Sets Pb, Pr to midscale clamp
and Y to ground clamp
Selects update rate and
enables auto-offset.
The sync-on-green input operates in two steps. First, it sets a
baseline clamp level off of the incoming video signal with a
negative peak detector. Second, it sets the sync trigger level to
a programmable (Register 0x1D, Bits [7:3]) level (typically
128 mV) above the negative peak. The sync-on-green input
must be ac-coupled to the green analog input through its own
capacitor. The value of the capacitor must be 1 nF ±20%. If
sync-on-green is not used, this connection is not required. The
sync-on-green signal always has negative polarity.
47nF
RAIN
47nF
BAIN
47nF
GAIN
1nF
SOG
04739-004
The ability to program a target code gives a large degree of
freedom and flexibility. While in most cases all channels are set
to either 1 or 512, the flexibility to select other values allows the
possibility of inserting intentional skews between channels. It
also allows the ADC range to be skewed so that voltages outside
of the normal range can be digitized. For example, setting the
target code to 40 allows the sync tip, which is normally below
black level, to be digitized and evaluated.
Sync-on-Green
Figure 4. Typical Input Configuration
Reference Bypassing
REFLO and REFHI are connected to each other by a 10 µF
capacitor. REFCM is connected to ground by a 10 µF capacitor.
These references are used by the input PGA circuitry.
REFHI
10µF
REFLO
10µF
REFCM
04739-014
Negative target codes are included in order to duplicate a feature that is present with manual offset adjustment. The benefit
that is being mimicked is the ability to easily adjust brightness
on a display. By setting the target code to a value that does not
correspond to the ideal ADC range, the end result is an image
that is either brighter or darker. A target code higher than ideal
results in a brighter image, while a target code lower than ideal
results in a darker image.
Figure 5. Input Amplifier Reference Capacitors
Clock Generation
A PLL is used to generate the pixel clock. The Hsync input
provides a reference frequency to the PLL. A voltagecontrolled oscillator (VCO) generates a much higher pixel clock
frequency. The pixel clock is divided by the PLL divide value
(Register 0x01 and Register 0x02) and phase-compared with the
Hsync input. Any error is used to shift the VCO frequency and
maintain lock between the two signals.
The stability of this clock is a very important element in
providing the clearest and most stable image. During each pixel
time, there is a period when the signal is slewing from the old
pixel amplitude and settling at its new value. Then there is a
time when the input voltage is stable, before the signal must
slew to a new value (see Figure 6). The ratio of the slewing time
to the stable time is a function of the bandwidth of the graphics
DAC and the bandwidth of the transmission system (cable and
termination). It is also a function of the overall pixel rate.
Clearly, if the dynamic characteristics of the system remain
fixed, then the slewing and settling time is likewise fixed. This
time must be subtracted from the total pixel period, leaving the
stable period. At higher pixel frequencies, the total cycle time is
shorter and the stable pixel time also becomes shorter.
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 44
AD9981
PIXEL CLOCK
INVALID SAMPLE TIMES
range register sets this operating range. The frequency
ranges for the four regions are shown in Table 7.
Table 7. VCO Frequency Ranges
04739-005
PV1
0
0
1
1
Figure 6. Pixel Sampling Times
3.
Any jitter in the clock reduces the precision with which the
sampling time can be determined and must also be subtracted
from the stable pixel time. Considerable care has been taken in
the design of the AD9981’s clock generation circuit to minimize
jitter. The clock jitter of the AD9981 is 9% or less of the total
pixel time in all operating modes, making the reduction in the
valid sampling time due to jitter negligible.
The PLL characteristics are determined by the loop filter design,
the PLL charge pump current, and the VCO range setting. The
loop filter design is illustrated in Figure 7. Recommended
settings of the VCO range and charge pump current for VESA
standard display modes are listed in Table 9.
CZ
80nF
CP
8nF
PV0
0
1
0
1
Pixel Clock
Range (MHz)
10–21
21–42
42–84
84-95
KVCO
Gain (MHz/V)
150
150
150
150
The 3-Bit Charge Pump Current Register. This register
varies the current that drives the low-pass loop filter. The
possible current values are listed in Table 8.
Table 8. Charge Pump Current/Control Bits
Ip2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
Ip1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
Ip0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
Current (µA)
50
100
150
250
350
500
750
1500
PVD
RZ
1.5kΩ
04739-006
FILT
4.
Figure 7. PLL Loop Filter Detail
Four programmable registers are provided to optimize the
performance of the PLL. These registers are
1.
The 12-Bit Divisor Register. The input Hsync frequencies
can accommodate any Hsync as long as the product of the
Hsync and the PLL divisor falls within the operating range
of the VCO. The PLL multiplies the frequency of the Hsync
signal, producing pixel clock frequencies in the range of
10 MHz to 95 MHz. The divisor register controls the exact
multiplication factor. This register may be set to any value
between 2 and 4095 as long as the output frequency is
within range.
2.
The 2-Bit VCO Range Register. To improve the noise
performance of the AD9981, the VCO operating frequency
range is divided into four overlapping regions. The VCO
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 44
The 5-Bit Phase Adjust Register. The phase of the generated sampling clock may be shifted to locate an optimum
sampling point within a clock cycle. The phase adjust
register provides 32 phase-shift steps of 11.25° each. The
Hsync signal with an identical phase shift is available
through the HSOUT pin. Phase adjust is still available if an
external pixel clock is used. The COAST pin or the internal
Coast is used to allow the PLL to continue to run at the
same frequency in the absence of the incoming Hsync
signal or during disturbances in Hsync (such as from
equalization pulses). This may be used during the vertical
sync period or at any other time that the Hsync signal is
unavailable. The polarity of the Coast signal may be set
through the Coast polarity register (Register 0x18,
Bits [6:5]). Also, the polarity of the Hsync signal may
be set through the Hsync polarity register (Register 0x12,
Bits [5:4]). For both Hsync and Coast, a value of 1 is active
high. The internal Coast function is driven off the Vsync
signal, which is typically a time when Hsync signals may be
disrupted with extra equalization pulses.
AD9981
Table 9. Recommended VCO Range and Charge Pump and Current Settings for Standard Display Formats
Refresh Rate
Horizontal Frequency
Pixel Rate
PLL
(kHz)
(MHz)
Divider
Standard Resolution (Hz)
VGA
640 × 480
SVGA
800 × 600
XGA
1024 × 768
TV
480i
480p
576i
576p
720p
1035i
1080i
60
72
75
85
56
60
72
75
85
60
70
75
80
85
30
60
30
60
60
30
60
31.500
37.700
37.500
43.300
35.100
37.900
48.100
46.900
53.700
48.400
56.500
60.000
64.000
68.300
15.750
31.470
15.625
31.250
45.000
33.750
33.750
25.175
31.500
31.500
36.000
36.000
40.000
50.000
49.500
56.250
65.000
75.000
78.750
85.500
94.500
13.510
27.000
13.500
27.000
74.250
74.250
74.250
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 44
800
832
840
832
1024
1056
1040
1056
1048
1344
1328
1312
1336
1376
858
858
864
864
1650
2200
2200
VCORNGE
Current
01
01
01
01
01
01
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
00
01
00
01
10
10
10
100
100
100
101
101
100
100
100
100
101
110
110
100
100
100
100
100
100
101
101
101
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
POLARITY
DETECT
SOGIN0
ACTIVITY
DETECT
SOGIN1
EQ PULSE
FILTER
FILTERED,
RECONSTRUCTED
HSYNC
SYNC
SLICER
SYNC
PROCESSOR
ACTIVITY
DETECT
VSYNC0
ACTIVITY
DETECT
POLARITY
DETECT
VSYNC1
ACTIVITY
DETECT
SET POLARITY
ACTIVITY
DETECT
HSYNC1
HSYNC
MUX
SOGOUT
MUX
POLARITY
DETECT
CHANNEL
MUX
ACTIVITY
DETECT
CHANNEL
MUX
HSYNC0
HSYNC
SELECT
CHANNEL
MUX
CHANNEL
SELECT
SET POLARITY
SOGOUT
VSYNCOUT
VSYNC
POLARITY
DETECT
HSYNC/VSYNC
H/V COUNT
R26, R27
HSYNC
COAST
MUX
COAST
SET POLARITY
VSYNCOUT
SET POLARITY
DATACK
PLL CLOCK
GENERATOR
04739-013
COAST
AD9981
Figure 8. Sync Processing Block Diagram
Sync Processing
The inputs of the sync processing section of the AD9981 are
combinations of digital Hsyncs and Vsyncs, analog sync-ongreen, or sync-on-Y signals, and an optional external Coast
signal. From these signals it generates a precise, jitter-free (9%
or less at 95 MHz) clock from its PLL; an odd-/even-field signal;
Hsync and Vsync out signals; a count of Hsyncs per Vsync; and
a programmable SOG output. The main sync processing blocks
are the sync slicer, sync separator, Hsync filter, Hsync
regenerator, Vsync filter, and Coast generator.
The sync slicer extracts the sync signal from the green graphics
or luminance video signal that is connected to the SOGIN input
and outputs a digital composite sync. The sync separator’s task
is to extract Vsync from the composite sync signal, which can
come from either the sync slicer or the Hsync input. The Hsync
filter is used to eliminate any extraneous pulses from the Hsync
or SOGIN inputs, outputting a clean, low-jitter signal that is
appropriate for mode detection and clock generation. The
Hsync regenerator is used to recreate a clean, although not low
jitter, Hsync signal that can be used for mode detection and
counting Hsyncs per Vsync. The Vsync filter is used to eliminate spurious Vsyncs, maintain a stable timing relationship
between the Vsync and Hsync output signals, and generate the
odd/even field output. The Coast generator creates a robust
Coast signal that allows the PLL to maintain its frequency in the
absence of Hsync pulses.
Sync Slicer
The purpose of the sync slicer is to extract the sync signal from
the green graphics or luminance video signal that is connected
to the SOGIN input. The sync signal is extracted in a two step
process. First, the SOG input is clamped to its negative peak,
(typically 0.3 V below the black level). Next, the signal goes to a
comparator with a variable trigger level (set by Register 0x1D,
Bits [7:3]), but nominally 0.128 V above the clamped level. The
sync slicer output is a digital composite sync signal containing
both Hsync and Vsync information (see Figure 9).
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 44
AD9981
NEGATIVE PULSE WIDTH = 40 SAMPLE CLOCKS
700mV MAXIMUM
SOG INPUT
–300mV
0mV
–300mV
SOGOUT OUTPUT
CONNECTED TO
HSYNCIN
04739-015
COMPOSITE
SYNC
AT HSYNCIN
VSYNCOUT
FROM SYNC
SEPARATOR
Figure 9. Sync Slicer and Sync Separator Output
Sync Separator
As part of sync processing, the sync separator’s task is to extract
Vsync from the composite sync signal. It works on the idea that
the Vsync signal stays active for a much longer time than the
Hsync signal. By using a digital low-pass filter and a digital
comparator, it rejects pulses with small durations (such as
Hsyncs and equalization pulses) and only passes pulses with
large durations, such as Vsync (see Figure 9).
The threshold of the digital comparator is programmable for
maximum flexibility. To program the threshold duration, write a
value (N) to Register 0x11. The resulting pulse width is N ×
200 ns. So, if N = 5 the digital comparator threshold is 1 µs. Any
pulse less than 1 µs is rejected, while any pulse greater than 1 µs
passes through.
There are two things to keep in mind when using the sync
separator. First, the resulting clean Vsync output is delayed from
the original Vsync by a duration equal to the digital comparator
threshold (N × 200 ns). Second, there is some variability to the
200 ns multiplier value. The maximum variability over all
operating conditions is ±20% (160 ns to 240 ns). Since normal
Vsync and Hsync pulse widths differ by a factor of about 500 or
more, the 20% variability is not an issue.
Hsync Filter and Regenerator
The Hsync filter is used to eliminate any extraneous pulses from
the Hsync or SOGIN inputs, outputting a clean, low-jitter signal
that is appropriate for mode detection and clock generation.
The Hsync regenerator is used to recreate a clean, although not
low jitter, Hsync signal that can be used for mode detection and
counting Hsyncs per Vsync. The Hsync regenerator has a high
degree of tolerance to extraneous and missing pulses on the
Hsync input, but is not appropriate for use by the PLL in
creating the pixel clock due to jitter.
The Hsync regenerator runs automatically and requires no
setup to operate. The Hsync filter requires the setting up of a
filter window. The filter window sets a periodic window of time
around the regenerated Hsync leading edge where valid Hsyncs
are allowed to occur. The general idea is that extraneous pulses
on the sync input occur outside of this filter window and thus
are filtered out. In order to set the filter window timing, program a value (x) into Register 0x23. The resulting filter window
time is ±x times 25 ns around the regenerated Hsync leading
edge. Just as for the sync separator threshold multiplier, allow a
±20% variance in the 25 ns multiplier to account for all operating conditions (20 ns to 30 ns range).
A second output from the Hsync filter is a status bit (0x25,
Bit 1) that tells whether extraneous pulses were present on the
incoming sync signal or not. Many times extraneous pulses are
included for copy protection purposes, so this status bit can be
used to detect that.
The filtered Hsync (rather than the raw Hsync/SOGIN signal)
for pixel clock generation by the PLL is controlled by
Register 0x20, Bit 2. The regenerated Hsync (rather than
the raw Hsync/ SOGIN signal) for the sync processing is
controlled by Register 0x20, Bit 1. Use of the filtered Hsync
and regenerated Hsync is recommended. See Figure 10 for an
illustration of a filtered Hsync.
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
HSYNCIN
FILTER
WINDOW
HSYNCOUT
VSYNC
EQUALIZATION
PULSES
EXPECTED
EDGE
04739-016
FILTER
WINDOW
Figure 10. Sync Processing Filter
Vsync Filter and Odd/Even Fields
SYNC SEPARATOR THRESHOLD
The filter works by examining the placement of Vsync with
respect to Hsync and if necessary shifting it in time slightly.
The goal is to keep the Vsync and Hsync leading edges from
switching at the same time, thus eliminating confusion as to
when the first line of a frame occurs. Register 0x14, Bit 2
enables the Vsync filter. Use of the Vsync filter is recommended
for all cases, including interlaced video, and is required when
using the Hsyncs per Vsync counter. Figure 12 illustrates
even/odd field determination in two situations.
FIELD 1
QUADRANT
2
3
FIELD 0
4
1
FIELD 1
2
3
FIELD 0
4
1
HSYNCIN
VSYNCIN
VSYNCOUT
O/E FIELD
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 44
ODD FIELD
Figure 11.
04739-017
The Vsync filter is used to eliminate spurious Vsyncs, maintain
a stable timing relationship between the Vsync and Hsync
output signals, and generate the odd/even field output.
AD9981
SYNC SEPARATOR THRESHOLD
FIELD 1
QUADRANT
2
FIELD 0
3
4
1
FIELD 1
2
With manual power-down control, the polarity of the powerdown pin must be set (0x1E, Bit 2) regardless of whether the pin
is used. If unused, it is recommended to set the polarity to active
high and hardwire the pin to ground with a 10 kΩ resistor.
FIELD 0
3
4
1
HSYNCIN
VSYNCIN
04739-018
VSYNCOUT
O/E FIELD
EVEN FIELD
Figure 12. Vsync Filter—Odd/Even
Power Management
To meet display requirements for low standby power, the
AD9981 includes a power-down mode. The power-down state
can be controlled manually (via Pin 17 or Register 0x1E, Bit 3),
or completely automatically by the chip. If automatic control is
selected (0x1E, Bit 4), the AD9981’s decision is based on the
status of the sync detect bits (Register 0x24, Bits 2, 3, 6, and 7). If
either an Hsync or a sync-on-green input is detected on any
input, the chip powers up, or else it powers down. For manual
control, the AD9981 allows flexibility of control through both a
dedicated pin and a register bit. The dedicated pin allows a
hardware watchdog circuit to control power-down, while the
register bit allows power-down to be controlled by software.
In power-down mode, there are several circuits that continue to
operate as normal. The serial register and sync detect circuits
maintain power so that the AD9981 can be woken up from
its power-down state. The bandgap circuit maintains power
because it is needed for sync detection. The sync-on-green and
SOGOUT functions continue to operate because the SOGOUT
output is needed when sync detection is performed by a
secondary chip. All of these circuits require minimal power to
operate. Typical standby power on the AD9981 is about 50 mW.
There are two options that can be selected when in powerdown. These are controlled by Bits 0 and 1 in Register 0x1E. The
first bit controls whether the SOGOUT pin is in high impedance or not. In most cases, the user will not place SOGOUT in
high impedance during normal operation. The option to put
SOGOUT in high impedance is included mainly to allow for
factory testing modes. The second option keeps the AD9981
powered up while placing only the outputs in high impedance.
This option is useful when the data outputs from two chips are
connected on a PCB and the user wants to switch
instantaneously between the two.
Table 10. Power-Down Control and Mode Descriptions
Inputs
Mode
Power-Up
Power-Down
Auto Power-Down
Control1
1
1
Power-Down2
X
X
Sync Detect3
1
0
Power-Up
Power-Down
0
0
0
1
X
X
1
2
3
Powered-On or Comments
Everything
Only the serial bus, sync activity detect,
SOG, bandgap reference
Everything
Only the serial bus, sync activity detect,
SOG, bandgap reference
Auto power-down control is set by Register 0x1E, Bit 4.
Power-down is controlled by OR’ing Pin 17 with Register 0x1E, Bit 3. The polarity of Pin 17 is set by Register 0x1E, Bit 2.
Sync detect is determined by OR’ing Register 0x24, Bits 2, 3, 6, and 7.
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
latch the output data externally. There is a pipeline in the
AD9981, which must be flushed before valid data becomes
available. This means six data sets are presented before valid
data is available.
TIMING DIAGRAMS
The following timing diagrams show the operation of the
AD9981.The output data clock signal is created so that its rising
edge always occurs between data transitions and can be used to
tPER
tDCYCLE
DATACK
tSKEW
04739-007
DATA
HSOUT
Figure 13. Output Timing
DATAIN
P0
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
P7
P9
P8
P10
P11
HSIN
DATACLK
8 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
DATAOUT
P0
P1
P2
P3
04739-008
2 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
HSOUT
Figure 14. 4:4:4 Timing Mode
DATAIN
P0
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
P7
P8
P9
P10
P11
HSIN
DATACLK
8 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
YOUT
CB/CROUT
Y0
Y1
Y2
Y3
B0
R0
B2
R2
2 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
1. PIXEL AFTER HSOUT CORRESONDS TO BLUE INPUT.
2. EVEN NUMBER OF PIXEL DELAY BETWEEN HSOUT AND DATAOUT (6 FOR THE AD9980).
Figure 15. 4:2:2 Timing Mode
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 44
04739-009
HSOUT
AD9981
DATAIN
P0
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
P7
P8
P9
P10
P11
HSIN
DATACLK
8 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
F0 R0 F1 R1 F2 R2 F3 R3
2 CLOCK CYCLE DELAY
HSOUT
GENERAL NOTES
1. DATA DELAY MAY VARY ± ONE CLOCK CYCLE, DEPENDING ON PHASE SETTING.
2. ADCs SAMPLE INPUT ON FALLING EDGE OF DATACLK.
3. HSYNC SHOWN IS ACTIVE HIGH (EDGE SHOWN IS LEADING EDGE).
04739-010
DDR NOTES
1. OUTPUT DATACLK MAY BE DELAYED 1/4 CLOCK PERIOD IN THE REGISTERS.
2. SEE PROJECT DOCUMENT FOR VALUES OF F (FALLING EDGE) AND R (RISING EDGE).
3. FOR DDR 4:2:2 MODE: TIMING IS IDENTICAL, VALUES OF F AND R CHANGE.
Figure 16. DDR Timing Mode
HSYNC TIMING
The Hsync is processed in the AD9981 to eliminate ambiguity
in the timing of the leading edge with respect to the phasedelayed pixel clock and data.
The Hsync input is used as a reference to generate the pixel
sampling clock. The sampling phase can be adjusted with
respect to Hsync through a full 360° in 32 steps via the phase
adjust register (to optimize the pixel sampling time). Display
systems use Hsync to align memory and display write cycles, so
it is important to have a stable timing relationship between
Hsync output (HSOUT) and the data clock (DATACK).
Three things happen to Hsync in the AD9981. First, the polarity
of Hsync input is determined and thus has a known output polarity. The known output polarity can be programmed either
active high or active low (Register 0x12, Bit 3). Second, HSOUT
is aligned with DATACK and data outputs. Third, the duration
of HSOUT (in pixel clocks) is set via Register 0x13. HSOUT is
the sync signal that should be used to drive the rest of the
display system.
The Coast input is provided to eliminate this problem. It is an
asynchronous input that disables the PLL input and holds the
clock at its current frequency. The PLL can free run for several
lines without significant frequency drift. Coast can be generated
internally by the AD9981 (see Register 0x18) or can be provided
externally by the graphics controller.
When internal Coast is selected (Register 0x18, Bit 7 = 0, and
Register 0x14, Bits [7:6] to select source), Vsync is used as a
basis for determining the position of Coast. The internal Coast
signal is enabled a programmed number of Hsync periods
before the periodic Vsync signal (Precoast Register 0x16) and
dropped a programmed number of Hsync periods after Vsync
(Postcoast Register 0x17). It is recommended that the Vsync
filter be enabled when using the internal Coast function to
allow the AD9981 to determine precisely the number of
Hsyncs/Vsync and their location. In many applications where
disruptions occur and Coast is used, values of 2 for Precoast
and 10 DDR for Postcoast are sufficient to avoid most
extraneous pulses.
OUTPUT FORMATTER
COAST TIMING
In most computer systems, the Hsync signal is provided
continuously on a dedicated wire. In these systems, the Coast
input and function are unnecessary and should not be used.
In some systems, however, Hsync is disturbed during Vsync. In
some cases, Hsync pulses disap-pear. In other systems, such as
those that employ composite sync (Csync) signals or embedded
sync-on-green, Hsync may include equalization pulses or other
distortions during Vsync. To avoid upsetting the clock generator
during Vsync, it is important to ignore these distortions. If the
pixel clock PLL sees extraneous pulses, it attempts to lock to the
new frequency and will have changed frequency by the end of
the Vsync period. It then takes a few lines of correct Hsync
timing to recover at the beginning of a new frame, resulting in a
tearing of the image at the top of the display.
The output formatter is capable of generating several output
formats to be presented to the 30 data output pins. The output
formats and the pin assignments for each format are listed in
Table 11. Also, there are several clock options for the output
clock. The user may select the pixel clock, a 90° phase-shifted
pixel clock, a 2× pixel clock, or a fixed frequency 40 MHz clock
for test purposes. The output clock may also be inverted.
Data output is available as 30 pin RGB or YCbCr or if either
4:2:2 or 4:4:4 DDR is selected, a secondary channel is available.
This secondary channel is always 4:2:2 DDR and allows the
flexibility of having a second channel with the same video data
that can be utilized by another display or a storage device.
Depending on the choice of output modes, the primary output
can be 30 pins, 20 pins or as few as 15 pins.
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
•
Mode Descriptions
•
4:4:4—All channels come out with their 10 data bits at the
same time. Data is aligned to the negative edge of the clock
for easy capture. This is the normal 30-bit output mode for
RGB or 4:4:4 YCbCr.
•
4:2:2—Red and green channels contain 4:2:2 formatted
data (20 pins) with Y data on the green channel and Cb, Cr
data on the red channel. Data is aligned to the negative
edge of the clock. The blue channel contains the secondary
channel with Cb, Y, Cr, Y formatted 4:2:2 DDR data. The
data edges are aligned to both edges of the pixel clock, so
use of the 90° clock may be necessary to capture the DDR
data.
4:4:4 DDR—This mode puts out full 4:4:4 data on 15 bits of
the red and green channels, thus saving 15 pins. The first
half (RGB [14:0]) of the 30-bit data is sent on the rising
edge and the second half (RGB [29:15]) is sent on the
falling edge. DDR 4:2:2 data is sent on the blue channel, as
in 4:2:2 mode.
RGB [29:0] = R [9:0] + G [9:0] + B [9:0], so RGB [29:15] =
R [9:0] + G [9:5] and RGB [14:0] = G [4:0] + B [9:0]
Table 11. Output Formats
Port
Bit
4:4:4
4:2:21
4:4:4
DDR
1
2
9
8
7
6
Red
5 4 3
Red/Cr
2
1
0
9
8
7
6
Cb, Cr
DDR ↑2 G [4:0]
DDR ↓ R [9:0]
Green
5 4 3
Green/Y
DDR ↓ G [9:5]
1
0
9
8
7
6
Blue
5 4 3
Blue/Cb
2
DDR 4:2:2 ↑ Cb, Cr ↓ Y,Y
Y
DDR ↑ B [9:0]
2
N/A
N/A
For 4:2:2 modes, the first item in the list is the first pixel after Hsync.
Arrows in the table indicate clock edge. Rising edge of clock = ↑, falling edge = ↓.
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 44
DDR 4:2:2 ↑ Cb,Cr
DDR 4:2:2 ↓ Y,Y
1
0
AD9981
TWO-WIRE SERIAL REGISTER MAP
The AD9981 is initialized and controlled by a set of registers, which determine the operating modes. An external controller is employed to
write and read the control registers through the two-wire serial interface port.
Table 12. Control Register Map
Hexadecimal
Address
0x00
0x01
Read and
Write or
Read Only
RO
R/W
Bits
7:0
7:0
0x02
R/W
0x03
R/W
Default
Value
0110 1001
Register Name
Chip Revision
PLL Div MSB
7:4
1101 ****
PLL Div LSB
7:6
01** ****
VCO/CPMP
5:3
**00 1***
Description
An 8-bit register that represents the silicon revision level.
This register is for bits [11:4] of the PLL divider. Larger values
mean the PLL operates at a faster rate. This register should be
loaded first whenever a change is needed. (This will give the PLL
more time to lock.)1
Bits [7:4] LSBs of the PLL Divider Word. Links to the PLL Div MSB
to make a 12-bit register.
Bits [7:6] VCO Range. Selects VCO frequency range.
(See PLL description).
Bits [5:3] Charge Pump Current. Varies the current that drives the
low-pass filter. (See PLL description).
Bit 2. External Clock Enable.
ADC Clock Phase Adjustment. Larger values mean more delay.
(1 LSB = T/32).
7-Bit Red Channel Gain Control. Controls ADC input range
(contrast) of each respective channel. Bigger values give less
contrast.
Linked with Register 0x05 to form the 9-bit red gain that controls
the ADC input range (contrast) of the red channel. A lower value
corresponds to a higher gain.
7-Bit Green Channel Gain Control. Controls ADC input range
(contrast) of each respective channel. Bigger values give less
contrast.
Linked to Register 0x07 to form the 9-bit green gain that controls
the ADC input range (contrast) of the green channel. A lower
value corresponds to a higher gain.
7-Bit Blue Channel Gain Control. Controls ADC input range
(contrast) of each respective channel. Bigger values give less
contrast.
Linked to Register 0x09 to form the 9-bit blue gain that controls
the ADC input range (contrast) of the blue channel. A lower value
corresponds to a higher gain.
8-Bit MSBs of the Red Channel Offset Control. Controls dc offset
(brightness) of each respective channel. Bigger values decrease
brightness.
Linked to Register 0x0B to form the 11-bit red offset that controls
the dc offset (brightness) of the red channel in auto-offset mode.
8-Bit MSBs of the Green Channel Offset Control. Controls dc
offset (brightness) of each respective channel. Bigger values
decrease brightness.
Linked to Register 0x0D to form the 11-bit green offset that
controls the dc offset (brightness) of the green channel in autooffset mode.
8-Bit MSBs of the Red Channel Offset Control. Controls dc offset
(brightness) of each respective channel. Bigger values decrease
brightness.
Linked to Register 0x0F to form the 11-bit blue offset which
controls the dc offset (brightness) of the blue channel in autooffset mode.
1
0x04
R/W
2
7:3
**** *0**
1000 0***
Phase Adjust
0x05
R/W
6:0
*100 0000
Red Gain MSBs
0x06
R/W
7:0
00** ****
Red Gain LSBs
0x07
R/W
6:0
*100 0000
Green Gain
MSBs
0x08
R/W
7:0
00** ****
Green Gain LSBs
0x09
R/W
6:0
*100 0000
Blue Gain MSBs
0x0A
R/W
7:0
00** ****
Blue Gain LSBs
0x0B
R/W
7:0
0100 0000
Red Offset MSBs
0x0C
R/W
7
000* ****
Red Offset LSBs
0x0D
R/W
7:0
0100 0000
Green Offset
MSBs
1
1
1
1
1
0x0E
R/W
7
000* ****
Green Offset
LSBs
0x0F
R/W
7:0
0100 0000
Blue Offset MSBs
0x10
R/W
7
000* ****
Blue Offset LSBs
1
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
Hexadecimal
Address
0x11
Read and
Write or
Read Only
R/W
Bits
7:0
Default
Value
0010 0000
0x12
R/W
7
0*** ****
6
*0** ****
5
**0* ****
4
***1 ****
3
**** 1***
7:0
7
0010 0000
0*** ****
6
*0** ****
5
**0* ****
4
***1 ****
3
**** 1***
2
**** *0**
1
**** **0*
0x13
0x14
R/W
R/W
Register Name
Sync Separator
Threshold
Hsync Control
Hsync Duration
Vsync Control
0x15
R/W
7:0
0000 1010
Vsync Duration
0x16
0x17
0x18
R/W
R/W
R/W
7:0
7:0
7
0000 0000
0000 0000
0*** ****
Precoast
Postcoast
Coast and Clamp
Control
Description
This register sets the threshold of the sync separator’s digital
comparator.
Active Hsync Override.
0 = The chip determines the active Hsync source.
1 = The active Hsync Source is set by 0x12, Bit 6.
Selects the source of the Hsync for PLL and sync processing. This
bit is used only if 0x12, Bit 7 is set to 1 or if both syncs are active.
0 = Hsync is from Hsync input pin.
1 = Hsync is from SOG.
Hsync Polarity Override.
0 = The chip selects the Hsync input polarity.
1 = The polarity of the input Hsync is controlled by 0x12, Bit 4.
This applies to both Hsync0 and Hsync1.
Hsync input polarity: this bit is used only if 0x12, Bit 5 is set to 1.
0 = Active low input Hsync.
1 = Active high input Hsync.
Sets the polarity of the Hsync output signal.
0 = Active low Hsync output.
1 = Active high Hsync output.
Sets the number of pixel clocks that Hsync out is active.
Active Vsync Override.
0 = The chip determines the active Vsync source.
1 = The active Vsync source is set by 0x14, Bit 6.
Selects the source of Vsync for the sync processing. This bit is
used only if 0x14, Bit 7 is set to 1.
0 = Vsync is from the VSYNC input pin.
1 = Vsync is from the sync separator.
Vsync Polarity Override.
0 = The chip selects the input Vsync polarity.
1 = The polarity of the input Vsync is set by 0x14, Bit 4.
This applies to both Vsync0 and Vsync1.
Vsync input polarity: this bit is used only if 0x14, Bit 5 is set to 1.
0 = Active low input Vsync.
1 = Active high input Vsync.
Sets the polarity of the output Vsync signal.
0 = Active low output Vsync.
1 = Active high output Vsync.
0 = The Vsync filter is disabled.
1 = The Vsync filter is enabled.
This needs to be enabled when using the Hsync to Vsync
counter.
Enables the Vsync duration block. This is designed to be used
with the Vsync filter.
0 = Vsync output duration is unchanged.
1 = Vsync output duration is set by Register 0x15.
Sets the number of Hsyncs that Vsync out is active. This is only
used if 0x14, Bit 1 is set to 1.
The number of Hsync periods to Coast prior to Vsync.
The number of Hsync periods to Coast after Vsync.
Coast Source.
Selects the source of the Coast signal.
0 = Using internal Coast generated from Vsync.
1 = Using external Coast signal from external Coast pin.
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 44
AD9981
Hexadecimal
Address
Read and
Write or
Read Only
Bits
6
Default
Value
*0** ****
5
**1* ****
4
***0 ****
3
**** 0***
2
**** *0**
1
**** **0*
0x19
R/W
0
7:0
**** ***0
0000 1000
0x1A
R/W
7:0
0010 0000
0x1B
R/W
7
0*** ****
6
*1** ****
5
**0* ****
4:3
***1 1***
2:0
7:0
7:3
**** *011
1111 1111
0111 1***
2
**** *0**
1:0
**** **00
7
*** ****
6
*0** ****
0x1C
0x1D
0x1E
R/W
R/W
R/W
Register Name
Clamp
Placement
Clamp Duration
Clamp and
Offset
TestReg0
SOG Control
Power
Description
Coast Polarity Override.
0 = The chip selects the external Coast polarity.
1 = The polarity of the external Coast signal is set by 0x18, Bit 5.
Coast Input Polarity.
This bit is used only if 0x18, Bit 6 is set to 1.
0 = Active low external Coast.
1 = Active high external Coast.
Clamp Source Select.
0 = Use the internal clamp generated from Hsync.
1 = Use the external clamp signal.
Red Clamp.
0 = Clamp the red channel to ground.
1 = Clamp the red channel to midscale.
Green Clamp.
0 = Clamp the green channel to ground.
1 = Clamp the green channel to midscale.
Blue Clamp.
0 = Clamp the blue channel to ground.
1 = Clamp the blue channel to midscale.
Must be set to 0 for proper operation.
Places the clamp signal an integer of clock periods after the
trailing edge of the Hsync signal.
Number of clock periods that the clamp signal is actively
clamping.
External clamp polarity override.
0 = The chip selects the clamp polarity.
1 = The polarity of the clamp signal is set by 0x1B, Bit 6.
External Clamp Input Polarity. This bit is used only if 0x1B, Bit 7 is
set to 1.
0 = Active low external clamp.
1 = Active high external clamp.
0 = Auto-offset is disabled.
1 = Auto-offset is enabled (offsets become the desired clamp
code).
This selects how often the auto-offset circuit operates. 00 = every
clamp; 01 = 16 clamps; 10 = every 64 clamps; 11 = every Vsync.
Must be written to default (011) for proper operation.
Must be set to 0xFF for proper operation.
SOG slicer threshold. Sets the voltage level of the SOG slicer’s
comparator.
SOGOUT Polarity.
Sets the polarity of the signal on the SOGOUT pin.
0 = Active low SOGOUT.
1 = Active high SOGOUT.
SOGOUT Select.
00 = Raw SOG from sync slicer (SOG0 or SOG1).
01 = Raw Hsync (Hsync0 or Hsync1).
10 = Regenerated sync from sync filter.
11 = Filtered sync from sync filter.
Channel Select Override.
0 = The chip determines which input channels to use.
1 = The input channel selection is determined by 0x1E, Bit 6.
Channel Select.
Input channel select: this is used only if 0x1E, Bit 7 is set to 1, or if
syncs are present on both channels.
0 = Channel 0 syncs and data are selected.
1 = Channel 1 syncs and data are selected.
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 44
AD9981
Hexadecimal
Address
0x1F
0x20
Preliminary Technical Data
Read and
Write or
Read Only
R/W
R/W
Bits
5
Default
Value
**1* ****
4
***1 ****
3
**** 0***
2
**** *0**
1
**** **0*
0
**** ***0
7:5
100* ****
4
***1 ****
3
**** 0***
2:1
**** *10*
0
**** ***0
7:6
0*** ****
5
*0** ****
4
**0* ****
3
***0 ****
2
**** 1***
Register Name
Output Select 1
Output Select 2
Description
Programmable Bandwidth.
0 = Low analog input bandwidth.
1 = High analog input bandwidth.
Power-Down Control Select.
0 = Manual power-down control.
1 = Auto power-down control.
Power-Down.
0 = Normal operation.
1 = Power-down.
Power-Down Pin Polarity.
0 = Active low.
1 = Active high.
Power-Down Fast Switching Control.
0 = Normal power-down operation.
1 = The chip stays powered up and the outputs are put in high
impedance mode.
SOGOUT High Impedance Control.
0 = SOGOUT operates as normal during power-down.
1 = SOGOUT is in high impedance during power-down.
Output Mode.
100 = 4:4:4 output mode.
101 = 4:2:2 output mode.
110 = 4:4:4—DDR output mode.
Primary Output Enable.
0 = Primary output is in high impedance state.
1 = Primary output is enabled.
Secondary Output Enable.
0 = Secondary output is in high impedance state.
1 = Secondary output is enabled.
Output Drive Strength.
00 = Low output drive strength.
01 = Medium low output drive strength.
10 = Medium high output drive strength.
11 = High output drive strength.
Applies to all outputs except VSOUT.
Output Clock Invert.
0 = Noninverted pixel clock.
1 = Inverted pixel clock.
Applies to all clocks output on DATACK.
Output Clock Select.
00 = Pixel clock.
01 = 90° phase shifted pixel clock.
10 = 2× pixel clock.
11 = 40 MHz internal clock.
Output High Impedance.
0 = Normal outputs.
1 = All outputs except SOGOUT in high impedance mode.
SOG High Impedance.
0 = Normal SOG output.
1 = SOGOUT pin is in high impedance mode.
Field Output Polarity.
Sets the polarity of the field output signal.
0 = Active low => even field, active high => odd field.
1 = Active low => odd field, active high => even field.
PLL Sync Filter Enable.
0 = PLL uses raw Hsync/SOG.
1 = PLL uses filtered Hsync/SOG.
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 44
AD9981
Hexadecimal
Address
Read and
Write or
Read Only
0x21
0x22
0x23
0x24
0x25
Bits
1
Default
Value
**** *0**
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
7:0
7:0
7:0
0010 0000
0011 0010
0000 1010
RO
7
_*** ****
6
*_** ****
5
**_* ****
4
***_ ****
3
**** _***
2
**** *_**
1
**** **_*
0
**** ***_
7
_*** ****
6
*_** ****
5
**_* ****
4
***_ ****
3
**** _***
2
**** *_**
1
**** **_*
RO
Register Name
Sync Filter
Window Width
Sync Detect
Sync Polarity
Detect
Description
Sync Processing Input Select.
Selects the sync source for the sync processor.
0 = Sync processing uses raw Hsync/SOGIN.
1 = Sync processing uses regenerated Hsync from sync filter.
Must be set to 1 for proper operation.
Must be set to default for proper operation.
Must be set to default for proper operation.
Sets the window of time around the regenerated Hsync leading
edge (in 25 ns steps) that sync pulses are allowed to pass
through.
Hsync0 Detection Bit.
0 = Hsync0 is not active.
1 = Hsync0 is active.
Hsync1 Detection Bit.
0 = Hsync 1 is not active.
1 = Hsync 1 is active.
Vsync 0 Detection Bit.
0 = Vsync0 is not active.
1 = Vsync0 is active.
Vsync1 Detection Bit.
0 = Vsync1 is not active.
1 = Vsync1 is active.
SOG0 Detection Bit
0 = SOG0 is not active.
1 = SOG0 is active.
SOG1 Detection Bit
0 = SOG1 is not active.
1 = SOG1 is active.
Coast Detection Bit.
0 = External Coast is not active.
1 = External Coast is active.
Clamp Detection Bit.
0 = External clamp is not active.
1 = External clamp is active.
Hsync 0 Polarity.
0 = Hsync0 polarity is active low.
1 = Hsync0 polarity is active high.
Hsync1 Polarity.
0 = Hsync1 polarity is active low.
1 = Hsync1 polarity is active high.
Vsync0 Polarity.
0 = Vsync0 polarity is active low.
1 = Vsync0 polarity is active high.
Vsync1 Polarity.
0 = Vsync1 polarity is active low.
1 = Vsync1 polarity is active high.
Coast Polarity.
0 = External Coast polarity is active low.
1 = External Coast polarity is active high.
Clamp Polarity.
0 = External clamp polarity is active low.
1 = External clamp polarity is active high.
Extraneous Pulses Detected.
0 = No equalization pulses detected on Hsync.
1 = Extraneous pulses detected on Hsync.
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
Hexadecimal
Address
0x26
Read and
Write or
Read Only
RO
Bits
7:0
0x27
RO
7:4
0x28
0x29
0x2A
0x2B
0x2C
R/W
R/W
RO
RO
R/W
7:0
7:0
7:0
7:0
7:5
4
000* ****
***0 ****
0x2D
0x2E
R/W
R/W
3:0
7:0
7:0
**** 0000
1111 0000
1111 0000
1
Default
Value
1011 1111
0000 0010
Register Name
Hsyncs Per Vsync
MSBs
Hsyncs Per
Vsync LSBs
TestReg1
TestReg2
TestReg3
TestReg4
Offset Hold
TestReg5
TestReg6
Description
MSBs of Hsyncs per Vsync count.
LSBs of Hsyncs per Vsync count.
Must be written to 0xBF for proper operation.
Must be written to 0x02 for proper operation.
Read only bits for future use.
Read only bits for future use.
Must be written to default for proper operation.
Auto-Offset Hold.
Disables the auto-offset and holds the feedback result.
0 = One time update.
1 = Continuous update.
Must be written to default for proper operation.
Must be written to 0xE8 for proper operation.
Must be written to 0xE0 for proper operation.
Functions with more than eight control bits, such as PLL divide ratio, gain, and offset, are only updated when the LSBs are written to (for example, Register 0x02 for
PLL divide ratio).
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 44
AD9981
DETAILED 2-WIRE SERIAL CONTROL REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS
CHIP IDENTIFICATION
CLOCK GENERATOR CONTROL
0x00
0x03
7:0
Chip Revision
An 8-bit register that represents the silicon revision.
7:0
PLL Divide Ratio MSBs
The eight MSBs of the 12-bit PLL divide ratio PLLDIV.
The PLL derives a pixel clock from the incoming
Hsync signal. The pixel clock frequency is then
divided by an integer value, such that the output is
phase-locked to Hsync. This PLLDIV value
determines the number of pixel times (pixels plus
horizontal blanking overhead) per line. This is
typically 20% to 30% more than the number of active
pixels in the display.
The 12-bit value of the PLL divider supports divide
ratios from 2 to 4095 as long as the output frequency
is within range. The higher the value loaded in this
register, the higher the resulting clock frequency with
respect to a fixed Hsync frequency.
VESA has established some standard timing specifications, which will assist in determining the value for
PLLDIV as a function of horizontal and vertical
display resolution and frame rate (see Table 9).
However, many computer systems do not conform
precisely to the recommendations and these numbers
should be used only as a guide. The display system
manufacturer should provide automatic or manual
means for optimizing PLLDIV. An incorrectly set
PLLDIV usually produces one or more vertical noise
bars on the display. The greater the error, the greater
the number of bars produced.
The power-up default value of PLLDIV is 1693.
PLLDIVM = 0x69, PLLDIVL = 0xDX.
0x02
7:4
Table 13. VCO Ranges
VCO Range
00
01
10
11
0x03
PLL Divide Ratio LSBs
Pixel Rates
10 to 21
21 to 42
42 to 84
84 to 95
5:3
Charge Pump Current
Three bits that establish the current driving the loop
filter in the clock generator. The current must be set to
correspond with the desired operating frequency. The
power-up default value is current = 001.
Table 14. Charge Pump Currents
Ip2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0x03
The AD9981 updates the full divide ratio only when
the LSBs are written. Writing to this register by itself
does not trigger an update.
VCO Range Select
Two bits that establish the operating range of the clock
generator. VCORNGE must be set to correspond to
the desired operating frequency (incoming pixel rate).
The PLL gives the best jitter performance at high
frequencies. For this reason, in order to output low
pixel rates and still get good jitter performance, the
PLL actually operates at a higher frequency but then
divides down the clock rate afterwards. See Table 13
for the pixel rates for each VCO range setting. The
PLL output divisor is automatically selected with the
VCO range setting. The power-up default value is 01.
PLL DIVIDER CONTROL
0x01
7:6
Ip1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
2
Ip0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
Current
50
100
150
250
350
500
750
1500
External Clock Enable
This bit determines the source of the pixel clock.
Table 15. External Clock Select Settings
EXTCLK
0
1
The four LSBs of the 12-bit PLL divide ratio PLLDIV.
The power-up default value of PLLDIV is 1693.
PLLDIVM = 0x69, PLLDIVL = 0xDX.
Function
Internally generated clock
Externally provided clock signal
A Logic 0 enables the internal PLL that generates the
pixel clock from an externally provided Hsync.
A Logic 1 enables the external EXTCLK input pin. In
this mode, the PLL Divide Ratio (PLLDIV) is ignored.
The clock phase adjust (PHASE) is still functional.
The power-up default value is EXTCLK = 0.
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
PHASE ADJUST
INPUT OFFSET
0x04
0x0B
7:3
Phase adjustment for the DLL to generate the ADC
clock. A 5-bit value that adjusts the sampling phase in
32 steps across one pixel time. Each step represents an
11.25° shift in sampling phase. The power up default
is 16.
6:0
Red Channel Gain Adjust MSBs
If auto-offset is disabled, the 9 bits of the offset registers (Bits [6:0] of the offset MSB register plus
Bits [7:6] of the following register) control the
absolute offset added to the channel (for the red
channel, Register 0x0B, Bits[6:0] plus Register 0x0C,
Bits [7:6]) control the absolute offset added to the
channel. The offset control provides a ±255 LSBs of
adjustment range, with 1 LSB of offset corresponding
to 1 LSB of output code.
The 7-Bit Red Channel Gain Control. The AD9981
can accommodate input signals with a full-scale range
of between 0.5 V and 1.0 V p-p. Setting the red gain to
511 corresponds to an input range of 1.0 V. A red gain
of 0 establishes an input range of 0.5 V. Note that
increasing red gain results in the picture having less
contrast (the input signal uses fewer of the available
converter codes). Values written to this register will
not be updated until the LSB register (R0x06) has also
been written. The power-up default is 1000000.
0x06
7:6
If auto-offset is enabled, the 11-bit offset (comprised
of the 8 bits of the MSB register and Bits [7:5] of the
following register) determines the clamp target code.
The 11-bit offset consists of 1 sign bit plus 10 bits. If
the register is programmed to 530 DDR, then the
output code is equal to 530 DDR at the end of the
clamp period. Note that incrementing the offset
register setting by 1 LSB adds 1 LSB of offset,
regardless of the auto-offset setting. Values written to
this register are not updated until the LSB register
(Register 0x0C) has also been written.
Red Channel Gain Adjust LSBs
The 2 Bit LSBs of the Red Channel Gain Control.
Along with the 7 MSBs of gain control in the previous
register, there are 9 bits of gain control. Default power
up value is 00.
0x07
6:0 Green Channel Gain Adjust MSBs
The 7-Bit Green Channel Gain Control. See red
channel gain adjust above. Register update requires
writing 0x00 to Register 0x08.
0x08
7:6
0x09
6:0
7:6
0x0D
Red Channel Offset LSBs
7:0
Green Channel Offset MSBs
The 8-Bit Green Channel Offset Control. See red
channel offset (0x0B). Update of this register occurs
only when Register 0x0E is also written.
0x0E
7:5
Green Channel Offset LSBs
The LSBs of the green channel offset control combine
with the 8 bits of MSB in the previous register to make
11 bits of offset control.
Blue Channel Gain Adjust LSBs
The 2-Bit LSBs of the Blue Channel Gain Control.
Along with the 7 MSBs of gain control in the previous
register, there are 9 bits of gain control. Default powerup value is 00.
7:5
The LSBs of the red channel offset control combine
with the 8 bits of MSB in the previous register to make
11 bits of offset control.
Blue Channel Gain Adjust MSBs
The 7-Bit Blue Channel Gain Control. See red channel
gain adjust above. Register update requires writing
0x00 to Register 0x0A.
0x0A
0x0C
Green Channel Gain Adjust LSBs
The 2-Bit LSBs of the Green Channel Gain Control.
Along with the 7 MSBs of gain control in the previous
register, there are 9 bits of gain control. Default powerup value is 00.
Red Channel Offset MSBs
The 8-Bit MSB of the Red Channel Offset Control.
Along with the 1 LSBs in the following register, there
are 11 bits of dc offset control in the red channel. The
offset control shifts the analog input, resulting in a
change in brightness. Note that the function of the
offset register depends on whether auto-offset is
enabled (Register 0x1B, Bit 5).
INPUT GAIN
0x05
7:0
0x0F
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 44
7:0
Blue Channel Offset MSBs
The 8-Bit Blue Channel Offset Control. See red
channel offset (0x0B). Update of this register occurs
only when Register 0x10 is also written.
AD9981
0x10
7:5
Blue Channel Offset LSBs
Table 18. Hsync Input Polarity Override Settings
The LSBs of the blue channel offset control combine
with the 8 bits of MSB in the previous register to make
11 bits of offset control.
HSYNC CONTROLS
0x11
7:0
0x12
Sync Separator Threshold
This register sets the threshold of the sync separator’s
digital comparator. The value written to this register is
multiplied by 200 ns to get the threshold value.
Therefore, if a value of 5 is written, the digital
comparator threshold is 1 µs and any pulses less than 1
µS are rejected by the sync separator. There is some
variability to the 200 ns multiplier value. The
maximum variability over all operating conditions is
±20% (160 ns to 240 ns). Since normal Vsync and
Hsync pulse widths differ by a factor of about 500 or
more, the 20% variability is not an issue. The powerup default value is 32 DDR.
0x12
7
Table 16.Active Hsync Source Override
0x12
Result
Hsync Source determined by chip
Hsync Source determined by user
Register 0x12, Bit 6
6
Select
0
1
0x12
0x12
3
Result
Hsync Input Polarity is Negative
Hsync Input Polarity is Positive
Hsync Output Polarity
This bit sets the polarity of the Hsync output. Setting
this bit to 0 sets the Hsync output to active low. Setting
this bit to 1 sets the Hsync output to active high.
Power-up default setting is 1.
Table 20. Hsync Output Polarity Settings
Hsync Output
Polarity Bit
0
1
7:0
Result
Hsync Output Polarity is Negative
Hsync Output Polarity is Positive
Hsync Duration
An 8-bit register that sets the duration of the Hsync
output pulse. The leading edge of the Hsync output is
triggered by the internally-generated, phase-adjusted
PLL feedback clock. The AD9981 then counts a
number of pixel clocks equal to the value in this
register. This triggers the trailing edge of the Hsync
output, which is also phase-adjusted.
VSYNC CONTROLS
0x14
Result
Hsync Input
Hsync from SOG
5
Input Hsync Polarity
Hsync Polarity Bit
0
1
Hsync Source
Table 17. Active Hsync Select Settings
4
Table 19. Hsync Input Polarity Settings
0x13
This bit selects the source of the Hsync for PLL and
sync processing—only if Bit 7 of Register 0x12 is set to
1 or if both syncs are active. Setting this bit to 0
specifies the Hsync from the input pin. Setting it to 1
selects Hsync from SOG. Power-up default is 0.
Result
Hsync Polarity Determined by Chip
Hsync Polarity Determined by User
Register 0x12, Bit 4
If Bit 5 of Register 0x12 is 1, the value of this bit
specifies the polarity of the input Hsync. Setting this
bit to 0 indicates an active low Hsync; setting this bit
to 1 indicates an active high Hsync. Power-up default
is 1.
Hsync Source Override
This is the active Hsync override. Setting this to 0
allows the chip to determine the active Hsync source.
Setting it to 1 uses Bit 6 of Register 0x12 to determine
the active Hsync source. Power-up default value is 0.
Override
0
1
Override Bit
0
1
7
Vsync Source Override
This is the active Vsync override. Setting this to 0
allows the chip to determine the active Vsync source,
setting it to 1 uses Bit 6 of Register 0x14 to determine
the active Vsync source. Power-up default value is 0.
Hsync Input Polarity Override
This bit determines whether the chip selects the Hsync
input polarity or if it is specified. Setting this bit to 0
allows the chip to automatically select the polarity of
the input Hsync; setting it to 1 indicates that Bit 4 of
Register 0x12 specifies the polarity. Power-up default
is 0.
Table 21. Active Vsync Source Override
Override
0
1
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 44
Result
Vsync source determined by chip
Vsync source determined by user
Register 0x14, Bit 6
AD9981
0x14
6
Preliminary Technical Data
Table 26. Vsync Filter Enable
Vsync Source
This bit selects the source of the Vsync for sync
processing only if Bit 7 of Register 0x14 is set to 1.
Setting Bit 6 to 0 specifies the Vsync from the input
pin; setting it to 1 selects Vsync from the sync
separator. Power-up default is 0.
Vsync Filter Bit
0
1
0x14
0x14
Result
Vsync input
Vsync from sync separator
5
Table 27. Vsync Duration Enable
Vsync Input Polarity Override
This bit sets whether the chip selects the Vsync input
polarity or if it is specified. Setting this bit to 0 allows
the chip to automatically select the polarity of the
input Vsync. Setting this bit to 1 indicates that Bit 4 of
Register 0x14 specifies the polarity. Power-up default
is 0.
Vsync Duration Bit
0
1
0x15
0x14
4
Result
Vsync polarity determined by chip
Vsync polarity determined by user
Register 0x14, Bit 4
0x16
Input Vsync Polarity
3
Result
Vsync input polarity is negative
Vsync input polarity is positive
0x17
2
7:0
Postcoast
This register allows the internally generated Coast
signal to be applied following the Vsync signal. This is
necessary in cases where postequalization pulses are
present. The step size for this control is one Hsync
period. For Postcoast to work correctly, it is necessary
for the Vsync filter (0x14, Bit 2) and sync processing
filter (0x20, Bit 1) both to be either enabled or
disabled. The power-up default is 00.
Table 25. Vsync Output Polarity Settings
0x14
Precoast
Vsync Output Polarity
This bit sets the polarity of the Hsync output. Setting
this bit to 0 sets the Hsync output to active low. Setting
this bit to 1 sets the Hsync output to active high.
Power-up default is 1.
Vsync Output
Polarity Bit
0
1
7:0
This register allows the internally generated Coast
signal to be applied prior to the Vsync signal. This is
necessary in cases where pre-equalization pulses are
present. The step size for this control is one Hsync
period. For Precoast to work correctly, it is necessary
for the Vsync filter (0x14, Bit 2) and sync processing
filter (Register 0x20, Bit 1) both to be either enabled or
disabled. The power-up default is 00.
Table 24. Vsync Input Polarity Settings
0x14
Vsync Duration
COAST AND CLAMP CONTROLS
If Bit 5 of Register 0x14 is 1, the value of this bit
specifies the polarity of the input Vsync. Setting this
bit to 0 indicates an active low Vsync; setting this bit to
1 indicates an active high Vsync. Power-up default is 1.
Override Bit
0
1
7:0
Result
Vsync output duration is unchanged
Vsync output duration is set by Register
0x15
This is used to set the output duration of the Vsync,
and is designed to be used with the Vsync filter. This is
valid only if Register 0x14, Bit 1 is set to 1. Power-up
default is 10 DDR.
Table 23. Vsync Input Polarity Override Settings
Override Bit
0
1
Vsync Duration Enable
This enables the Vsync duration block, which is
designed to be used with the Vsync filter. Setting the
bit to 0 leaves the Vsync output duration unchanged.
Setting the bit to 1 sets the Vsync output duration
based on Register 0x15. Power-up duration is 0.
Table 22. Active Vsync Select Settings
Select
0
1
1
Result
Vsync filter disabled
Vsync filter enabled
Result
Vsync output polarity is negative
Vsync output polarity is positive
0x18
Vsync Filter Enable
This bit enables the Vsync filter allowing precise
placement of the Vsync with respect to the Hsync
and facilitating the correct operation of the Hsyncs/
Vsync count.
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 44
7
Coast Source
This bit is used to select the active Coast source. The
choices are the COAST input pin or vsync. If Vsync is
selected, the additional decision of using the VSYNC
input pin or the output from the sync separator needs
to be made (Register 0x14, Bits [7: 6]).
AD9981
Table 28. Coast Source Selection Settings
Select
0
1
0x18
Table 33. Green Clamp Select Settings
Result
Vsync (internal Coast)
COAST input pin
6
Clamp
0
1
Coast Polarity Override
0x18
This register is used to override the internal circuitry
that determines the polarity of the Coast signal going
into the PLL. The power-up default setting is 0.
Result
Clamp to ground
Clamp to midscale
1
Blue Clamp Select
This bit determines whether the blue channel is
clamped to ground or to midscale. The power-up
default setting is 0.
Table 29. Coast Polarity Override Settings
Table 34. Blue Clamp Select Settings
Override Bit
0
1
Clamp
0
1
0x18
5
Result
Coast polarity determined by chip
Coast polarity determined by user
Input Coast Polarity
0x19
This register sets the input Coast polarity when Bit 6
of Register 0x18 = 1. The power-up default setting is 1.
0x18
4
Result
Coast polarity is negative
Coast polarity is positive
Clamp Source
This bit determines the source of clamp timing. A 0
enables the clamp timing circuitry controlled by
clamp placement and clamp duration. The clamp position and duration is counted from the leading edge of
Hsync. A 1 enables the external clamp input pin. The
three channels are clamped when the clamp signal is
active. The polarity of clamp is determined by the
clamp polarity bit. The power-up default setting
is 0.
0x18
3
0x1A
Red Clamp Select
Table 32. Red Clamp Select Settings
0x18
Result
Clamp to ground
Clamp to midscale
2
7:0
Clamp Duration
An 8-bit register that sets the duration of the
internally generated clamp. When EXTCLMP = 0
(Register 0x18, Bit 4), a clamp signal is generated
internally at a position established by the clamp
placement register (and for a duration set by the
clamp duration register). Clamping begins a clamp
placement count (Register 0x19) of pixel periods after
the trailing edge of Hsync. The clamp duration may be
programmed to any value between 1 and 255. A value
of 0 is not supported.
Result
Internally generated clamp
Externally provided clamp signal
This bit determines whether the red channel is
clamped to ground or to midscale. The power-up
default setting is 0.
Clamp
0
1
Clamp Placement
The clamp should be placed during a time that the
input signal presents a stable black-level reference,
usually the back porch period between Hsync and the
image. When EXTCLMP = 1, this register is ignored.
Power-up default setting is 8.
Table 31. Clamp Source Selection Settings
Clamp Source
0
1
7:0
An 8-bit register that sets the position of the internally
generated clamp. When EXTCLMP = 0 (Register 0x18,
Bit 4), a clamp signal is generated internally, at a
position established by the clamp placement register
(Register 0x19) and for a duration set by the clamp
duration register (Register 0x1A). Clamping is started
a clamp placement count(Register 0x19) of pixel
periods after the trailing edge of Hsync. The clamp
placement may be programmed to any value between
1 and 255. A value of 0 is not supported.
Table 30. Coast Polarity Settings
Coast Polarity Bit
0
1
Result
Clamp to ground
Clamp to midscale
For the best results, the clamp duration should be set
to include the majority of the black reference signal
time that follows the Hsync signal trailing edge. Insufficient clamping time can produce brightness changes
at the top of the screen, and a slow recovery from large
changes in the average picture level (APL), or brightness. When EXTCLMP = 1, this register is ignored.
Power-up default setting is 20 DDR.
Green Clamp Select
This bit determines whether the green channel is
clamped to ground or to midscale. The power-up
default setting is 0.
Rev. 0 | Page 33 of 44
AD9981
0x1B
Preliminary Technical Data
7
Clamp Polarity Override
0x1D
This bit is used to override the internal circuitry that
determines the polarity of the clamp signal. The
power-up default setting is 0.
Table 35. Clamp Polarity Override Settings
Override Bit
0
1
0x1B
Table 39. SOGOUT Polarity Settings
0x1D
Table 36. Clamp Polarity Override Settings
0x1B
Result
Active low
Active high
5
Table 37. Auto-Offset Settings
0x1B
SOGOUT Select
00
01
10
11
0x1E
7
Result
Update offset every clamp period
Update offset every 16 clamp periods
Update offset every 64 clamp periods
Update offset every Vsync periods
2-0
Channel Select Override
Table 41. Channel Source Override
Override
0
1
Result
Channel input source determined by chip
Channel input source determined by user
Register 0x1E, Bit 6
Table 38. Auto-Offset Update Mode
0x1B
Function
Raw SOG from sync slicer (SOG0 or SOG1)
Raw Hsync (HSYNC0 or HSYNC1)
Regenerated Sync from sync filter
Filtered sync from sync filter
This bit provides an override to the automatic input
channel selection. Power-up default setting is 0.
Auto-Offset Update Frequency
These bits control how often the auto-offset circuit is
updated (if enabled). Updating every 64 Hsyncs is
recommended. The power-up default setting is 11.
Clamp Update
00
01
10
11
SOG Output Select
INPUT AND POWER CONTROL
Result
Auto-offset is disabled
Auto-offset is enabled (manual offset mode)
4:3
1:0
Table 40. SOGOUT Polarity Settings
Auto-Offset Enable
This bit selects between auto-offset mode and manual
offset mode (auto-offset disabled). See the section on
auto-offset operation. The power-up default setting
is 0.
Auto-Offset
0
1
Result
Active low
Active high
These register bits control what is output on the
SOGOUT pin. Options are the raw SOG from the
slicer (this is the unprocessed SOG signal produced
from the sync slicer), the raw Hsync, the regenerated
sync from the sync filter which can generate missing
syncs either due to coasting or drop-out, or finally the
filtered sync which excludes extraneous syncs not
occurring within the sync filter window. The powerup default setting is 0.
Input Clamp Polarity
This bit indicates the polarity of the clamp signal only
if Bit 7 of Register 0x1B = 1. The power-up default
setting is 1.
CLMPOL
0
1
SOG Output Polarity
This bit sets the polarity of the SOGout signal. The
power-up default setting is 0.
SOGOUT
0
1
Result
Clamp Polarity Determined by Chip
Clamp Polarity Determined by User
Register 0x1B, Bit 6
6
2
0x1E
6
Channel Select
This bit selects the active input channel if
Register 0x1E, bit 7 = 1. This selects between
Channel 0 data and syncs or Channel 1 data and
syncs. Power-up default setting is 0.
Must be written to 011 for proper operation.
Table 42. Channel Select
SOG CONTROL
0x1D
7:3
SOG Comparator Threshold
This register allows the comparator threshold of the
SOG slicer to be adjusted. This register adjusts it in
steps of 8 mV, with the minimum setting equaling
8 mV and the maximum setting equaling 256 mV. The
power-up default setting is 15 DDR and corresponds
to a threshold value of 128 mV.
Channel Select
0
1
0x1E
Rev. 0 | Page 34 of 44
5
Result
Channel 0 data and syncs are selected
Channel 1 data and syncs are selected
Programmable Bandwidth
This bit selects between a low or high input bandwidth. It is useful in limiting noise for lower frequency
inputs. The power-up default setting is 1. Low analog
input bandwidth is ~100 MHz; high analog input
bandwidth is ~200 MHz.
AD9981
0x1E
Table 43. Input Bandwidth Select
Input Bandwidth
0
1
0x1E
4
Result
Low analog input bandwidth
High analog input bandwidth
Power-Down Fast Switching Control
This bit controls a special fast switching mode. With
this bit the AD9981 can stay active during powerdown and only put the outputs in high impedance.
This option is useful when the data outputs from two
chips are connected on a PCB and the user wants to
switch instantaneously between the two.
Power-Down Control Select
This bit determines whether power-down is controlled manually or automatically by the chip. If
automatic control is selected (Register 0x1E, Bit 4), the
AD9981’s decision is based on the status of the sync
detect bits (Register 0x24, Bits 2, 3, 6, and 7). If either
an Hsync or a sync-on-green input is detected on any
input, the chip powers up or powers down. For
manual control, the AD9981 allows the flexibility of
control through both a dedicated pin and a register bit.
The dedicated pin allows a hardware watchdog circuit
to control power-down, while the register bit allows
power-down to be controlled by software. With
manual power-down control, the polarity of the
powerdown pin must be set (0x1E, Bit 2) whether it is
used or not. If unused, it is recommended to set the
polarity to active high and hardwire the pin to ground
with a 10 kΩ resistor.
1
Table 47. Power-Down Fast Switching Control
Fast Switching Control
0
1
0x1E
0
Result
Normal power-down operation
The chip stays powered up and the
outputs are put in high impedance
mode
SOGOUT High Impedance Control
This bit controls whether the SOGOUT output pin is
in high impedance or not, when in power-down mode.
In most cases, SOGOUT is not put in high impedance
during normal operation. It is usually needed for sync
detection by the graphics controller. The option to put
SOGOUT in high impedance is included mainly to
allow for factory testing modes.
Table 44. Auto Power-Down Select
Table 42. SOGOUT High Impedance Control
Power-Down Select
0
SOGOUT Control
0
1
0x1E
3
Result
Manual power-down control
(User determines power-down)
Auto power-down control
(Chip determines power-down)
1
OUTPUT CONTROL
Power-Down
This bit is used to manually place the chip in powerdown mode. It is only used if manual power-down
control is selected (see Bit 4 above). Both the state of
this register bit and the power-down pin (Pin 17)
are used to control manual power-down. (See the
Power Management section for more details on
power-down.)
0x1F
0x1E
2
Pin 17
0
X
Output Mode
100
101
110
Power-Down Polarity
0x1F
4
Result
4:4:4 RGB mode
4:2:2 YCbCr mode
4:4:4 DDR mode
Primary Output Enable
This bit places the primary output in active or high
impedance mode. The power-up default setting is 1.
Table 46. Power-Down Pin Polarity
Result
Power-down pin is active low
Power-down pin is active high
Output Mode
Table 43. Output Mode
Result
Normal operation
Power-down
This bit defines the polarity of the power-down pin
(Pin 17). It is only used if manual power-down control
is selected (see Bit 4 above).
Select
0
1
7:5
These bits choose between three options for the
output mode. In 4:4:4 mode, RGB is standard. In 4:2:2
mode, YCbCr is standard, which allows a reduction in
the number of output pins from 30 to 20. In 4:4:4
DDR output mode, the data is in RGB mode, but
changes on every clock edge. The power-up default
setting is 100.
Table 45. Power-Down Settings
Power-Down Select
0
1
Result
The SOGOUT output operates as
normal during power-down.
The SOGOUT output is in high
impedance during power-down.
Table 44. Primary Output Enable
Select
0
1
Rev. 0 | Page 35 of 44
Result
Primary output is in high impedance
mode
Primary output is enabled
AD9981
0x1F
3
Preliminary Technical Data
Secondary Output Enable
0x20
This bit puts all outputs (except SOGOUT) in a high impedance
state. The power-up default setting is 0.
The secondary output is designated when using either
4:2:2 or 4:4:4 (DDR). In these modes, the data on the
blue output channel is the secondary output while the
output data on the red and green channels are the
primary output. Secondary output is always a DDR
YCbCr data mode. See the Output Formatter section
and Table 11. The power-up default setting is 0.
Table 49. Output High Impedance
Select
0
1
Result
Secondary output is in high impedance mode
Secondary output is enabled
2:1
Output Drive Strength
These two bits select the drive strength for all the
high-speed digital outputs (except VSOUT, A0, and
the O/E field). Higher drive strength results in faster
rise/fall times and in general makes it easier to capture
data. Lower drive strength results in slower rise/fall
times and helps to reduce EMI and digitally generated
power supply noise. The power-up default setting
is 10.
Table 46. Output Drive Strength
Output Drive
00
01
10
11
0x1F
Select
0
1
0x20
0
Select
0
1
0x20
3
Field Output Polarity
This bit sets the polarity of the field output bit. The
power-up default setting is 1.
Table 51. Field Output Polarity
Select
0
1
Result
Active low = even field; active high = odd field
Active low = odd field; active high = even field
2
Select
0
1
0x20
Output Clock Select
Result
Pixel clock
90° phase-shifted pixel clock
2× pixel clock
40 MHz internal clock
Result
Normal SOG output
SOGOUT pin is in high impedance mode
PLL Sync Filter
Table 52. PLL Sync Filter Enable
These bits allow selection of optional output clocks
such as a fixed 40 MHz clock, a 2× clock, a 90° phaseshifted clock, or the normal pixel clock. The power-up
default setting is 00.
Select
00
01
10
11
Table 50. SOGOUT High Impedance
Output Clock Invert
Table 48. Output Clock Select
SOG High Impedance
This bit selects which signal the PLL uses. It can select
between either raw Hsync or SOG or filtered versions.
The filtering of the Hsync and SOG can eliminate
nearly all extraneous transitions which have traditionally caused PLL disruption. The power-up default
setting is 0.
Result
Noninverted pixel clock
Inverted pixel clock
7:6
4
This bit allows the SOGOUT pin to be placed in high
impedance mode. The power-up default setting is 0.
0x20
Table 47. Output Clock Invert
Select
0
1
Result
Normal outputs
All outputs (except SOGOUT) in high impedance
mode
SYNC PROCESSING
Result
Low output drive strength
Medium low output drive strength
Medium high output drive strength
High output drive strength
This bit allows inversion of the output clock. The
power-up default setting is 0.
0x20
Output High Impedance
This bit places the secondary output in active or high
impedance mode.
Table 45. Secondary Output Enable
0x1F
5
Result
PLL uses raw Hsync or SOG inputs
PLL uses filtered Hsync or SOG inputs
1
Sync Processing Input Source
This bit selects whether the sync processor uses a raw
sync or a regenerated sync for the following functions:
Coast, H/V count, field detection and Vsync duration
counts. Using the regenerated sync is recommended.
Table 53. SP Filter Enable
Select
0
1
Rev. 0 | Page 36 of 44
Result
Sync processing uses raw Hsync or SOG
Sync processing uses the internally regenerated
Hsync
AD9981
0x21
7:0
Must be set to default
0x22
7:0
Must be set to default
0x23
7:0
Sync Filter Window Width
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = Vsync1 not active. 1 = Vsync1 is active.
Table 57. Vsync1 Detection Results
This 8-bit register sets the window of time for the regenerated
Hsync leading edge (in 25 ns steps) and that sync pulses are
allowed to pass through. Therefore with the default value of 10,
the window width is ±250 ns. The goal is to set the window
width so that extraneous pulses are rejected. (see the Sync
Processing section). As in the sync separator threshold, the
25 ns multiplier value is somewhat variable. The maximum
variability over all operating conditions is ±20% (20 ns
to 30 ns).
DETECTION STATUS
0x24
7
Detect
0
1
0x24
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
6
Detect
0
1
0x24
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
5
Vsync0 Detection Bit
Table 56. Vsync0 Detection Results
0x24
Detect
0
1
0x24
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
1
COAST Detection Bit
This bit detects activity on the EXTCLK/EXTCOAST
pin. It indicates that one of the two signals is active,
but it doesn’t indicate which one. A dc signal is
not detected.
Detect
0
1
0x24
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
0
Clamp Detection Bit
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the external CLAMP pin. If external clamp is held
high or low, activity is not detected.
Table 61. Clamp Detection Results
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
4
SOG1 Detection Bit
Table 60. Coast Detection Result
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the VSYNC0 input pin. If Vsync is held high or low,
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = Vsync0 not active. 1 = Vsync0 is active.
Detect
0
1
2
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the SOG1 input pin. If SOG is held high or low,
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = SOG1 not active. 1 = SOG1 is active.
Table 55. Hsync1 Detection Results
0x24
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
Table 59. SOG1 Detection Results
Hsync1 Detection Bit
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the HSYNC1 input pin. If HSYNC is held high or low,
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = HSYNC1 not active. 1 = HSYNC1 is active.
Detect
0
1
SOG0 Detection Bit
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the SOG0 input pin. If SOG is held high or low,
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = SOG0 not active. 1 = SOG0 is active.
Table 54. Hsync0 Detection Results
0x24
3
Table 58. SOG0 Detection Results
Hsync0 Detection Bit
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the HSYNC0 input pin. If Hsync is held high or low,
activity is not detected. The sync processing block
diagram shows where this function is implemented.
0 = Hsync0 not active. 1 = Hsync0 is active.
Detect
0
1
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
Detect
0
1
VSYNC1 Detection Bit
This bit is used to indicate when activity is detected on
the VSYNC1 input pin. If Vsync is held high or low,
Rev. 0 | Page 37 of 44
Result
No activity detected
Activity detected
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
POLARITY STATUS
0x25
7
Table 68. Equalization Pulse Detect Bit
Detect
0
Hsync0 Polarity
Result
No equalization pulses detected during active
Hsync
Equalization pulses detected during active Hsync
Indicates the polarity of the HSYNC0 input.
1
Table 62. Detected Hsync0 Polarity Results
Detect
0
1
0x25
Result
Hsync polarity is negative
Hsync polarity is positive
6
HSYNC COUNT
0x26
Hsync1 Polarity
Table 63. Detected Hsync1 Polarity Results
0x25
Result
Hsync polarity is negative
Hsync polarity is positive
5
0x27
0x28
Result
Vsync polarity is negative
Vsync polarity is positive
4
0x29
Vsync1 Polarity
0x2A
0x2B
0x2C
Result
Coast polarity is negative
Coast polarity is positive
2
0x2C
Clamp Polarity
Indicates the polarity of the clamp signal.
Table 67. Detected Clamp Polarity Results
Detect
0
1
0x25
Result
Clamp polarity is negative
Clamp polarity is positive
1
7:0
Test Register 2
7:0
Test Register 3
7:0
Test Register 4
Must be written to 0x00 for proper operation.
Table 66. Detected Coast Polarity Results
0x25
Test Register 1
Read-only bits for future use.
Coast Polarity
Indicates the polarity of the external Coast signal.
Detect
0
1
7:0
Read-only bits for future use.
Result
Vsync polarity is negative
Vsync polarity is positive
3
Test Register 0
Must be written to 0x00 for proper operation.
Table 65. Detected Vsync1 Polarity Results
0x25
7:0
Must be written to 0xBF for proper operation.
Indicates the polarity of Vsync1 input.
Detect
0
1
Hsyncs/Vsync LSBs
Test Registers
Table 64. Detected Vsync0 Polarity Results
0x25
7:4
The four LSBs of the 12-bit counter that reports the
number of Hsyncs/Vsync on the active input.
Vsync0 Polarity
Indicates the polarity of Vsync0 input.
Detect
0
1
Hsyncs/Vsync MSB
The eight MSBs of the 12-bit counter that reports the
number of Hsyncs/Vsync on the active input. This is
useful for determining the mode and is an aid in
setting the PLL divide ratio.
Indicates the polarity of HSYNC1 input.
Detect
0
1
7:0
Extraneous Pulses Detection
A second output from the Hsync filter, this status bit
tells whether extraneous pulses are present on the
incoming sync signal. Often extraneous pulses are
used for copy protection, so this status bit can be used
for this purpose.
Rev. 0 | Page 38 of 44
4
Auto-Offset Hold
A bit for controlling whether the auto-offset function
runs continuously or runs once and holds the result.
Continuous updates are recommended because it
allows the AD9981 to compensate for drift-over time,
temperature, and so on. If one-time updates are
preferred, these should be performed every time the
part is powered up and when there is a mode change.
To do a one-time update, first auto-offset must be
enabled (0x1B, Bit 5). Next, this bit (auto-offset hold)
must be set to 1 to let the auto-offset function operate
and settle to a final value. Auto-offset hold should then
be set to 0 to hold the offset values that the auto
circuitry calculates. The AD9981’s auto-offset circuit’s
maxi-mum settle time is 10 updates. For example, if
the update frequency is set to once every 64 Hsyncs,
then the maximum settling time would be 640 Hsyncs
(10 × 64 Hsyncs).
AD9981
Table 69. Auto-Offset Hold
Select
0
Result
Disables auto-offset updates and holds the
current auto-offset values
Allows auto-offset to update continuously
1
0x2C
3:0
Must be written to 0x0 for proper operation.
0x2D
7:0
Test Register 5
Read/write bits for future use. Must be written to
0xE8 for proper operation.
0x2E
7:0
Test Register 6
Read/write bits for future use. Must be written to
0xE0 for proper operation.
Rev. 0 | Page 39 of 44
AD9981
Preliminary Technical Data
Table 70. Serial Port Addresses
TWO-WIRE SERIAL CONTROL PORT
A two-wire serial interface control interface is provided. Up to
two AD9981 devices may be connected to the two-wire serial
interface, with each device having a unique address.
The two-wire serial interface comprises a clock (SCL) and a bidirectional data (SDA) pin. The analog flat panel interface acts
as a slave for receiving and transmitting data over the serial
interface. When the serial interface is not active, the logic levels
on SCL and SDA are pulled high by external pull-up resistors.
Data received or transmitted on the SDA line must be stable for
the duration of the positive-going SCL pulse. Data on SDA must
change only when SCL is low. If SDA changes state while SCL is
high, the serial interface interprets that action as a start or stop
sequence.
The following are the five components to serial bus operation:
•
Start signal
•
Slave address byte
•
Base register address byte
•
Data byte to read or write
•
Stop signal
When the serial interface is inactive (SCL and SDA are high),
communications are initiated by sending a start signal. The start
signal is a high-to-low transition on SDA while SCL is high.
This signal alerts all slaved devices that a data transfer sequence
is coming.
The first eight bits of data transferred after a start signal
comprise a 7-bit slave address (the first seven bits) and a single
R/W\ bit (the eighth bit). The R/W\ bit indicates the direction
of data transfer, read from 1 or write to 0 on the slave device. If
the transmitted slave address matches the address of the device
(set by the state of the Serial A0 address [SA0] input pin in
Table 70), the AD9981 acknowledges the match by bringing
SDA low on the 9th SCL pulse. If the addresses do not match,
the AD9981 does not acknowledge it.
Bit 7
A6 (MSB)
1
1
Bit 6
A5
0
0
Bit 5
A4
0
0
Bit 4
A3
1
1
Bit 3
A2
1
1
Bit 2
A1
0
0
DATA TRANSFER VIA SERIAL INTERFACE
For each byte of data read or written, the MSB is the first bit in
the sequence.
If the AD9981 does not acknowledge the master device during a
write sequence, the SDA remains high so the master can generate a stop signal. If the master device does not acknowledge the
AD9981 during a read sequence, the AD9981 interprets this as
end-of-data. The SDA remains high so the master can generate
a stop signal.
Writing data to specific control registers of the AD9981 requires
that the 8-bit address of the control register of interest be written after the slave address has been established. This control
register address is the base address for subsequent write operations. The base address auto-increments by one for each byte of
data written after the data byte intended for the base address. If
more bytes are transferred than there are available addresses,
the address will not increment and remain at its maximum
value of 0x2E. Any base address higher than 0x2E will not produce an acknowledge signal. Data are read from the control
registers of the AD9981 in a similar manner. Reading requires
two data transfer operations:
The base address must be written with the R/W bit of the slave
address byte low to set up a sequential read operation. Reading
(the R/W\ bit of the slave address byte high) begins at the
previously established base address. The address of the read
register auto-increments after each byte is transferred.
To terminate a read/write sequence to the AD9981, a stop signal
must be sent. A stop signal comprises a low-to-high transition
of SDA while SCL is high.
A repeated start signal occurs when the master device driving
the serial interface generates a start signal without first generating a stop signal to terminate the current communication. This
is used to change the mode of communication (read, write)
between the slave and master without releasing the serial
interface lines.
SDA
tBUFF
tSTAH
tDSU
tDHO
Bit 1
A0
0
1
tSTASU
tSTOSU
tDAL
04739-011
SCL
tDAH
Figure 17. Serial Port Read/Write Timing
Rev. 0 | Page 40 of 44
AD9981
Serial Interface Read/Write Examples
Read from one control register:
Write the following to one control register:
•
•
Start signal
Start signal
•
•
Slave address byte (R/W\bit = low)
Slave address byte (R/W\bit = low)
•
•
Base address byte
Base address byte
•
•
Start signal
Data byte to base address
•
•
Slave address byte (R/W\ bit = high)
Stop signal
•
Data byte from base address
Write to four consecutive control registers:
•
Stop signal
•
Start signal
Read from four consecutive control registers:
•
Slave address byte (R/W\bit = low)
•
•
Start signal
Base address byte
•
•
Slave address byte (R/W\bit = low)
Data byte to base address
•
•
Base address byte
Data byte to (base address + 1)
•
•
Start signal
Data byte to (base address + 2)
•
•
Slave address byte (R/W\bit = high)
Data byte to (base address + 3)
•
•
Data byte from base address
Stop signal
•
Data byte from (base address + 1)
•
Data byte from (base address + 2)
•
Data byte from (base address + 3)
•
Stop signal
BIT 7
BIT 6
BIT 5
BIT 4
BIT 3
BIT 2
BIT 1
BIT 0
ACK
04739-012
SDA
SCL
Figure 18. Serial Interface—Typical Byte Transfer
Rev. 0 | Page 41 of 44
AD9981
PCB LAYOUT RECOMMENDATIONS
The AD9981 is a high-precision, high-speed analog device.
To achieve the maximum performance from the part, it is
important to have a well laid-out board. The Analog Interface
Inputs section provides a guide for designing a board using
the AD9981.
Analog Interface Inputs
Using the following layout techniques on the graphics inputs is
extremely important:
1.
Minimize the trace length running into the graphics inputs.
This is accomplished by placing the AD9981 as close as
possible to the graphics VGA connector. Long input trace
lengths are undesirable because they pick up noise from
the board and other external sources.
2.
Place the 75 Ω termination resistors (see Figure 3) as close
as possible to the AD9981 chip. Any additional trace length
between the termination resistors and the input of the
AD9981 increases the magnitude of reflections, which
corrupts the graphics signal.
3.
Use 75 Ω matched impedance traces. Trace impedances
other than 75 Ω also increases the chance of reflections.
4.
5.
The AD9981 has a very high input bandwidth, (200 MHz).
While this is desirable for acquiring a high resolution PC
graphics signal with fast edges, it also means that it
captures any high frequency noise present. Therefore, it is
important to reduce the amount of noise that gets coupled
to the inputs. Avoid running any digital traces near the
analog inputs.
Due to the high bandwidth of the AD9981, sometimes
low-pass filtering the analog inputs can help to reduce
noise. (For many applications, filtering is unnecessary.)
Experiments have shown that placing a ferrite bead in
series prior to the 75 Ω termination resistor is helpful in
filtering excess noise. Specifically, the Fair-Rite
#2508051217Z0 was used, but an application could work
best with a different bead value. Alternatively, placing a
100 Ω to 120 Ω resistor between the 75 Ω termination
resistor and the input coupling capacitor is beneficial.
Power Supply Bypassing
It is recommended to bypass each power supply pin with a
0.1 µF capacitor. The exception is where two or more supply
pins are adjacent to each other. For these groupings of
powers/grounds, it is only necessary to have one bypass
capacitor. The fundamental idea is to have a bypass capacitor
within about 0.5 cm of each power pin. Also, avoid placing the
capacitor on the opposite side of the PC board from the
AD9981, since that interposes resistive vias in the path.
The bypass capacitors should be physically located between the
power plane and the power pin. Current should flow from the
power plane to the capacitor to the power pin. Do not make the
power connection between the capacitor and the power pin.
Placing a via underneath the capacitor pads, down to the power
plane, is generally the best approach.
It is particularly important to maintain low noise and good
stability of the PVD (the clock generator supply). Abrupt
changes in PVD can result in similarly abrupt changes in
sampling clock phase and frequency. This can be avoided by
careful attention to regulation, filtering, and bypassing. It is
highly desirable to provide separate regulated supplies for each
of the analog circuitry groups (VD and PVD).
Some graphic controllers use substantially different levels of
power when active (during active picture time) and when idle
(during horizontal and vertical sync periods). This can result in
a measurable change in the voltage supplied to the analog
supply regulator, which can in turn produce changes in the
regulated analog supply voltage. This can be mitigated by
regulating the analog supply, or at least PVD, from a different,
cleaner, power source (for example, from a 12 V supply).
It is also recommended to use a single ground plane for the
entire board. Experience has repeatedly shown that the noise
performance is the same or better with a single ground plane.
Using multiple ground planes can be detrimental because each
separate ground plane is smaller and long ground loops can
result.
In some cases, using separate ground planes is unavoidable. For
those cases, it is recommended to at least place a single ground
plane under the AD9981. The location of the split should be at
the receiver of the digital outputs. In this case it is even more
important to place components wisely because the current
loops will be much longer (current takes the path of least
resistance). An example of a current loop is power plane to
AD9981 to digital output trace to digital data receiver to digital
ground plane to analog ground plane.
PLL
Place the PLL loop filter components as close to the FILT pin as
possible. Do not place any digital or other high frequency traces
near these components. Use the values suggested in the data
sheet with 10% tolerances or less.
Outputs (Both Data and Clocks)
Try to minimize the trace length that the digital outputs have to
drive. Longer traces have higher capacitance and require more
instantaneous current to drive, which creates more internal
digital noise. Shorter traces reduce the possibility of reflections.
Rev. 0 | Page 42 of 44
AD9981
Adding a series resistor of value 50 Ω to 200 Ω can suppress
reflections, reduce EMI, and reduce the current spikes inside of
the AD9981. If series resistors are used, place them as close to
the AD9981 pins as possible, (although try not to add vias or
extra length to the output trace to get the resistors closer).
If possible, limit the capacitance that each digital output drives
to less than 10 pF. This is easily accomplished by keeping traces
short and by connecting the outputs to only one device. Loading
the outputs with excessive capacitance increases the current
transients inside of the AD9981 and creates more digital noise
on its power supplies.
Digital Inputs
Digital inputs on the AD9981 (HSYNC0, HSYNC1, VSYNC0,
VSYNC1, SOGIN0, SOGIN1, SDA, SCL and CLAMP) were
designed to work with 3.3 V signals, but are tolerant of 5.0 V
signals. Therefore, no extra components need to be added if
using 5.0 V logic.
Any noise that gets onto the Hsync input trace adds jitter to the
system. Therefore, minimize the trace length and do not run
any digital or other high frequency traces near it.
REFERENCE Bypass
The AD9981 has three reference voltages that must be bypassed
for proper operation of the input PGA. REFLO and REFHI are
connected to each other through a 10 µF capacitor. REFCM is
connected to ground through a 10 µF capacitor. These references are used by the input PGA circuitry to assure the greatest
stability. Place them as close to the AD9981 pin as possible.
Make the ground connection as short as possible.
Rev. 0 | Page 43 of 44
AD9981
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
0.75
0.60
0.45
16.00
BSC SQ
1.60
MAX
61
80
60
1
SEATING
PLANE
PIN 1
14.00
BSC SQ
TOP VIEW
(PINS DOWN)
10°
6°
2°
1.45
1.40
1.35
0.15
0.05
SEATING
PLANE
0.20
0.09
7°
3.5°
0°
0.10 MAX
COPLANARITY
VIEW A
20
41
40
21
0.65
BSC
VIEW A
0.38
0.32
0.22
ROTATED 90° CCW
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MS-026-BEC
Figure 19. 80-Lead Low Profile Quad Flat Pack [LQFP]
(ST-80-2)
Dimensions shown in millimeters
ORDERING GUIDE
Model
AD9981KSTZ-801
AD9981KSTZ-951
AD9981/PCB
1
Temperature Range
0°C to +70°C
0°C to +70°C
Package Description
80-lead LQFP
80-lead LQFP
Evaluation Kit
Package Option
ST-80-2
ST-80-2
Z = Pb-free part.
Purchase of licensed I2C components of Analog Devices or one of its sublicensed Associated Companies conveys a license for the purchaser under the Philips I2C Patent
Rights to use these components in an I2C system, provided that the system conforms to the I2C Standard Specification as defined by Philips.
© 2005 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
D04739–0–1/05 0)
Rev. 0 | Page 44 of 44