AD AD9225

Complete 12-Bit, 25 MSPS
Monolithic A/D Converter
AD9225
FEATURES
Monolithic 12-Bit, 25 MSPS ADC
Low Power Dissipation: 280 mW
Single 5 V Supply
No Missing Codes Guaranteed
Differential Nonlinearity Error: 0.4 LSB
Complete On-Chip Sample-and-Hold Amplifier and
Voltage Reference
Signal-to-Noise and Distortion Ratio: 71 dB
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range: –85 dB
Out-of-Range Indicator
Straight Binary Output Data
28-Lead SOIC
28-Lead SSOP
Compatible with 3 V Logic
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD9225 is a monolithic, single-supply, 12-bit, 25 MSPS
analog-to-digital converter with an on-chip, high performance
sample-and-hold amplifier and voltage reference. The AD9225
uses a multistage differential pipelined architecture with output
error correction logic to provide 12-bit accuracy at 25 MSPS
data rates, and guarantees no missing codes over the full operating temperature range.
The AD9225 combines a low cost, high speed CMOS process
and a novel architecture to achieve the resolution and speed of
existing bipolar implementations at a fraction of the power
consumption and cost.
The input of the AD9225 allows for easy interfacing to both
imaging and communications systems. With the device’s truly
differential input structure, the user can select a variety of input
ranges and offsets, including single-ended applications. The
dynamic performance is excellent.
The sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) is well suited for both
multiplexed systems that switch full-scale voltage levels in successive channels and sampling single-channel inputs at frequencies
up to and well beyond the Nyquist rate.
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
CLK
AVDD
DRVDD
SHA
VINA
MDAC1
GAIN = 16
VINB
ADC
CAPT
5
MDAC2
GAIN = 4
3
ADC
5
MDAC3
GAIN = 4
ADC
3
3
ADC
4
3
CAPB
DIGITAL CORRECTION LOGIC
VREF
12
OUTPUT BUFFERS
OTR
SENSE
MODE
SELECT
1V
AD9225
REFCOM
AVSS
DRVSS
BIT 1
(MSB)
BIT 12
(LSB)
CML
A single clock input is used to control all internal conversion
cycles. The digital output data is presented in straight binary
output format. An out-of-range signal indicates an overflow
condition that can be used with the most significant bit to determine low or high overflow.
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
The AD9225 is fabricated on a very cost effective CMOS process. High speed precision analog circuits are combined with
high density logic circuits.
The AD9225 offers a complete, single-chip sampling, 12-bit,
25 MSPS analog-to-digital conversion function in 28-lead
SOIC and SSOP packages.
Low Power—The AD9225 at 280 mW consumes a fraction of
the power presently available in monolithic solutions.
On-Board Sample-and-Hold Amplifier (SHA)—The versatile SHA input can be configured for either single-ended or
differential inputs.
Out-of-Range (OTR)—The OTR output bit indicates when
the input signal is beyond the AD9225’s input range.
The AD9225’s wideband input, combined with the power and
cost savings over previously available monolithics, suits applications in communications, imaging, and medical ultrasound.
Single Supply—The AD9225 uses a single 5 V power supply,
simplifying system power supply design. It also features a separate digital driven supply line to accommodate 3 V and 5 V logic
families.
The AD9225 has an on-board programmable reference. An
external reference can also be chosen to suit the dc accuracy
and temperature drift requirements of an application.
Pin Compatibility—The AD9225 is pin compatible with the
AD9220, AD9221, AD9223, and AD9224 ADCs.
REV. B
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. 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
© 2003 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD9225–SPECIFICATIONS
DC SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = 5 V, DRVDD = 5 V, fSAMPLE = 25 MSPS, VREF = 2.0 V, VINB = 2.5 V dc, TMIN to TMAX,
unless otherwise noted.)
Parameter
Min
Typ
RESOLUTION
12
Bits
MAX CONVERSION RATE
25
MHz
INPUT REFERRED NOISE
VREF = 1.0 V
VREF = 2.0 V
0.35
0.17
ACCURACY
Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
No Missing Codes
Zero Error (@ 25∞C)
Gain Error (@ 25∞C)1
Gain Error (@ 25∞C)2
± 1.0
± 0.4
12
± 0.3
± 0.5
± 0.4
TEMPERATURE DRIFT
Zero Error
Gain Error1
Gain Error2
±2
± 26
± 0.4
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION
AVDD (+5 V ± 0.25 V)
± 0.1
ANALOG INPUT
Input Span
Input Capacitance
INTERNAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE
Output Voltage (1 V Mode)
Output Voltage Tolerance (1 V Mode)
Output Voltage (2.0 V Mode)
Output Voltage Tolerance (2.0 V Mode)
Output Current (Available for External Loads)
Load Regulation3
1.0
±5
2.0
± 10
1.0
1.0
REFERENCE INPUT RESISTANCE
8
4.75
2.85
POWER CONSUMPTION
External Reference
Internal Reference
Unit
LSB rms
LSB rms
± 2.5
± 1.0
± 0.6
± 2.2
± 1.7
LSB
LSB
Bits Guaranteed
% FSR
% FSR
% FSR
ppm/∞C
ppm/∞C
ppm/∞C
± 0.35
2
4
0
AVDD
10
Input (VINA or VINB) Range
POWER SUPPLIES
Supply Voltages
AVDD
DRVDD
Supply Currents
IAVDD
IDRVDD
Max
% FSR
V p-p
V p-p
V
V
pF
± 17
± 35
3.4
V
mV
V
mV
mA
mV
kW
5
5.25
5.25
V (± 5% AVDD Operating)
V (± 5% DRVDD Operating)
65
2.0
72.5
4.0
mA
mA
280
335
290
345
310
373
mW (VREF = 1 V)
mW (VREF = 2 V)
mW (VREF = 1 V)
mW (VREF = 2 V)
NOTES
1
Includes internal voltage reference error.
2
Excludes internal voltage reference error.
3
Load regulation with 1 mA load current (in addition to that required by the AD9225).
Specifications subject to change without notice.
–2–
REV. B
AD9225
AC SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = 5 V, DRVDD = 5 V, fSAMPLE = 25 MSPS, VREF = 2.0 V, TMIN to TMAX, Differential Input unless
otherwise noted.)
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE AND DISTORTION RATIO (S/N+D)
fINPUT = 2.5 MHz
67.4
fINPUT = 10 MHz
66.7
70.7
69.6
dB
dB
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR)
fINPUT = 2.5 MHz
fINPUT = 10 MHz
71
70
dB
dB
69.0
68.2
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD)
fINPUT = 2.5 MHz
fINPUT = 10 MHz
SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE
fINPUT = 2.5 MHz
fINPUT = 10 MHz
Full Power Bandwidth
Small Signal Bandwidth
Aperture Delay
Aperture Jitter
Acquisition to Full-Scale Step
–82
–81
73
72.5
–72
–71.5
–85
–83
105
105
1
1
10
dB
dB
dB
dB
MHz
MHz
ns
ps rms
ns
Specifications subject to change without notice.
DIGITAL SPECIFICATIONS
(AVDD = 5 V, DRVDD = 5 V, unless otherwise noted.)
Parameter
Symbol
Min
LOGIC INPUTS
High Level Input Voltage
Low Level Input Voltage
High Level Input Current (VIN = DRVDD)
Low Level Input Current (VIN = 0 V)
Input Capacitance
VIH
VIL
IIH
IIL
CIN
3.5
LOGIC OUTPUTS
High Level Output Voltage (IOH = 50 mA)
High Level Output Voltage (IOH = 0.5 mA)
Low Level Output Voltage (IOL = 1.6 mA)
Low Level Output Voltage (IOL = 50 mA)
Output Capacitance
VOH
VOH
VOL
VOL
COUT
4.5
2.4
LOGIC OUTPUTS (with DRVDD = 3 V)
High Level Output Voltage (IOH = 50 mA)
High Level Output Voltage (IOH = 0.5 mA)
Low Level Output Voltage (IOL = 1.6 mA)
Low Level Output Voltage (IOL = 50 mA)
VOH
VOH
VOL
VOL
2.95
2.80
Typ
Max
Unit
1.0
+10
+10
5
V
V
mA
mA
pF
5
V
V
V
V
pF
–10
–10
0.4
0.1
0.4
0.05
V
V
V
V
Max
Unit
Specifications subject to change without notice.
SWITCHING SPECIFICATIONS
(TMIN to TMAX with AVDD = 5 V, DRVDD = 5 V, CL = 20 pF)
Parameter
Symbol
Min
Clock Period*
CLOCK Pulse Width High
CLOCK Pulse Width Low
Output Delay
Pipeline Delay (Latency)
tC
tCH
tCL
tOD
40
18
18
13
3
*The clock period may be extended to 1 ms without degradation in specified performance @ 25 ∞C.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
REV. B
Typ
–3–
ns
ns
ns
ns
Clock Cycles
AD9225
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
Pin Name
AVDD
DRVDD
AVSS
AVDD
REFCOM
CLK
Digital Outputs
VINA, VINB
VREF
SENSE
CAPB, CAPT
Junction Temperature
Storage Temperature
Lead Temperature (10 sec)
With
Respect to
Min
Max
Unit
AVSS
DRVSS
DRVSS
DRVDD
AVSS
AVSS
DRVSS
AVSS
AVSS
AVSS
AVSS
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–6.5
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
+6.5
+6.5
+0.3
+6.5
+0.3
AVDD + 0.3
DRVDD + 0.3
AVDD + 0.3
AVDD + 0.3
AVDD + 0.3
AVDD + 0.3
150
+150
300
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
∞C
∞C
∞C
–65
*Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a
stress rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the
operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum ratings for extended periods
may affect device reliability.
S1
ANALOG
INPUT
S2
tCH
tC
PIN CONFIGURATION
28-Lead SOIC and SSOP
S4
tCL
S3
INPUT
CLOCK
tOD
DATA
OUTPUT
CLK 1
28
DRVDD
(LSB) BIT 12 2
27
DRVSS
BIT 11 3
26
AVDD
BIT 10 4
25
AVSS
BIT 9 5
24
VINB
BIT 8 6
23
VINA
DATA 1
Figure 1. Timing Diagram
AD9225
BIT 7 7
TOP VIEW 22 CML
BIT 6 8 (Not to Scale) 21 CAPT
BIT 5 9
20
CAPB
BIT 4 10
19
REFCOM
BIT 3 11
18
VREF
BIT 2 12
17
SENSE
(MSB) BIT 1 13
16
AVSS
OTR 14
15
AVDD
ORDERING GUIDE
Model
Temperature Range
Package Description
Package Option
AD9225AR
AD9225ARRL
AD9225ARS
AD9225ARSRL
AD9225-EB
–40∞C to +85∞C
–40∞C to +85∞C
–40∞C to +85∞C
–40∞C to +85∞C
28-Lead Wide Body Small Outline
28-Lead Wide Body Small Outline
28-Lead Shrink Small Outline
28-Lead Shrink Small Outline
Evaluation Board
R-28
R-28
RS-28
RS-28
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 the
AD9225 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.
–4–
REV. B
AD9225
PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Pin Number
Mnemonic
Description
1
2
3–12
13
14
15, 26
16, 25
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
27
28
CLK
BIT 12
BIT 11–2
BIT 1
OTR
AVDD
AVSS
SENSE
VREF
REFCOM
CAPB
CAPT
CML
VINA
VINB
DRVSS
DRVDD
Clock Input Pin
Least Significant Data Bit (LSB)
Data Output Bit
Most Significant Data Bit (MSB)
Out of Range
5 V Analog Supply
Analog Ground
Reference Select
Input Span Select (Reference I/O)
Reference Common (AVSS)
Noise Reduction Pin
Noise Reduction Pin
Common-Mode Level (Midsupply)
Analog Input Pin (+)
Analog Input Pin (–)
Digital Output Driver Ground
3 V to 5 V Digital Output Driver Supply
Aperture Delay
TERMINOLOGY
Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
Aperture delay is a measure of the sample-and-hold amplifier
(SHA) performance and is measured from the rising edge of the
clock input to when the input signal is held for conversion.
INL refers to the deviation of each individual code from a line
drawn from negative full scale through positive full scale. The
point used as negative full scale occurs 1/2 LSB before the first
code transition. Positive full scale is defined as a level 1 1/2 LSB
beyond the last code transition. The deviation is measured from
the middle of each particular code to the true straight line.
Signal-to-Noise and Distortion Ratio (S/N+D, SINAD)
S/N+D is the ratio of the rms value of the measured input
signal to the rms sum of all other spectral components below
the Nyquist frequency, including harmonics but excluding dc.
The value for S/N+D is expressed in decibels.
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL, No Missing Codes)
An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions that are exactly 1 LSB
apart. DNL is the deviation from this ideal value. Guaranteed
no missing codes to 12-bit resolution indicates that all 4096
codes, respectively, must be present over all operating ranges.
Effective Number of Bits (ENOB)
For a sine wave, SINAD can be expressed in terms of the number of bits. Using the following formula,
N = (SINAD – 1.76)/6.02
Zero Error
it is possible to get a measure of performance expressed as N,
the effective number of bits.
The major carry transition should occur for an analog value
1/2 LSB below VINA = VINB. Zero error is defined as the
deviation of the actual transition from that point.
The effective number of bits for a device for sine wave inputs at
a given input frequency can be calculated directly from its measured SINAD.
Gain Error
The first code transition should occur at an analog value 1/2 LSB
above negative full scale. The last transition should occur at an
analog value 1 1/2 LSB below the nominal full scale. Gain error
is the deviation of the actual difference between first and last
code transitions and the ideal difference between first and last
code transitions.
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
THD is the ratio of the rms sum of the first six harmonic components to the rms value of the measured input signal and is
expressed as a percentage or in decibels.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)
Temperature Drift
The temperature drift for zero error and gain error specifies the
maximum change from the initial (25∞C) value to the value at
TMIN or TMAX.
SNR is the ratio of the rms value of the measured input signal to
the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist
frequency, excluding the first six harmonics and dc. The value
for SNR is expressed in decibels.
Power Supply Rejection
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (SFDR)
The specification shows the maximum change in full scale from
the value with the supply at the minimum limit to the value with
the supply at its maximum limit.
SFDR is the difference in dB between the rms amplitude of the
input signal and the peak spurious signal.
Aperture Jitter
Aperture jitter is the variation in aperture delay for successive
samples and is manifested as noise on the input to the ADC.
REV. B
–5–
AD9225–Typical Performance Characteristics
(AVDD, DRVDD = 5 V, fS = 25 MHz (50% Duty Cycle), unless otherwise noted.)
2.00
1.00
1.50
0.75
1.00
0.50
0.50
0.25
Title
0
0.00
–0.25
0.50
–0.50
1.00
–0.75
1.50
2.00
–1.00
0
511
1022
1533
2044
Title
2555
3066
3577
4095
511
0
TITLE
1022
2044
2555
3066
3577
4095
TPC 4. Typical INL
TPC 1. Typical DNL
70
75
0.5dB INT 1V
0.5dB 2V INT REF
65
70
6dB 2V INT REF
6dB INT 1V
65
SINAD (dB)
SINAD (dB)
1533
60
60
55
20dB INT 1V
50
55
20dB 2V INT REF
45
50
FREQUENCY (MHz)
FREQUENCY (MHz)
TPC 5. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V p-p
VCM = 2.5 V Differential Input)
TPC 2. SINAD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 4.0 V p-p,
VCM = 2.5 V Differential Input)
–60
–60
–65
20dB INT 1V
–65
20.0dB 2V INT REF
–70
THD (dB)
THD (dB)
10
1
10
1
–75
–70
–75
6dB INT 1V
6.0dB 2V INT REF
–80
–80
0.5dB INT 1V
0.5dB 2V INT REF
–85
–85
1
FREQUENCY (MHz)
1
10
10
FREQUENCY (MHz)
TPC 6. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 2 V p-p,
VCM = 2.5 V Differential Input)
TPC 3. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span = 4.0 V p-p,
VCM = 2.5 V Differential Input)
–6–
REV. B
AD9225
90
–70
80
–75
70
THD (dB)
SNR AND SFDR (dBFS)
SFDR INT 2V REF
60
SNR INT 2V REF
–80
INT 1V REF
50
–85
INT 2V REF
40
30
–40
–35
–30
–25
–20
–15
AIN (dB)
–10
–5
–90
0
TPC 7. SNR/SFDR vs. AIN (Input Amplitude)
(fIN = 12.5 MHz, Input Span = 4.0 V p-p, VCM = 2.5 V
Differential Input)
10
FREQUENCY (MHz)
TPC 10. THD vs. Sample Rate, (AIN = –0.5 dB,
VCM = 2.5 V, Input Span = 4.0 V p-p Differential Input)
–65
75
20.0dB 2V INT REF
0.5dB 2V INT REF
–70
70
–75
65
–80
SNR (dB)
THD (dB)
6.0dB 2V INT REF
6.0dB 2V INT REF
60
0.5dB 2V INT REF
–85
55
20.0dB 2V INT REF
–90
1
50
10
1
FREQUENCY (MHz)
TPC 8. THD vs. Input Frequency (Input Span =
4.0 V p-p, VCM = 2.5 V Single-Ended Input)
HITS
N–1
4206
N
N+1
BIN
TPC 9. Grounded-Input Histogram (Input Span =
40 V p-p)
REV. B
10
TPC 11. SNR vs. Input Frequency (Input Span =
4.0 V p-p, VCM = 2.5 V Single-Ended Input)
246447
3299
FREQUENCY (MHz)
–7–
AD9225
the difference of the voltages applied at the VINA and VINB
input pins. Therefore, the equation
INTRODUCTION
The AD9225 is a high performance, complete single-supply
12-bit ADC. The analog input range of the AD9225 is highly
flexible, allowing for both single-ended or differential inputs
of varying amplitudes that can be ac-coupled or dc-coupled.
VCORE = VINA – VINB
(1)
defines the output of the differential input stage and provides
the input to the ADC core.
The AD9225 utilizes a four-stage pipeline architecture with a
wideband input sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) implemented
on a cost-effective CMOS process. Each stage of the pipeline,
excluding the last stage, consists of a low resolution flash ADC
connected to a switched capacitor DAC and interstage residue
amplifier (MDAC). The residue amplifier amplifies the difference between the reconstructed DAC output and the flash input
for the next stage in the pipeline. One bit of redundancy is used
in each of the stages to facilitate digital correction of flash errors.
The last stage simply consists of a flash ADC.
The voltage, VCORE, must satisfy the condition
–VREF £ VCORE £ VREF
(2)
where VREF is the voltage at the VREF pin.
While an infinite combination of VINA and VINB inputs exist
that satisfy Equation 2, there is an additional limitation placed
on the inputs by the power supply voltages of the AD9225. The
power supplies bound the valid operating range for VINA and
VINB. The condition
The pipeline architecture allows a greater throughput rate at the
expense of pipeline delay or latency. This means that while the
converter is capable of capturing a new input sample every clock
cycle, it actually takes three clock cycles for the conversion to
be fully processed and appear at the output. This latency is not
a concern in most applications. The digital output, together
with the out-of-range indicator (OTR), is latched into an
output buffer to drive the output pins. The output drivers of
the AD9225 can be configured to interface with 5 V or 3.3 V
logic families.
AVSS – 0.3 V < VINA < AVDD + 0.3 V
(3)
AVSS – 0.3 V < VINB < AVDD + 0.3 V
where AVSS is nominally 0 V and AVDD is nominally 5 V,
defines this requirement. The range of valid inputs for VINA
and VINB is any combination that satisfies both Equations
2 and 3.
For additional information showing the relationships among
VINA, VINB, VREF, and the digital output of the AD9225, see
Table IV.
The AD9225 uses both edges of the clock in its internal timing
circuitry (see Figure 1 and Specifications tables for exact timing
requirements). The ADC samples the analog input on the rising
edge of the clock input. During the clock low time (between the
falling edge and rising edge of the clock), the input SHA is in
the sample mode; during the clock high time it is in hold mode.
System disturbances just prior to the rising edge of the clock
and/or excessive clock jitter may cause the input SHA to acquire
the wrong value, and should be minimized.
Refer to Table I and Table II at the end of this section for a summary of the various analog input and reference configurations.
ANALOG INPUT OPERATION
Figure 3 shows the equivalent analog input of the AD9225,
which consists of a differential sample-and-hold amplifier. The
differential input structure of the SHA is highly flexible, allowing the devices to be easily configured for either a differential or
single-ended input. The dc offset, or common-mode voltage, of
the input(s) can be set to accommodate either single-supply or
dual-supply systems. Also, note that the analog inputs, VINA
and VINB, are interchangeable, with the exception that reversing the inputs to the VINA and VINB pins results in a polarity
inversion.
ANALOG INPUT AND REFERENCE OVERVIEW
Figure 2 is a simplified model of the AD9225. It highlights the
relationship between the analog inputs, VINA and VINB, and the
reference voltage, VREF. Like the voltage applied to the top of
the resistor ladder in a flash ADC, the value VREF defines the
maximum input voltage to the ADC core. The minimum input
voltage to the ADC core is automatically defined to be –VREF.
CH
QS2
VINA
AD9225
+VREF
VCORE
VINB
ADC
CORE
VINA
CPIN+
CPAR
QS1
12
VINB
CS
QS1
QH1
CS
–
CPIN
CPAR
QS2
–VREF
CH
Figure 2. Equivalent Functional Input Circuit
Figure 3. Simplified Input Circuit
The addition of a differential input structure gives the user an
additional level of flexibility that is not possible with traditional
flash converters. The input stage allows the user to easily configure the inputs for either single-ended operation or differential
operation. The A/D converter’s input structure allows the dc
offset of the input signal to be varied independently of the input
span of the converter. Specifically, the input to the ADC core is
The AD9225 has a wide input range. The input peaks may be
moved to AVDD or AVSS before performance is compromised.
This allows for much greater flexibility when selecting singleended drive schemes. Op amps and ac coupling clamps can be
set to available reference levels rather than be dictated according
to what the ADC needs.
–8–
REV. B
AD9225
VCC
Due to the high degree of symmetry within the SHA topology, a
significant improvement in distortion performance for differential input signals with frequencies up to and beyond Nyquist can
be realized. This inherent symmetry provides excellent cancellation of both common-mode distortion and noise. Also, the
required input signal voltage span is reduced by a half, which
further reduces the degree of RON modulation and its effects
on distortion.
VINA
RS
VINB
VEE
VREF
10F
0.1F
SENSE
REFCOM
The optimum noise and dc linearity performance for either
differential or single-ended inputs is achieved with the largest
input signal voltage span (i.e., 4 V input span) and matched
input impedance for VINA and VINB. Only a slight degradation in dc linearity performance exists between the 2 V and 4 V
input spans.
Figure 4. Series Resistor Isolates Switched Capacitor
SHA Input from Op Amp. Matching Resistors Improve
SNR Performance.
The optimum size of this resistor is dependent on several factors, which include the ADC sampling rate, the selected op
amp, and the particular application. In most applications, a
30 W to 100 W resistor is sufficient. However, some applications may require a larger resistor value to reduce the noise
bandwidth or possibly to limit the fault current in an overvoltage condition. Other applications may require a larger resistor
value as part of an antialiasing filter. In any case, since the THD
performance is dependent on the series resistance and the above
mentioned factors, optimizing this resistor value for a given
application is encouraged.
Referring to Figure 3, the differential SHA is implemented
using a switched capacitor topology. Its input impedance and its
switching effects on the input drive source should be considered
in order to maximize the converter’s performance. The combination of the pin capacitance, CPIN, parasitic capacitance, CPAR,
and the sampling capacitance, CS, is typically less than 5 pF.
When the SHA goes into track mode, the input source must
charge or discharge the voltage stored on CS to the new input
voltage. This action of charging and discharging CS, averaged
over a period of time and for a given sampling frequency, fS,
makes the input impedance appear to have a benign resistive
component. However, if this action is analyzed within a sampling
period (i.e., T = 1/fS), the input impedance is dynamic and
therefore certain precautions on the input drive source should
be observed.
The source impedance driving VINA and VINB should be
matched. Failure to provide that matching will result in degradation of the AD9225’s superb SNR, THD, and SFDR.
For noise sensitive applications, the very high bandwidth of the
AD9225 may be detrimental. The addition of a series resistor
and/or shunt capacitor can help limit the wideband noise at the
ADC’s input by forming a low-pass filter. Note, however, that
the combination of this series resistance with the equivalent
input capacitance of the AD9225 should be evaluated for
those time domain applications that are sensitive to the input
signal’s absolute settling time. In applications where harmonic
distortion is not a primary concern, the series resistance may be
selected in combination with the SHA’s nominal 10 pF of input
capacitance to set the filter’s 3 dB cutoff frequency.
The resistive component to the input impedance can be computed by calculating the average charge that gets drawn by CH
from the input drive source. It can be shown that if CS is allowed to fully charge up to the input voltage before switches
QS1 are opened, then the average current into the input would
be the same as it would if there were a resistor of 1/(CS fS) Ohms
connected between the inputs. This means that the input impedance is inversely proportional to the converter’s sample
rate. Since CS is only 5 pF, this resistive component is typically
much larger than that of the drive source (i.e., 8 kW at fS =
25 MSPS).
A better method of reducing the noise bandwidth, while possibly establishing a real pole for an antialiasing filter, is to add
some additional shunt capacitance between the input (i.e.,
VINA and/or VINB) and analog ground. Since this additional
shunt capacitance combines with the equivalent input capacitance of the AD9225, a lower series resistance can be selected to
establish the filter’s cutoff frequency while not degrading the
distortion performance of the device. The shunt capacitance
also acts like a charge reservoir, sinking or sourcing the additional charge required by the hold capacitor, CH, and further
reducing current transients seen at the op amp’s output.
The SHA’s input impedance over a sampling period appears as
a dynamic input impedance to the input drive source. When the
SHA goes into the track mode, the input source ideally should
provide the charging current through RON of switch QS1 in an
exponential manner. The requirement of exponential charging
means that the most common input source, an op amp, must
exhibit a source impedance that is both low and resistive up to
and beyond the sampling frequency.
The output impedance of an op amp can be modeled with a
series inductor and resistor. When a capacitive load is switched
onto the output of the op amp, the output will momentarily
drop due to its effective output impedance. As the output recovers, ringing may occur. To remedy the situation, a series resistor
can be inserted between the op amp and the SHA input as
shown in Figure 4. The series resistance helps isolate the op
amp from the switched capacitor load.
REV. B
AD9225
RS
The effect of this increased capacitive load on the op amp driving the AD9225 should be evaluated. To optimize performance
when noise is the primary consideration, increase the shunt
capacitance as much as the transient response of the input signal
will allow. Increasing the capacitance too much may adversely
affect the op amp’s settling time, frequency response, and distortion performance.
–9–
AD9225
The actual reference voltages used by the internal circuitry of
the AD9225 appears on the CAPT and CAPB pins. For proper
operation when using the internal or an external reference, it is
necessary to add a capacitor network to decouple these pins.
Figure 6 shows the recommended decoupling network. This
capacitive network performs the following three functions: (1)
along with the reference amplifier, A2, it provides a low source
impedance over a large frequency range to drive the ADC internal circuitry, (2) it provides the necessary compensation for A2,
and (3) it bandlimits the noise contribution from the reference.
The turn-on time of the reference voltage appearing between
CAPT and CAPB is approximately 15 ms and should be evaluated in any power-down mode of operation.
REFERENCE OPERATION
The AD9225 contains an on-board band gap reference that
provides a pin strappable option to generate either a 1 V or 2 V
output. With the addition of two external resistors, the user can
generate reference voltages other than 1 V and 2 V. Another
alternative is to use an external reference for designs requiring
enhanced accuracy and/or drift performance. See Table II for
a summary of the pin strapping options for the AD9225 reference configurations.
Figure 5 shows a simplified model of the internal voltage
reference of the AD9225. A pin strappable reference amplifier
buffers a 1 V fixed reference. The output from the reference
amplifier, A1, appears on the VREF pin. The voltage on the
VREF pin determines the full-scale input span of the ADC.
This input span equals
0.1F
CAPT
Full-Scale Input Span = 2 ¥ VREF
AD9225
The voltage appearing at the VREF pin as well as the state of
the internal reference amplifier, A1, are determined by the voltage appearing at the SENSE pin. The logic circuitry contains
two comparators that monitor the voltage at the SENSE pin.
The comparator with the lowest set point (approximately 0.3 V)
controls the position of the switch within the feedback path of
A1. If the SENSE pin is tied to AVSS (AGND), the switch is
connected to the internal resistor network thus providing a
VREF of 2.0 V. If the SENSE pin is tied to the VREF pin via
a short or resistor, the switch will connect to the SENSE pin.
This short will provide a VREF of 1.0 V. An external resistor
network will provide an alternative VREF between 1.0 V and
2.0 V. The other comparator controls internal circuitry that will
disable the reference amplifier if the SENSE pin is tied AVDD.
Disabling the reference amplifier allows the VREF pin to be
driven by an external voltage reference.
AD9225
TO
A/D
CAPT
5k
A2
5k
CAPB
5k
LOGIC
VREF
1V
A1
6.25k
SENSE
DISABLE
A1
LOGIC
10F
0.1F
Figure 6. Recommended CAPT/CAPB
Decoupling Network
The ADC’s input span may be varied dynamically by changing the
differential reference voltage appearing across CAPT and CAPB
symmetrically around 2.5 V (i.e., midsupply). To change the reference at speeds beyond the capabilities of A2, it will be necessary to
drive CAPT and CAPB with two high speed, low noise amplifiers.
In this case, both internal amplifiers (i.e., A1 and A2) must be
disabled by connecting SENSE to AVDD, connecting VREF to
AVSS and removing the capacitive decoupling network. The external voltages applied to CAPT and CAPB must be 2.0 V + Input
Span/4 and 2.0 V – Input Span/4, respectively, in which the input
span can be varied between 2 V and 4 V. Note that those samples
within the pipeline ADC during any reference transition will be
corrupted and should be discarded.
DRIVING THE ANALOG INPUTS
5k
DISABLE
A2
0.1F
CAPB
6.25k
REFCOM
Figure 5. Equivalent Reference Circuit
The AD9225 has a highly flexible input structure allowing it to
interface with single ended or differential input interface circuitry. The applications shown in this section and the Reference
Configurations section along with the information presented in
the Input and Reference Overview give examples of singleended and differential operation. Refer to Tables I and II for a
list of the different possible input and reference configurations
and their associated figures in the data sheet.
The optimum mode of operation, analog input range, and associated interface circuitry will be determined by the particular
applications performance requirements as well as power supply
options. For example, a dc-coupled single-ended input would
be appropriate for most data acquisition and imaging applications. Many communication applications, which require a
dc-coupled input for proper demodulation, can take advantage
of the excellent single-ended distortion performance of the
AD9225. The input span should be configured so the system’s
performance objectives and the headroom requirements of the
driving op amp are simultaneously met.
–10–
REV. B
AD9225
Table I. Analog Input Configuration Summary
Input
Connection
Input
Input Range (V)
Coupling Span (V) VINA*
VINB*
Figure
No.
Single-Ended
DC
1
8, 9
Best for stepped input response applications;
requires ± 5 V op amp.
2 ¥ VREF 0 to
2 ¥ VREF
VREF
8, 9
Same as above but with improved noise
performance due to increase in dynamic
range. Headroom/settling time requirements
of ± 5 V op amp should be evaluated.
4
2.0
8, 9
Optimum noise performance, excellent THD
performance, often requires low distortion op
amp with VCC > +5 V due to its headroom
issues.
2.0
21
Optimum THD performance with VREF = 1.
Single-supply operation (i.e., +5 V) for many
op amps.
2
0 to 2
0 to 4
2 ¥ VREF 2.0 – VREF
to
2.0 + VREF
Single-Ended
AC
Differential
AC/DC
(via Transformer)
or Amplifier
Comments
2 or
0 to 1 or
1 or VREF
2 ¥ VREF 0 to 2 ¥ VREF
10, 11
4
2.0
11
Optimum noise performance, excellent THD
performance; ability to use ± 5 V op amp.
2 ¥ VREF 2.0 – VREF
to
2.0 + VREF
2.0
10
Flexible input range, optimum THD performance with VREF = 1. Ability to use either
+5 V or ± 5 V op amp.
2
3 to 2
12, 13
Optimum full-scale THD and SFDR performance well beyond the ADC’s Nyquist
frequency. Preferred mode for undersampling applications.
0.5 to 4.5
2 to 3
2 ¥ VREF 2.0 – VREF/2
to
2.0 + VREF/2
2.0 + VREF/2 12, 13
to
2.0 – VREF/2
Same as above with the exception that fullscale THD and SFDR performance can be
traded off for better noise performance.
4.0
3.5 to 1.5
Optimum noise performance.
1.5 to 3.5
12, 13
*VINA and VINB can be interchanged if signal inversion is required.
Table II. Reference Configuration Summary
Reference
Operating Mode
Input Span (VINA–VINB)
(V p-p)
Required VREF (V)
Connect
To
Internal
Internal
Internal
2
4
2 £ SPAN £ 4 and
SPAN = 2 ⫻ VREF
1
2
1 £ VREF £ 2.0 and
VREF = (1 + R1/R2)
SENSE
SENSE
R1
R2
VREF
REFCOM
VREF and SENSE
SENSE and REFCOM
External
(Nondynamic)
2 £ SPAN £ 4
1 £ VREF £ 2.0
SENSE
VREF
AVDD
External Reference
External
(Dynamic)
2 £ SPAN £ 4
CAPT and CAPB
Externally Driven
SENSE
VREF
External Reference
External Reference
AVDD
AVSS
CAPT
CAPB
REV. B
–11–
AD9225
Differential modes of operation (ac-coupled or dc-coupled input)
provide the best THD and SFDR performance over a wide frequency range. Differential operation should be considered for the
most demanding spectral based applications (e.g., direct IF-todigital conversion). See Figures 12 and 13 and the Differential
Mode of Operation section. Differential input characterization was
performed for this data sheet using the configuration shown in
Figure 13.
Single-ended operation is often limited by the availability of driving
op amps. Very low distortion op amps that provide great performance out to the Nyquist frequency of the converter are hard to
find. Compounding the problem, for dc-coupled, single-ended
applications, is the inability of many high performance amplifiers
to maintain low distortions as their outputs approach their positive
output voltage limit (i.e., 1 dB compression point). For this reason,
it is recommended that applications requiring high performance
dc coupling use the single-ended-to-differential circuit shown in
Figure 12.
Single-ended operation requires that VINA be ac-coupled or dccoupled to the input signal source while VINB of the AD9225 be
biased to the appropriate voltage corresponding to a midscale code
transition. Note that signal inversion may be easily accomplished
by transposing VINA and VINB. Most of the single-ended specifications for the AD9225 are characterized using Figure 21 circuitry
with input spans of 4 V and 2 V as well as VINB = 2.5 V.
DC COUPLING AND INTERFACE ISSUES
Many applications require the analog input signal to be dc-coupled
to the AD9225. An operational amplifier can be configured to
rescale and level shift the input signal so that it is compatible with
the selected input range of the ADC. The input range to the ADC
should be selected on the basis of system performance objectives,
as well as the analog power supply availability since this will place
certain constraints on the op amp selection.
Differential operation requires that VINA and VINB be simultaneously driven with two equal signals that are in and out of phase
versions of the input signal. Differential operation of the AD9225
offers the following benefits: (1) Signal swings are smaller and,
therefore, linearity requirements placed on the input signal source
may be easier to achieve, (2) Signal swings are smaller and therefore may allow the use of op amps which may otherwise have been
constrained by headroom limitations, (3) Differential operation
minimizes even-order harmonic products, and (4) Differential
operation offers noise immunity based on the device’s commonmode rejection.
Many of the new high performance op amps are specified for only
±5 V operation and have limited input/output swing capabilities.
The selected input range of the AD9225 should be considered with
the headroom requirements of the particular op amp to prevent
clipping of the signal. Since the output of a dual supply amplifier
can swing below –0.3 V, clamping its output should be considered
in some applications.
As is typical of most IC devices, exceeding the supply limits will
turn on internal parasitic diodes resulting in transient currents
within the device. Figure 7 shows a simple means of clamping an
ac-coupled or dc-coupled single-ended input with the addition of
two series resistors and two diodes. An optional capacitor is shown
for ac-coupled applications. Note that a larger series resistor could
be used to limit the fault current through D1 and D2 but should
be evaluated since it can cause a degradation in overall performance. A similar clamping circuit could also be used for each input
if a differential input signal is being applied. The diodes might
cause nonlinearities in the signal. Careful evaluation should be
performed on the diodes used.
VCC
OPTIONAL
AC COUPLING
CAPACITOR
AVDD
RS1
30
D2
1N4148
RS2
20
In some applications, it may be advantageous to use an op amp
specified for single-supply +5 V operation since it will inherently
limit its output swing to within the power supply rails. Amplifiers
like the AD8041 and AD8011 are useful for this purpose but their
low bandwidths will limit the AD9225’s performance. High performance amplifiers, such as the AD9631, AD9632, AD8056, or
AD8055, allow the AD9225 to be configured for larger input spans
which will improve the ADC’s noise performance.
Op amp circuits using a noninverting and inverting topology are
discussed in the next section. Although not shown, the noninverting and inverting topologies can be easily configured as part
of an antialiasing filter by using a Sallen-Key or multiple-feedback
topology. An additional R-C network can be inserted between the
op amp output and the AD9225 input to provide a filter pole.
Simple Op Amp Buffer
AD9225
D1
1N4148
VEE
Figure 7. Simple Clamping Circuit
SINGLE-ENDED MODE OF OPERATION
The AD9225 can be configured for single-ended operation using
dc-coupling or ac-coupling. In either case, the input of the ADC
must be driven from an operational amplifier that will not degrade
the ADC’s performance. Because the ADC operates from a single
supply, it will be necessary to level shift ground based bipolar
signals to comply with its input requirements. Both dc and ac
coupling provide this necessary function, but each method results
in different interface issues that may influence the system design
and performance.
In the simplest case, the input signal to the AD9225 will already be
biased at levels in accordance with the selected input range. It is
simply necessary to provide an adequately low source impedance
for the VINA and VINB analog pins of the ADC. Figure 8 shows
the recommended configuration a single-ended drive using an op
amp. In this case, the op amp is shown in a noninverting unity gain
configuration driving the VINA pin. The internal reference drives
the VINB pin. Note that the addition of a small series resistor of
30 W to 50 W connected to VINA and VINB will be beneficial in
nearly all cases. Refer to the Analog Input Operation section on a
discussion on resistor selection. Figure 8 shows the proper connection for a 0 V to 4 V input range. Alternative single-ended ranges
of 0 V to 2 ¥ VREF can also be realized with the proper configuration of VREF (refer to the Using the Internal Reference section).
Headroom limitations of the op amp must always be considered.
–12–
REV. B
AD9225
+V
4V
0V
impedance over a wide frequency range. The combination of the
capacitor and the resistor form a high-pass filter with a high-pass –
3 dB frequency determined by the equation
AD9225
RS
U1
VINA
RS
f–3 dB = 1/(2 ¥ ␲ ¥ R ¥ (C1 + C2))
VINB
–V
2.0V
VREF
10F
The low impedance VREF voltage source biases both the VINB
input and provides the bias voltage for the VINA input. Figure 10
shows the VREF configured for 2.0 V thus the input range of the
ADC is 0 V to 4 V. Other input ranges could be selected by changing VREF.
0.1F
SENSE
Figure 8. Single-Ended AD9225 Op Amp Drive Circuit
Op Amp with DC Level Shifting
Figure 9 shows a dc-coupled level shifting circuit employing an op
amp, A1, to sum the input signal with the desired dc set. Configuring the op amp in the inverting mode with the given resistor values
results in an ac signal gain of –1. If the signal inversion is undesirable, interchange the VINA and VINB connections to re-establish
the original signal polarity. The dc voltage at VREF sets the
common-mode voltage of the AD9225. For example, when
VREF = 2.0 V, the input level from the op amp will also be centered around 2.0 V. The use of ratio matched, thin-film resistor
networks will minimize gain and offset errors. Also, an optional
pull-up resistor, RP, may be used to reduce the output load on
VREF to less than its 1 mA maximum.
500*
+VCC
0.1F
+VREF
0VDC
–VREF
RP**
500*
NC
2
7
500*
3
+V
0.1F
500*
RS
1
A1
VINA
6
5
4
AD9225
NC
RS
VREF
VINB
*OPTIONAL RESISTOR NETWORK-OHMTEK ORNA500D
**OPTIONAL PULL-UP RESISTOR WHEN USING INTERNAL REFERENCE
Figure 9. Single-Ended Input with DC-Coupled Level Shift
+5V
+2V
0V
–2V
VIN
+V
+V
4.5
2.5
0.5
AD9631
R
R
AD9225
RS
VINA
C2
0.1F
–5V
RS
VINB
0.1F
R
10F
R
Figure 10. AC-Coupled Input
Alternative AC Interface
Figure 11 shows a flexible ac-coupled circuit that can be configured for different input spans. Since the common-mode voltage of
VINA and VINB are biased to midsupply independent of VREF,
VREF can be pin strapped or reconfigured to achieve input spans
between 2 V and 4 V p-p. The AD9225’s CMRR along with the
symmetrical coupling R-C networks will reject both power supply
variations and noise. The resistors, R, establish the common-mode
voltage. They may have a high value (e.g., 5 kW) to minimize
power consumption and establish a low cutoff frequency. The
capacitors, C1 and C2, are typically a 0.1 mF ceramic and 10 mF
tantalum capacitor in parallel to achieve a low cutoff frequency
while maintaining a low impedance over a wide frequency range.
RS isolates the buffer amplifier from the ADC input. The optimum
performance is achieved when VINA and VINB are driven via
symmetrical networks. The f–3 dB point can be approximated by
the equation
AC COUPLING AND INTERFACE ISSUES
f –3 dB =
For applications where ac coupling is appropriate, the op amp
output can be easily level-shifted via a coupling capacitor. This has
the advantage of allowing the op amp common-mode level to be
symmetrically biased to its midsupply level (i.e., (VCC + VEE)/2).
Op amps that operate symmetrically with respect to their power
supplies typically provide the best ac performance as well as greatest input/output span. Various high speed/performance amplifiers
which are restricted to +5 V/–5 V operation and/or specified for
+5 V single-supply operation can be easily configured for the 4 V
or 2 V input span of the AD9225. Note that differential transformer coupling, which is another form of ac coupling, should be
considered for optimum ac performance.
1
2 p ¥ 6K +(C1+ C2)
C2
0.1F
RS
VIN
C1
10F
AD9225
VINA
1k
C3
0.1F
C1
10F
VCM
1k
C2
0.1F
RS
VINB
Figure 11. AC-Coupled Input-Flexible Input Span,
VCM = 2.5 V
Simple AC Interface
Figure 10 shows a typical example of an ac-coupled, single-ended
configuration. The bias voltage shifts the bipolar, ground-referenced input signal to approximately AVDD/2. The value for C1
and C2 will depend on the size of the resistor, R. The capacitors,
C1 and C2, are a 0.1 mF ceramic and 10 mF tantalum capacitor in
parallel to achieve a low cutoff frequency while maintaining a low
REV. B
C1
10F
–13–
AD9225
500
OP AMP SELECTION GUIDE
Op amp selection for the AD9225 is highly dependent on the
particular application. In general, the performance requirements of
any given application can be characterized by either time domain
or frequency domain parameters. In either case, one should carefully select an op amp that preserves the performance of the ADC.
This task becomes challenging when the AD9225’s high performance capabilities are coupled with other extraneous system level
requirements such as power consumption and cost.
500
VINA
500
500
AD9225
500
500
+V
50
VINB
500
CML
500
The ability to select the optimal op amp may be further complicated by either limited power supply availability and/or limited
acceptable supplies for a desired op amp. Newer, high performance
op amps typically have input and output range limitations in
accordance with their lower supply voltages. As a result, some op
amps will be more appropriate in systems where ac coupling is
allowable. When dc coupling is required, op amps without headroom constraints such as rail-to-rail op amps or the ones where
larger supplies can be used should be considered. The following
section describes some op amps currently available from Analog
Devices, Inc. The system designer is always encouraged to contact
the factory or local sales office to be updated on Analog Devices’
latest amplifier product offerings. Highlights of the areas where the
op amps excel and where they may limit the performance of the
AD9225 is also included.
AD8055:
f–3 dB = 300 MHz.
Low cost. Best used for driving single-ended accoupled configuration.
Limit: THD is compromised when output is not
swinging about 0 V.
AD8056:
Dual Version of above amp.
Perfect for single-ended to differential configuration
(see Figure 12). Harmonics cancel each other in
differential drive, making this amplifier highly recommended for a single-ended input signal source.
Handles input signals past the 20 MHz Nyquist
frequency.
AD9631:
f–3 dB = 250 MHz.
Moderate cost.
Good for single-ended drive applications when
signal is anywhere between 0 V and 3 V.
Limits: THD is compromised above 8 MHz.
DIFFERENTIAL MODE OF OPERATION
Since not all applications have a signal preconditioned for
differential operation, there is often a need to perform a singleended-to-differential conversion. In systems that do not need to be
dc-coupled, an RF transformer with a center tap is the best method
to generate differential inputs for the AD9225. It provides all the
benefits of operating the ADC in the differential mode without
contributing additional noise or distortion. An RF transformer also
has the added benefit of providing electrical isolation between the
signal source and the ADC.
An improvement in THD and SFDR performance can be realized
by operating the AD9225 in the differential mode. The performance enhancement between the differential and single-ended
mode is most noteworthy as the input frequency approaches and
goes beyond the Nyquist frequency (i.e., fIN > fS/2).
50
VREF
0V
*OPTIONAL
10F
R*
0.1F
Figure 12. Direct Coupled Drive Circuit with
AD8056 Dual Op Amp
The circuit shown in Figure 12 is an ideal method of applying a
differential dc drive to the AD9225. We have used this configuration to drive the AD9225 from 2 V to 4 V spans at frequencies
approaching Nyquist with performance numbers matching those
listed in the Specifications tables (gathered through a transformer).
The dc input is shifted to a dc point swinging symmetrically about
the reference voltage. The optional resistor will provide additional
current if more reference drive is required.
The driver circuit shown in Figure 12 is optimized for dc coupling
applications requiring optimum distortion performance. This
differential op amp driver circuit is configured to convert and level
shift a 2 V p-p single-ended, ground referenced signal to a 4 V p-p
differential signal centered at the VREF level of the ADC. The
circuit is based on two op amps that are configured as matched
unity gain difference amplifiers. The single-ended input signal is
applied to opposing inputs of the difference amplifiers, thus providing differential drive. The common-mode offset voltage is applied
to the noninverting resistor leg of each difference amplifier providing the required offset voltage. The common-mode offset can be
varied over a wide span without any serious degradation in distortion performance as shown in Figures 14 and 15, thus providing
some flexibility in improving output compression distortion from
some ± 5 V op amps with limited positive voltage swing.
To protect the AD9225 from an undervoltage fault condition from
op amps specified for ±5 V operation, two diodes to AGND can be
inserted between each op amp output and the AD9225 inputs.
The AD9225 will inherently be protected against any overvoltage
condition if the op amps share the same positive power supply (i.e.,
AVDD) as the AD9225. Note that the gain accuracy and common-mode rejection of each difference amplifier in this driver
circuit can be enhanced by using a matched thin-film resistor
network (i.e., Ohmtek ORNA5000F) for the op amps. Recall that
the AD9225’s small signal bandwidth is 105 MHz and therefore,
any noise falling within the baseband bandwidth of the AD9225
will degrade its overall noise performance.
The noise performance of each unity gain differential driver circuit
is limited by its inherent noise gain of 2. For unity gain op amps
ONLY, the noise gain can be reduced from 2 to 1 beyond the
input signals passband by adding a shunt capacitor, CF, across
each op amp’s feedback resistor. This will essentially establish a
low-pass filter, which reduces the noise gain to 1 beyond the filter’s
f–3 dB while simultaneously bandlimiting the input signal to f–3 dB.
Note that the pole established by this filter can also be used as the
real pole of an antialiasing filter.
–14–
REV. B
AD9225
–76
–78
THD (dB)
Figure 13 shows the schematic of the suggested transformer circuit.
The circuit uses a minicircuits RF transformer, model #T4-1T,
which has an impedance ratio of 4 (turns ratio of 2). The schematic assumes that the signal source has a 50 W source impedance.
The 1:4 impedance ratio requires the 200 W secondary termination
for optimum power transfer and VSWR. The center tap of the
transformer provides a convenient means of level-shifting the input
signal to a desired common-mode voltage.
–80
fIN = 10MHz
–82
fIN = 2.5MHz
RS
33
VINA
49.9
–84
CML
200
0.1F
CS
AD9225
–86
0
1
VINB
MINICIRCUITS
T4-1T
RS
33
2
3
COMMON-MODE VOLTAGE (V)
4
5
Figure 14. Common-Mode Voltage vs. THD
(AIN = 2 V Differential)
Figure 13. Transformer Coupled Input
The configuration in Figure 13 was used to gather the differential
data on the Specifications tables.
–76
Transformers with other turns ratios may also be selected to optimize the performance of a given application. For example, a given
input signal source or amplifier may realize an improvement in
distortion performance at reduced output power levels and signal
swings. For example, selecting a transformer with a higher impedance ratio (e.g., Minicircuits T16-6T with a 1:16 impedance ratio)
effectively steps up the signal level further reducing the driving
requirements of the signal source.
THD (dB)
–78
–80
fIN = 10MHz
–82
fIN = 2.5MHz
–84
Referring to Figure 13, a series resistors, RS, and shunt capacitor,
CS, were inserted between the AD9225 and the secondary of the
transformer. The value of 33 W was selected to specifically optimize both the THD and SNR performance of the ADC. RS and
CS help provide a low-pass filter to block high frequency noise.
–86
0.5
The AD9225 can be easily configured for either a 2 V p-p input
span or a 4.0 V p-p input span by setting the internal reference (see
Table II). Other input spans can be realized with two external gain
setting resistors as shown in Figure 19. Figures 14 and 15 demonstrate how both spans of the AD9225 achieve the high degree of
linearity and SFDR over a wide range of amplitudes required by
the most demanding communication applications.
1.0
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
1.5
COMMON-MODE VOLTAGE (V)
4.0
4.5
Figure 15. Common-Mode Voltage vs. THD
(AIN = 4 V Differential)
0.0
FUND
fIN = 2.5MHz
fS = 25MHz
–10.0
–20.0
–30.0
–40.0
Figures 14 and 15 demonstrate the flexibility of common-mode
voltage (transformer center tap) with respect to THD.
–50.0
–60.0
–70.0
–80.0
2ND
3RD
–90.0
4TH
–100.0
–110.0
–119.7
2.0E+6
4.0E+6
6.0E+6
8.0E+6
10.0E+6
12.5E+6
Figure 16. Single-Tone Frequency Domain Plot
Common-Mode Voltage = 2.5 V (AIN = 4 V
Differential)
REV. B
–15–
AD9225
This reference configuration could also be used for a differential
input in which VINA and VINB are driven via a transformer as
shown in Figure 13. In this case, the common-mode voltage,
VCM , is set at midsupply by connecting the transformer’s center
tap to CML of the AD9225. VREF can be configured for 1.0 V
or 2.0 V by connecting SENSE to either VREF or REFCOM,
respectively. Note that the valid input range for each of the differential inputs is one half of the single-ended input and thus becomes
VCM – VREF/2 to VCM + VREF/2.
REFERENCE CONFIGURATIONS
The figures associated with this section on internal and external
reference operation do not show recommended matching series
resistors for VINA and VINB for the purpose of simplicity. Refer
to the Driving the Analog Inputs and Introduction sections for a
discussion of this topic. The figures do not show the decoupling
network associated with the CAPT and CAPB pins. Refer to the
Reference Operation section for a discussion of the internal reference circuitry and the recommended decoupling network shown
in Figure 16.
3.5V
1V
10F
VINA
0V
VINB
10F
0.1F
VREF
SHORT FOR 0V TO 2V
INPUT SPAN
AD9225
SENSE
SHORT FOR 0V TO 4V
INPUT SPAN
AD9225
VREF
SENSE
0.1F
REFCOM
In either case, both the midscale voltage and input span are directly
dependent on the value of VREF. More specifically, the midscale
voltage is equal to VREF while the input span is equal to 2 ¥ VREF.
Thus, the valid input range extends from 0 to 2 ¥ VREF. When
VINA is £ 0 V, the digital output will be 0x000; when VINA is
≥ 2 ¥ VREF, the digital output will be 0xFFF.
Shorting the VREF pin directly to the SENSE pin places the internal reference amplifier in unity-gain mode and the resulting VREF
output is 1 V. Therefore, the valid input range is 0 V to 2 V.
However, shorting the SENSE pin directly to the REFCOM pin
configures the internal reference amplifier for a gain of 2.0 and the
resulting VREF output is 2.0 V. Therefore, the valid input range
becomes 0 V to 4 V. The VREF pin should be bypassed to the
REFCOM pin with a 10 mF tantalum capacitor in parallel with a
low inductance 0.1 mF ceramic capacitor.
VCM
VINB
Figure 16 shows how to connect the AD9225 for a 0 V to 2 V or
0 V to 4 V input range via pin strapping the SENSE pin. An intermediate input range of 0 to 2 ¥ VREF can be established using the
resistor programmable configuration in Figure 19.
2 VREF
VINA
1.5V
USING THE INTERNAL REFERENCE
Single-Ended Input with 0 to 2 3 VREF Range
Figure 18. Internal Reference—2 V p-p Input Span,
VCM = 2.5 V
Resistor Programmable Reference
Figure 19 shows an example of how to generate a reference voltage
other than 1.0 V or 2.0 V with the addition of two external resistors
and a bypass capacitor. Use the equation
VREF = 1 V ¥ (1 + R1/R2)
to determine appropriate values for R1 and R2. These resistors
should be in the 2 kW to 100 kW range. For the example shown,
R1 equals 2.5 kW and R2 equals 5 kW. From the equation above,
the resultant reference voltage on the VREF pin is 1.5 V. This
sets the input span to be 3 V p-p. To assure stability, place a 0.1 mF
ceramic capacitor in parallel with R1.
The midscale voltage can be set to VREF by connecting VINB to
VREF to provide an input span of 0 to 2 ¥ VREF. Alternatively,
the midscale voltage can be set to 2.5 V by connecting VINB to a
low impedance 2.5 V source. For the example shown, the valid
input single-ended range for VINA is 1 V to 4 V since VINB is set
to an external, low impedance 2.5 V source. The VREF pin should
be bypassed to the REFCOM pin with a 10 mF tantalum capacitor
in parallel with a low inductance 0.1 mF ceramic capacitor.
REFCOM
4V
VINA
1V
Figure 17. Internal Reference—2 V p-p Input Span,
VCM = 1 V, or 4 V p-p Input Span
AD9225
2.5V
VINB
1.5V
Figure 18 shows the single-ended configuration that gives good
dynamic performance (SINAD, SFDR). To optimize dynamic
specifications, center the common-mode voltage of the analog
input at approximately by 2.5 V by connecting VINB to a low
impedance 2.5 V source. As described above, shorting the VREF
pin directly to the SENSE pin results in a 1 V reference voltage
and a 2 V p-p input span. The valid range for input signals is 1.5 V
to 3.5 V. The VREF pin should be bypassed to the REFCOM pin
with a 10 mF tantalum capacitor in parallel with a low-inductance
0.1 mF ceramic capacitor.
10F
0.1F
R1
2.5k
VREF
C1
0.1F
SENSE
R2
5k
REFCOM
Figure 19. Resistor Programmable Reference
3 V p-p Input Span, VCM = 2.5 V
–16–
REV. B
AD9225
2 REF
USING AN EXTERNAL REFERENCE
Using an external reference may enhance the dc performance
of the AD9225 by improving drift and accuracy. Figures 20 and 21
show examples of how to use an external reference with the ADC.
Table III is a list of suitable voltage references from Analog
Devices. To use an external reference, the user must disable the
internal reference amplifier and drive the VREF pin. Connecting
the SENSE pin to AVDD disables the internal reference amplifier.
VINA
0V
+5V
VINB
VREF
0.1F
10F
0.1F
AD9225
VREF
0.1F
+5V
Table III. Suitable Voltage References
Internal
AD589
AD1580
REF191
Internal
Output
Voltage
Drift
(ppm/∞C)
Initial
Accuracy
% (max)
1.00
1.235
1.225
2.048
2.0
26
10–100
50–100
5–25
26
1.4
1.2–2.8
0.08–0.8
0.1–0.5
1.4
Figure 21. Input Range = 0 V to 2 ¥ VREF
Operating
Current
DIGITAL INPUTS AND OUTPUTS
Digital Outputs
1 mA
50 mA
50 mA
45 mA
1 mA
The AD9225 output data is presented in positive true straight
binary for all input ranges. Table IV indicates the output data
formats for various input ranges regardless of the selected input
range. A twos complement output data format can be created by
inverting the MSB.
Table IV. Output Data Format
The AD9225 contains an internal reference buffer, A2 (see
Figure 5), that simplifies the drive requirements of an external
reference. The external reference must be able to drive about 5
kW (± 20%) load. Note that the bandwidth of the reference
buffer is deliberately left small to minimize the reference noise
contribution. As a result, it is not possible to change the reference voltage rapidly in this mode.
2.5V+VREF
2.5V
2.5V–VREF
+5V
0.1F
Input (V)
Condition (V)
Digital Output
OTR
VINA–VINB
VINA–VINB
VINA–VINB
VINA–VINB
VINA–VINB
< – VREF
= – VREF
=0
= + VREF – 1 LSB
≥ + VREF
0000 0000 0000
0000 0000 0000
1000 0000 0000
1111 1111 1111
1111 1111 1111
1
0
0
0
1
VINA
AD9225
2.5V
REF
22F
0.1F
R1
0.1F
1
1111 1111 1111
0
1111 1111 1111
0
1111 1111 1110
OTR
–FS+1/2 LSB
VREF
R2
+5V
+FS –1 1/2 LSB
OTR DATA OUTPUTS
VINB
A1
0
0
1
SENSE
0000 0000 0001
0000 0000 0000
0000 0000 0000
–FS
Figure 20. External Reference
–FS –1/2 LSB
Variable Input Span with VCM = 2.5 V
Single-Ended Input with 0 to 2 ¥ VREF Range
+FS
+FS –1/2 LSB
Figure 22. Output Data Format
Figure 20 shows an example of the AD9225 configured for an
input span of 2 ¥ VREF centered at 2.5 V. An external 2.5 V reference drives the VINB pin thus setting the common-mode voltage
at 2.5 V. The input span can be independently set by a voltage
divider consisting of R1 and R2, which generates the VREF signal.
A1 buffers this resistor network and drives VREF. Choose this op
amp based on accuracy requirements. It is essential that a minimum of a 10 mF capacitor in parallel with a 0.1 mF low inductance
ceramic capacitor decouple A1’s output to ground.
Figure 21 shows an example of an external reference driving both
VINB and VREF. In this case, both the common-mode voltage
and input span are directly dependent on the value of VREF. More
specifically, the common-mode voltage is equal to VREF while the
input span is equal to 2 ¥ VREF. The valid input range extends
from 0 to 2 ¥ VREF. For example, if the REF191, a 2.048 V external reference was selected, the valid input range extends from 0 to
4.096 V. In this case, 1 LSB of the AD9225 corresponds to 1 mV.
It is essential that a minimum of a 10 mF capacitor in parallel with a
0.1 mF low inductance ceramic capacitor decouple the reference
output to ground.
REV. B
SENSE
Out-Of-Range (OTR)
An out-of-range condition exists when the analog input voltage is
beyond the input range of the converter. OTR is a digital output
that is updated along with the data output corresponding to the
particular sampled analog input voltage. OTR has the same pipeline delay (latency) as the digital data. It is low when the analog
input voltage is within the analog input range. It is high when the
analog input voltage exceeds the input range as shown in Figure
23. OTR will remain high until the analog input returns within
the input range and another conversion is completed. By logical
ANDing OTR with the MSB and its complement, overrange high
or underrange low conditions can be detected. Table V is a truth
table for the overrange circuit in Figure 24 which uses NAND
gates. Systems requiring programmable gain conditioning of the
AD9225 input signal can immediately detect an out-of-range
condition, eliminating gain selection iterations. OTR can also be
used for digital offset and gain calibration.
–17–
AD9225
The AD9225 has a clock tolerance of 5% at 25 MHz. One way to
obtain a 50% duty cycle clock is to divide down a clock of higher
frequency, as shown in Figure 24. This configuration will also
decrease the jitter of the source clock.
Table V. Out-of-Range Truth Table
OTR
MSB
Analog Input Is
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
In Range
In Range
Underrange
Overrange
+5V
R
D
MSB
Q
OVER = “1”
50MHz
OTR
Q
UNDER = “1”
MSB
25MHz
S
+5V
Figure 23. Overrange or Underrange Logic
Figure 24. Divide-by-Two Clock Circuit
Digital Output Driver Considerations (DRVDD)
In this case, a 50 MHz clock is divided by two to produce the
25 MHz clock input for the AD9225. In this configuration, the
duty cycle of the 50 MHz clock is irrelevant.
The AD9225 output drivers can be configured to interface with
5 V or 3.3 V logic families by setting DRVDD to 5 V or 3.3 V,
respectively. The output drivers are sized to provide sufficient
output current to drive a wide variety of logic families. However,
large drive currents tend to cause glitches on the supplies and may
affect SINAD performance. Applications requiring the ADC to
drive large capacitive loads or large fanout may require additional
decoupling capacitors on DRVDD. In extreme cases, external
buffers or latches may be required.
The input circuitry for the CLOCK pin is designed to accommodate CMOS inputs. The quality of the logic input, particularly
the rising edge, is critical in realizing the best possible jitter
performance of the part; the faster the rising edge, the better
the jitter performance.
Clock Input and Considerations
The AD9225 internal timing uses the two edges of the clock input
to generate a variety of internal timing signals. The clock input
must meet or exceed the minimum specified pulse width high and
low (tCH and tCL) specifications for the given ADC as defined in
the Switching Specifications table to meet the rated performance
specifications. For example, the clock input to the AD9225 operating at 25 MSPS may have a duty cycle between 45% to 55% to
meet this timing requirement since the minimum specified tCH and
tCL is 18 ns. For low clock rates, the duty cycle may deviate from
this range to the extent that both tCH and tCL are satisfied.
As a result, careful selection of the logic family for the clock driver,
as well as the fanout and capacitive load on the clock line, is important. Jitter-induced errors become more predominant at higher
frequency and large amplitude inputs, where the input slew rate
is greatest.
Most of the power dissipated by the AD9225 is from the analog
power supplies. However, lower clock speeds will reduce digital
current. Figure 25 shows the relationship between power and
clock rate.
380
360
340
All high speed high resolution ADCs are sensitive to the quality of
the clock input. The degradation in SNR at a given full-scale input
frequency (fIN) due to only aperture jitter (tA) can be calculated
with the following equation:
POWER (mW)
˘
È
1
SNR = 20 log 10 Í
˙
Î2p f IN t A ˚
300
280
260
1V
INTERNAL
REFERENCE
240
220
In the equation, the rms aperture jitter, tA, represents the rootsum square of all the jitter sources, which include the clock
input, analog input signal, and ADC aperture jitter specification.
Undersampling applications are particularly sensitive to jitter.
200
180
Clock input should be treated as an analog signal in cases where
aperture jitter may affect the dynamic range of the AD9225. Power
supplies for clock drivers should be separated from the ADC output driver supplies to avoid modulating the clock signal with digital
noise. Low jitter crystal controlled oscillators make the best clock
sources. If the clock is generated from another type of source (by
gating, dividing, or other method), it should be retimed by the
original clock at the last step.
The clock input is referred to as the analog supply. Its logic threshold is AVDD/2. If the clock is being generated by 3 V logic, it will
have to be level shifted into 5 V CMOS logic levels. This can also
be accomplished by ac coupling and level-shifting the clock signal.
2V
INTERNAL
REFERENCE
320
0
5
10
20
15
SAMPLE RATE
25
30
35
Figure 25. Power Consumption vs. Clock Rate
Direct IF Down Conversion Using the AD9225
Sampling IF signals above an ADC’s baseband region (i.e.,
dc to fS/2) is becoming increasingly popular in communication
applications. This process is often referred to as direct IF down
conversion or undersampling. There are several potential benefits
in using the ADC to alias (i.e., or mix) down a narrowband or
wideband IF signal. First and foremost is the elimination of a
complete mixer stage with its associated baseband amplifiers and
filters, reducing cost and power dissipation. Second is the ability to
apply various DSP techniques to perform such functions as filtering, channel selection, quadrature demodulation, data reduction,
–18–
REV. B
AD9225
In direct IF down conversion applications, one exploits the
inherent sampling process of an ADC in which an IF signal lying
outside the baseband region can be aliased back into the baseband
region in a similar manner that a mixer will down-convert an IF
signal. Similar to the mixer topology, an image rejection filter
is required to limit other potential interferring signals from also
aliasing back into the ADC’s baseband region. A trade-off exists
between the complexity of this image rejection filter and the ADC’s
sample rate as well as dynamic range.
The AD9225 is well suited for various IF sampling applications.
The AD9225’s low distortion input SHA has a full-power bandwidth extending beyond 130 MHz thus encompassing many
popular IF frequencies. A DNL of ± 0.4 LSB (typ) combined
with low thermal input referred noise allows the AD9225 in the
2 V span to provide 69 dB of SNR for a baseband input sine
wave. Its low aperture jitter of 0.8 ps rms ensures minimum
SNR degradation at higher IF frequencies. In fact, the AD9225
is capable of still maintaining 68 dB of SNR at an IF of 71 MHz
with a 2 V input span. Although the AD9225 can yield a 1 dB
to 2 dB improvement in SNR when configured for the larger
4 V span, the 2 V span achieves the optimum full-scale distortion performance at these higher input frequencies. The 2 V
span reduces only the performance requirements of the input
driver circuitry (i.e., IP3) and thus may also be more attractive
from a system implementation perspective.
The distortion and noise performance of an ADC at the given IF
frequency is of particular concern when evaluating an ADC for a
narrowband IF sampling application. Both single-tone and dualtone SFDR versus amplitude are very useful in assessing an
ADC’s dynamic and static nonlinearities. SNR versus amplitude
performance at the given IF is useful in assessing the ADC’s noise
performance and noise contribution due to aperture jitter. In any
application, one is advised to test several units of the same device
under the same conditions to evaluate the given applications sensitivity to that particular device.
Figures 27 to 30 combine the dual-tone SFDR as well as singletone SFDR and SNR performances at IF frequencies of 35 MHz,
45 MHz, 70 MHz, and 85 MHz. Note that the SFDR versus
amplitude data is referenced to dBFS while the single-tone SNR
data is referenced to dBc. The performance characteristics in these
figures are representative of the AD9225 without any preceding
gain stage. The AD9225 was operated in the differential mode (via
transformer) with a 2 V span and a sample rate between 28 MSPS
and 36 MSPS. The analog supply (AVDD) and the digital supply
(DRVDD) were set to 5 V and 3.3. V, respectively.
Figure 26 shows a simplified schematic of the AD9225 configured in an IF sampling application. To reduce the complexity of
the digital demodulator in many quadrature demodulation
applications, the IF frequency and/or sample rate are strategically selected such that the band-limited IF signal aliases back
into the center of the ADC’s baseband region (i.e., fS/4). This
demodulation technique typically reduces the complexity of the
post digital demodulator ASIC that follows the ADC.
FROM
PREVIOUS
STAGES
MIXER
HIGH
LINEARITY OPTIONAL
RF
BANDPASS
SAW
FILTER
FILTER AMPLIFIER
MINICIRCUITS
T4-6T
90
85
20
75
SNR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBc)
70
65
50
–15
–10
–5
0
AIN (dBFS)
100
VINA
SFDR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBFS)
95
VINB
90
CML
SNR/SFDR (dBFS)
85
VREF
SENSE
0.1F
REFCOM
Figure 26. Example of AD9225 IF Sampling Circuit
To maximize its distortion performance, the AD9225 is configured
in the differential mode with a 2 V span using a transformer. The
center tap of the transformer is biased at midsupply via the CML
output of the AD9225. Preceding the AD9225 and transformer is
an optional band-pass filter as well as a gain stage. A low Q passive
band-pass filter can be inserted to reduce the out-of-band distortion and noise that lies within the AD9225’s 130 MHz bandwidth.
A large gain stage(s) is often required to compensate for the high
insertion losses of a SAW filter used for channel selection and
image rejection. The gain stage will also provide adequate isolation
for the SAW filter from the charge kickback currents associated
with the AD9225’s switched capacitor input stage.
REV. B
SFDR
DUAL-TONE
(dBFS)
55
0.1F
10F
80
60
200
RF2317
RF2312
SFDR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBFS)
95
Figure 27. IF Undersampling at 35 MHz (F1 = 34.63 MHz,
F2 = 35.43 MHz, CLOCK = 20 MHz)
AD9225
20
100
SNR/SFDR (dBFS)
and detection, among other things. See Application Note AN-302
on using this technique in digital receivers.
–19–
80
75
70
SFDR
DUAL-TONE
(dBFS)
SNR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBc)
65
60
55
50
–15
–10
–5
0
AIN (dBFS)
Figure 28. IF Undersampling at 45 MHz (F1 = 44.81 MHz,
F2 = 45.23 MHz, CLOCK = 20 MHz)
AD9225
100
carefully managed. Alternatively, the ground plane under the
ADC may contain serrations to steer currents in predictable
directions where cross coupling between analog and digital
would otherwise be unavoidable. The AD9225/AD9225EB
ground layout, shown in Figure 38, depicts the serrated type
of arrangement.
95
SFDR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBFS)
90
SNR/SFDR (dBFS)
85
80
The board is built primarily over a common ground plane. It
has a slit to route currents near the clock driver. Figure 31 illustrates a general scheme of ground and power implementation, in
and around the AD9225.
75
70
SFDR
DUAL-TONE
(dBFS)
65
60
SNR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBc)
55
50
–15
–10
AVDD
A
0
–5
LOGIC
SUPPLY
DVDD
A
D
AIN (dBFS)
Figure 29. IF Undersampling at 70 MHz (F1 = 69.50 MHz,
F2 = 70.11 MHz, CLOCK = 25 MHz)
ADC
IC
ANALOG
CIRCUITS
100
VIN
95
SNR/SFDR (dBFS)
85
B
IA
CSTRAY
ID
AVSS
80
75
A
= ANALOG
70
D
= DIGITAL
SFDR
DUAL-TONE
(dBFS)
A
GND
DVSS
V
A
D
Figure 31. Ground and Power Consideration
SNR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBc)
60
55
50
–15
DIGITAL
CIRCUITS
A
A
SFDR
SINGLE-TONE
(dBFS)
90
65
DIGITAL
LOGIC
ICs
CSTRAY
–10
–5
Analog and Digital Driver Supply Decoupling
The AD9225 features separate analog and driver supply and
ground pins, helping to minimize digital corruption of sensitive
analog signals. In general, AVDD, the analog supply, should
be decoupled to AVSS, the analog common, as close to the
chip as physically possible. Figure 32 shows the recommended
decoupling for the analog supplies; 0.1 mF ceramic chip and
10 mF tantalum capacitors should provide adequately low impedance over a wide frequency range. Note that the AVDD and
AVSS pins are co-located on the AD9225 to simplify the layout
of the decoupling capacitors and provide the shortest possible
PCB trace lengths. The AD9225/AD9225EB power plane layout,
shown in Figure 39 depicts a typical arrangement using a multilayer PCB.
0
AIN (dBFS)
Figure 30. IF Undersampling at 85 MHz (F1 = 84.81 MHz,
F2 = 85.23 MHz, CLOCK = 20 MHz)
GROUNDING AND DECOUPLING
Analog and Digital Grounding
Proper grounding is essential in any high speed, high resolution
system. Multilayer printed circuit boards (PCBs) are recommended to provide optimal grounding and power schemes. The
use of ground and power planes offers distinct advantages:
• The minimization of the loop area encompassed by a signal
and its return path.
• The minimization of the impedance associated with ground
and power paths.
• The inherent distributed capacitor formed by the power
plane, PCB insulation and ground plane.
AVDD
10F
AD9225
0.1F
AVSS
Figure 32. Analog Supply Decoupling
These characteristics result in both a reduction of electromagnetic interference (EMI) and an overall improvement
in performance.
It is important to design a layout that prevents noise from coupling onto the input signal. Digital signals should not be run in
parallel with input signal traces and should be routed away from
the input circuitry. While the AD9225 features separate analog
and driver ground pins, it should be treated as an analog component. The AVSS and DRVSS pins must be joined together
directly under the AD9225. A solid ground plane under the
ADC is acceptable if the power and ground return currents are
The CML is an internal analog bias point used internally by
the AD9225. This pin must be decoupled with at least a 0.1 mF
capacitor as shown in Figure 33. The dc level of CML is
approximately AVDD/2. This voltage should be buffered if it is
to be used for any external biasing.
–20–
CML
0.1F
AD9225
Figure 33. CML Decoupling
REV. B
AD9225
The digital activity on the AD9225 chip falls into two general
categories: correction logic and output drivers. The internal
correction logic draws relatively small surges of current, mainly
during the clock transitions. The output drivers draw large
current impulses while the output bits are changing. The size
and duration of these currents are a function of the load on the
output bits; large capacitive loads are to be avoided. Note that
the internal correction logic of the AD9225 is referenced to
AVDD while the output drivers are referenced to DRVDD.
DRVDD
10F
DRVSS
Figure 34. Digital Supply Decoupling
The decoupling shown in Figure 34, a 0.1 mF ceramic chip
capacitor and a 10 mF tantalum capacitor, are appropriate for a
reasonable capacitive load on the digital outputs (typically
20 pF on each pin). Applications involving greater digital loads
should consider increasing the digital decoupling proportionally,
and/or using external buffers/latches.
REV. B
AD9225
0.1F
A complete decoupling scheme will also include large tantalum
or electrolytic capacitors on the PCB to reduce low frequency
ripple to negligible levels. Refer to the AD9225/AD9225EB
schematic and layouts in Figures 35 to 41 for more information
regarding the placement of decoupling capacitors.
–21–
AD9225
U5
REF43
TP38
2
VOUT VIN
GND
4
JP19
2
1
2
2
C26
0.1F
1
1
TP31
TP30
1
JP21
+ C2
2 0.1F
10F
2 10V
6
U4 N2
AD187 OUT
N1
–V
2
1
IN
4
2
1
C19
10F
10V
TP37
1
1
2
1
+ C48
22F
20V
AGND 2
1
R29
1k
3
2
2
C31
2 0.1F
1
2
1
J3
1 C53
0.1F
2
1
JP22
JP23
JP24
JP25
1
C21 +
10F
10V 2
C34
0.1F
2
1
R30
316
1
2
C20 2
10F
10V
1
2
R32
50
2
2
C33
0.1F 1
1
2
R21
200
1
2
TP33
R22
200
1
2
TP32
1
T1
1
R24
50
5
3
6
2
P4
3
T4-6T
1
1
1
2
C49
2
VEE
1
20V
1
1
P5
1
JP11
JP12
U9
11
2
1
U9
9
2
2
1
L5
FBEAD
P5
2
1
TP8
U9
5
6
1
1
U9
DRVDD
1
1
22F
2 20V
DGND
1
L7404
+ C51
2
13
D11
12 1
DVDD
1
1
J5
2
R35
50
1
2
U1
REF43
2
1
1 C16
0.1F
2
10F
2 10V
3
C13
0.1F
2
1
R19
4k
1
J2
R2
5k
2
1
TP4
U8
3
1
1
R1
50
2
2
3
2
CCV
B
2
A
+ 1 C9
1
JP6
1
2
4
L7404
JP7
1
2
1
CW
9
1
8
TP1
10
10F
2 10V
1
R18
1k
JP9
1
2
L7404
L7404
AVDD
TP2
U8
12
L7404
1
1
1
U8
2
TP3
1
2
1
C10
0.1F
U8
DECOUPLING
+ C3
10F
2 10V
Y2
Y3
Y4
Y5
Y6
Y7
Y8
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
2
1
19
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
OTR
CLK
U6
74541 Y1 18
C11
0.1F
2 1
2
2
A B
3
1
JP32
U9
3
4
2
JP3
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
A6
A7
A8
1 JP2 2
1
13
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
+ C7
C17
0.1F
U9
1
U8
11
L7404
2
JP8
C15
0.1F
1 L7404
TP10
1
6
JP16
3
A B
2
20
VCC
10
GND
G1
G2
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
C5
10V 10F
1 +
2
18
A1
Y1
17
A2
Y2
U7
16
A3 74541 Y3
15
A4
Y4 14
A5
Y5
13
A6
Y6
12
A7
Y7 11
A8
Y8
1
TP9
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
VCC
CLR
RCO
CLK
QA
A
U2
B 74LS161 QB
QC
C
QD
D
ENT
ENP
GND
LOAD
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
1
JP15
1
2
L6
FBEAD
A B
2
JP28
1
R6 22
1
2
1
R7 22
1
2
1
R8 22
2
1
1
R9 22
2
1
1
R10 22
1
2
1
R11 22
1
2
1
R12 22
1
2
1
R13 22
1
2
1
R14 22
1
2
1
R15 22
1
2
1
2 1
1
2
1
JP29
1
R20
22
10F
10V
DUTAVDDIN
2 P6
2
2 1
+ C58
2
22F
20V
AGND
1
P6
TP25
1
P1
P1
2
3
P1
P1
4
5
P1
P1
6
7
P1
P1
8
TP24
TP23
TP22
TP21
9
P1
P1 10
11 P1
P1 12
13 P1
P1 14
15 P1
P1 16
17 P1
P1 18
19 P1
P1 20
21 P1
P1 22
23 P1
P1 24
25 P1
P1 26
27 P1
P1 28
29 P1
P1 30
TP20
TP19
TP26
TP18
TP17
TP16
TP15
31 P1
P1 32
33 P1
P1 34
35 P1
P1 36
37 P1
P1 38
39 P1
P1 40
TP14
TP13
TP12
TP11
2
DVDD
JP30
1
2
JP31
2
1
9
1
R5 22
1
2
R16
22
DUTAUDD
1
R17 22
1
2
1
3
DRVDD
+ C23
C38
0.1F
1
R33
1k 2
1
L7404
2
10F
2 10V
C59
2 0.1F
20
VCC
10
GND
G1
G2
P3
+ C1
1
2
1
19
2
1
C4
10V 10F
2
+1
1
JP14
U8
L7404
2
U8
2
1 JP13 2 5
1
10F
2 10V
1
JP17
JP5
JP27
1
1
C14
0.1F
2
1
C37
0.1F
TP40
DVDD
2
OTR
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
CLK
1
2
DUTAVDD
2
JP1
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
OTR
D11
D10
D9
D8
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
CLK
1
C40
0.001F
TP5
1
2
22F
20V
2
AGND
AVDD
1 C41
0.001F
2
C43
15pF
P3
+ C47
C42
15pF
C12
0.1F
1
2
U9
DECOUPLING
VIN VOUT
GND
AVDD
+ C8
2
2
1
L7404
C56
0.1F
1
TP39
L1
FBEAD
1
C44
15pF
22F
2 20V
DGND
2
2
JP4
8
2
2
1
TP7
1
L7404
1
C45
15pF
1
1
1
+ C6
TP6
1
10
L7404
DRVDDIN
2
DVDDIN
1
P2
P2
JP10
1
C46
15pF
1 C54
0.1F
2
+ 22F
2
1
1 C25
0.1F
2
TP36
L4
FBEAD
VEEIN
2
4
2
1
1
1
C52
0.1F
AD9225
DUTDRVDD
2
R23
200
2
AVDD2
AVSS2
SENSE
VREF
REFCOM
CAPB
CAPT
CML U3
VINA
VINB
AVSS1
AVDD1
DRVSS
DRVDD
C24
2 0.1F
JP18
1
1
2
1
JP26
1
1
TP28
J1
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
C35
0.1F
2 AVDDIN1
1
1
1
1
AVDD
1
2
2
C32
0.1F
L2
FBEAD
1
2
1 C36
0.1F
2
2
2
TP27
1
C39
0.001F
1
C22 +
10F
10V 2
2
TP29
TP37
VCC
2
1
1
2
1
1 C57
0.1F
2
Q1
2N2222
C27
0.1F
1 2
1
VEE
L3
FBEAD
VCCIN
8
+V
1
1
R4
10k
2
7
3
1
1
2
R3
10k
+ C28
R28
1 50 2
R27
4.99k
P4
R31
820
2
1
C29
0.1F
TP34
DUTAVDD
2
1
IN
1
1
+ C18
10F
2 10V
1
2
1
R26
4.99k
2
JP20
1
2
P4
1
C30
0.1F
+
1
R25
2.49k
2
1
1
R34
2 50 1
1
J4
VCC
+
6
1
2
1
C55
0.1F
+ C50
10F
2 10V
DVDD
Figure 35. Evaluation Board Schematic
–22–
REV. B
AD9225
Figure 36. Evaluation Board Component Side
Layout (Not to Scale)
Figure 39. Evaluation Board Solder Side Layout
(Not to Scale)
Figure 37. Evaluation Board Ground Plane Layout
(Not to Scale)
Figure 40. Evaluation Board Power Plane Layout
Figure 41. Evaluation Board Solder Side Silkscreen
(Not to Scale)
Figure 38. Evaluation Board Component Side
Silkscreen (Not to Scale)
REV. B
–23–
AD9225
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
28-Lead Standard Small Outline Package [SOIC]
Wide Body
(R-28)
C00577–0–8/03(B)
Dimensions shown in millimeters and (inches)
18.10 (0.7126)
17.70 (0.6969)
28
15
7.60 (0.2992)
7.40 (0.2913)
1
10.65 (0.4193)
10.00 (0.3937)
14
2.65 (0.1043)
2.35 (0.0925)
0.75 (0.0295)
ⴛ 45ⴗ
0.25 (0.0098)
0.30 (0.0118)
0.10 (0.0039)
COPLANARITY
0.10
8ⴗ
0ⴗ
1.27 (0.0500) 0.51 (0.0201) SEATING
0.33 (0.0130)
PLANE
BSC
0.31 (0.0122)
0.20 (0.0079)
1.27 (0.0500)
0.40 (0.0157)
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MS-013AE
CONTROLLING DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS; INCH DIMENSIONS
(IN PARENTHESES) ARE ROUNDED-OFF MILLIMETER EQUIVALENTS FOR
REFERENCE ONLY AND ARE NOT APPROPRIATE FOR USE IN DESIGN
28-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [SSOP]
(RS-28)
Dimensions shown in millimeters
10.50
10.20
9.90
28
15
5.60
5.30
5.00
8.20
7.80
7.40
14
1
1.85
1.75
1.65
2.00 MAX
0.10
COPLANARITY
0.25
0.09
0.05
MIN
0.65
BSC
0.38
0.22
SEATING
PLANE
8ⴗ
4ⴗ
0ⴗ
0.95
0.75
0.55
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-150AH
Revision History
Location
Page
8/03—Data Sheet changed from REV. A to REV. B.
Renumbered TPCs and Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Universal
Updated ORDERING GUIDE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Updated OUTLINE DIMENSIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
–24–
REV. B