AD AD9522

12 LVDS/24 CMOS Output
Clock Generator
AD9522-5
FEATURES
APPLICATIONS
Low jitter, low phase noise clock distribution
Clock generation and translation for SONET, 10Ge, 10G FC,
and other 10 Gbps protocols
Forward error correction (G.710)
Clocking high speed ADCs, DACs, DDSs, DDCs, DUCs, MxFEs
High performance wireless transceivers
ATE and high performance instrumentation
Broadband infrastructures
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD9522-51 provides a multioutput clock distribution function
with subpicosecond jitter performance, along with an on-chip PLL
that can be used with an external VCO.
1
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
CP
REFIN
CLK
REF2
ZERO
DELAY
DIVIDER
AND MUXES
LVDS/
CMOS
DIV/Φ
OUT0
OUT1
OUT2
DIV/Φ
OUT3
OUT4
OUT5
DIV/Φ
OUT6
OUT7
OUT8
DIV/Φ
OUT9
OUT10
OUT11
SPI/I2C CONTROL
PORT AND
DIGITAL LOGIC
EEPROM
AD9522-5
07240-001
REFIN
STATUS
MONITOR
PLL
REF1
SWITCHOVER
AND MONITOR
Low phase noise, phase-locked loop (PLL)
Supports external 3.3 V/5 V VCO/VCXO to 2.4 GHz
1 differential or 2 single-ended reference inputs
Accepts CMOS, LVPECL, or LVDS references to 250 MHz
Accepts 16.62 MHz to 33.33 MHz crystal for reference input
Optional reference clock doubler
Reference monitoring capability
Auto and manual reference switchover/holdover modes
with selectable revertive/nonrevertive switching
Glitch-free switchover between references
Automatic recovery from holdover
Digital or analog lock detect, selectable
Optional zero delay operation
Twelve 800 MHz LVDS outputs divided into 4 groups
Each group of 3 has a 1-to-32 divider with phase delay
Additive broadband jitter as low as 242 fs rms
Channel-to-channel skew grouped outputs < 60 ps
Each LVDS output can be configured as 2 CMOS outputs
(for fOUT ≤ 250 MHz)
Automatic synchronization of all outputs on power-up
Manual synchronization of outputs as needed
SPI- and I²C-compatible serial control port
64-lead LFCSP
Nonvolatile EEPROM stores configuration settings
Figure 1.
The AD9522 serial interface supports both SPI and I2C® ports.
An in-package EEPROM can be programmed through the
serial interface and store user-defined register settings for
power-up and chip reset.
The AD9522 features 12 LVDS outputs in four groups. Any of
the 800 MHz LVDS outputs can be reconfigured as two
250 MHz CMOS outputs.
Each group of outputs has a divider that allows both the divide
ratio (from 1 to 32) and the phase (coarse delay) to be set.
The AD9522 is available in a 64-lead LFCSP and can be operated
from a single 3.3 V supply. The external VCO can have an
operating voltage up to 5.5 V.
The AD9522 is specified for operation over the standard industrial
range of −40°C to +85°C.
The AD9520-5 is an equivalent part to the AD9522-5 featuring
LVPECL/CMOS drivers instead of LVDS/CMOS drivers.
The AD9522 is used throughout this data sheet to refer to all the members of the AD9522 family. However, when AD9522-5 is used, it is referring to that specific
member of the AD9522 family.
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: 781.461.3113
©2008 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD9522-5
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Features .............................................................................................. 1 Charge Pump (CP)................................................................. 29 Applications ....................................................................................... 1 PLL External Loop Filter ....................................................... 30 General Description ......................................................................... 1 PLL Reference Inputs ............................................................. 30 Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 1 Reference Switchover ............................................................. 30 Revision History ............................................................................... 3 Reference Divider R ............................................................... 31 Specifications..................................................................................... 4 VCO/VCXO Feedback Divider N: P, A, B .......................... 31 Power Supply Requirements ....................................................... 4 Digital Lock Detect (DLD) ................................................... 32 PLL Characteristics ...................................................................... 4 Analog Lock Detect (ALD) ................................................... 32 Clock Inputs .................................................................................. 7 Current Source Digital Lock Detect (CSDLD) .................. 32 Clock Outputs ............................................................................... 7 External VCXO/VCO Clock Input (CLK/CLK) ................ 33 Timing Characteristics ................................................................ 8 Holdover .................................................................................. 33 Timing Diagrams ..................................................................... 8 External/Manual Holdover Mode ........................................ 33 Clock Output Additive Phase Noise (Distribution Only; VCO
Divider Not Used) ........................................................................ 9 Automatic/Internal Holdover Mode.................................... 34 Clock Output Absolute Time Jitter (Clock Generation Using
External VCXO) ......................................................................... 10 Zero Delay Operation ................................................................ 37 Clock Output Additive Time Jitter (VCO Divider Not Used)
....................................................................................................... 10 Operation Modes ................................................................... 38 Frequency Status Monitors ................................................... 35 Clock Distribution ..................................................................... 38 Clock Output Additive Time Jitter (VCO Divider Used) ..... 11 Clock Frequency Division..................................................... 38 Serial Control Port—SPI Mode ................................................ 11 VCO Divider ........................................................................... 39 Serial Control Port—I2C Mode ................................................ 12 Channel Dividers ................................................................... 39 PD, SYNC, and RESET Pins ..................................................... 13 Synchronizing the Outputs—SYNC Function ................... 41 Serial Port Setup Pins: SP1, SP0 ............................................... 13 LVDS Output Drivers ............................................................ 42 LD, STATUS, and REFMON Pins ............................................ 13 CMOS Output Drivers .......................................................... 43 Power Dissipation ....................................................................... 14 Reset Modes ................................................................................ 43 Absolute Maximum Ratings.......................................................... 15 Power-On Reset ...................................................................... 43 Thermal Resistance .................................................................... 15 Hardware Reset via the RESET Pin ..................................... 43 ESD Caution ................................................................................ 15 Soft Reset via the Serial Port ................................................. 43 Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions ........................... 16 Soft Reset to Settings in EEPROM When EEPROM Pin = 0
via the Serial Port ................................................................... 43 Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 19 Terminology .................................................................................... 23 Power-Down Modes .................................................................. 43 Chip Power-Down via PD .................................................... 43 Detailed Block Diagram ................................................................ 24 PLL Power-Down ................................................................... 44 Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 25 Distribution Power-Down .................................................... 44 Operational Configurations ...................................................... 25 Individual Clock Output Power-Down ............................... 44 Mode 1: Clock Distribution or External VCO < 1600 MHz
................................................................................................... 25 Individual Clock Channel Power-Down............................. 44 Mode 2: High Frequency Clock Distribution—CLK or
External VCO > 1600 MHz .................................................. 27 Serial Control Port ......................................................................... 45 Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) .................................................... 29 I2C Serial Port Operation .......................................................... 45 Configuration of the PLL ...................................................... 29 I2C Bus Characteristics .......................................................... 45 Phase Frequency Detector (PFD) ........................................ 29 Data Transfer Process ............................................................ 46 SPI/I2C Port Selection................................................................ 45 Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 76
AD9522-5
Data Transfer Format .............................................................47 IO_UPDATE (Operational Code 0x80) .............................. 53 I2C Serial Port Timing ............................................................47 End-of-Data (Operational Code 0xFF) ............................... 53 SPI Serial Port Operation ...........................................................48 Pseudo-End-of-Data (Operational Code 0xFE) ................. 53 Pin Descriptions ......................................................................48 Thermal Performance..................................................................... 54 SPI Mode Operation ...............................................................48 Register Map .................................................................................... 55 Communication Cycle—Instruction Plus Data ..................48 Register Map Descriptions ............................................................. 60 Write .........................................................................................48 Applications Information ............................................................... 73 Read ..........................................................................................48 Frequency Planning Using the AD9522 .................................. 73 SPI Instruction Word (16 Bits) ..................................................49 Using the AD9522 Outputs for ADC Clock Applications .... 73 SPI MSB/LSB First Transfers .....................................................49 LVDS Clock Distribution........................................................... 73 EEPROM Operations......................................................................52 CMOS Clock Distribution ......................................................... 74 Writing to the EEPROM ............................................................52 Outline Dimensions ........................................................................ 75 Reading from the EEPROM ......................................................52 Ordering Guide ........................................................................... 75 Programming the EEPROM Buffer Segment ..........................52 Register Section Definition Group .......................................53 REVISION HISTORY
12/08—Revision 0: Initial Version
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 76
AD9522-5
SPECIFICATIONS
Typical (typ) is given for VS = 3.3 V ± 5%; VS ≤ VCP ≤ 5.25 V; TA = 25°C; RSET = 4.12 kΩ; CPRSET = 5.1 kΩ, unless otherwise noted. Minimum
(min) and maximum (max) values are given over full VS and TA (−40°C to +85°C) variation.
POWER SUPPLY REQUIREMENTS
Table 1.
Parameter
VS
VCP
RSET Pin Resistor
CPRSET Pin Resistor
Min
3.135
VS
Typ
3.3
Max
3.465
5.25
4.12
5.1
Unit
V
V
kΩ
kΩ
Test Conditions/Comments
3.3 V ± 5%
This is nominally 3.3 V to 5.0 V ± 5%
Sets internal biasing currents; connect to ground
Sets internal CP current range, nominally 4.8 mA (CP_lsb = 600 μA);
actual current can be calculated by CP_lsb = 3.06/CPRSET; connect to ground
PLL CHARACTERISTICS
Table 2.
Parameter
REFERENCE INPUTS
Differential Mode (REFIN, REFIN)
Input Frequency
Input Sensitivity
Self-Bias Voltage, REFIN
Self-Bias Voltage, REFIN
Input Resistance, REFIN
Input Resistance, REFIN
Dual Single-Ended Mode (REF1, REF2)
Input Frequency (AC-Coupled with
DC Offset Off )
Input Frequency (AC-Coupled
with DC Offset On)
Input Frequency (DC-Coupled)
Input Sensitivity (AC-Coupled
with DC Offset Off )
Input Sensitivity (AC-Coupled
with DC Offset On)
Input Logic High, DC Offset Off
Input Logic Low, DC Offset Off
Input Current
Input Capacitance
Crystal Oscillator
Crystal Resonator Frequency Range
Maximum Crystal Motional Resistance
PHASE/FREQUENCY DETECTOR (PFD)
PFD Input Frequency
Reference Input Clock Doubler Frequency
Antibacklash Pulse Width
Min
Typ
0
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
Differential mode (can accommodate single-ended input
by ac grounding undriven input)
Frequencies below about 1 MHz should be dc-coupled;
be careful to match VCM (self-bias voltage)
250
MHz
1.75
1.60
5.9
6.4
mV p-p
V
V
kΩ
kΩ
250
MHz
250
MHz
0
0.55
250
3.28
MHz
V p-p
Slew rate must be > 50 V/μs, and input amplitude
sensitivity specification must be met; see input sensitivity
Slew rate > 50 V/μs; CMOS levels
VIH should not exceed VS
1.5
2.78
V p-p
VIH should not exceed VS
0.8
+100
V
V
μA
pF
Each pin, REFIN (REF1)/REFIN (REF2)
1.35
1.30
4.0
4.4
280
1.60
1.50
4.8
5.3
10
2.0
−100
2
16.62
0.004
1.3
2.9
6.0
33.33
30
MHz
Ω
100
45
50
MHz
MHz
MHz
ns
ns
ns
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 76
Self-bias voltage of REFIN 1
Self-bias voltage of REFIN1
Self-biased1
Self-biased1
Two single-ended CMOS-compatible inputs
Slew rate must be > 50 V/μs
Antibacklash pulse width = 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns
Antibacklash pulse width = 6.0 ns
Antibacklash pulse width = 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns
0x017[1:0] = 01b
0x017[1:0] = 00b; 0x017[1:0] = 11b
0x017[1:0] = 10b
AD9522-5
Parameter
CHARGE PUMP (CP)
ICP Sink/Source
High Value
Min
Low Value
Absolute Accuracy
CPRSET Range
ICP High Impedance Mode Leakage
Sink-and-Source Current Matching
Max
Unit
4.8
mA
0.60
mA
2.5
1
1
%
kΩ
nA
%
1.5
2
%
%
2.7
ICP vs. VCP
ICP vs. Temperature
PRESCALER (PART OF N DIVIDER)
Prescaler Input Frequency
P = 1 FD
P = 2 FD
P = 3 FD
P = 2 DM (2/3)
P = 4 DM (4/5)
P = 8 DM (8/9)
P = 16 DM (16/17)
P = 32 DM (32/33)
Prescaler Output Frequency
PLL N DIVIDER DELAY
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
PLL R DIVIDER DELAY
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
PHASE OFFSET IN ZERO DELAY
Phase Offset (REF-to-LVDS Clock Output
Pins) in Zero Delay Mode
Phase Offset (REF-to-LVDS Clock Output
Pins) in Zero Delay Mode
Typ
10
300
600
900
600
1000
2400
3000
3000
300
Off
385
504
623
743
866
989
1112
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
Test Conditions/Comments
Programmable
With CPRSET = 5.1 kΩ; higher ICP is possible by changing
CPRSET
With CPRSET = 5.1 kΩ; lower ICP is possible by changing
CPRSET
Charge pump voltage set to VCP/2
0.5 V < VCP < VCP − 0.5 V; VCP is the voltage on the CP (charge
pump) pin; VCP is the voltage on the VCP power supply pin
0.5 V < VCP < VCP − 0.5 V
VCP = VCP/2 V
A, B counter input frequency (prescaler input frequency
divided by P)
Register 0x019[2:0]; see Table 47
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
Register 0x019[5:3]; see Table 47
Off
365
486
608
730
852
976
1101
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
ps
1890
2348
3026
ps
REF refers to REFIN (REF1)/REFIN (REF2)
When N delay and R delay are bypassed
900
1217
1695
ps
When N delay = Setting 111 and R delay is bypassed
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 76
AD9522-5
Parameter
NOISE CHARACTERISTICS
In-Band Phase Noise of the Charge Pump/
Phase Frequency Detector (In-Band
Means Within the LBW of the PLL)
@ 500 kHz PFD Frequency
@ 1 MHz PFD Frequency
@ 10 MHz PFD Frequency
@ 50 MHz PFD Frequency
PLL Figure of Merit (FOM)
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
The PLL in-band phase noise floor is estimated by
measuring the in-band phase noise at the output of
the VCO and subtracting 20 log(N) (where N is the value
of the N divider)
−165
−162
−152
−144
−222
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
Low Range (ABP 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns)
High Range (ABP 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns)
High Range (ABP 6.0 ns)
Unlock Threshold (Hysteresis)2
3.5
7.5
3.5
ns
ns
ns
Low Range (ABP 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns)
High Range (ABP 1.3 ns, 2.9 ns)
High Range (ABP 6.0 ns)
7
15
11
ns
ns
ns
PLL DIGITAL LOCK DETECT WINDOW 2
Lock Threshold (Coincidence of Edges)
1
2
Test Conditions/Comments
Reference slew rate > 0.5 V/ns; FOM + 10 log(fPFD) is an
approximation of the PFD/CP in-band phase noise (in
the flat region) inside the PLL loop bandwidth; when
running closed-loop, the phase noise, as observed at
the VCO output, is increased by 20 log(N); PLL figure of
merit decreases with decreasing slew rate; see Figure 11
Signal available at the LD, STATUS, and REFMON pins
when selected by appropriate register settings; lock
detect window settings can be varied by changing the
CPRSET resistor
Selected by 0x017[1:0] and 0x018[4] (this is the threshold
to go from unlock to lock)
0x017[1:0] = 00b, 01b, 11b; 0x018[4] = 1b
0x017[1:0] = 00b, 01b, 11b; 0x018[4] = 0b
0x017[1:0] = 10b; 0x018[4] = 0b
Selected by 0x017[1:0] and 0x018[4] (this is the threshold
to go from lock to unlock)
0x017[1:0] = 00b, 01b, 11b; 0x018[4] = 1b
0x017[1:0] = 00b, 01b, 11b; 0x018[4] = 0b
0x017[1:0] = 10b; 0x018[4] = 0b
The REFIN and REFIN self-bias points are offset slightly to avoid chatter on an open input condition.
For reliable operation of the digital lock detect, the period of the PFD frequency must be greater than the unlock-after-lock time.
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 76
AD9522-5
CLOCK INPUTS
Table 3.
Parameter
CLOCK INPUTS (CLK, CLK)
Input Frequency
Min
Typ
01
01
Input Sensitivity, Differential
1
Unit
2.4
1.6
GHz
GHz
150
Input Level, Differential
Input Common-Mode Voltage, VCM
Input Common-Mode Range, VCMR
Input Sensitivity, Single-Ended
Input Resistance
Input Capacitance
Max
1.3
1.3
3.9
1.57
150
4.7
2
mV p-p
2
V p-p
1.8
1.8
V
V
mV p-p
kΩ
pF
5.7
Test Conditions/Comments
Differential input
High frequency distribution (VCO divider)
Distribution only (VCO divider bypassed); this is the
frequency range supported by the channel divider
Measured at 2.4 GHz; jitter performance is improved with
slew rates > 1 V/ns
Larger voltage swings can turn on the protection diodes
and can degrade jitter performance
Self-biased; enables ac coupling
With 200 mV p-p signal applied; dc-coupled
CLK ac-coupled; CLK ac-bypassed to RF ground
Self-biased
Below about 1 MHz, the input should be dc-coupled. Care should be taken to match VCM.
CLOCK OUTPUTS
Table 4.
Parameter
LVDS CLOCK OUTPUTS
OUT0, OUT1, OUT2, OUT3, OUT4, OUT5,
OUT6, OUT7, OUT8, OUT9, OUT10, OUT11
Output Frequency
Output Differential Voltage, VOD
Min
247
Typ
360
Delta VOD
Output Offset Voltage, VOS
1.125
1.25
Delta VOS
Short-Circuit Current, ISA, ISB
CMOS CLOCK OUTPUTS
OUT0A, OUT0B, OUT1A, OUT1B, OUT2A,
OUT2B, OUT3A, OUT3B, OUT4A, OUT4B,
OUT5A, OUT5B, OUT6A, OUT6B, OUT7A,
OUT7B, OUT8A, OUT8B, OUT9A, OUT9B,
OUT10A, OUT10B, OUT11A, OUT11B
Output Frequency
Output Voltage High, VOH
Output Voltage Low, VOL
Output Voltage High, VOH
Output Voltage Low, VOL
14
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
Termination = 100 Ω across differential pair
Differential (OUT, OUT)
800
MHz
454
mV
25
mV
1.375
V
25
mV
24
mA
The AD9522 outputs toggle at higher frequencies,
but the output amplitude may not meet the VOD
specification
VOH − VOL measurement across a differential pair
at the default amplitude setting with output
driver not toggling; see Figure 17 for variation
over frequency
This is the absolute value of the difference
between VOD when the normal output is high vs.
when the complementary output is high
(VOH + VOL)/2 across a differential pair at the default
amplitude setting with output driver not toggling
This is the absolute value of the difference
between VOS when the normal output is high vs.
when the complementary output is high
Output shorted to GND
Single-ended; termination = 10 pF
250
VS − 0.1
0.1
2.7
0.5
MHz
V
V
V
V
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 76
See Figure 18
@ 1 mA load
@ 1 mA load
@ 10 mA load
@ 10 mA load
AD9522-5
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
Table 5.
Parameter
LVDS OUTPUT RISE/FALL TIMES
Output Rise Time, tRP
Output Fall Time, tFP
PROPAGATION DELAY, tLVDS, CLK-TO-LVDS OUTPUT
For All Divide Values
Variation with Temperature
OUTPUT SKEW, LVDS OUTPUTS 1
LVDS Outputs That Share the Same Divider
LVDS Outputs on Different Dividers
All LVDS Outputs Across Multiple Parts
CMOS OUTPUT RISE/FALL TIMES
Output Rise Time, tRC
Output Fall Time, tFC
PROPAGATION DELAY, tCMOS, CLK-TO-CMOS OUTPUT
For All Divide Values
Variation with Temperature
OUTPUT SKEW, CMOS OUTPUTS1
CMOS Outputs That Share the Same Divider
All CMOS Outputs on Different Dividers
All CMOS Outputs Across Multiple Parts
OUTPUT SKEW, LVDS-TO-CMOS OUTPUT1
Outputs That Share the Same Divider
Outputs That Are on Different Dividers
1
Min
1866
1808
Typ
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
Termination = 100 Ω across differential pair
20% to 80%, measured differentially
80% to 20%, measured differentially
150
150
350
350
ps
ps
2313
2245
1
2812
2740
ps
ps
ps/°C
7
19
60
162
432
ps
ps
ps
625
625
835
800
ps
ps
2400
2
2950
ps
ps/°C
10
27
55
230
500
ps
ps
ps
+152
+160
+495
+495
ps
ps
High frequency clock distribution configuration
Clock distribution configuration
Termination = 100 Ω across differential pair
1913
−31
−193
Termination = open
20% to 80%; CLOAD = 10 pF
80% to 20%; CLOAD = 10 pF
Clock distribution configuration
All settings identical; different logic type
LVDS to CMOS on the same part
LVDS to CMOS on the same part
The output skew is the difference between any two similar delay paths while operating at the same voltage and temperature.
Timing Diagrams
tCLK
CLK
SINGLE-ENDED
tLVDS
80%
CMOS
10pF LOAD
tCMOS
tRC
Figure 4. CMOS Timing, Single-Ended, 10 pF Load
Figure 2. CLK/CLK to Clock Output Timing, DIV = 1
DIFFERENTIAL
80%
LVDS
tFP
07240-061
20%
tRP
tFC
Figure 3. LVDS Timing, Differential
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 76
07240-063
07240-060
20%
AD9522-5
CLOCK OUTPUT ADDITIVE PHASE NOISE (DISTRIBUTION ONLY; VCO DIVIDER NOT USED)
Table 6.
Parameter
CLK-TO-LVDS ADDITIVE PHASE NOISE
CLK = 1.6 GHz, Output = 800 MHz
Divider = 2
@ 10 Hz Offset
@ 100 Hz Offset
@ 1 kHz Offset
@ 10 kHz Offset
@ 100 kHz Offset
@ 1 MHz Offset
@ 10 MHz Offset
@ 100 MHz Offset
CLK = 1 GHz, Output = 200 MHz
Divider = 5
@ 10 Hz Offset
@ 100 Hz Offset
@ 1 kHz Offset
@ 10 kHz Offset
@ 100 kHz Offset
@ 1 MHz Offset
>10 MHz Offset
CLK-TO-CMOS ADDITIVE PHASE NOISE
CLK = 1 GHz, Output = 500 MHz
Divider = 2
@ 10 Hz Offset
@ 100 Hz Offset
@ 1 kHz Offset
@ 10 kHz Offset
@ 100 kHz Offset
@ 1 MHz Offset
>10 MHz Offset
CLK = 1 GHz, Output = 50 MHz
Divider = 20
@ 10 Hz Offset
@ 100 Hz Offset
@ 1 kHz Offset
@ 10 kHz Offset
@ 100 kHz Offset
@ 1 MHz Offset
>10 MHz Offset
Min
Typ
−100
−110
−117
−126
−134
−137
−147
−148
Max
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
Distribution section only; does not include PLL and VCO
Input slew rate > 1 V/ns
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
Input slew rate > 1 V/ns
−111
−123
−132
−141
−146
−150
−156
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
Distribution section only; does not include PLL and VCO
Input slew rate > 1 V/ns
−102
−114
−122
−129
−135
−140
−150
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
Input slew rate > 1 V/ns
−125
−136
−144
−152
−157
−160
−164
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
dBc/Hz
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 76
AD9522-5
CLOCK OUTPUT ABSOLUTE TIME JITTER (CLOCK GENERATION USING EXTERNAL VCXO)
Table 7.
Parameter
LVDS OUTPUT ABSOLUTE TIME JITTER
Min
Typ
LVDS = 245.76 MHz; PLL LBW = 125 Hz
Max
87
108
146
120
151
207
157
210
295
LVDS = 122.88 MHz; PLL LBW = 125 Hz
LVDS = 61.44 MHz; PLL LBW = 125 Hz
Unit
Test Conditions/Comments
Application example based on a typical setup using an
external 245.76 MHz VCXO (Toyocom TCO-2112);
reference = 15.36 MHz; R DIV = 1
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 5 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 10 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 12 kHz to 20 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 5 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 10 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 12 kHz to 20 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 5 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 200 kHz to 10 MHz
Integration bandwidth = 12 kHz to 20 MHz
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
fs rms
CLOCK OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER (VCO DIVIDER NOT USED)
Table 8.
Parameter
LVDS OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER
CLK = 622.08 MHz
Any LVDS Output = 622.08 MHz
Divide Ratio = 1
CLK = 622.08 MHz
Any LVDS Output = 155.52 MHz
Divide Ratio = 4
CLK = 100 MHz
Any LVDS Output = 100 MHz
Divide Ratio = 1
CLK = 500 MHz
Any LVDS Output = 100 MHz
Divide Ratio = 5
CMOS OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER
CLK = 200 MHz
Any CMOS Output Pair = 100 MHz
Divide Ratio = 2
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
69
fs rms
Test Conditions/Comments
Distribution section only; does not include PLL and
VCO; measured at rising edge of clock signal
Integration bandwidth = 12 kHz to 20 MHz
116
fs rms
Integration bandwidth = 12 kHz to 20 MHz
263
fs rms
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
Broadband jitter
242
fs rms
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
Broadband jitter
289
fs rms
Distribution section only; does not include PLL and VCO
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
Broadband jitter
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 76
AD9522-5
CLOCK OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER (VCO DIVIDER USED)
Table 9.
Parameter
LVDS OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
CLK = 500 MHz; VCO DIV = 5; LVDS = 100 MHz;
Bypass Channel Divider; Duty-Cycle Correction = On
CMOS OUTPUT ADDITIVE TIME JITTER
248
fs rms
CLK = 200 MHz; VCO DIV = 2; CMOS = 100 MHz;
Bypass Channel Divider; Duty-Cycle Correction = Off
CLK = 200 MHz; VCO DIV = 1; CMOS = 100 MHz;
Bypass Channel Divider; Duty-Cycle Correction = Off
290
fs rms
288
fs rms
Test Conditions/Comments
Distribution section only; does not include
PLL and VCO; uses rising edge of clock signal
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
(broadband jitter)
Distribution section only; does not include
PLL and VCO; uses rising edge of clock signal
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
(broadband jitter)
Calculated from SNR of ADC method
(broadband jitter)
SERIAL CONTROL PORT—SPI MODE
Table 10.
Parameter
CS (INPUT)
Input Logic 1 Voltage
Input Logic 0 Voltage
Input Logic 1 Current
Input Logic 0 Current
Min
Max
Unit
0.8
3
−110
V
V
μA
μA
2
pF
2.0
Input Capacitance
SCLK (INPUT) IN SPI MODE
Input Logic 1 Voltage
Input Logic 0 Voltage
Input Logic 1 Current
Input Logic 0 Current
Input Capacitance
SDIO (WHEN AN INPUT IN BIDIRECTIONAL MODE)
Input Logic 1 Voltage
Input Logic 0 Voltage
Input Logic 1 Current
Input Logic 0 Current
Input Capacitance
SDIO, SDO (OUTPUTS)
Output Logic 1 Voltage
Output Logic 0 Voltage
TIMING
Clock Rate (SCLK, 1/tSCLK)
Pulse Width High, tHIGH
Pulse Width Low, tLOW
SDIO to SCLK Setup, tDS
SCLK to SDIO Hold, tDH
SCLK to Valid SDIO and SDO, tDV
CS to SCLK Setup and Hold, tS, tC
CS Minimum Pulse Width High, tPWH
Typ
Test Conditions/Comments
CS has an internal 30 kΩ pull-up resistor
The minus sign indicates that current is flowing out of
the AD9522, which is due to the internal pull-up resistor
SCLK has an internal 30 kΩ pull-down resistor in SPI
mode, but not in I2C mode
2.0
0.8
110
1
2
2.0
0.8
1
1
2
2.7
0.4
25
16
16
4
0
11
2
3
V
V
μA
μA
pF
V
V
μA
μA
pF
V
V
MHz
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 76
AD9522-5
SERIAL CONTROL PORT—I²C MODE
Table 11.
Parameter
SDA, SCL (WHEN INPUTTING DATA)
Input Logic 1 Voltage
Input Logic 0 Voltage
Input Current with an Input Voltage Between
0.1 × VS and 0.9 × VS
Hysteresis of Schmitt Trigger Inputs
Pulse Width of Spikes That Must Be Suppressed by
the Input Filter, tSPIKE
SDA (WHEN OUTPUTTING DATA)
Output Logic 0 Voltage at 3 mA Sink Current
Output Fall Time from VIHMIN to VILMAX with a Bus
Capacitance from 10 pF to 400 pF
TIMING
Clock Rate (SCL, fI2C)
Bus Free Time Between a Stop and Start Condition, tIDLE
Setup Time for a Repeated Start Condition, tSET; STR
Hold Time (Repeated) Start Condition (After This Period,
the First Clock Pulse Is Generated), tHLD; STR
Setup Time for Stop Condition, tSET; STP
Low Period of the SCL Clock, tLOW
High Period of the SCL Clock, tHIGH
SCL, SDA Rise Time, tRISE
SCL, SDA Fall Time, tFALL
Data Setup Time, tSET; DAT
Data Hold Time, tHLD; DAT
Min
Typ
Unit
0.3 × VS
+10
V
V
μA
50
V
ns
0.4
250
V
ns
0.7 × VS
−10
0.015 × VS
20 + 0.1 Cb
Test Conditions/Comments
Cb = capacitance of one bus line in pF
Note that all I2C timing values refer
to VIHMIN (0.3 × VS) and VILMAX levels
(0.7 × VS)
1.3
0.6
0.6
400
kHz
μs
μs
μs
0.6
1.3
0.6
20 + 0.1 Cb
20 + 0.1 Cb
120
μs
μs
μs
ns
ns
ns
140
Capacitive Load for Each Bus Line, Cb
1
Max
300
300
880
ns
400
pF
Cb = capacitance of one bus line in pF
Cb = capacitance of one bus line in pF
This is a minor deviation from the
original I²C specification of 100 ns
minimum
This is a minor deviation from the
original I²C specification of 0 ns
minimum 1
According to the original I2C specification, an I2C master must also provide a minimum hold time of 300 ns for the SDA signal to bridge the undefined region of the SCL
falling edge.
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 76
AD9522-5
PD, SYNC, AND RESET PINS
Table 12.
Parameter
INPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Logic 1 Voltage
Logic 0 Voltage
Logic 1 Current
Logic 0 Current
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
0.8
1
−110
V
V
μA
μA
2
pF
2.0
Capacitance
RESET TIMING
Pulse Width Low
RESET Inactive to Start of Register Programming
50
100
ns
ns
SYNC TIMING
Pulse Width Low
1.3
ns
Test Conditions/Comments
Each of these pins has an internal 30 kΩ pull-up resistor
The minus sign indicates that current is flowing out of
the AD9522, which is due to the internal pull-up resistor
High speed clock is CLK input signal
SERIAL PORT SETUP PINS: SP1, SP0
Table 13.
Parameter
SP1, SP0
Logic Level 0
Logic Level ½
Min
0.4 × VS
Logic Level 1
0.8 × VS
Typ
Max
Unit
0.25 × VS
0.65 × VS
V
V
Test Conditions/Comments
These pins do not have internal pull-up/pull-down resistors
VS is the voltage on the VS pin
User can float these pins to obtain Logic Level ½; if floating these pins, user
should connect a capacitor to ground
V
LD, STATUS, AND REFMON PINS
Table 14.
Parameter
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Min
Output Voltage High, VOH
Output Voltage Low, VOL
MAXIMUM TOGGLE RATE
2.7
Max
Unit
0.4
100
V
V
MHz
3
pF
On-chip capacitance; used to calculate RC time constant
for analog lock detect readback; use a pull-up resistor
1.02
MHz
8
kHz
Frequency above which the monitor indicates the
presence of the reference
Frequency above which the monitor indicates the
presence of the reference
ANALOG LOCK DETECT
Capacitance
REF1, REF2, AND CLK FREQUENCY STATUS MONITOR
Normal Range
Extended Range
LD PIN COMPARATOR
Trip Point
Hysteresis
Typ
1.6
260
V
mV
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 76
Test Conditions/Comments
When selected as a digital output (CMOS); there are other
modes in which these pins are not CMOS digital outputs;
see Table 47, 0x017, 0x01A, and 0x01B
Applies when mux is set to any divider or counter output,
or PFD up/down pulse; also applies in analog lock detect
mode; usually debug mode only; note that spurs can
couple to output when any of these pins are toggling
AD9522-5
POWER DISSIPATION
Table 15.
Parameter
POWER DISSIPATION, CHIP
Typ
Max
Unit
Power-On Default
Distribution Only Mode; VCO Divider On;
One LVDS Output Enabled
Distribution Only Mode; VCO Divider Off;
One LVDS Output Enabled
Maximum Power, Full Operation
0.88
0.36
1.0
0.43
W
W
0.33
0.4
W
1.1
1.3
W
PD Power-Down
35
50
mW
PD Power-Down, Maximum Sleep
27
43
mW
2.3
8
mW
33
25
43
31
mW
mW
REF1, REF2 (Single-Ended) On/Off
16
22
mW
PLL Dividers and Phase Detector On/Off
LVDS Channel
LVDS Driver
CMOS Channel
54
118
11
120
67
146
15
154
mW
mW
mW
mW
CMOS Driver On/Off
Channel Divider Enabled
16
33
30
40
mW
mW
Zero Delay Block On/Off
30
35
mW
VCP Supply
POWER DELTAS, INDIVIDUAL FUNCTIONS
VCO Divider On/Off
REFIN (Differential) Off
Min
Test Conditions/Comments
Does not include power dissipated in external resistors; all LVDS
outputs terminated with 100 Ω across differential pair; all CMOS
outputs have 10 pF capacitive loading
No clock; no programming; default register values
fCLK = 2.4 GHz; fOUT = 200 MHz; VCO divider = 2; one LVDS output
and output divider enabled; zero delay off
fCLK = 2.4 GHz; fOUT = 200 MHz; VCO divider bypassed; one LVDS
output and output divider enabled; zero delay off
PLL on; VCO divider = 3; all channel dividers on; 12 LVDS
outputs @ 125 MHz; zero delay on
PD pin pulled low; does not include power dissipated in
termination resistors
PD pin pulled low; PLL power-down, 0x010[1:0] = 01b; powerdown SYNC, 0x230[2] = 1b; power-down distribution reference,
0x230[1] = 1b
PLL operating; typical closed-loop configuration
Power delta when a function is enabled/disabled
VCO divider not used
Delta between reference input off and differential reference
input mode
Delta between reference inputs off and one single-ended
reference enabled; double this number if both REF1 and REF2
are powered up
PLL off to PLL on, normal operation; no reference enabled
No LVDS output on to one LVDS output on; channel divider set to 1
Second LVDS output turned on, same channel
No CMOS output on to one CMOS output on; channel divider
set to 1; fOUT = 62.5 MHz and 10 pF of capacitive loading
Additional CMOS outputs within the same channel turned on
Delta between divider bypassed (divide-by-1) and divide-by-2 to
divide-by-32
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 76
AD9522-5
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Table 16.
Parameter or Pin
VS
VCP, CP
REFIN, REFIN
RSET
CPRSET
CLK, CLK
CLK
SCLK/SCL, SDIO/SDA, SDO, CS
OUT0, OUT0, OUT1, OUT1,
OUT2, OUT2, OUT3, OUT3,
OUT4, OUT4, OUT5, OUT5,
OUT6, OUT6, OUT7, OUT7,
OUT8, OUT8, OUT9, OUT9,
OUT10, OUT10, OUT11, OUT11
SYNC, RESET, PD
REFMON, STATUS, LD
SP0, SP1, EEPROM
Junction Temperature 1
Storage Temperature Range
Lead Temperature (10 sec)
1
With
Respect to
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
CLK
GND
GND
Rating
−0.3 V to +3.6 V
−0.3 V to +5.8 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−1.2 V to +1.2 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
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
section of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
THERMAL RESISTANCE
Thermal impedance measurements were taken on a JEDEC
JESD51-5 2S2P test board in still air in accordance with JEDEC
JESD51-2. See the Thermal Performance section for more details.
Table 17.
Package Type
64-Lead LFCSP (CP-64-4)
GND
GND
GND
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
−0.3 V to VS + 0.3 V
150°C
−65°C to +150°C
300°C
ESD CAUTION
See Table 17 for θJA.
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 76
θJA
22
Unit
°C/W
AD9522-5
64
63
62
61
60
59
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
51
50
49
REFIN (REF1)
REFIN (REF2)
CPRSET
VS
VS
GND
RSET
VS
OUT0 (OUT0A)
OUT0 (OUT0B)
VS
OUT1 (OUT1A)
OUT1 (OUT1B)
OUT2 (OUT2A)
OUT2 (OUT2B)
VS
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
PIN 1
INDICATOR
AD9522-5
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
48
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
OUT3 (OUT3A)
OUT3 (OUT3B)
VS
OUT4 (OUT4A)
OUT4 (OUT4B)
OUT5 (OUT5A)
OUT5 (OUT5B)
VS
VS
OUT8 (OUT8B)
OUT8 (OUT8A)
OUT7 (OUT7B)
OUT7 (OUT7A)
VS
OUT6 (OUT6B)
OUT6 (OUT6A)
NOTES
1. EXPOSED DIE PAD MUST BE CONNECTED TO GND.
07240-003
SDIO/SDA
SDO
GND
SP1
SP0
EEPROM
RESET
PD
OUT9 (OUT9A)
OUT9 (OUT9B)
VS
OUT10 (OUT10A)
OUT10 (OUT10B)
OUT11 (OUT11A)
OUT11 (OUT11B)
VS
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
VS
REFMON
LD
VCP
CP
STATUS
REF_SEL
SYNC
NC
NC
VS
VS
CLK
CLK
CS
SCLK/SCL
Figure 5. Pin Configuration
Table 18. Pin Function Descriptions
Pin No.
1, 11, 12, 27,
32, 35, 40,
41, 46, 49,
54, 57, 60, 61
2
3
4
Input/
Output
I
Pin
Type
Power
Mnemonic
VS
Description
3.3 V Power Pins.
O
O
I
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
Power
REFMON
LD
VCP
5
O
Loop filter
CP
6
7
O
I
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
STATUS
REF_SEL
8
I
3.3 V CMOS
SYNC
9, 10
13
I
14
I
Differential
clock input
Differential
clock input
Reference Monitor (Output). This pin has multiple selectable outputs.
Lock Detect (Output). This pin has multiple selectable outputs.
Power Supply for Charge Pump (CP); VS ≤ VCP ≤ 5.25 V. VCP must still be connected
to 3.3 V if the PLL is not used.
Charge Pump (Output). This pin connects to an external loop filter. This pin can
be left unconnected if the PLL is not used.
Programmable Status Output.
Reference Select. It selects REF1 (low) or REF2 (high). This pin has an internal
30 kΩ pull-down resistor.
Manual Synchronizations and Manual Holdover. This pin initiates a manual
synchronization and is used for manual holdover. Active low. This pin has an
internal 30 kΩ pull-up resistor.
No Connect. These pins can be left floating.
Along with CLK, this pin is the differential input for the clock distribution section.
NC
CLK
CLK
Along with CLK, this pin is the differential input for the clock distribution section. If a
single-ended input is connected to the CLK pin, connect a 0.1 μF bypass capacitor
from this pin to ground.
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 76
AD9522-5
Pin No.
15
Input/
Output
I
Pin
Type
3.3 V CMOS
Mnemonic
CS
16
I
3.3 V CMOS
SCLK/SCL
17
18
19, 59
20
I/O
O
I
I
SDIO/SDA
SDO
GND
SP1
21
I
22
I
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
GND
Three-level
logic
Three-level
logic
3.3 V CMOS
23
24
25
I
I
O
RESET
PD
OUT9 (OUT9A)
26
O
28
O
29
O
30
O
31
O
33
O
34
O
36
O
37
O
38
O
39
O
42
O
43
O
44
O
45
O
3.3 V CMOS
3.3 V CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
SP0
EEPROM
OUT9 (OUT9B)
OUT10 (OUT10A)
OUT10 (OUT10B)
OUT11 (OUT11A)
OUT11 (OUT11B)
OUT6 (OUT6A)
OUT6 (OUT6B)
OUT7 (OUT7A)
OUT7 (OUT7B)
OUT8 (OUT8A)
OUT8 (OUT8B)
OUT5 (OUT5B)
OUT5 (OUT5A)
OUT4 (OUT4B)
OUT4 (OUT4A)
Description
Serial Control Port Chip Select; Active Low. This pin has an internal 30 kΩ
pull-up resistor.
Serial Control Port Clock Signal. This pin has an internal 30 kΩ pull-down resistor
in SPI mode but is high impedance in I²C mode.
Serial Control Port Bidirectional Serial Data In/Out.
Serial Control Port Unidirectional Serial Data Out.
Ground Pins.
Select SPI or I²C as the serial interface port and select the I²C slave address in I²C
mode. Three-level logic. This pin is internally biased for the open logic level.
Select SPI or I²C as the serial interface port and select the I²C slave address in I²C
mode. Three-level logic. This pin is internally biased for the open logic level.
Setting this pin high selects the register values stored in the internal EEPROM to
be loaded at reset and/or power-up. Setting this pin low causes the AD9522 to
load the hard-coded default register values at power-up/reset. This pin has an
internal 30 kΩ pull-down resistor.
Chip Reset, Active Low. This pin has an internal 30 kΩ pull-up resistor.
Chip Power-Down, Active Low. This pin has an internal 30 kΩ pull-up resistor.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 76
AD9522-5
Pin No.
47
Input/
Output
O
48
O
50
O
51
O
52
O
53
O
55
O
56
O
58
O
62
O
63
I
64
I
EPAD
Pin
Type
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
LVDS or
CMOS
Current set
resistor
Current set
resistor
Reference
input
Reference
input
GND
Mnemonic
OUT3 (OUT3B)
OUT3 (OUT3A)
OUT2 (OUT2B)
OUT2 (OUT2A)
OUT1 (OUT1B)
OUT1 (OUT1A)
OUT0 (OUT0B)
OUT0 (OUT0A)
RSET
CPRSET
REFIN (REF2)
REFIN (REF1)
GND
Description
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Output. This pin can be configured as one side of a differential LVDS output
or as a single-ended CMOS output.
Clock Distribution Current Set Resistor. Connect a 4.12 kΩ resistor from this pin
to GND.
Charge Pump Current Set Resistor. Connect a 5.1 kΩ resistor from this pin to GND.
This resistor can be omitted if the PLL is not used.
Along with REFIN, this is the differential input for the PLL reference. Alternatively,
this pin is a single-ended input for REF2.
Along with REFIN, this is the differential input for the PLL reference. Alternatively,
this pin is a single-ended input for REF1.
The exposed die pad must be connected to GND.
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 76
AD9522-5
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
275
5
3 CHANNELS—6 LVDS
250
3 CHANNELS—3 LVDS
200
175
2 CHANNELS—2 LVDS
150
4
CURRENT FROM CP PIN (mA)
125
PUMP DOWN
3
2
1
1 CHANNEL—1 LVDS
0
200
400
600
800
1000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
07240-112
75
07240-108
100
5.0
VOLTAGE ON CP PIN (V)
Figure 6. Total Current vs. Frequency, CLK-to-Output (PLL Off), Channel and
VCO Divider Bypassed, LVDS Outputs Terminated 100 Ω Across Differential Pair
Figure 9. Charge Pump Characteristics @ VCP = 5.0 V
–140
PFD PHASE NOISE REFERRED TO PFD INPUT
(dBc/Hz)
240
2 CHANNELS—8 CMOS
220
200
180
2 CHANNELS—2 CMOS
160
140
1 CHANNEL—2 CMOS
120
100
1 CHANNEL—1 CMOS
80
0
50
100
150
200
250
FREQUENCY (MHz)
–145
–150
–155
–160
–165
–170
0.1
07240-109
CURRENT (mA)
PUMP UP
1
10
07240-013
CURRENT (mA)
225
100
PFD FREQUENCY (MHz)
Figure 7. Total Current vs. Frequency, CLK-to-Output (PLL Off), Channel and
VCO Divider Bypassed, CMOS Outputs with 10 pF Load
Figure 10. PFD Phase Noise Referred to PFD Input vs. PFD Frequency
5
–208
PLL FIGURE OF MERIT (dBc/Hz)
PUMP DOWN
PUMP UP
3
2
1
–212
–214
–216
–218
DIFFERENTIAL INPUT
–220
–222
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
VOLTAGE ON CP PIN (V)
3.5
–224
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
INPUT SLEW RATE (V/ns)
Figure 11. PLL Figure of Merit (FOM) vs. Slew Rate at REFIN/REFIN
Figure 8. Charge Pump Characteristics @ VCP = 3.3 V
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 76
07240-114
SINGLE-ENDED INPUT
0
07240-111
CURRENT FROM CP PIN (mA)
–210
4
AD9522-5
3.5
3.2
VS_DRV = 3.3V
3.0
2.8
VS_DRV = 3.135V
AMPLITUDE (V)
VS_DRV = 2.35V
2.0
1.5
1.0
2.0
1.6
1.2
0.8
0.5
0
1k
100
RESISTIVE LOAD (Ω)
0
07240-118
0
10k
10
20
30
40
0.4
70
80
90
100
2pF LOAD
3.2
0.3
2.8
10pF
LOAD
AMPLITUDE (V)
2.4
0.1
0
–0.1
2.0
1.6
1.2
–0.2
0.8
–0.3
0.4
–0.4
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15
TIME (ns)
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
9
TIME (ns)
Figure 13. LVDS Output (Differential) @ 100 MHz,
Output Terminated 100 Ω Across Differential Pair
07240-019
0.2
07240-014
DIFFERENTIAL OUTPUT (V)
60
Figure 15. CMOS Output with 10 pF Load @ 25 MHz
Figure 12. CMOS Output VOH (Static) vs. RLOAD (to Ground)
Figure 16. CMOS Output with 2 pF and 10 pF Load @ 250 MHz
1600
0.3
1400
DIFFERENTIAL SWING (mV p-p)
0.4
0.2
0.1
0
–0.1
–0.2
–0.3
7mA SETTING
1200
1000
800
DEFAULT 3.5mA SETTING
600
400
200
–0.4
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
TIME (ns)
3.0
07240-015
DIFFERENTIAL SWING (V p-p)
50
TIME (ns)
07240-018
0.4
0
0
200
400
600
800
1000
FREQUENCY (GHz)
Figure 17. LVDS Differential Voltage Swing vs. Frequency,
Output Terminated 100 Ω Across Differential Pair
Figure 14. LVDS Differential Voltage Swing @ 800 MHz,
Output Terminated 100 Ω Across Differential Pair
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 76
07240-123
VOH (V)
2.4
VS_DRV = 2.5V
2.5
AD9522-5
4.0
–100
3.5
–110
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
3.0
AMPLITUDE (V)
2pF
2.5
2.0
10pF
1.5
20pF
1.0
–120
–130
–140
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
FREQUENCY (MHz)
–150
10
–110
–120
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
100k
1M
10M
100M
–120
–130
–140
–130
–140
–150
–160
1k
10k
100k
1M
10M
100M
FREQUENCY (Hz)
–170
10
07240-128
100
100
1k
10k
100k
1M
10M
100M
FREQUENCY (Hz)
07240-131
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
–110
–150
Figure 22. Additive (Residual) Phase Noise,
CLK-to-CMOS @ 50 MHz, Divide-by-20
Figure 19. Additive (Residual) Phase Noise,
CLK-to-LVDS @ 245.76 MHz, Divide-by-1
–100
–110
–110
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
–100
–120
–130
–140
–120
–130
–140
–150
–150
100
1k
10k
100k
1M
10M
FREQUENCY (Hz)
100M
07240-129
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
10k
Figure 21. Additive (Residual) Phase Noise,
CLK-to-LVDS @ 800 MHz, Divide-by-1
–100
–160
10
1k
FREQUENCY (Hz)
Figure 18. CMOS Output Swing vs. Frequency and Capacitive Load
–160
10
100
–160
10
100
1k
10k
100k
1M
10M
FREQUENCY (Hz)
Figure 23. Additive (Residual) Phase Noise,
CLK-to-CMOS @ 250 MHz, Divide-by-4
Figure 20. Additive (Residual) Phase Noise,
CLK-to-LVDS @ 200 MHz, Divide-by-5
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 76
100M
07240-132
0
07240-124
0
07240-130
0.5
AD9522-5
–80
INTEGRATED RMS JITTER (12kHz TO 20MHz): 146fs
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
–90
–100
–110
–120
–130
–140
–160
1k
10k
100k
1M
FREQUENCY (Hz)
10M
100M
07240-135
–150
Figure 24. Phase Noise (Absolute), External VCXO (Toyocom TCO-2112)
@ 245.76 MHz; PFD = 15.36 MHz; LBW = 250 Hz; LVDS Output = 245.76 MHz
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 76
AD9522-5
TERMINOLOGY
Phase Jitter and Phase Noise
An ideal sine wave has a continuous and even progression of
phase with time from 0° to 360° for each cycle. Actual signals,
however, have a variation from the ideal phase progression over
time. This variation is called phase jitter. Although many causes
can contribute to phase jitter, one major cause is random noise,
which is characterized statistically as a Gaussian (normal)
distribution.
This phase jitter leads to a spreading out of the energy of the
sine wave in the frequency domain, producing a continuous
power spectrum. This power spectrum is usually reported as a
series of values whose units are dBc/Hz at a given offset in
frequency from the sine wave (carrier). The value is a ratio
(expressed in decibels) of the power contained within a 1 Hz
bandwidth with respect to the power at the carrier frequency.
For each measurement, the offset from the carrier frequency is
also given.
It is meaningful to integrate the total power contained within
some interval of offset frequencies (for example, 10 kHz to
10 MHz). This is called the integrated phase noise over that
frequency offset interval and can be readily related to the time
jitter due to the phase noise within that offset frequency interval.
Phase noise has a detrimental effect on the performance of ADCs,
DACs, and RF mixers. It lowers the achievable dynamic range of
the converters and mixers, although they are affected in somewhat
different ways.
Time Jitter
Phase noise is a frequency domain phenomenon. In the time
domain, the same effect is exhibited as time jitter. When observing
a sine wave, the time of successive zero crossings varies. In a square
wave, the time jitter is a displacement of the edges from their
ideal (regular) times of occurrence. In both cases, the variations in
timing from the ideal are the time jitter. Because these variations
are random in nature, the time jitter is specified in seconds root
mean square (rms) or 1 sigma of the Gaussian distribution.
Time jitter that occurs on a sampling clock for a DAC or an
ADC decreases the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and dynamic
range of the converter. A sampling clock with the lowest possible
jitter provides the highest performance from a given converter.
Additive Phase Noise
Additive phase noise is the amount of phase noise that is
attributable to the device or subsystem being measured.
The phase noise of any external oscillators or clock sources is
subtracted. This makes it possible to predict the degree to which
the device impacts the total system phase noise when used in
conjunction with the various oscillators and clock sources, each
of which contributes its own phase noise to the total. In many
cases, the phase noise of one element dominates the system
phase noise. When there are multiple contributors to phase
noise, the total is the square root of the sum of squares of the
individual contributors.
Additive Time Jitter
Additive time jitter is the amount of time jitter that is attributable to
the device or subsystem being measured. The time jitter of any
external oscillators or clock sources is subtracted. This makes it
possible to predict the degree to which the device impacts the
total system time jitter when used in conjunction with the various
oscillators and clock sources, each of which contributes its own
time jitter to the total. In many cases, the time jitter of the external
oscillators and clock sources dominates the system time jitter.
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 76
AD9522-5
DETAILED BLOCK DIAGRAM
VS
GND
RSET
REFMON
DISTRIBUTION
REFERENCE
REFERENCE
SWITCHOVER
LD
STATUS
BUF
LOCK
DETECT
PLL
REFERENCE
STATUS
REF2
R
DIVIDER
CLOCK
DOUBLER
REF1
OPTIONAL
REFIN
CPRSET VCP
PROGRAMMABLE
R DELAY
REF_SEL
HOLD
REFIN
AMP
STATUS
P, P + 1
PRESCALER
A/B
COUNTERS
PROGRAMMABLE
N DELAY
PHASE
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
CHARGE
PUMP
CP
N DIVIDER
ZERO DELAY BLOCK
STATUS
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
OUT0
CLK
OUT0
1
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
PD
SYNC
0
DIGITAL
LOGIC
EEPROM
RESET
OUT1
OUT1
OUT2
OUT2
EEPROM
OUT3
OUT3
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
SPI
INTERFACE
I2C
INTERFACE
OUT4
OUT4
OUT5
SCLK/SCL
SDIO/SDA
SDO
CS
OUT5
OUT6
OUT6
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
LVDS/CMOS OUTPUTS
SP0
SERIAL
PORT
DECODE
OUT7
OUT7
OUT8
OUT8
OUT9
OUT9
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
AD9522-5
OUT10
OUT10
OUT11
OUT11
Figure 25.
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 76
07240-028
SP1
AD9522-5
THEORY OF OPERATION
OPERATIONAL CONFIGURATIONS
The AD9522 can be configured in several ways. These
configurations must be set up by loading the control registers
(see Table 43 to Table 54). Each section or function must be
individually programmed by setting the appropriate bits in the
corresponding control register or registers. When the desired
configuration is programmed, the user can store these values in
the on-board EEPROM to allow the part to power up in the
desired configuration without user intervention.
When using the PLL with an external VCO < 1600 MHz, the PLL
must be turned on.
Table 20. Settings for Using the PLL with External VCO <
1600 MHz
Register
0x1E1[0] = 1b
0x010[1:0] = 00b
Mode 1: Clock Distribution or External VCO < 1600 MHz
When the external clock source to be distributed or the external
VCO/VCXO is <1600 MHz, a configuration that bypasses the
VCO divider can be used. This is the only difference from Mode 2.
Bypassing the VCO divider limits the frequency of the clock
source to <1600 MHz (due to the maximum input frequency
allowed at the channel dividers).
For clock distribution applications where the external clock is
<1600 MHz, the register settings shown in Table 19 should be used.
Table 19. Settings for Clock Distribution < 1600 MHz
Register
0x010[1:0] = 01b
0x1E1[0] = 1b
Description
PLL asynchronous power-down (PLL off )
Bypass the VCO divider as the source for
the distribution section
Description
Bypass the VCO divider as the source for
the distribution section
PLL normal operation (PLL on) along
with other appropriate PLL settings in
0x010 to 0x01F
An external VCO/VCXO requires an external loop filter that
must be connected between CP and the tuning pin of the VCO/
VCXO. This loop filter determines the loop bandwidth and stability
of the PLL. Make sure to select the proper PFD polarity for the
VCO/VCXO being used.
Table 21. Setting the PFD Polarity
Register
0x010[7] = 0b
0x010[7] = 1b
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 76
Description
PFD polarity positive (higher control voltage
produces higher frequency)
PFD polarity negative (higher control voltage
produces lower frequency)
AD9522-5
VS
GND
RSET
REFMON
DISTRIBUTION
REFERENCE
REFERENCE
SWITCHOVER
LD
STATUS
BUF
LOCK
DETECT
PLL
REFERENCE
STATUS
REF2
R
DIVIDER
CLOCK
DOUBLER
REF1
OPTIONAL
REFIN
CPRSET VCP
PROGRAMMABLE
R DELAY
REF_SEL
HOLD
REFIN
AMP
STATUS
P, P + 1
PRESCALER
A/B
COUNTERS
PROGRAMMABLE
N DELAY
PHASE
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
CHARGE
PUMP
CP
N DIVIDER
ZERO DELAY BLOCK
STATUS
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
OUT0
CLK
OUT0
1
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
PD
SYNC
0
DIGITAL
LOGIC
EEPROM
RESET
OUT1
OUT1
OUT2
OUT2
EEPROM
OUT3
OUT3
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
SPI
INTERFACE
I2 C
INTERFACE
OUT4
OUT4
OUT5
SCLK/SCL
SDIO/SDA
SDO
CS
OUT5
OUT6
OUT6
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
LVDS/CMOS OUTPUTS
SP0
SERIAL
PORT
DECODE
OUT7
OUT7
OUT8
OUT8
OUT9
OUT9
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
AD9522-5
OUT10
OUT10
OUT11
OUT11
Figure 26. Clock Distribution or External VCO < 1600 MHz (Mode 1)
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 76
07240-031
SP1
AD9522-5
Mode 2: High Frequency Clock Distribution—CLK or
External VCO > 1600 MHz
When using the PLL with an external VCO, the PLL must be
turned on.
The AD9522 power-up default configuration has the PLL
powered off and the routing of the input set so that the CLK/
CLK input is connected to the distribution section through the
VCO divider (divide-by-1/divide-by-2/divide-by-3/divide-by-4/
divide-by-5/divide-by-6). This is a distribution-only mode that
allows for an external input up to 2400 MHz (see Table 3). The
maximum frequency that can be applied to the channel dividers
is 1600 MHz; therefore, higher input frequencies must be divided
down before reaching the channel dividers.
When the PLL is enabled, this routing also allows the use of the
PLL with an external VCO or VCXO with a frequency <2400 MHz.
In this configuration, the external VCO/VCXO feeds directly into
the prescaler.
The register settings shown in Table 22 are the default values of
these registers at power-up or after a reset operation.
Table 22. Default Register Settings for Clock Distribution Mode
Register
0x010[1:0] = 01b
0x1E0[2:0] = 000b
0x1E1[0] = 0b
Description
PLL asynchronous power-down (PLL off )
Set VCO divider = 2
Use the VCO divider
Table 23. Settings When Using an External VCO
Register
0x010[1:0] = 00b
0x010 to 0x01F
Description
PLL normal operation (PLL on)
PLL settings; select and enable a reference
input; set R, N (P, A, B), PFD polarity, and ICP
according to the intended loop configuration
An external VCO requires an external loop filter that must be
connected between CP and the tuning pin of the VCO. This
loop filter determines the loop bandwidth and stability of the
PLL. Make sure to select the proper PFD polarity for the VCO
being used.
Table 24. Setting the PFD Polarity
Register
0x010[7] = 0b
0x010[7] = 1b
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 76
Description
PFD polarity positive (higher control
voltage produces higher frequency)
PFD polarity negative (higher control
voltage produces lower frequency)
AD9522-5
VS
GND
RSET
REFMON
DISTRIBUTION
REFERENCE
REFERENCE
SWITCHOVER
LD
STATUS
BUF
LOCK
DETECT
PLL
REFERENCE
STATUS
REF2
R
DIVIDER
CLOCK
DOUBLER
REF1
OPTIONAL
REFIN
CPRSET VCP
PROGRAMMABLE
R DELAY
REF_SEL
HOLD
REFIN
AMP
STATUS
P, P + 1
PRESCALER
A/B
COUNTERS
PROGRAMMABLE
N DELAY
PHASE
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
CHARGE
PUMP
CP
N DIVIDER
ZERO DELAY BLOCK
STATUS
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
OUT0
CLK
OUT0
1
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
PD
SYNC
0
DIGITAL
LOGIC
EEPROM
RESET
OUT1
OUT1
OUT2
OUT2
EEPROM
OUT3
OUT3
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
SPI
INTERFACE
I2C
INTERFACE
OUT4
OUT4
OUT5
SCLK/SCL
SDIO/SDA
SDO
CS
OUT5
OUT6
OUT6
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
LVDS/CMOS OUTPUTS
SP0
SERIAL
PORT
DECODE
OUT7
OUT7
OUT8
OUT8
OUT9
OUT9
DIVIDE BY
1 TO 32
AD9522-5
OUT10
OUT10
OUT11
OUT11
Figure 27. High Frequency Clock Distribution—CLK or External VCO > 1600 MHz (Mode 2)
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 76
07240-029
SP1
AD9522-5
Phase-Locked Loop (PLL)
VS
GND
RSET
REFMON
DISTRIBUTION
REFERENCE
REFERENCE
SWITCHOVER
LD
STATUS
BUF
REFIN
LOCK
DETECT
PLL
REFERENCE
STATUS
REF2
R
DIVIDER
CLOCK
DOUBLER
REF1
OPTIONAL
REFIN
CPRSET VCP
PROGRAMMABLE
R DELAY
REF_SEL
HOLD
STATUS
AMP
P, P + 1
PRESCALER
A/B
COUNTERS
PROGRAMMABLE
N DELAY
PHASE
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
CHARGE
PUMP
CP
N DIVIDER
ZERO DELAY BLOCK
STATUS
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
FROM CHANNEL
DIVIDER 0
1
07240-064
CLK
0
Figure 28. PLL Functional Block Diagram
The AD9522 includes on-chip PLL blocks that can be used with
an external VCO or VCXO to create a complete phase-locked
loop. The PLL requires an external loop filter, which usually
consists of a small number of capacitors and resistors. The
configuration and components of the loop filter help to
establish the loop bandwidth and stability of the PLL.
ADIsimCLK™ is a free program that can help with the design
and exploration of the capabilities and features of the AD9522,
including the design of the PLL loop filter. The AD9516 model
found in ADIsimCLK Version 1.2 can also be used for modeling
the AD9522 loop filter. It is available at www.analog.com/clocks.
The AD9522 PLL is useful for generating clock frequencies
from a supplied reference frequency. This includes conversion
of reference frequencies to much higher frequencies for subsequent
division and distribution. In addition, the PLL can be used to
clean up jitter and phase noise on a noisy reference. The exact
choice of PLL parameters and loop dynamics is application specific.
The flexibility and depth of the AD9522 PLL allow the part to
be tailored to function in many different applications and signal
environments.
The PFD takes inputs from the R divider and the N divider and
produces an output proportional to the phase and frequency
difference between them. The PFD includes a programmable
delay element that controls the width of the antibacklash pulse.
This pulse ensures that there is no dead zone in the PFD
transfer function and minimizes phase noise and reference
spurs. The antibacklash pulse width is set by 0x017[1:0].
Configuration of the PLL
Configuration of the PLL is accomplished by programming
the various settings for the R divider, N divider, PFD polarity,
and charge pump current. The combination of these settings
determines the PLL loop bandwidth. These are managed through
programmable register settings (see Table 43 and Table 47) and
by the design of the external loop filter.
Successful PLL operation and satisfactory PLL loop performance
are highly dependent on proper configuration of the PLL
settings, and the design of the external loop filter is crucial to
the proper operation of the PLL.
Phase Frequency Detector (PFD)
An important limit to keep in mind is the maximum frequency
allowed into the PFD. The maximum input frequency into the
PFD is a function of the antibacklash pulse setting, as specified
in the phase/frequency detector (PFD) parameter in Table 2.
Charge Pump (CP)
The charge pump is controlled by the PFD. The PFD monitors
the phase and frequency relationship between its two inputs and
tells the CP to pump up or pump down to charge or discharge the
integrating node (part of the loop filter). The integrated and
filtered CP current is transformed into a voltage that drives the
tuning node of the external VCO to move the VCO frequency
up or down. The CP can be set (0x010[3:2]) for high impedance
(allows holdover operation), for normal operation (attempts to
lock the PLL loop), for pump-up, or for pump-down (test modes).
The CP current is programmable in eight steps from (nominally)
0.6 mA to 4.8 mA. The exact value of the CP current LSB is set
by the CPRSET resistor, which is nominally 5.1 kΩ.
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 76
AD9522-5
PLL External Loop Filter
An example of an external loop filter for a PLL is shown in
Figure 29. A loop filter must be calculated for each desired PLL
configuration. The values of the components depend on the VCO
frequency, the KVCO, the PFD frequency, the charge pump current,
the desired loop bandwidth, and the desired phase margin. The
loop filter affects the phase noise, the loop settling time, and the
loop stability. A basic knowledge of PLL theory is necessary for
understanding loop filter design. ADIsimCLK can help with the
calculation of a loop filter according to the application requirements.
AD9522
CLK/CLK
EXTERNAL
VCO/VCXO
In differential mode, the reference input pins are internally selfbiased so that they can be ac-coupled via capacitors. It is possible to
dc couple to these inputs. If the differential REFIN is driven by
a single-ended signal, the unused side (REFIN) should be
decoupled via a suitable capacitor to a quiet ground. Figure 30
shows the equivalent circuit of REFIN.
VS
R2
CP
R1
C1
C2
85kΩ
C3
07240-265
CHARGE
PUMP
The differential reference input receiver is powered down when
it is not selected or when the PLL is powered down. The singleended buffers power down when the PLL is powered down or
when their respective individual power-down registers are set.
When the differential mode is selected, the single-ended inputs
are powered down.
REF1
Figure 29. Example of External Loop Filter for PLL
VS
PLL Reference Inputs
10kΩ
The AD9522 features a flexible PLL reference input circuit that
allows a fully differential input, two separate single-ended inputs,
or a 16.62 MHz to 33.33 MHz crystal oscillator with an on-chip
maintaining amplifier. An optional reference clock doubler
can be used to double the PLL reference frequency. The input
frequency range for the reference inputs is specified in Table 2.
Both the differential and the single-ended inputs are self-biased,
allowing for easy ac coupling of input signals. To increase
isolation and reduce power, each single-ended input can be
independently powered down.
12kΩ
REFIN
150Ω
REFIN
150Ω
10kΩ
10kΩ
VS
REF2
85kΩ
The differential input and the single-ended inputs share two pins,
REFIN (REF1) and REFIN (REF2). The desired reference input
type is selected and controlled by 0x01C (see Table 43 and Table 47).
In single-ended mode, the AD9522 features a dc offset option.
Setting 0x018[7] to 1b shifts the dc offset bias point down 140 mV.
This option eliminates the risk of the reference inputs chattering
when they are ac-coupled and the reference clock disappears.
When using the reference switchover, the single-ended reference
inputs should be dc-coupled CMOS levels (with the AD9522 dc
offset feature disabled). Alternatively, the inputs can be ac-coupled,
and the dc offset feature can be enabled. The user should keep in
mind, however, that the minimum input amplitude for the
reference inputs is greater when the dc offset is turned on.
When the differential reference input is selected, the self-bias
level of the two sides is offset slightly to prevent chattering of
the input buffer when the reference is slow or missing. The
specification for this voltage level can be found in Table 2.
The input hysteresis increases the voltage swing required of
the driver to overcome the offset.
07240-066
Either a differential or a single-ended reference must be specifically
enabled. All PLL reference inputs are off by default.
Figure 30. REFIN Equivalent Circuit for Non-XTAL Mode
Crystal mode is nearly identical to differential mode. The user
enables a maintaining amplifier by setting the enable XTAL OSC
bit, and putting a series resonant, AT fundamental cut crystal
across the REFIN/REFIN pins.
Reference Switchover
The AD9522 supports dual single-ended CMOS inputs, as well
as a single differential reference input. In the dual single-ended
reference mode, the AD9522 supports automatic and manual
PLL reference clock switching between REF1 (on Pin REFIN)
and REF2 (on Pin REFIN). This feature supports networking
and other applications that require hitless switching of
redundant references. When used in conjunction with the
automatic holdover function, the AD9522 can achieve a worstcase reference input switchover with an output frequency
disturbance as low as 10 ppm.
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 76
AD9522-5
There are several configurable modes of reference switchover.
The switchover can be performed manually or automatically.
Manual switchover is performed either through Register 0x01C
or by using the REF_SEL pin. The automatic switchover occurs
when REF1 disappears. A switchover deglitch feature ensures that
the PLL does not receive rising edges that are far out of alignment
with the newly selected reference.
operation are given in Table 47, 0x016[2:0]. Not all modes are
available at all frequencies (see Table 2).
There are two automatic reference switchover modes (0x01C):
However, when operating the prescaler in FD Mode 1,
FD Mode 2, or FD Mode 3, the A counter is not used (A = 0)
and the equation simplifies to
•
•
Prefer REF1. Switch from REF1 to REF2 when REF1
disappears. Return to REF1 from REF2 when REF1 returns.
Stay on REF2. Automatically switch to REF2 if REF1
disappears but do not switch back to REF1 if it reappears.
The reference can be set back to REF1 manually at an
appropriate time.
In automatic mode, REF1 is monitored by REF2. If REF1
disappears (two consecutive falling edges of REF2 without an
edge transition on REF1), REF1 is considered missing. On the
next subsequent rising edge of REF2, REF2 is used as the reference
clock to the PLL. If 0x01C[3] = 0b (default), when REF1 returns
(four rising edges of REF1 without two falling edges of REF2
between the REF1 edges), the PLL reference switches back to
REF1. If 0x01C[3] = 1b, the user can control when to switch back to
REF1. This is done by programming the part to manual reference
select mode (0x01C[4] = 0b) and by ensuring that the registers
and/or the REF_SEL pin are set to select the desired reference.
Automatic mode can be reenabled when REF1 is reselected.
Manual switchover requires a valid clock on the reference input
being switched to or that the deglitching feature be disabled
(0x01C[7]).
Reference Divider R
The reference inputs are routed to the reference divider, R. R (a 14-bit
counter) can be set to any value from 0 to 16,383 by writing to
0x011 and 0x012. (Both R = 0 and R = 1 give divide-by-1.) The
output of the R divider goes to one of the PFD inputs to be
compared with the VCO frequency divided by the N divider.
The frequency applied to the PFD must not exceed the maximum
allowable frequency.
When operating the AD9522 in dual modulus mode, P/(P + 1),
the equation used to relate the input reference frequency to the
VCO output frequency is
fVCO = (fREF/R) × (P × B + A) = fREF × N/R
fVCO = (fREF/R) × (P × B) = fREF × N/R
When A = 0, the divide is a fixed divide of P = 2, 4, 8, 16, or 32.
By using combinations of DM and FD modes, the AD9522 can
achieve values of N from 1 to 262,175.
Table 25 shows how a 10 MHz reference input can be locked to
any integer multiple of N.
Note that the same value of N can be derived in different ways,
as illustrated by the case of N = 12. The user can choose a fixed
divide mode P = 2 with B = 6, use the dual modulus mode 2/3 with
A = 0, B = 6, or use the dual modulus mode 4/5 with A = 0, B = 3.
A and B Counters
The B counter must be ≥3 or bypassed and, unlike the R counter,
A = 0 is actually zero.
When the prescaler is in dual-modulus mode, the A counter
must be less than the B counter.
The maximum input frequency to the A/B counter is reflected
in the maximum prescaler output frequency (~300 MHz) specified
in Table 2. This is the prescaler input frequency (external VCO
or CLK) divided by P. For example, dual modulus P = 8/9 mode
is not allowed if the VCO frequency is greater than 2400 MHz
because the frequency going to the A/B counter is too high.
When the AD9522 B counter is bypassed (B = 1), the A counter
should be set to zero, and the overall resulting divide is equal to
the prescaler setting, P. The possible divide ratios in this mode
are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 16, and 32.
The R divider has its own reset. The R divider can be reset using
the shared reset bit of the R, A, and B counters. It can also be
reset by a SYNC operation.
Although manual reset is not normally required, the A/B counters
have their own reset bit. Alternatively, the A and B counters can be
reset using the shared reset bit of the R, A, and B counters. Note
that these reset bits are not self-clearing.
VCO/VCXO Feedback Divider N: P, A, B
R, A, and B Counters: SYNC Pin Reset
The N divider is a combination of a prescaler (P) and two counters,
A and B. The total divider value is
The R, A, and B counters can be reset simultaneously through the
SYNC pin. This function is controlled by 0x019[7:6] (see Table 47).
The SYNC pin reset is disabled by default.
N = (P × B) + A
where P can be 2, 4, 8, 16, or 32.
R and N Divider Delays
Prescaler
Both the R and N dividers feature a programmable delay cell.
These delays can be enabled to allow adjustment of the phase
relationship between the PLL reference clock and the CLK
input. Each delay is controlled by three bits. The total delay
range is about 1 ns. See 0x019 in Table 2 and Table 47.
The prescaler of the AD9522 allows for two modes of operation:
a fixed divide (FD) mode of 1, 2, or 3, and a dual modulus (DM)
mode where the prescaler divides by P and (P + 1) {2 and 3, 4
and 5, 8 and 9, 16 and 17, or 32 and 33}. The prescaler modes of
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 76
AD9522-5
Table 25. How a 10 MHz Reference Input Can Be Locked to Any Integer Multiple of N
fREF (MHz)
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
1
R
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
P
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
4
A
X1
X1
X1
X1
X1
X1
0
1
2
1
X1
0
1
X1
0
0
1
B
1
1
3
4
5
3
3
3
3
4
5
5
5
6
6
3
3
N
1
2
3
4
5
6
6
7
8
9
10
10
11
12
12
12
13
fVCO (MHz)
10
20
30
40
50
60
60
70
80
90
100
100
110
120
120
120
130
Mode
FD
FD
FD
FD
FD
FD
DM
DM
DM
DM
FD
DM
DM
FD
DM
DM
DM
Notes
P = 1, B = 1 (bypassed)
P = 2, B = 1 (bypassed)
P = 1, B = 3
P = 1, B = 4
P = 1, B = 5
P = 2, B = 3
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 0, B = 3
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 1, B = 3
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 2, B = 3
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 1, B = 4
P = 2, B = 5
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 0, B = 5
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 1, B = 5
P = 2, B = 6
P and P + 1 = 2 and 3, A = 0, B = 6
P and P + 1 = 4 and 5, A = 0, B = 3
P and P + 1 = 4 and 5, A = 1, B = 3
X = don’t care.
Digital Lock Detect (DLD)
Analog Lock Detect (ALD)
By selecting the proper output through the mux on each pin, the
DLD function is available at the LD, STATUS, and REFMON pins.
The digital lock detect circuit indicates a lock when the time
difference of the rising edges at the PFD inputs is less than a
specified value (the lock threshold). The loss of a lock is indicated
when the time difference exceeds a specified value (the unlock
threshold). Note that the unlock threshold is wider than the
lock threshold, which allows some phase error in excess of the
lock window to occur without chattering on the lock indicator.
The AD9522 provides an ALD function that can be selected for
use at the LD pin. There are two operating modes for ALD.
A lock is not indicated until there is a programmable number of
consecutive PFD cycles with a time difference less than the lock
detect threshold. The lock detect circuit continues to indicate a
lock until a time difference greater than the unlock threshold
occurs on a single subsequent cycle. For the lock detect to work
properly, the period of the PFD frequency must be greater than
the unlock threshold. The number of consecutive PFD cycles
required for lock is programmable (0x018[6:5]).
Note that it is possible in certain low (<500 Hz) loop bandwidth,
high phase margin cases that the DLD can chatter during acquisition, which can cause the AD9522 to automatically enter and exit
holdover. To avoid this problem, it is recommended that the
user make provisions for a capacitor to ground on the LD pin so
that current source digital lock detect (CSDLD) mode can be used.
•
N-channel open-drain lock detect. This signal requires a
pull-up resistor to the positive supply, VS. The output is
normally high with short, low going pulses. Lock is
indicated by the minimum duty cycle of the low going pulses.
P-channel open-drain lock detect. This signal requires a
pull-down resistor to GND. The output is normally low with
short, high going pulses. Lock is indicated by the minimum
duty cycle of the high going pulses.
The analog lock detect function requires an RC filter to provide a
logic level indicating lock/unlock. The ADIsimCLK tool can be
used to help the user select the right passive component values
for ALD to ensure its correct operation.
VS = 3.3V
AD9522
LD
ALD
R1
R2
VOUT
C
07240-067
The lock detect window timing depends on the value of the
CPRSET resistor, as well as three settings: the digital lock
detect window bit (0x018[4]), the antibacklash pulse width
bit (0x017[1:0], see Table 2), and the lock detect counter
(0x018[6:5]). The lock and unlock detection values in Table 2
are for the nominal value of CPRSET = 5.1 kΩ. Doubling the
CPRSET value to 10 kΩ doubles the values in Table 2.
•
Figure 31. Example of Analog Lock Detect Filter Using
N-Channel Open-Drain Driver
Current Source Digital Lock Detect (CSDLD)
During the PLL locking sequence, it is normal for the DLD
signal to toggle a number of times before remaining steady
when the PLL is completely locked and stable. There may be
applications where it is desirable to have DLD asserted only
after the PLL is solidly locked. This is possible by using the
current source digital lock detect function.
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 76
AD9522-5
The current source lock detect provides a current of 110 μA when
DLD is true and shorts to ground when DLD is false. If a capacitor
is connected to the LD pin, it charges at a rate determined by the
current source during the DLD true time but is discharged nearly
instantly when DLD is false. By monitoring the voltage at the
LD pin (top of the capacitor), LD = high happens only after the
DLD is true for a sufficiently long time. Any momentary DLD
false resets the charging. By selecting a properly sized capacitor,
it is possible to delay a lock detect indication until the PLL is
stably locked and the lock detect does not chatter.
To use current source digital lock detect, do the following:
•
•
•
Place a capacitor to ground on the LD pin
Set 0x01A[5:0] = 0x04
Enable the LD pin comparator (0x01D[3] = 1)
The LD pin comparator senses the voltage on the LD pin, and the
comparator output can be made available at the REFMON pin
control (0x01B[4:0]) or the STATUS pin control (0x017[7:2]). The
internal LD pin comparator trip point and hysteresis are given in
Table 14. The voltage on the capacitor can also be sensed by an
external comparator connected to the LD pin. In this case,
enabling the on-board LD pin comparator is not necessary.
The user can asynchronously enable individual clock outputs only
when CSDLD is high. To enable this feature, set the appropriate bits
in the enable output on the CSDLD registers (0x0FC and 0x0FD).
AD9522
110µA
DLD
VOUT
LD
LD PIN
COMPARATOR
REFMON
OR
STATUS
07240-068
C
Figure 32. Current Source Digital Lock Detect
External VCXO/VCO Clock Input (CLK/CLK)
This differential input is used to drive the AD9522 clock
distribution section. This input can receive up to 2.4 GHz.
The pins are internally self-biased, and the input signal should
be ac-coupled via capacitors.
CLOCK INPUT
STAGE
VS
CLK
CLK
2.5kΩ
2.5kΩ
5kΩ
07240-032
5kΩ
The CLK/CLK input can be used either as a distribution only
input (with the PLL off), or as a feedback input for an external
VCO/VCXO using the PLL.
Holdover
The AD9522 PLL has a holdover function. Holdover is
implemented by placing the charge pump in a high impedance
state. This function is useful when the PLL reference clock is
lost. Holdover mode allows the external VCO to maintain a
relatively constant frequency even though there is no reference
clock. Without this function, the charge pump is placed into a
constant pump-up or pump-down state, resulting in a large
VCO frequency shift. Because the charge pump is placed in a
high impedance state, any leakage that occurs at the charge
pump output or the VCO tuning node causes a drift of the VCO
frequency. This can be mitigated by using a loop filter that
contains a large capacitive component because this drift is
limited by the current leakage induced slew rate (ILEAK/C) of
the VCO control voltage.
Both a manual holdover mode, using the SYNC pin, and an
automatic holdover mode are provided. To use either function, the
holdover function must be enabled (0x01D[0]).
External/Manual Holdover Mode
A manual holdover mode can be enabled that allows the user to
place the charge pump into a high impedance state when the
SYNC pin is asserted low. This operation is edge sensitive, not
level sensitive. The charge pump enters a high impedance state
immediately. To take the charge pump out of a high impedance
state, take the SYNC pin high. The charge pump then leaves the
high impedance state synchronously with the next PFD rising
edge from the reference clock. This prevents extraneous charge
pump events from occurring during the time between SYNC
going high and the next PFD event. This also means that the
charge pump stays in a high impedance state if there is no
reference clock present.
The B counter (in the N divider) is reset synchronously with the
charge pump leaving the high impedance state on the reference
path PFD event. This helps align the edges out of the R and N
dividers for faster settling of the PLL. Because the prescaler is
not reset, this feature works best when the B and R numbers are
close because this results in a smaller phase difference for the
loop to settle out.
When using this mode, the channel dividers should be set to ignore
the SYNC pin (at least after an initial SYNC event). If the dividers
are not set to ignore the SYNC pin, any time SYNC is taken low
to put the part into holdover, the distribution outputs turn off.
The channel divider ignore SYNC function is found in 0x191[6],
0x194[6], 0x197[6], and 0x19A[6] for Channel Divider 0, Channel
Divider 1, Channel Divider 2, and Channel Divider 3, respectively.
Figure 33. CLK Equivalent Input Circuit
Rev. 0 | Page 33 of 76
AD9522-5
PLL ENABLED
LOOP OUT OF LOCK. DIGITAL LOCK
DETECT SIGNAL GOES LOW WHEN THE
LOOP LEAVES LOCK AS DETERMINED
BY THE PHASE DIFFERENCE AT THE
INPUT OF THE PFD.
NO
DLD == LOW
YES
NO
ANALOG LOCK DETECT PIN INDICATES
LOCK WAS PREVIOUSLY ACHIEVED.
(0x01D[3] = 1; USE LD PIN VOLTAGE
WITH HOLDOVER.
0x01D[3] = 0; IGNORE LD PIN VOLTAGE,
TREAT LD PIN AS ALWAYS HIGH.)
WAS
LD PIN == HIGH
WHEN DLD WENT
LOW?
YES
CHARGE PUMP IS MADE
HIGH IMPEDANCE.
PLL COUNTERS CONTINUE
OPERATING NORMALLY.
HIGH IMPEDANCE
CHARGE PUMP
NO
CHARGE PUMP REMAINS HIGH
IMPEDANCE UNTIL THE REFERENCE
RETURNS.
REFERENCE
EDGE AT PFD?
YES
YES
RELEASE
CHARGE PUMP
HIGH IMPEDANCE
NO
DLD == HIGH
WAIT FOR DLD TO GO HIGH. THIS TAKES
5 TO 255 CYCLES (PROGRAMMING OF THE DLD
DELAY COUNTER) WITH THE REFERENCE AND
FEEDBACK CLOCKS INSIDE THE LOCK WINDOW AT
THE PFD. THIS ENSURES THAT THE HOLDOVER
FUNCTION WAITS FOR THE PLL TO SETTLE AND LOCK
BEFORE THE HOLDOVER FUNCTION CAN BE
RETRIGGERED.
07240-069
TAKE CHARGE PUMP OUT OF
HIGH IMPEDANCE. PLL CAN
NOW RESETTLE.
Figure 34. Flowchart of Automatic/Internal Holdover Mode
Automatic/Internal Holdover Mode
When enabled, the automatic/internal holdover mode automatically puts the charge pump into a high impedance state
when the loop loses lock. The assumption is that the only
reason that the loop loses lock is due to the PLL losing the
reference clock; therefore, the holdover function puts the charge
pump into a high impedance state to maintain the VCO
frequency as close as possible to the original frequency before
the reference clock disappeared.
A flowchart of the automatic/internal holdover function
operation is shown in Figure 34.
The holdover function senses the logic level of the LD pin as a
condition to enter holdover. The signal at LD can be from the
DLD, ALD, or current source LD (CSDLD) mode. It is possible
to disable the LD comparator (0x01D[3]), which causes the holdover function to always sense LD as being high. If DLD is used,
it is possible for the DLD signal to chatter while the PLL is
reacquiring lock. The holdover function may retrigger, thereby
preventing the holdover mode from terminating. Use of the
current source lock detect mode is recommended to avoid this
situation (see the Current Source Digital Lock Detect (CSDLD)
section).
Rev. 0 | Page 34 of 76
AD9522-5
When in holdover mode, the charge pump stays in a high
impedance state as long as there is no reference clock present.
As in the external holdover mode, the B counter (in the N divider)
is reset synchronously with the charge pump leaving the high
impedance state on the reference path PFD event. This helps
align the edges out of the R and N dividers for faster settling of
the PLL and reduces frequency errors during settling. Because
the prescaler is not reset, this feature works best when the B and
R numbers are close because this results in a smaller phase
difference for the loop to settle out.
After leaving holdover, the loop then reacquires lock and the
LD pin must go high (if 0x01D[3] = 1) before it can reenter
holdover.
•
•
•
In the following example, automatic holdover is configured with
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The following registers affect the automatic/internal holdover
function:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
0x018[6:5]—lock detect counter. This changes how many
consecutive PFD cycles with edges inside the lock detect
window are required for the DLD indicator to indicate
lock. This impacts the time required before the LD pin can
begin to charge, as well as the delay from the end of a
holdover event until the holdover function can be
reengaged.
0x018[3]—disable digital lock detect. This bit must be set
to 0 to enable the DLD circuit. Internal/automatic holdover
does not operate correctly without the DLD function enabled.
0x01A[5:0]—lock detect pin control. Set this to 000100b to
put it in the current source lock detect mode if using the
LD pin comparator. Load the LD pin with a capacitor of an
appropriate value.
Automatic reference switchover, prefer REF1.
Digital lock detect: five PFD cycles, high range window.
Automatic holdover using the LD pin comparator.
The following registers are set (in addition to the normal PLL
registers):
The holdover function always responds to the state of the
currently selected reference (0x01C). If the loop loses lock
during a reference switchover (see the Reference Switchover
section), holdover is triggered briefly until the next reference
clock edge at the PFD.
•
0x01D[3]—enable LD pin comparator. 1 = enable; 0 =
disable. When disabled, the holdover function always
senses the LD pin as high.
0x01D[1]—external holdover control.
0x01D[0]—enable holdover. If holdover is disabled, both
external and automatic/internal holdover are disabled.
•
0x018[6:5] = 00b; lock detect counter = five cycles.
0x018[4] = 0b; digital lock detect window = high range.
0x018[3] = 1b; disable DLD normal operation.
0x01A[5:0] = 000100b; program LD pin control to current
source lock detect mode.
0x01C[4] = 1b; enable automatic switchover.
0x01C[3] = 0b; prefer REF1.
0x01C[2:1] = 11b; enable REF1 and REF2 input buffers.
0x01D[3] = 1b; enable LD pin comparator.
0x01D[1] = 0b; disable external holdover mode and use
automatic/internal holdover mode.
0x01D[0] = 1b; enable holdover.
Frequency Status Monitors
The AD9522 contains three frequency status monitors that are
used to indicate if the PLL reference (or references in the case of
single-ended mode) and the VCO have fallen below a threshold
frequency. Figure 35 is a diagram that shows their location in
the PLL.
The PLL reference monitors have two threshold frequencies:
normal and extended (see Table 14). The reference frequency
monitor thresholds are selected in 0x01F.
Rev. 0 | Page 35 of 76
AD9522-5
VS
GND
RSET
REFMON
DISTRIBUTION
REFERENCE
REFERENCE
SWITCHOVER
LD
STATUS
BUF
REFIN
LOCK
DETECT
PLL
REFERENCE
STATUS
REF2
R
DIVIDER
CLOCK
DOUBLER
REF1
OPTIONAL
REFIN
CPRSET VCP
PROGRAMMABLE
R DELAY
REF_SEL
HOLD
CLK FREQUENCY STATUS
P, P + 1
PRESCALER
A/B
COUNTERS
PROGRAMMABLE
N DELAY
PHASE
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
CHARGE
PUMP
CP
N DIVIDER
ZERO DELAY BLOCK
STATUS
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
1
07240-070
FROM CHANNEL
DIVIDER 0
CLK
0
Figure 35. Reference and CLK Frequency Status Monitors
Rev. 0 | Page 36 of 76
AD9522-5
EXTERNAL VCXO
REFIN/
REFIN
R
DIVIDER
AD9522-5
R
DELAY
PFD
N
DIVIDER
LOOP
FILTER
CP
N
DELAY
REG 0x01E[1] = 1
MUX1
INTERNAL ZERO DELAY CLOCK FEEDBACK PATH
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK/CLK
CHANNEL DIVIDER 0
OUT0 TO OUT2
CHANNEL DIVIDER 1
OUT3 TO OUT5
CHANNEL DIVIDER 2
OUT6 TO OUT8
CHANNEL DIVIDER 3
OUT9 TO OUT11
0
07240-053
1
Figure 36. Zero Delay Function
ZERO DELAY OPERATION
Zero delay operation aligns the phase of the output clocks with
the phase of the external PLL reference input.
The zero delay function of the AD9522-5 is achieved by feeding
the output of Channel Divider 0 back to the PLL N divider. In
Figure 36, the change in signal routing for zero delay mode is
shown in blue.
Because the channel dividers are synchronized to each other,
the outputs of the channel dividers are synchronous with the
reference input. Both the R delay and the N delay inside the
PLL can be programmed to compensate for the propagation
delay from the output drivers and PLL components to minimize
the phase offset between the clock output and the reference
input to achieve zero delay.
Set Register 0x01E[1] = 1b to select the zero delay mode. In the
zero delay mode, the output of Channel Divider 0 is routed back to
the PLL (N divider) through MUX1 (feedback path shown in blue
in Figure 36). The PLL synchronizes the phase/edge of the output
of Channel Divider 0 with the phase/edge of the reference input.
Rev. 0 | Page 37 of 76
AD9522-5
PLL
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
DIVIDE BY 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, OR 6
CLK
CLK
CLK
1
0
DISTRIBUTION
CLOCK
1
CLOCK
DISTRIBUTION
MODE 1 (CLOCK DISTRIBUTION MODE)
0
DISTRIBUTION
CLOCK
CLOCK
DISTRIBUTION
MODE 2 (HF CLOCK DISTRIBUTION MODE)
07240-054
CLK
PLL
Figure 37. Simplified Diagram of the Two Clock Distribution Operation Modes
CLOCK DISTRIBUTION
Operation Modes
A clock channel consists of three LVDS clock outputs or six
CMOS clock outputs that share a common divider. A clock
output consists of the drivers that connect to the output pins.
The clock outputs have either LVDS or CMOS at the pins.
The AD9522-5 has two clock distribution operating modes that
are shown in Figure 37.
The AD9522 has four clock channels. Each channel has its own
programmable divider that divides the clock frequency applied
to its input. The channel dividers can divide by any integer
from 1 to 32.
The AD9522 features a VCO divider that divides the VCO output
by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 before going to the individual channel dividers.
The VCO divider has two purposes. The first is to limit the
maximum input frequency of the channel dividers to 1.6 GHz.
The other is to allow the AD9522 to generate even lower
frequencies than would be possible with only a simple post divider.
The channel dividers allow for a selection of various duty cycles,
depending on the currently set division. That is, for any specific
division, D, the output of the divider can be set to high for N + 1
input clock cycles and low for M + 1 input clock cycles (where
D = N + M + 2). For example, a divide-by-5 can be high for one
divider input cycle and low for four cycles, or a divide-by-5 can
be high for three divider input cycles and low for two cycles.
Other combinations are also possible.
The channel dividers include a duty-cycle correction function
that can be disabled. In contrast to the selectable duty cycle
just described, this function can correct a non-50% duty cycle
caused by an odd division. However, this requires that the
division be set by M = N + 1.
In addition, the channel dividers allow a coarse phase offset or
delay to be set. Depending on the division selected, the output
can be delayed by up to 15 input clock cycles. For example, if
the frequency at the input of the channel divider is 1 GHz, the
channel divider output can be delayed by up to 15 ns. The
divider outputs can also be set to start high or to start low.
It is not necessary to use the VCO divider if the CLK frequency
is less than the maximum channel divider input frequency
(1600 MHz); otherwise, the VCO divider must be used to
reduce the frequency going to the channel dividers.
Table 26 shows how the operation modes are selected. 0x1E1[0]
selects the channel divider source.
Table 26. Operation Modes
Mode
2
1
0x1E1[0]
0
1
VCO Divider
Used
Not used
Clock Frequency Division
The total frequency division is a combination of the VCO
divider (when used) and the channel divider. When the VCO
divider is used, the total division from the CLK input to the
output is the product of the VCO divider (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6)
and the division of the channel divider. Table 27 indicates how
the frequency division for a channel is set.
Table 27. Frequency Division
VCO Divider
Setting1
1 to 6
2 to 6
1
VCO divider
bypassed
VCO divider
bypassed
1
Channel Divider
Setting
2 to 32
Bypass
Bypass
Bypass
Resulting Frequency
Division
(1 to 6) × (2 to 32)
(2 to 6) × (1)
Output static (illegal state)
1
2 to 32
2 to 32
The bypass VCO divider (0x1E1[0] = 1) is not the same as VCO divider = 1.
Rev. 0 | Page 38 of 76
AD9522-5
The channel dividers feeding the output drivers contain one
2-to-32 frequency divider. This divider provides for division-by-1
to division-by-32. Division-by-1 is accomplished by bypassing
the divider. The dividers also provide for a programmable duty
cycle, with optional duty-cycle correction when the divide ratio
is odd. A phase offset or delay in increments of the input clock
cycle is selectable. The channel dividers operate with a signal at
their inputs up to 1600 MHz. The features and settings of the
dividers are selected by programming the appropriate setup
and control registers (see Table 43 through Table 54).
Otherwise, DX = (N + 1) + (M + 1) = N + M + 2. This allows
each channel divider to divide by any integer from 1 to 32.
VCO Divider
The DCC function is enabled by default for each channel divider.
However, the DCC function can be disabled individually for
each channel divider by setting the disable divider DCC bit for
that channel.
The VCO divider provides frequency division between the CLK
input and the clock distribution channel dividers. The VCO
divider can be set to divide by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 (see Table 50,
0x1E0[2:0]). However, when the VCO divider is set to 1, none
of the channel output dividers can be bypassed.
The VCO divider can also be set to static, which is useful for
applications where the only desired output frequency is the
CLK input frequency. Making the VCO divider static increases
the wideband spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR). The same
improvement in SFDR performance can also be achieved by
setting the VCO divider to 1.
Channel Dividers
A channel divider drives each group of three LVDS outputs.
There are four channel dividers (0, 1, 2, and 3) driving 12 LVDS
outputs (OUT0 to OUT11). Table 28 gives the register locations
used for setting the division and other functions of these dividers.
The division is set by the values of M and N. The divider can be
bypassed (equivalent to divide-by-1, divider circuit is powered
down) by setting the bypass bit. The duty-cycle correction can
be enabled or disabled according to the setting of the disable
divider DCC bits.
Duty Cycle and Duty-Cycle Correction
The duty cycle of the clock signal at the output of a channel is a
result of some or all of the following conditions:
•
•
•
•
The M and N values for the channel
DCC enabled/disabled
VCO divider enabled/bypassed
The CLK input duty cycle
Certain M and N values for a channel divider result in a non50% duty cycle. A non-50% duty cycle can also result with an
even division, if M ≠ N. The duty-cycle correction function
automatically corrects non-50% duty cycles at the channel
divider output to 50% duty cycle.
Duty-cycle correction requires the following channel divider
conditions:
•
•
An even division must be set as M = N.
An odd division must be set as M = N + 1.
When not bypassed or corrected by the DCC function, the duty
cycle of each channel divider output is the numerical value of
(N + 1)/(N + M + 2) expressed as a percent.
The duty cycle at the output of the channel divider for various
configurations is shown in Table 29 to Table 32.
Table 29. Channel Divider Output Duty Cycle with VCO
Divider ≠ 1, Input Duty Cycle Is 50%
DX
Table 28. Setting DX for the Output Dividers
Divider
0
1
2
3
Low Cycles M
0x190[7:4]
0x193[7:4]
0x196[7:4]
0x199[7:4]
High Cycles N
0x190[3:0]
0x193[3:0]
0x196[3:0]
0x199[3:0]
Bypass
0x191[7]
0x194[7]
0x197[7]
0x19A[7]
Disable
Div DCC
0x192[0]
0x195[0]
0x198[0]
0x19B[0]
VCO
Divider
Even
Even, odd
N+M+2
Channel
divider
bypassed
Channel
divider
bypassed
Channel
divider
bypassed
Even
Even, odd
Odd
Odd = 3
Odd = 5
Channel Frequency Division (0, 1, 2, and 3)
For each channel (where the channel number x is 0, 1, 2, or 3),
the frequency division, DX, is set by the values of M and N
(four bits each, representing Decimal 0 to Decimal 15), where
Number of Low Cycles = M + 1
Number of High Cycles = N + 1
The high and low cycles are cycles of the clock signal currently routed
to the input of the channel dividers (VCO divider out or CLK).
When a divider is bypassed, DX = 1.
Rev. 0 | Page 39 of 76
Output Duty Cycle
Disable Div
Disable Div
DCC = 1
DCC = 0
50%
50%
33.3%
50%
40%
50%
(N + 1)/(N + M + 2)
50%, requires
M=N
50%, requires
M=N+1
(N + 1)/(N + M + 2)
AD9522-5
If the CLK input is routed directly to the output, the duty cycle of
the output is the same as the CLK input.
Table 30. Channel Divider Output Duty Cycle with VCO
Divider ≠ 1, Input Duty Cycle Is X%
DX
VCO
Divider
Even
Even
N+M+2
Channel
divider
bypassed
Channel
divider
bypassed
Channel
divider
bypassed
Even
Even
Odd
Odd = 3
Even
Odd = 3
Odd
Odd = 5
Even
Odd = 5
Odd
Odd = 3
Odd = 5
Output Duty Cycle
Disable Div
DCC = 1
Disable Div DCC = 0
50%
50%
33.3%
(1 + X%)/3
40%
(2 + X%)/5
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + M + 2)
50%, requires M = N
Phase Offset or Coarse Time Delay
Each channel divider allows for a phase offset, or a coarse time
delay, to be programmed by setting register bits (see Table 33).
These settings determine the number of cycles (successive rising
edges) of the channel divider input frequency by which to offset, or
delay, the rising edge of the output of the divider. This delay is
with respect to a nondelayed output (that is, with a phase offset
of zero). The amount of the delay is set by five bits loaded into
the phase offset (PO) register plus the start high (SH) bit for
each channel divider. When the start high bit is set, the delay is
also affected by the number of low cycles (M) programmed for
the divider.
50%, requires M = N + 1
50%, requires M = N
(3N + 4 + X%)/(6N + 9),
requires M = N + 1
50%, requires M = N
Table 33. Setting Phase Offset and Division
(5N + 7 + X%)/(10N + 15),
requires M = N + 1
Table 31. Channel Divider Output Duty Cycle When the
VCO Divider Is Enabled and Set to 1
DX
Input
Clock
Duty Cycle
Any
N+M+2
Even
50%
Odd
X%
Odd
Output Duty Cycle
Disable Div
DCC = 1
Disable Div DCC = 0
50%, requires M = N
(N + 1)/
(M + N + 2)
50%, requires M = N + 1
(N + 1)/
(M + N + 2)
(N + 1)/
(N + 1 + X%)/(2 × N + 3),
(M + N + 2)
requires M = N + 1
Note that the channel divider must be enabled when the VCO
divider = 1.
Table 32. Channel Divider Output Duty Cycle When the
VCO Divider Is Bypassed
Input
Clock
Duty Cycle
Any
DX
Any
N+M+2
Channel
divider
bypassed
Even
50%
Odd
X%
Odd
Output Duty Cycle
Disable Div
DCC = 1
Disable Div DCC = 0
Same as input Same as input duty
duty cycle
cycle
(N + 1)/
(M + N + 2)
(N + 1)/
(M + N + 2)
(N + 1)/
(M + N + 2)
It is necessary to use the SYNC function to make phase offsets
effective (see the Synchronizing the Outputs—SYNC Function
section).
Divider
0
1
2
3
Start
High (SH)
0x191[4]
0x194[4]
0x197[4]
0x19A[4]
Phase
Offset (PO)
0x191[3:0]
0x194[3:0]
0x197[3:0]
0x19A[3:0]
Low Cycles
M
0x190[7:4]
0x193[7:4]
0x196[7:4]
0x199[7:4]
High Cycles
N
0x190[3:0]
0x193[3:0]
0x196[3:0]
0x199[3:0]
Let
Δt = delay (in seconds).
Δc = delay (in cycles of clock signal at input to DX).
TX = period of the clock signal at the input of the divider, DX (in
seconds).
Φ=
16 × SH[4] + 8 × PO[3] + 4 × PO[2] + 2 × PO[1] + 1 × PO[0]
The channel divide-by is set as N = high cycles and M = low
cycles.
Case 1
For Φ ≤ 15,
Δt = Φ × TX
Δc = Δt/TX = Φ
Case 2
For Φ ≥ 16,
Δt = (Φ − 16 + M + 1) × TX
Δc = Δt/TX
50%, requires M = N
50%, requires M = N + 1
(N + 1 + X%)/(2 × N + 3),
requires M = N + 1
Rev. 0 | Page 40 of 76
AD9522-5
By giving each divider a different phase offset, output-to-output
delays can be set in increments of the channel divider input
clock cycle. Figure 38 shows the results of setting such a coarse
offset between outputs.
CHANNEL
DIVIDER INPUT
0
1
2
Tx
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15
CHANNEL DIVIDER OUTPUTS
DIV = 4, DUTY = 50%
DIVIDER 1
SH = 0
PO = 1
DIVIDER 2
SH = 0
PO = 2
07240-071
SH = 0
DIVIDER 0 PO = 0
1 × Tx
2 × Tx
Figure 38. Effect of Coarse Phase Offset (or Delay)
Synchronizing the Outputs—SYNC Function
The AD9522 clock outputs can be synchronized to each other.
Outputs can be individually excluded from synchronization.
Synchronization consists of setting the nonexcluded outputs to
a preset set of static conditions. These conditions include the
divider ratio and phase offsets for a given channel divider. This
allows the user to specify different divide ratios and phase offsets
for each of the four channel dividers. Releasing the SYNC pin
allows the outputs to continue clocking with the preset conditions
applied.
Synchronization of the outputs is executed in the following ways:
•
•
•
•
•
The SYNC pin is forced low and then released (manual sync).
By setting and then resetting any one of the following three
bits: the soft SYNC bit (0x230[0]), the soft reset bit
(0x000[5] [mirrored]), and the power-down distribution
reference bit (0x230[1]).
Synchronization of the outputs can be executed as part of
the chip power-up sequence.
The RESET pin is forced low and then released (chip reset).
The PD pin is forced low and then released (chip powerdown).
The most common way to execute the SYNC function is to use
the SYNC pin to perform a manual synchronization of the outputs.
This requires a low going signal on the SYNC pin, which is held
low and then released when synchronization is desired. The
timing of the SYNC operation is shown in Figure 39 (using the
VCO divider) and in Figure 40 (the VCO divider is not used).
There is an uncertainty of up to one cycle of the clock at the
input to the channel divider due to the asynchronous nature of
the SYNC signal with respect to the clock edges inside the AD9522.
The pipeline delay from the SYNC rising edge to the beginning
of the synchronized output clocking is between 14 cycles and
15 cycles of clock at the channel divider input, plus one cycle of
the VCO divider input (see Figure 39) or one cycle of the
channel divider input (see Figure 40), depending on whether the
VCO divider is used. Cycles are counted from the rising edge of
the signal. In addition, there is an additional 1.2 ns (typical) delay
from the SYNC signal to the internal synchronization logic, as well
as the propagation delay of the output driver. The driver
propagation delay is approximately 100 ps for the LVDS driver
and approximately 1.5 ns for the CMOS driver.
Another common way to execute the SYNC function is by
setting and resetting the soft SYNC bit at 0x230[0]. Both setting
and resetting of the soft SYNC bit require an update all registers
(0x232[0] = 1b) operation to take effect.
A SYNC operation brings all outputs that have not been excluded
(by the ignore SYNC bit) to a preset condition before allowing
the outputs to begin clocking in synchronicity. The preset condition
takes into account the settings of each channel start high bit and
its phase offset. These settings govern both the static state of each
output when the SYNC operation is happening and the state
and relative phase of the outputs when they begin clocking
again upon completion of the SYNC operation. A SYNC operation
must take place in order for the phase offset settings to take effect.
The AD9522 differential LVDS outputs are four groups of three,
sharing a channel divider per triplet. In the case of CMOS, each
LVDS differential pair can be configured as two single-ended
CMOS outputs. The synchronization conditions apply to all of
the drivers that belong to that channel divider.
Each channel (a divider and its outputs) can be excluded from
any SYNC operation by setting the ignore SYNC bit of the channel.
Channels that are set to ignore SYNC (excluded channels) do
not set their outputs static during a SYNC operation, and their
outputs are not synchronized with those of the included channels.
Rev. 0 | Page 41 of 76
AD9522-5
CHANNEL DIVIDER
OUTPUT CLOCKING
CHANNEL DIVIDER
OUTPUT CLOCKING
CHANNEL DIVIDER OUTPUT STATIC
INPUT TO VCO DIVIDER
1
1
INPUT TO CHANNEL DIVIDER
2
3
4
5
6
7
9
8
11
10
12
13
14
SYNC PIN
OUTPUT OF
CHANNEL DIVIDER
07240-073
14 TO 15 CYCLES AT CHANNEL DIVIDER INPUT + 1 CYCLE AT VCO DIVIDER INPUT
Figure 39. SYNC Timing Pipeline Delay When the VCO Divider Is Used—CLK or VCO Is Input
CHANNEL DIVIDER
OUTPUT CLOCKING
CHANNEL DIVIDER
OUTPUT CLOCKING
CHANNEL DIVIDER OUTPUT STATIC
INPUT TO CLK
INPUT TO CHANNEL DIVIDER
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
SYNC PIN
OUTPUT OF
CHANNEL DIVIDER
07240-074
14 TO 15 CYCLES AT CHANNEL DIVIDER INPUT + 1 CYCLE AT CLK INPUT
Figure 40. SYNC Timing Pipeline Delay When the VCO Divider Is Not Used
The AD9522 output drivers can be configured as either an
LVDS differential output or as a pair of CMOS single-ended
outputs. The LVDS outputs allow for selectable output current
from ~1.75 mA to ~7 mA.
The LVDS output polarity can be set as noninverting or
inverting, which allows for the adjustment of the relative
polarity of outputs within an application without requiring a
board layout change. Each LVDS output can be individually
powered down to save power.
Rev. 0 | Page 42 of 76
3.5mA
OUT
OUT
3.5mA
07240-134
LVDS Output Drivers
Figure 41. LVDS Output Simplified Equivalent Circuit with
3.5 mA Typical Current Source
AD9522-5
CMOS Output Drivers
Soft Reset via the Serial Port
The user can also individually configure each LVDS output as a
pair of CMOS outputs, which provides up to 24 CMOS outputs.
When an output is configured as CMOS, CMOS Output A
and CMOS Output B are automatically turned on. For a given
differential pair, either CMOS Output A or Output B can be
turned on or off independently. The user can also select the
relative polarity of the CMOS outputs for any combination of
inverting and noninverting (see Register 0x0F0 to Register 0x0FB).
The serial port control register allows for a soft reset by setting
Bit 2 and Bit 5 in Register 0x000. When Bit 5 and Bit 2 are set,
the chip enters a soft reset mode and restores the chip either to
the setting stored in EEPROM (the EEPROM pin = 1) or to the
on-chip setting (the EEPROM pin = 0), except for Register 0x000.
The user can power down each CMOS output as needed to save
power. The CMOS output power-down is individually controlled
by the enable CMOS output register (0x0F0[6:5] to 0x0FB[6:5]).
The CMOS driver is in tristate when it is powered down.
VS
Except for the self-clearing bits, Bit 2 and Bit 5, Register 0x000
retains its previous value prior to reset. During the internal reset,
the outputs hold static. These bits are self-clearing. However, the
self-clearing operation does not complete until an additional
serial port SCLK cycle, and the AD9522 is held in reset until
that happens.
Soft Reset to Settings in EEPROM When EEPROM Pin = 0 via
the Serial Port
The serial port control register allows the chip to be reset to
settings in EEPROM when the EEPROM pin = 1 via 0xB02[1].
This bit is self-clearing. This bit does not have any effect when
the EEPROM pin = 0. It takes ~20 ms for the outputs to begin
toggling after the Soft_EEPROM register is cleared.
07240-035
OUT1/
OUT1
POWER-DOWN MODES
Figure 42. CMOS Equivalent Output Circuit
RESET MODES
Chip Power-Down via PD
The AD9522 has a power-on reset (POR) and several other
ways to apply a reset condition to the chip.
The AD9522 can be put into a power-down condition by pulling
the PD pin low. Power-down turns off most of the functions and
currents inside the AD9522. The chip remains in this power-down
state until PD is brought back to logic high. When taken out of
power-down mode, the AD9522 returns to the settings programmed
into its registers prior to the power-down, unless the registers
are changed by new programming while the PD pin is held low.
Power-On Reset
During chip power-up, a power-on reset pulse is issued when
VS reaches ~2.6 V (<2.8 V) and restores the chip either to the
setting stored in EEPROM (with the EEPROM pin = 1) or to
the on-chip setting (with the EEPROM pin = 0). At power-on,
the AD9522 also executes a SYNC operation, which brings the
outputs into phase alignment according to the default settings.
The output drivers are held in sync for the duration of the
internally generated power-up sync timer (~70 ms). The
outputs begin to toggle after this period.
Hardware Reset via the RESET Pin
RESET, a hard reset (an asynchronous hard reset is executed by
briefly pulling RESET low), restores the chip either to the setting
stored in EEPROM (the EEPROM pin = 1) or to the on-chip
setting (the EEPROM pin = 0). A hard reset also executes a
SYNC operation, which brings the outputs into phase alignment
according to the default settings. When EEPROM is inactive
(the EEPROM pin = 0), it takes ~2 μs for the outputs to begin
toggling after RESET is issued. When EEPROM is active (the
EEPROM pin = 1), it takes ~20 ms for the outputs to toggle after
RESET is brought high.
Powering down the chip shuts down the currents on the chip.
Because this is not a complete power-down, it can be called
sleep mode. The AD9522 contains special circuitry to prevent
runt pulses on the outputs when the chip is entering or exiting
sleep mode.
When the AD9522 is in a PD power-down, the chip is in the
following state:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Rev. 0 | Page 43 of 76
The PLL is off (asynchronous power-down).
The CLK input buffer is off, but the CLK input dc bias
circuit is on.
In differential mode, the reference input buffer is off, but
the dc bias circuit is still on.
In singled-ended mode, the reference input buffer is off,
and the dc bias circuit is off.
All dividers are off.
All CMOS outputs are tristated.
All LVDS outputs are in power-down (high impedance)
mode.
The serial control port is active, and the chip responds to
commands.
AD9522-5
PLL Power-Down
Individual Clock Output Power-Down
The PLL section of the AD9522 can be selectively powered
down. There are two PLL power-down modes set by
Register 0x010[1:0]: asynchronous and synchronous.
Any of the clock distribution outputs can be put into powerdown mode by individually writing to the appropriate registers.
The register map details the individual power-down settings for
each output. These settings are found in Register 0x0F0[0] to
Register 0x0FB[0].
In asynchronous power-down mode, the device powers down as
soon as the registers are updated. In synchronous power-down
mode, the PLL power-down is gated by the charge pump to
prevent unwanted frequency jumps. The device goes into powerdown on the occurrence of the next charge pump event after the
registers are updated.
Distribution Power-Down
The distribution section can be powered down by writing
0x230[1] = 1b, which turns off the bias to the distribution
section. If the LVDS power-down mode is normal operation
(0b), it is possible for a low impedance load on that LVDS
output to draw significant current during this power-down. If
the LVDS power-down mode is set to 1b, the LVDS output is
not protected from reverse bias and can be damaged under
certain termination conditions.
Individual Clock Channel Power-Down
Any of the clock distribution channels can be powered down
individually by writing to the appropriate registers. Powering
down a clock channel is similar to powering down an individual
driver, but it saves more power because the dividers are also
powered down. Powering down a clock channel also automatically
powers down the drivers connected to it. The register map
details the individual power-down settings for each output
channel. These settings are found in 0x192[2], 0x195[2],
0x198[2], and 0x19B[2].
Rev. 0 | Page 44 of 76
AD9522-5
SERIAL CONTROL PORT
The AD9522 serial control port is a flexible, synchronous serial
communications port that allows an easy interface with many
industry-standard microcontrollers and microprocessors. The
AD9522 serial control port is compatible with most synchronous
transfer formats, including Philips I2C, Motorola® SPI®, and
Intel® SSR protocols. The AD9522 I2C implementation deviates
from the classic I2C specification on two specifications; these
deviations are documented in Table 11 of this data sheet. The
serial control port allows read/write access to all registers that
configure the AD9522.
SPI/I²C PORT SELECTION
The AD9522 has two serial interfaces, SPI and I2C. Users can
select either SPI or I2C depending on the states of the three
logic level (high, open, low) input pins, SP1 and SP0. When
both SP1 and SP0 are high, the SPI interface is active. Otherwise,
I2C is active with eight different I2C slave address (seven bits
wide) settings, see Table 34. The four MSBs of the slave address
are hardware coded as 1011, and the three LSBs are programmed
by SP1 and SP0.
I2C Bus Characteristics
Table 35. I2C Bus Definitions
Abbreviation
S
Sr
P
A
A
W
R
Definition
Start
Repeated start
Stop
Acknowledge
No acknowledge
Write
Read
One pulse on the SCL clock line is generated for each data bit
transferred.
The data on the SDA line must not change during the high
period of the clock. The state of the data line can change only when
the clock on the SCL line is low.
DATA LINE
STABLE;
DATA VALID
CHANGE
OF DATA
ALLOWED
SDA
SP1
Low
Low
Low
Open
Open
Open
High
High
High
SP0
Low
Open
High
Low
Open
High
Low
Open
High
Address
I²C, 1011000
I²C, 1011001
I²C, 1011010
I²C, 1011011
I²C, 1011100
I²C, 1011101
I²C, 1011110
I²C, 1011111
SPI
07240-160
Table 34. Serial Port Mode Selection
SCL
Figure 43. Valid Bit Transfer
A start condition is a transition from high to low on the SDA
line while SCL is high. The start condition is always generated
by the master to initialize the data transfer.
A stop condition is a transition from low to high on the SDA
line while SCL is high. The stop condition is always generated
by the master to end the data transfer.
SDA
The AD9522 I2C port is based on the I2C fast mode standard.
The AD9522 supports both I2C protocols: standard mode
(100 kHz) and fast mode (400 kHz).
The AD9522 I2C port has a 2-wire interface consisting of a serial
data line (SDA) and a serial clock line (SCL). In an I2C bus system,
the AD9522 is connected to the serial bus (data bus SDA and
clock bus SCL) as a slave device, meaning that no clock is generated
by the AD9522. The AD9522 uses direct 16-bit (two bytes)
memory addressing instead of traditional 8-bit (one byte) memory
addressing.
SCL
S
P
START
CONDITION
STOP
CONDITION
07240-161
I²C SERIAL PORT OPERATION
Figure 44. Start and Stop Conditions
A byte on the SDA line is always eight bits long. An acknowledge
bit must follow every byte. Bytes are sent MSB first.
The acknowledge bit is the ninth bit attached to any 8-bit data
byte. An acknowledge bit is always generated by the receiving
device (receiver) to inform the transmitter that the byte has
been received. It is done by pulling the SDA line low during the
ninth clock pulse after each 8-bit data byte.
Rev. 0 | Page 45 of 76
AD9522-5
MSB
ACKNOWLEDGE FROM
SLAVE-RECEIVER
1
SCL
2
3 TO 7
8
9
1
ACKNOWLEDGE FROM
SLAVE-RECEIVER
2
3 TO 7
8
9
S
10
P
07240-162
SDA
Figure 45. Acknowledge Bit
MSB = 0
1
SCL
2
3 TO 7
8
9
1
ACKNOWLEDGE FROM
SLAVE-RECEIVER
2
3 TO 7
8
9
S
10
P
07240-163
ACKNOWLEDGE FROM
SLAVE-RECEIVER
10
P
07240-164
SDA
Figure 46. Data Transfer Process (Master Write Mode, 2-Byte Transfer Used for Illustration)
MSB = 1
SDA
ACKNOWLEDGE FROM
MASTER-RECEIVER
1
SCL
2
3 TO 7
8
9
1
NO ACKNOWLEDGE
FROM
SLAVE-RECEIVER
2
3 TO 7
8
S
9
Figure 47. Data Transfer Process (Master Read Mode, 2-Byte Transfer Used for Illustration)
The no acknowledge bit is the ninth bit attached to any 8-bit
data byte. A no acknowledge bit is always generated by the
receiving device (receiver) to inform the transmitter that the
byte has not been received. It is done by leaving the SDA line
high during the ninth clock pulse after each 8-bit data byte.
Data Transfer Process
The master initiates data transfer by asserting a start condition.
This indicates that a data stream follows. All I2C slave devices
connected to the serial bus respond to the start condition.
The master then sends an 8-bit address byte over the SDA line,
consisting of a 7-bit slave address (MSB first) plus an R/W bit.
This bit determines the direction of the data transfer, that is,
whether data is written to or read from the slave device
(0 = write, 1 = read).
The peripheral whose address corresponds to the transmitted
address responds by sending an acknowledge bit. All other
devices on the bus remain idle while the selected device waits
for data to be read from or written to it. If the R/W bit is 0, the
master (transmitter) writes to the slave device (receiver). If the
R/W bit is 1, the master (receiver) reads from the slave device
(transmitter).
The format for these commands is described in the Data
Transfer Format section.
Data is then sent over the serial bus in the format of nine clock
pulses, one data byte (8-bit) from either master (write mode) or
slave (read mode) followed by an acknowledge bit from the
receiving device. The number of bytes that can be transmitted per
transfer is unrestricted. In write mode, the first two data bytes
immediately after the slave address byte are the internal
memory (control registers) address bytes with the high address
byte first. This addressing scheme gives a memory address up to
216 − 1 = 65,535. The data bytes after these two memory address
bytes are written into the control registers. In read mode, the data
bytes after the slave address byte are read from the control registers.
When all data bytes are read or written, stop conditions are
established. In write mode, the master (transmitter) asserts a
stop condition to end data transfer during the (10th) clock
pulse following the acknowledge bit for the last data byte from
the slave device (receiver). In read mode, the master device
(receiver) receives the last data byte from the slave device
(transmitter) but does not pull it low during the ninth clock
pulse. This is known as a no acknowledge bit. By receiving the no
acknowledge bit, the slave device knows that the data transfer is
finished and releases the SDA line. The master then takes the
data line low during the low period before the 10th clock pulse
and high during the 10th clock pulse to assert a stop condition.
A repeated start (Sr) condition can be used in place of a stop
condition. Furthermore, a start or stop condition can occur at
any time, and partially transferred bytes are discarded.
Rev. 0 | Page 46 of 76
AD9522-5
Data Transfer Format
Send byte format—the send byte protocol is used to set up the register address for subsequent commands.
S
Slave Address
W
A
RAM Address High Byte
A
RAM Address Low Byte
A
P
Write byte format—the write byte protocol is used to write a register address to the RAM starting from the specified RAM address.
S
Slave Address
W
A
RAM Address
High Byte
A
RAM Address
Low Byte
A
RAM Data 0
A
RAM Data 1
A
RAM Data 2
A
P
Receive byte format—the receive byte protocol is used to read the data byte(s) from RAM starting from the current address.
S
Slave Address
R
A
RAM Data 0
A
RAM Data 1
A
A
RAM Data 2
P
Read byte format—the combined format of the send byte and the receive byte.
S
Slave
Address
W
RAM Address
High Byte
A
A
RAM Address
Low Byte
A
Sr
Slave
Address
R
A
RAM
Data 0
A
RAM
Data 1
A
RAM
Data 2
A
I²C Serial Port Timing
SDA
tSET; DAT
tFALL
tLOW
tFALL
tHLD; STR
tRISE
tSPIKE
tRISE
tIDLE
tHLD; STR
tHLD; DAT
S
tHIGH
tSET; STP
tSET; STR
Sr
Figure 48. I²C Serial Port Timing
Table 36. I2C Timing Definitions
Parameter
fI2C
tIDLE
tHLD; STR
tSET; STR
tSET; STP
tHLD; DAT
tSET; DAT
tLOW
tHIGH
tRISE
tFALL
tSPIKE
Description
I²C clock frequency
Bus idle time between stop and start conditions
Hold time for repeated start condition
Setup time for repeated start condition
Setup time for stop condition
Hold time for data
Setup time for data
Duration of SCL clock low
Duration of SCL clock high
SCL/SDA rise time
SCL/SDA fall time
Voltage spike pulse width that must be suppressed by the input filter
Rev. 0 | Page 47 of 76
P
S
07240-165
SCL
P
AD9522-5
SPI SERIAL PORT OPERATION
Pin Descriptions
SCLK (serial clock) is the serial shift clock. This pin is an input.
SCLK is used to synchronize serial control port reads and writes.
Write data bits are registered on the rising edge of this clock,
and read data bits are registered on the falling edge. This pin is
internally pulled down by a 30 kΩ resistor to ground.
SDIO (serial data input/output) is a dual-purpose pin and acts
either as an input only (unidirectional mode) or as an
input/output (bidirectional mode). The AD9522 defaults to the
bidirectional I/O mode (0x000[7] = 0b).
SDO (serial data out) is used only in the unidirectional I/O mode
(0x000[7] = 1b) as a separate output pin for reading back data.
CS (chip select bar) is an active low control that gates the read
and write cycles. When CS is high, SDO and SDIO are in a high
impedance state. This pin is internally pulled up by a 30 kΩ
resistor to VS.
15
16
SDIO/SDA
17
SDO
18
AD9522
SERIAL
CONTROL
PORT
07240-036
CS
SCLK/SCL
Figure 49. Serial Control Port
SPI Mode Operation
In SPI mode, single or multiple byte transfers are supported, as
well as MSB first or LSB first transfer formats. The AD9522
serial control port can be configured for a single bidirectional
I/O pin (SDIO only) or for two unidirectional I/O pins (SDIO/
SDO). By default, the AD9522 is in bidirectional mode. Short
instruction mode (8-bit instructions) is not supported. Only
long (16-bit) instruction mode is supported.
A write or a read operation to the AD9522 is initiated by pulling
CS low.
The CS stalled high mode is supported in data transfers where
three or fewer bytes of data (plus instruction data) are transferred
(see Table 37). In this mode, the CS pin can temporarily return
high on any byte boundary, allowing time for the system controller
to process the next byte. CS can go high on byte boundaries only
and can go high during either part (instruction or data) of the
transfer.
During this period, the serial control port state machine enters
a wait state until all data is sent. If the system controller decides
to abort the transfer before all of the data is sent, the state machine
must be reset by either completing the remaining transfers or by
returning CS low for at least one complete SCLK cycle (but
fewer than eight SCLK cycles). Raising the CS pin on a nonbyte
boundary terminates the serial transfer and flushes the buffer.
In the streaming mode (see Table 37), any number of data bytes
can be transferred in a continuous stream. The register address
is automatically incremented or decremented (see the SPI
MSB/LSB First Transfers section). CS must be raised at the end
of the last byte to be transferred, thereby ending streaming mode.
Communication Cycle—Instruction Plus Data
There are two parts to a communication cycle with the AD9522.
The first part writes a 16-bit instruction word into the AD9522,
coincident with the first 16 SCLK rising edges. The instruction
word provides the AD9522 serial control port with information
regarding the data transfer, which is the second part of the
communication cycle. The instruction word defines whether
the upcoming data transfer is a read or a write, the number of
bytes in the data transfer, and the starting register address for
the first byte of the data transfer.
Write
If the instruction word is for a write operation, the second part
is the transfer of data into the serial control port buffer of the
AD9522. Data bits are registered on the rising edge of SCLK.
The length of the transfer (one, two, or three bytes, or streaming
mode) is indicated by two bits (W1:W0) in the instruction byte.
When the transfer is one, two, or three bytes, but not streaming,
CS can be raised after each sequence of eight bits to stall the bus
(except after the last byte, where it ends the cycle). When the bus
is stalled, the serial transfer resumes when CS is lowered. Raising
the CS pin on a nonbyte boundary resets the serial control port.
During a write, streaming mode does not skip over reserved or
blank registers, and the user can write 0x00 to the reserved
register addresses.
Because data is written into a serial control port buffer area, not
directly into the actual control registers of the AD9522, an
additional operation is needed to transfer the serial control port
buffer contents to the actual control registers of the AD9522,
thereby causing them to become active. The update registers
operation consists of setting 0x232[0] = 1b (this bit is selfclearing). Any number of bytes of data can be changed before
executing an update registers. The update registers simultaneously
actuates all register changes that have been written to the buffer
since any previous update.
Read
The AD9522 supports only the long instruction mode. If the
instruction word is for a read operation, the next N × 8 SCLK
cycles clock out the data from the address specified in the
instruction word, where N is 1 to 3 as determined by W1:W0.
If N = 4, the read operation is in streaming mode, continuing
until CS is raised. Streaming mode does not skip over reserved
or blank registers. The readback data is valid on the falling
edge of SCLK.
Rev. 0 | Page 48 of 76
AD9522-5
The default mode of the AD9522 serial control port is the
bidirectional mode. In bidirectional mode, both the sent data
and the readback data appear on the SDIO pin. It is also possible to
set the AD9522 to unidirectional mode (0x000[7] = 1 and
0x000[0] = 1). In unidirectional mode, the readback data
appears on the SDO pin.
A readback request reads the data that is in the serial control
port buffer area or the data that is in the active registers (see
Figure 50). Readback of the buffer or active registers is controlled
by 0x004[0].
SDO
SERIAL
CONTROL
PORT
UPDATE
REGISTERS
WRITE REGISTER 0x232 = 0x01
TO UPDATE REGISTERS
07240-037
SDIO/SDA
ACTIVE REGISTERS
CS
SCLK/SCL
BUFFER REGISTERS
The AD9522 uses Register Address 0x000 to Register Address 0xB03.
Figure 50. Relationship Between Serial Control Port Buffer Registers and
Active Registers of the AD9522
SPI INSTRUCTION WORD (16 BITS)
The MSB of the instruction word is R/W, which indicates
whether the instruction is a read or a write. The next two bits
(W1:W0) indicate the length of the transfer in bytes. The final
13 bits are the address (A12:A0) at which to begin the read or
write operation, see Table 39.
For a write, the instruction word is followed by the number of
bytes of data indicated by Bits[W1:W0], see Table 37.
Table 37. Byte Transfer Count
W1
0
0
1
1
W0
0
1
0
1
Bytes to Transfer
1
2
3
Streaming mode
SPI MSB/LSB FIRST TRANSFERS
The AD9522 instruction word and byte data can be MSB first
or LSB first. Any data written to 0x000 must be mirrored; the
upper four bits ([7:4]) must mirror the lower four bits ([3:0]).
This makes it irrelevant whether LSB first or MSB first is in
effect. As an example of this mirroring, see the default setting
for 0x000, which mirrors Bit 4 and Bit 3. This sets the long
instruction mode, which is the default and the only mode
supported.
The default for the AD9522 is MSB first.
When LSB first is set by 0x000[1] and 0x000[6], it takes effect
immediately because it affects only the operation of the serial
control port and does not require that an update be executed.
When MSB first mode is active, the instruction and data bytes
must be written from MSB to LSB. Multibyte data transfers in
MSB first format start with an instruction byte that includes the
register address of the most significant data byte. Subsequent
data bytes must follow in order from the high address to the
low address. In MSB first mode, the serial control port internal
address generator decrements for each data byte of the multibyte
transfer cycle.
When LSB first is active, the instruction and data bytes must be
written from LSB to MSB. Multibyte data transfers in LSB first
format start with an instruction byte that includes the register
address of the least significant data byte followed by multiple
data bytes. In a multibyte transfer cycle, the internal byte
address generator of the serial port increments for each byte.
The AD9522 serial control port register address decrements
from the register address just written toward 0x000 for multibyte
I/O operations if the MSB first mode is active (default). If the
LSB first mode is active, the register address of the serial control
port increments from the address just written toward 0x232 for
multibyte I/O operations.
Streaming mode always terminates when it reaches 0x232. Note
that unused addresses are not skipped during multibyte I/O
operations.
Bits[A12:A0] select the address within the register map that is
written to or read from during the data transfer portion of the
communications cycle. Only Bits[A9:A0] are needed to cover
the range of the 0x232 registers used by the AD9522. Bits[A12:A10]
must always be 0b. For multibyte transfers, this address is the
starting byte address. In MSB first mode, subsequent bytes
increment the address.
Table 38. Streaming Mode (No Addresses Are Skipped)
Write Mode
LSB first
MSB first
Rev. 0 | Page 49 of 76
Address Direction
Increment
Decrement
Stop Sequence
0x230, 0x231, 0x232, stop
0x001, 0x000, 0x232, stop
AD9522-5
Table 39. Serial Control Port, 16-Bit Instruction Word, MSB First
MSB
LSB
I15
R/W
I14
W1
I13
W0
I12
A12 = 0
I11
A11 = 0
I10
A10 = 0
I9
A9
I8
A8
I7
A7
I6
A6
I5
A5
I4
A4
I3
A3
I2
A2
I1
A1
I0
A0
CS
SCLK DON'T CARE
SDIO DON'T CARE
R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A9
A8
A7
A6 A5
A4 A3 A2
A1 A0
D7 D6 D5
16-BIT INSTRUCTION HEADER
D4 D3
D2 D1
D0
D7
D6 D5
REGISTER (N) DATA
D4 D3 D2
D1 D0
DON'T CARE
REGISTER (N – 1) DATA
07240-038
DON'T CARE
Figure 51. Serial Control Port Write—MSB First, 16-Bit Instruction, Two Bytes of Data
CS
SCLK
DON'T CARE
SDIO
DON'T CARE
R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
SDO DON'T CARE
REGISTER (N) DATA
REGISTER (N – 1) DATA
REGISTER (N – 2) DATA
REGISTER (N – 3) DATA
DON'T
CARE
07240-039
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
16-BIT INSTRUCTION HEADER
Figure 52. Serial Control Port Read—MSB First, 16-Bit Instruction, Four Bytes of Data
tHIGH
tDS
tS
CS
DON'T CARE
SDIO
DON'T CARE
tLOW
DON'T CARE
R/W
W1
W0
A12
A11
A10
A9
A8
A7
A6
A5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
DON'T CARE
07240-040
SCLK
tC
tCLK
tDH
Figure 53. Serial Control Port Write—MSB First, 16-Bit Instruction, Timing Measurements
CS
SCLK
DATA BIT N
07240-041
tDV
SDIO
SDO
DATA BIT N – 1
Figure 54. Timing Diagram for Serial Control Port Register Read
CS
SCLK DON'T CARE
A0 A1 A2 A3
A4
A5 A6 A7
A8
A9 A10 A11 A12 W0 W1 R/W D0 D1 D2 D3 D4
16-BIT INSTRUCTION HEADER
D5 D6
REGISTER (N) DATA
D7
D0
D1 D2
D6
REGISTER (N + 1) DATA
Figure 55. Serial Control Port Write—LSB First, 16-Bit Instruction, Two Bytes of Data
Rev. 0 | Page 50 of 76
D3 D4 D5
D7
DON'T CARE
07240-042
SDIO DON'T CARE
DON'T CARE
AD9522-5
tS
tC
CS
tCLK
tHIGH
SCLK
tLOW
tDS
SDIO
BIT N
BIT N + 1
Figure 56. Serial Control Port Timing—Write
Table 40. Serial Control Port Timing
Parameter
tDS
tDH
tCLK
tS
tC
tHIGH
tLOW
tDV
Description
Setup time between data and rising edge of SCLK
Hold time between data and rising edge of SCLK
Period of the clock
Setup time between the CS falling edge and SCLK rising edge (start of communication cycle)
Setup time between SCLK rising edge and the CS rising edge (end of communication cycle)
Minimum period that SCLK should be in a logic high state
Minimum period that SCLK should be in a logic low state
SCLK to valid SDIO and SDO (see Figure 54)
Rev. 0 | Page 51 of 76
07240-043
tDH
AD9522-5
EEPROM OPERATIONS
The AD9522 contains an internal EEPROM (nonvolatile memory).
The EEPROM can be programmed by users to create and store
a user-defined register setting file when the power is off. This
setting file can be used for power-up and chip reset as a default
setting. The EEPROM size is 512 bytes.
During the data transfer process, the write and read registers via
the serial port are generally not available except for one readback
register, STATUS_EEPROM.
WRITING TO THE EEPROM
The EEPROM cannot be programmed directly through the serial
port interface. To program the EEPROM and store a register
setting file, do the following:
4.
5.
To verify that the data transfer has completed correctly, the user
can verify that 0xB01[0] = 0. A value of 1 in this register indicates a
data transfer error.
READING FROM THE EEPROM
When the EEPROM pin is set high, do any of the following:
In I2C mode, the user can address the AD9522 slave port with
the external I2C master (send an address byte to the AD9522). If
the AD9522 responds with a no acknowledge bit, the data transfer
process is not done. If the AD9522 responds with an acknowledge
bit, the data transfer process is completed. The user can monitor
the STATUS_EEPROM register or program the STATUS pin to
monitor the status of the data transfer.
3.
After the data transfer process is done (0xB00[0] = 0), set
the enable EEPROM write register (0xB02[0]) to 0 to
disable writing to the EEPROM.
The following reset-related events can start the process of
restoring the settings stored in EEPROM to the control registers.
To determine the data transfer state through the serial port
in SPI mode, users can read the value of STATUS_EEPROM
(1 = in process and 0 = completed).
1.
2.
6.
Program the AD9522 registers to the desired circuit state.
Program the EEPROM buffer registers, if necessary (see
the Programming the EEPROM Buffer Segment section).
This is only necessary if users want to use the EEPROM to
control the default setting of some (but not all) of the
AD9522 registers, or if they want to control the register
setting update sequence during power-up or chip reset.
Set the enable EEPROM write bit (0xB02[0]) to 1 to enable
the EEPROM.
Set the REG2EEPROM bit (0xB03[0]) to 1.
Set the IO_UPDATE bit (0x232[0]) to 1, which starts the
process of writing data into the EEPROM to create the
EEPROM setting file. This enables the AD9522 EEPROM
controller to transfer the current register values, as well as
the memory address and instruction bytes from the EEPROM
buffer segment, into the EEPROM. After the write process
is completed, the internal controller sets 0xB03[0]
(REG2EEPROM) back to 0.
The readback register, STATUS_EEPROM (0xB00[0]),
is used to indicate the data transfer status between the
EEPROM and the control registers (0 = done/inactive;
1 = in process/active). At the beginning of the data transfer,
STATUS_EEPROM is set to 1 by the EEPROM controller
and cleared to 0 at the end of the data transfer. The user
can access STATUS_EEPROM through the STATUS pin
when the STATUS pin is programmed to monitor
STATUS_EEPROM. Alternatively, the user can monitor
the STATUS_EEPROM bit.
•
•
•
Power up the AD9522.
Perform a hardware chip reset by pulling the RESET pin
low and then releasing RESET.
Set the self-clearing soft reset bit (0x000[5]) to 1.
When the EEPROM pin is set low, set the self-clearing
Soft_EEPROM bit (0xB02[1]) to 1. The AD9522 then starts to
read the EEPROM and loads the values into the AD9522.
If the EEPROM pin is low during reset or power-up, the
EEPROM is not active, and the AD9522 default values are
loaded instead.
To verify that the data transfer has completed correctly, the user
can verify that 0xB01[0] = 0. A value of 1 in this register indicates a
data transfer error.
PROGRAMMING THE EEPROM BUFFER SEGMENT
The EEPROM buffer segment is a register space on the AD9522
that allows the user to specify which groups of registers are
stored to the EEPROM during EEPROM programming. Normally,
this segment does not need to be programmed by the user. Instead,
the default power-up values for the EEPROM buffer segment
allow the user to store all of the AD9522 register values from
Register 0x000 to Register 0x231 to the EEPROM.
For example, if users want to load only the output driver settings
from the EEPROM without disturbing the PLL register settings
currently stored in the AD9522, they can alter the EEPROM buffer
segment to include only the registers that apply to the output
drivers and exclude the registers that apply to the PLL configuration.
There are two parts to the EEPROM buffer segment: register
section definition groups and operational codes. Each register
section definition group contains the starting address and
number of bytes to be written to the EEPROM.
If the AD9522 register map were continuous from Address 0x000
to Address 0x232, only one register section definition group
would consist of a starting address of 0x000 and a length of
563 bytes. However, this is not the case. The AD9522 register
map is noncontiguous, and the EEPROM is only 512 bytes long.
Therefore, the register section definition group tells the EEPROM
controller how the AD9522 register map is segmented.
Rev. 0 | Page 52 of 76
AD9522-5
End-of-Data (Operational Code 0xFF)
There are three operational codes: IO_UPDATE, end-of-data,
and pseudo-end-of-data. It is important that the EEPROM buffer
segment always have either an end-of-data or a pseudo-end-of-data
operational code and that an IO_UPDATE operation code appear
at least once before the end-of-data op code.
The EEPROM controller uses Operational Code 0xFF to
terminate the data transfer process between EEPROM and the
control register during the upload and download process. The
last item appearing in the EEPROM buffer segment should be
either this operational code or the pseudo-end-of-data
operational code.
Register Section Definition Group
The register section definition group is used to define a continuous
register section for the EEPROM profile. It consists of three bytes.
The first byte defines how many continuous register bytes are in
this group. If the user puts 0x000 in the first byte, it means there
is only one byte in this group. If the user puts 0x001, it means
there are two bytes in this group. The maximum number of
registers in one group is 128.
Pseudo-End-of-Data (Operational Code 0xFE)
The AD9522 EEPROM buffer segment has 23 bytes that can
contain up to seven register section definition groups. If users
want to define more than seven register section definition
groups, the pseudo-end-of-data operational code (0xFE) can be
used. During the upload process, when the EEPROM controller
receives the pseudo-end-of-data operational code, it halts the
data transfer process, clears the REG2EEPROM bit, and enables
the AD9522 serial port. Users can then program the EEPROM
buffer segment again and reinitiate the data transfer process by
setting the REG2EEPROM bit (0xB03[0]) to 1 and the
IO_UPDATE bit (0x232[0]) to 1. The internal I2C master then
begins writing to the EEPROM starting from the EEPROM address
held from the last writing.
The next two bytes are the low byte and high byte of the
memory address (16-bit) of the first register in this group.
IO_UPDATE (Operational Code 0x80)
The EEPROM controller uses Operational Code 0x80 to generate
an IO_UPDATE signal to update the active control register
bank from the buffer register bank during the download process.
At a minimum, there should be at least one IO_UPDATE
operational code after the end of the final register section definition
group. This is needed so that at least one IO_UPDATE occurs after
all of the AD9522 registers are loaded when the EEPROM is
read. If this operational code is absent during a write to the
EEPROM, the register values loaded from the EEPROM are not
transferred to the active register space, and these values do not
take effect after they are loaded from the EEPROM to the AD9522.
This sequence enables more discrete instructions to be written
to the EEPROM than would otherwise be possible due to the
limited size of the EEPROM buffer segment. It also permits the
user to write to the same register multiple times with a different
value each time.
Table 41. Example of EEPROM Buffer Segment
Reg Addr (Hex)
Bit 7 (MSB)
Start EEPROM Buffer Segment
0xA00
0
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Address [15:8] of the first group of registers
0xA02
Address [7:0] of the first group of registers
0
Number of bytes [6:0] of the second group of registers
0xA04
Address [15:8] of the second group of registers
0xA05
Address [7:0] of the second group of registers
0xA06
0
Bit 0 (LSB)
Number of bytes [6:0] of the first group of registers
0xA01
0xA03
Bit 1
Number of bytes [6:0] of the third group of registers
0xA07
Address [15:8] of the third group of registers
0xA08
Address [7:0] of the third group of registers
0xA09
IO_UPDATE operational code (0x80)
0xA0A
End-of-data operational code (0xFF)
Rev. 0 | Page 53 of 76
AD9522-5
THERMAL PERFORMANCE
Table 42. Thermal Parameters for the 64-Lead LFCSP
Symbol
θJA
θJMA
θJMA
ΨJB
θJC
ΨJT
Thermal Characteristic Using a JEDEC JESD51-7 Plus JEDEC JESD51-5 2S2P Test Board
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance, 0.0 m/sec airflow per JEDEC JESD51-2 (still air)
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance, 1.0 m/sec airflow per JEDEC JESD51-6 (moving air)
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance, 2.0 m/sec airflow per JEDEC JESD51-6 (moving air)
Junction-to-board characterization parameter, 1.0 m/sec airflow per JEDEC JESD51-6 (moving air)
and JEDEC JESD51-8
Junction-to-case thermal resistance (die-to-heat sink) per MIL-STD-883, Method 1012.1
Junction-to-top-of-package characterization parameter, 0 m/sec airflow per JEDEC JESD51-2 (still air)
The AD9522 is specified for a case temperature (TCASE). To ensure
that TCASE is not exceeded, an airflow source can be used.
Use the following equation to determine the junction
temperature on the application PCB:
Value (°C/W)
22.0
19.2
17.2
11.6
1.3
0.1
Values of θJA are provided for package comparison and PCB
design considerations. θJA can be used for a first-order
approximation of TJ by the equation
TJ = TA + (θJA × PD)
where TA is the ambient temperature (°C).
TJ = TCASE + (ΨJT × PD)
where:
TJ is the junction temperature (°C).
TCASE is the case temperature (°C) measured by the user at the
top center of the package.
ΨJT is the value from Table 42.
Values of θJC are provided for package comparison and PCB
design considerations when an external heat sink is required.
Values of ΨJB are provided for package comparison and PCB
design considerations.
PD is the power dissipation (see the total power dissipation in
Table 15).
Rev. 0 | Page 54 of 76
AD9522-5
REGISTER MAP
Register addresses that are not listed in Table 43 are not used, and writing to those registers has no effect. The user should avoid writing
values other than 0x00 to register addresses marked unused.
Table 43. Register Map Overview
Addr
(Hex) Parameter
Serial Port Configuration
000
Serial port config
(SPI mode)
Bit 7 (MSB)
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0 (LSB)
Default
Value
(Hex)
SDO active
LSB first/
addr incr
Soft reset
(selfclearing)
Soft reset
(selfclearing)
Unused
Unused
LSB first/
addr incr
SDO active
00
Unused
Unused
Soft reset
(selfclearing)
Soft reset
(selfclearing)
Serial port config
(I²C mode)
Unused
001
002
003
004
Readback
control
EEPROM ID
005
EEPROM
customer
006
version ID
007
to
00F
PLL
010
PFD charge
pump
011
R counter
012
013
A counter
014
B counter
015
016
PLL_CTRL_1
Unused
Unused
Reserved (read-only)
Reserved (read-only)
Unused
PFD polarity
017
PLL_CTRL_2
018
PLL_CTRL_3
019
PLL_CTRL_4
01A
PLL_CTRL_5
Enable STATUS
pin divider
01B
PLL_CTRL_6
Enable CLK
frequency
monitor
01C
PLL_CTRL_7
Disable
switchover
deglitch
01D
PLL_CTRL_8
Enable
Status_EEPROM
at STATUS pin
Enable CMOS
reference input
dc offset
EEPROM customer version ID (LSB)
00
00
Unused
00
Charge pump mode
PLL power-down
14-bit R counter, Bits[7:0] (LSB)
14-bit R counter, Bits[13:8] (MSB)
6-bit A counter
13-bit B counter, Bits[7:0] (LSB)
Unused
Reset
R counter
Reset
Reset all
A and B
counters
counters
STATUS pin control
R, A, B counters
SYNC pin reset
Ref freq
monitor
threshold
Enable
REF2
(REFIN)
frequency
monitor
Select
REF2
Enable
XTAL
OSC
00
06
Antibacklash pulse width
Use
REF_SEL
pin
06
N path delay
00
Enable
clock
doubler
00
REFMON pin control
Enable
automatic
reference
switchover
Disable
PLL status
register
00
Unused
LD pin control
Enable
REF1
(REFIN)
frequency
monitor
7D
01
00
00
03
13-bit B counter, Bits[12:8] (MSB)
B counter
Prescaler P
bypass
Disable
Digital
digital
lock
lock detect
detect
window
R path delay
Lock detect counter
N/A
N/A
N/A
00
EEPROM customer version ID (MSB)
Charge pump current
Unused
Unused
Set CP pin
to VCP/2
Readback
active regs
00
00
Stay on REF2
Enable
REF2
Enable
REF1
Enable
differential
reference
00
Enable LD
pin
comparator
Unused
Enable
external
holdover
Enable
holdover
80
Rev. 0 | Page 55 of 76
AD9522-5
Addr
(Hex)
01E
01F
Parameter
PLL_CTRL_9
Bit 7 (MSB)
PLL_Readback
(read-only)
Bit 6
Bit 5
Unused
Bit 4
Unused
Holdover
active
REF2
selected
Bit 3
Bit 2
CLK freq >
threshold
REF2
freq >
threshold
Bit 1
Enable
zero delay
REF1 freq >
threshold
Output Driver Control
0F0
OUT0 control
OUT0 format
OUT0 CMOS
configuration
OUT0 polarity
OUT0 LVDS
differential voltage
0F1
OUT1 control
OUT1 format
OUT1 CMOS
configuration
OUT1 polarity
OUT1 LVDS
differential voltage
0F2
OUT2 control
OUT2 format
OUT2 CMOS
configuration
OUT2 polarity
OUT2 LVDS
differential voltage
0F3
OUT3 control
OUT3 format
OUT3 CMOS
configuration
OUT3 polarity
OUT3 LVDS
differential voltage
0F4
OUT4 control
OUT4 format
OUT4 CMOS
configuration
OUT4 polarity
OUT4 LVDS
differential voltage
0F5
OUT5 control
OUT5 format
OUT5 CMOS
configuration
OUT5 polarity
OUT5 LVDS
differential voltage
0F6
OUT6 control
OUT6 format
OUT6 CMOS
configuration
OUT6 polarity
OUT6 LVDS
differential voltage
0F7
OUT7 control
OUT7 format
OUT7 CMOS
configuration
OUT7 polarity
OUT7 LVDS
differential voltage
0F8
OUT8 control
OUT8 format
OUT8 CMOS
configuration
OUT8 polarity
OUT8 LVDS
differential voltage
0F9
OUT9 control
OUT9 format
OUT9 CMOS
configuration
OUT9 polarity
OUT9 LVDS
differential voltage
0FA
OUT10 control
OUT10 format
OUT10 CMOS
configuration
OUT10 polarity
OUT10 LVDS
differential voltage
0FB
OUT11 control
OUT11 format
OUT11 CMOS
configuration
OUT11 polarity
OUT11 LVDS
differential voltage
0FC
Enable output
on CSDLD
Enable output
on CSDLD
CSDLD En
OUT7
Unused
0FD
0FE
to
18F
LVDS Channel Dividers
190
Divider 0
191
192
Divider 0
bypass
CSDLD En
OUT6
Unused
CSDLD En
OUT5
Unused
Divider 0 low cycles
Divider 0
Divider 0
ignore
force
SYNC
high
Unused
CSDLD En
OUT4
Unused
CSDLD En
OUT3
CSDLD En
OUT11
Unused
Divider 0
start high
CSDLD En
OUT2
CSDLD En
OUT10
Digital lock
detect
N/A
OUT0
LVDS
power-down
OUT1
LVDS
power-down
OUT2
LVDS
power-down
OUT3
LVDS
power-down
OUT4
LVDS
power-down
OUT5
LVDS
power-down
OUT6
LVDS
power-down
OUT7
LVDS
power-down
OUT8
LVDS
power-down
OUT9
LVDS
power-down
OUT10
LVDS
power-down
OUT11
LVDS
power-down
CSDLD En
OUT0
CSDLD En
OUT8
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
62
00
00
00
Divider 0 high cycles
Divider 0
phase offset
Channel 0
powerdown
Rev. 0 | Page 56 of 76
CSDLD En
OUT1
CSDLD En
OUT9
Bit 0 (LSB)
Unused
Default
Value
(Hex)
00
Reserved
77
00
Disable
Divider 0
DCC
00
AD9522-5
Addr
(Hex)
193
194
Parameter
Divider 1
Bit 7 (MSB)
Divider 1
bypass
195
196
197
Divider 2
Divider 2
bypass
198
199
19A
Divider 3
Divider 3
bypass
19B
Bit 6
Bit 5
Divider 1 low cycles
Divider 1
Divider 1
force
ignore
SYNC
high
Unused
Divider 2 low cycles
Divider 2
Divider 2
ignore
force
SYNC
high
Unused
Divider 3 low cycles
Divider 3
Divider 3
force
ignore
high
SYNC
Unused
Unused
1E2
to
22A
System
230
Power-down
and SYNC
A02
A03
A04
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 2
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 3
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 4
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 5
Bit 1
Divider 1 high cycles
Divider 1
phase offset
Bit 0 (LSB)
Disable
Divider 1
DCC
Divider 2
start high
Channel 1
Reserved
powerdown
Divider 2 high cycles
Divider 2
phase offset
Disable
Divider 2
DCC
Divider 3
start high
Channel 2
Reserved
powerdown
Divider 3 high cycles
Divider 3
phase offset
Channel 3
powerdown
Reserved
Unused
Disable
Divider 3
DCC
00
Bypass VCO
divider
Powerdown
SYNC
Powerdown
distribution
reference
Soft
SYNC
0
00
00
IO_UPDATE
(self-clearing)
Unused
0
00
00
Unused
Unused
00
00
Reserved
Disable
power-on
SYNC
00
00
00
VCO divider
Power down
clock
input
section
00
11
00
Unused
231
Update All Registers
232
IO_UPDATE
A01
Divider 1
start high
Bit 2
Unused
Input CLKs
233
to
9FF
EEPROM Buffer Segment
A00
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 1
Bit 3
Unused
19C
to
1DF
VCO Divider and CLK Input
1E0
VCO divider
1E1
Bit 4
Default
Value
(Hex)
33
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 1 (default: number of bytes for Group 1)
00
00
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 2 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 1)
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 3 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 1)
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 4 (default: number of bytes for Group 2)
02
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 5 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 2)
Rev. 0 | Page 57 of 76
00
AD9522-5
Addr
(Hex)
A05
A06
A07
A08
A09
A0A
A0B
A0C
A0D
A0E
A0F
A10
A11
A12
A13
A14
A15
A16
A17
to
AFF
Parameter
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 6
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 7
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 8
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 9
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 10
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 11
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 12
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 13
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 14
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 15
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 16
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 17
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 18
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 19
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 20
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 21
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 22
EEPROM
Buffer Segment
Register 23
Bit 7 (MSB)
0
0
0
0
0
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0 (LSB)
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 6 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 2)
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 7 (default: number of bytes for Group 3)
Default
Value
(Hex)
04
0E
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 8 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 3)
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 9 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 3)
10
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 10 (default: number of bytes for Group 4)
0E
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 11 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 4)
00
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 12 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 4)
F0
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 13 (default: number of bytes for Group 5)
0B
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 14 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 5)
01
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 15 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 5)
90
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 16 (default: number of bytes for Group 6)
01
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 17 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 6)
01
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 18 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 6)
E0
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 19 (default: number of bytes for Group 7)
01
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 20 (default: Bits[15:8] of starting register address for Group 7)
02
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 21 (default: Bits[7:0] of starting register address for Group 7)
30
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 22 (default: IO_UPDATE from EEPROM)
80
EEPROM Buffer Segment Register 23 (default: end of data)
FF
Unused
00
Rev. 0 | Page 58 of 76
AD9522-5
Addr
(Hex) Parameter
EEPROM Control
B00
EEPROM status
(read-only)
B01
EEPROM error
checking
(read-only)
B02
EEPROM
Control 1
B03
EEPROM
Control 2
Bit 7 (MSB)
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Unused
Unused
Unused
Soft_EEPROM
(self-clearing)
Unused
Rev. 0 | Page 59 of 76
Bit 0 (LSB)
Default
Value
(Hex)
STATUS_
EEPROM
EEPROM
data error
00
Enable
EEPROM
write
REG2EEPROM
(self-clearing)
00
00
00
AD9522-5
REGISTER MAP DESCRIPTIONS
Table 44 through Table 54 provide a detailed description of each of the control register functions. The registers are listed by hexadecimal
address. Reference to a specific bit or range of bits within a register is indicated by squared brackets. For example, [3] refers to Bit 3 and
[5:2] refers to the range of bits from Bit 5 through Bit 2.
Table 44. SPI Mode Serial Port Configuration
Reg Addr (Hex)
000
Bit(s)
[7]
Name
SDO active
000
[6]
LSB first/addr incr
000
[5]
Soft reset
000
000
[4]
[3:0]
Unused
Mirror[7:4]
004
[0]
Readback active registers
Description
Selects unidirectional or bidirectional data transfer mode.
[7] = 0; SDIO pin used for write and read; SDO is high impedance (default).
[7] = 1; SDO used for read; SDIO used for write; unidirectional mode.
SPI MSB or LSB data orientation. (This register is ignored in I2C mode.)
[6] = 0; data-oriented MSB first; addressing decrements (default).
[6] = 1; data-oriented LSB first; addressing increments.
Soft reset.
[5] = 1 (self-clearing). Soft reset; restores default values to internal registers. This bit
self-clears on the next SCLK cycle after the completion of writing to this register.
Bits[3:0] should always mirror Bits[7:4] so that it does not matter whether the part
is in MSB or LSB first mode (see Register 0x000[6]). Set bits as follows:
[0] = [7]
[1] = [6]
[2] = [5]
[3] = [4]
Select register bank used for a readback.
[0] = 0; read back buffer registers (default).
[0] = 1; read back active registers.
Table 45. I2C Mode Serial Port Configuration
Reg Addr (Hex)
000
000
Bit(s)
[7:6]
[5]
Name
Unused
Soft reset
000
000
[4]
[3:0]
Unused
Mirror[7:4]
004
[0]
Readback active registers
Description
Soft reset.
[5] = 1 (self-clearing). Soft reset; restores default values to internal registers. This bit
self-clears on the next SCL cycle after the completion of writing to this register.
Bits[3:0] should always mirror Bits[7:4]. Set bits as follows:
[0] = [7]
[1] = [6]
[2] = [5]
[3] = [4]
Select register bank used for a readback.
[0] = 0; read back buffer registers (default).
[0] = 1; read back active registers.
Table 46. EEPROM ID
Reg Addr (Hex)
005
Bit(s)
[7:0]
Name
EEPROM customer
version ID (LSB)
006
[7:0]
EEPROM customer
version ID (MSB)
Description
16-bit EEPROM ID[7:0]. This register, along with 0x006, allows the user to store a
unique ID to identify which version of the AD9522 register settings is stored in the
EEPROM. It does not affect AD9522 operation in any way (default: 0x00).
16-bit EEPROM ID[15:8]. This register, along with 0x005, allows the user to store a
unique ID to identify which version of the AD9522 register settings is stored in the
EEPROM. It does not affect AD9522 operation in any way (default: 0x00).
Rev. 0 | Page 60 of 76
AD9522-5
Table 47. PLL
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
010 [7]
PFD polarity
010
[6:4]
010
[3:2]
010
[1:0]
011
[7:0]
012
[5:0]
013
[5:0]
014
[7:0]
015
[4:0]
016
[7]
016
[6]
016
[5]
016
[4]
Description
Sets the PFD polarity. Negative polarity is for use (if needed) with external VCO/VCXO only.
[7] = 0; positive (higher control voltage produces higher frequency) (default).
[7] = 1; negative (higher control voltage produces lower frequency).
CP current
Charge pump current (with CPRSET = 5.1 kΩ).
[6] [5]
[4]
ICP (mA)
0
0
0
0.6
0
0
1
1.2
0
1
0
1.8
0
1
1
2.4
1
0
0
3.0
1
0
1
3.6
1
1
0
4.2
1
1
1
4.8 (default)
CP mode
Charge pump operating mode.
[3]
[2]
Charge Pump Mode
0
0
High impedance state.
0
1
Force source current (pump up).
1
0
Force sink current (pump down).
1
1
Normal operation (default).
PLL operating mode.
PLL powerdown
[1]
[0]
Mode
0
0
Normal operation; this mode must be selected to use the PLL.
0
1
Asynchronous power-down (default).
1
0
Unused.
1
1
Synchronous power-down.
14-bit R counter, Reference divider LSBs—lower eight bits. The reference divider (also called the R divider or R counter) is
Bits[7:0] (LSB)
14 bits long. The lower eight bits are in this register (default: 0x01).
14-bit R counter, Reference divider MSBs—upper six bits. The reference divider (also called the R divider or R counter) is
Bits[13:8] (MSB) 14 bits long. The upper six bits are in this register (default: 0x00).
6-bit A counter A counter (part of N divider). The N divider is also called the feedback divider (default: 0x00).
13-bit B counter,
Bits[7:0] (LSB)
13-bit B counter,
Bits[12:8] (MSB)
Set CP pin
to VCP/2
B counter (part of N divider)—lower eight bits. The N divider is also called the feedback divider (default: 0x03).
B counter (part of N divider)—upper five bits. The N divider is also called the feedback divider (default: 0x00).
Sets the CP pin to one-half of the VCP supply voltage.
[7] = 0; CP normal operation (default).
[7] = 1; CP pin set to VCP/2.
Reset R counter Reset R counter (R divider).
[6] = 0; normal (default).
[6] = 1; hold R counter in reset.
Reset A and B counters (part of N divider).
Reset A and B
counters
[5] = 0; normal (default).
[5] = 1; hold A and B counters in reset.
Reset R, A, and B counters.
Reset all
counters
[4] = 0; normal (default).
[4] = 1; hold R, A, and B counters in reset.
Rev. 0 | Page 61 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
016 [3]
B counter
bypass
016
[2:0]
Prescaler P
017
[7:2]
STATUS
pin control
Description
B counter bypass. This is valid only when operating the prescaler in FD mode.
[3] = 0; normal (default).
[3] = 1; B counter is set to divide-by-1. This allows the prescaler setting to determine the divide for
the N divider.
Prescaler: DM = dual modulus and FD = fixed divide. The Prescaler P is part of the feedback divider.
[2]
[1] [0] Mode
Prescaler
0
0
0
FD
Divide-by-1.
0
0
1
FD
Divide-by-2.
0
1
0
DM
Divide-by-2 and divide-by-3 when A ≠ 0; divide-by-2 when A = 0.
0
1
1
DM
Divide-by-4 and divide-by-5 when A ≠ 0; divide-by-4 when A = 0.
1
0
0
DM
Divide-by-8 and divide-by-9 when A ≠ 0; divide-by-8 when A = 0.
1
0
1
DM
Divide-by-16 and divide-by-17 when A ≠ 0; divide-by-16 when A = 0.
1
1
0
DM
Divide-by-32 and divide-by-33 when A ≠ 0; divide-by-32 when A = 0 (default).
1
1
1
FD
Divide-by-3.
Selects the signal that appears at the STATUS pin. 0x01D[7] must be 0 to reprogram the STATUS pin.
Level or
Dynamic
[7]
[6] [5] [4] [3]
[2] Signal
Signal at STATUS Pin
0
0
0
0
0
0
LVL
Ground, dc (default).
0
0
0
0
0
1
DYN
N divider output (after the delay).
0
0
0
0
1
0
DYN
R divider output (after the delay).
0
0
0
0
1
1
DYN
A divider output.
0
0
0
1
0
0
DYN
Prescaler output.
0
0
0
1
0
1
DYN
PFD up pulse.
0
0
0
1
1
0
DYN
PFD down pulse.
0
X
X
X
X
X
LVL
Ground (dc); for all other cases of 0XXXXX not specified.
The selections that follow are the same as for REFMON.
1
0
0
0
0
0
LVL
Ground (dc).
1
0
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
1
0
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not applicable in differential mode).
1
0
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in
differential mode).
1
0
0
1
0
0
DYN
Unselected reference to PLL (not available in differential
mode).
1
0
0
1
0
1
LVL
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active high.
1
0
0
1
1
0
LVL
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential
mode); active high.
1
0
0
1
1
1
LVL
Status of REF1 frequency (active high).
1
0
1
0
0
0
LVL
Status of REF2 frequency (active high).
1
0
1
0
0
1
LVL
(Status of REF1 frequency) AND (status of REF2 frequency).
1
0
1
0
1
0
LVL
(DLD) AND (status of selected reference) AND (status of CLK).
1
0
1
0
1
1
LVL
Status of CLK frequency (active high).
1
0
1
1
0
0
LVL
Selected reference (low = REF1, high = REF2).
1
0
1
1
0
1
LVL
DLD; active high.
1
0
1
1
1
0
LVL
Holdover active (active high).
1
0
1
1
1
1
LVL
LD pin comparator output (active high).
1
1
0
0
0
0
LVL
VS (PLL power supply).
1
1
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
1
1
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not available in differential mode).
1
1
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in
differential mode).
Rev. 0 | Page 62 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
017
[1:0]
Antibacklash
pulse width
018
[7]
Enable CMOS
reference input
dc offset
018
[6:5]
Lock detect
counter
018
[4]
Digital lock
detect window
018
[3]
Disable digital
lock detect
019
[7:6]
R, A, B counters
SYNC pin reset
Description
[7]
1
[6]
1
[5] [4]
0 1
[3]
0
Level or
Dynamic
[2] Signal
0
DYN
1
1
0
1
0
1
LVL
1
1
0
1
1
0
LVL
1
1
0 1
1
1
LVL
1
1
1 0
0
0
LVL
1
1
1 0
0
1
LVL
1
1
1 0
1
0
LVL
1
1
1 0
1
1
LVL
1
1
1 1
0
0
LVL
1
1
1 1
0
1
LVL
1
1
1 1
1
0
LVL
1
1
1 1
1
1
LVL
[1]
[0] Antibacklash Pulse Width (ns)
0
0
2.9 (default)
0
1
1.3
1
0
6.0
1
1
2.9
Enables dc offset in single-ended CMOS input mode to prevent chattering when ac-coupled and input is lost.
[7] = 0; disable dc offset (default).
[7] = 1; enable dc offset.
Required consecutive number of PFD cycles with edges inside lock detect window before the DLD indicates
a locked condition.
[6]
[5] PFD Cycles to Determine Lock
0
0
5 (default)
0
1
16
1
0
64
1
1
255
If the time difference of the rising edges at the inputs to the PFD are less than the lock detect window time,
the digital lock detect flag is set. The flag remains set until the time difference is greater than the loss-of-lock
threshold.
[4] = 0; high range (default).
[4] = 1; low range.
Digital lock detect operation.
[3] = 0; normal lock detect operation (default).
[3] = 1; disable lock detect.
[7]
[6]
Action
0
0
Do nothing on SYNC (default).
0
1
1
019
019
[5:3]
[2:0]
R path delay
N path delay
Signal at STATUS Pin
Unselected reference to PLL (not available when in
differential mode).
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active low.
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential
mode); active low.
Status of REF1 frequency (active low).
Status of REF2 frequency (active low).
(Status of REF1 frequency) AND (status of REF2 frequency).
(DLD) AND (Status of selected reference) AND (status of VCO).
Status of CLK frequency (active low).
Selected reference (low = REF2, high = REF1).
DLD (active low).
Holdover active (active low).
LD pin comparator output (active low).
1
0
1
Asynchronous reset.
Synchronous reset.
Do nothing on SYNC.
R path delay, see Table 2 (default: 0x0).
N path delay, see Table 2 (default: 0x0).
Rev. 0 | Page 63 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
01A [7]
Enable STATUS
pin divider
01A
[6]
01A
[5:0]
Description
Enables a divide-by-4 on the STATUS pin. This makes it easier to look at low duty-cycle signals out of the
R and N dividers.
[7] = 0; divide-by-4 disabled on STATUS pin (default).
[7] = 1; divide-by-4 enabled on STATUS pin.
Ref freq monitor Sets the reference (REF1/REF2) frequency monitor’s detection threshold frequency. This does not affect the CLK
threshold
frequency monitor’s detection threshold (see Table 14, REF1, REF2, and CLK frequency status monitor parameter).
[6] = 0; frequency valid if frequency is above 1.02 MHz (default).
[6] = 1; frequency valid if frequency is above 8 kHz.
Selects the signal that is connected to the LD pin.
LD pin
control
Level or
Dynamic
[5] [4] [3]
[2]
[1] [0] Signal
Signal at LD Pin
0
0
0
0
0
0
LVL
Digital lock detect (high = lock; low = unlock, default).
0
0
0
0
0
1
DYN
P-channel, open-drain lock detect (analog lock detect).
0
0
0
0
1
0
DYN
N-channel, open-drain lock detect (analog lock detect).
0
0
0
0
1
1
HIZ
Tristate (high-Z) LD pin.
0
0
0
1
0
0
CUR
Current source lock detect (110 μA when DLD is true).
0
X
X
X
X
X
LVL
Ground (dc); for all other cases of 0XXXXX not specified.
The selections that follow are the same as for REFMON.
1
0
0
0
0
0
LVL
Ground (dc).
1
0
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
1
0
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not applicable in differential mode).
1
0
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in
differential mode).
1
0
0
1
0
0
DYN
Unselected reference to PLL (not available in differential mode).
1
0
0
1
0
1
LVL
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active high.
1
0
0
1
1
0
LVL
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential
mode); active high.
1
0
0
1
1
1
LVL
Status of REF1 frequency (active high).
1
0
1
0
0
0
LVL
Status of REF2 frequency (active high).
1
0
1
0
0
1
LVL
(Status of REF1 frequency) AND (status of REF2 frequency).
1
0
1
0
1
0
LVL
(DLD) AND (status of selected reference) AND (status of CLK).
1
0
1
0
1
1
LVL
Status of CLK frequency (active high).
1
0
1
1
0
0
LVL
Selected reference (low = REF1, high = REF2).
1
0
1
1
0
1
LVL
DLD; active high.
1
0
1
1
1
0
LVL
Holdover active (active high).
1
0
1
1
1
1
LVL
Not applicable, do not use.
1
1
0
0
0
0
LVL
VS (PLL supply).
1
1
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
1
1
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not available in differential mode).
1
1
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in
differential mode).
1
1
0
1
0
0
DYN
Unselected reference to PLL (not available when in differential
mode).
1
1
0
1
0
1
LVL
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active low.
1
1
0
1
1
0
LVL
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential
mode); active low.
1
1
0
1
1
1
LVL
Status of REF1 frequency (active low).
1
1
1
0
0
0
LVL
Status of REF2 frequency (active low).
1
1
1
0
0
1
LVL
(Status of REF1 frequency) AND (status of REF2 frequency).
Rev. 0 | Page 64 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
01B
[7]
Enable CLK
frequency
monitor
01B
[6]
Enable REF2
(REFIN)
frequency
monitor
Enable REF1
(REFIN)
frequency
monitor
01B
[5]
01B
[4:0]
REFMON pin
control
Description
Level or
Dynamic
[5] [4] [3]
[2]
[1] [0] Signal
Signal at LD Pin
1
1
1
0
1
0
LVL
(DLD) AND (Status of selected reference) AND (status of VCO).
1
1
1
0
1
1
LVL
Status of CLK frequency (active low).
1
1
1
1
0
0
LVL
Selected reference (low = REF2, high = REF1).
1
1
1
1
0
1
LVL
DLD; active low.
1
1
1
1
1
0
LVL
Holdover active (active low).
1
1
1
1
1
1
LVL
Not applicable, do not use.
Enables or disables the CLK frequency monitor.
[7] = 0; disable the CLK frequency monitor (default).
[7] = 1; enable the CLK frequency monitor.
Enables or disables the REF2 frequency monitor.
[6] = 0; disable the REF2 (REFIN) frequency monitor (default).
[6] = 1; enable the REF2 (REFIN) frequency monitor.
REF1 (REFIN) frequency monitor enabled; this is for both REF1 (single-ended) and REFIN (differential) inputs
(as selected by differential reference mode).
[5] = 0; disable the REF1 (REFIN) frequency monitor (default).
[5] = 1; enable the REF1 (REFIN) frequency monitor.
Selects the signal that is connected to the REFMON pin.
Level or
Dynamic
[4] [3] [2] [1] [0] Signal
Signal at REFMON Pin
0
0
0
0
0
LVL
Ground, dc (default).
0
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
0
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not applicable in differential mode).
0
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in differential
mode).
0
0
1
0
0
DYN
Unselected reference to PLL (not available in differential mode).
0
0
1
0
1
LVL
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active high.
0
0
1
1
0
LVL
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential mode);
active high.
0
0
1
1
1
LVL
Status REF1 frequency (active high).
0
1
0
0
0
LVL
Status REF2 frequency (active high).
0
1
0
0
1
LVL
(Status REF1 frequency) AND (status REF2 frequency).
0
1
0
1
0
LVL
(DLD) AND (status of selected reference) AND (status of CLK).
0
1
0
1
1
LVL
Status of CLK frequency (active high).
0
1
1
0
0
LVL
Selected reference (low = REF1, high = REF2).
0
1
1
0
1
LVL
DLD; active low.
0
1
1
1
0
LVL
Holdover active (active high).
0
1
1
1
1
LVL
LD pin comparator output (active high).
1
0
0
0
0
LVL
VS (PLL supply).
1
0
0
0
1
DYN
REF1 clock (differential reference when in differential mode).
1
0
0
1
0
DYN
REF2 clock (not available in differential mode).
1
0
0
1
1
DYN
Selected reference to PLL (differential reference when in
differential mode).
1
0
1
0
0
DYN
Unselected reference to PLL (not available when in differential mode).
Rev. 0 | Page 65 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
Description
[4]
1
01C
[7]
01C
[6]
01C
[5]
01C
[4]
01C
[3]
01C
[2]
01C
[1]
01C
[0]
01D
[7]
01D
[6]
[3]
0
[2]
1
[1]
0
Level or
Dynamic
[0] Signal
1
LVL
Signal at REFMON Pin
Status of selected reference (status of differential reference);
active low.
1
0
1
1
0
LVL
Status of unselected reference (not available in differential mode);
active low.
1
0
1
1
1
LVL
Status of REF1 frequency (active low).
1
1
0
0
0
LVL
Status of REF2 frequency (active low).
1
1
0
0
1
LVL
(Status of REF1 frequency) AND (status of REF2 frequency).
1
1
0
1
0
LVL
(DLD) AND (status of selected reference) AND (status of CLK).
1
1
0
1
1
LVL
Status of CLK frequency (active low).
1
1
1
0
0
LVL
Selected reference (low = REF2, high = REF1).
1
1
1
0
1
LVL
DLD; active low.
1
1
1
1
0
LVL
Holdover active (active low).
1
1
1
1
1
LVL
LD pin comparator output (active low).
Disables or enables the switchover deglitch circuit.
Disable
switchover
[7] = 0; enable the switchover deglitch circuit (default).
deglitch
[7] = 1; disable the switchover deglitch circuit.
Select REF2
If Register 0x01C[5] = 0, selects the reference for PLL when in manual; register selected reference control.
[6] = 0; select REF1 (default).
[6] = 1; select REF2.
If Register 0x01C[4] = 0 (manual), sets the method of PLL reference selection.
Use REF_SEL
pin
[5] = 0; use Register 0x01C[6] (default).
[5] = 1; use REF_SEL pin.
Enable
Automatic or manual reference switchover. Single-ended reference mode must be selected by
automatic
Register 0x01C[0] = 0.
reference
[4] = 0; manual reference switchover (default).
switchover
[4] = 1; automatic reference switchover.
Setting this bit also powers on REF1 and REF2, and overrides the settings in Register 0x01C[2:1].
Stay on REF2
Stays on REF2 after switchover.
[3] = 0; return to REF1 automatically when REF1 status is good again (default).
[3] = 1; stay on REF2 after switchover. Do not automatically return to REF1.
Enable REF2
This bit turns the REF2 power on. This bit is overridden when automatic reference switchover is enabled.
[2] = 0; REF2 power off (default).
[2] = 1; REF2 power on.
Enable REF1
This bit turns the REF1 power on. This bit is overridden when automatic reference switchover is enabled.
[1] = 0; REF1 power off (default).
[1] = 1; REF1 power on.
Enable
Selects the PLL reference mode, differential or single-ended. Register 0x01C[2:1] should be cleared when
differential
this bit is set.
reference
[0] = 0; single-ended reference mode (default).
[0] = 1; differential reference mode.
Enables the Status_EEPROM signal at the STATUS pin.
Enable
Status_EEPROM [7] = 0; the STATUS pin is controlled by the 0x017[7:2] selection.
at STATUS pin
[7] = 1; select the Status_EEPROM signal at STATUS pin. This bit overrides 0x017[7:2] (default).
Enables the maintaining amplifier needed by a crystal oscillator at the PLL reference input.
Enable
XTAL OSC
[6] = 0; crystal oscillator maintaining amplifier disabled (default).
[6] = 1; crystal oscillator maintaining amplifier enabled.
Rev. 0 | Page 66 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
01D [5]
Enable clock
doubler
01D
[4]
01D
[3]
01D
[1]
01D
[0]
01E
[1]
01F
[5]
01F
[4]
01F
[3]
01F
[2]
01F
[1]
01F
[0]
Description
Enable PLL reference input clock doubler.
[5] = 0; doubler disabled (default).
[5] = 1; doubler enabled.
Disables the PLL status register readback.
Disable PLL
status register
[4] = 0; PLL status register enabled (default).
[4] = 1; PLL status register disabled. If this bit is set, 0x01F is not automatically updated.
Enable LD pin
Enables the LD pin voltage comparator. This is used with the LD pin current source lock detect mode.
comparator
When the AD9522 is in internal (automatic) holdover mode, this enables the use of the voltage on the
LD pin to determine if the PLL was previously in a locked state (see Figure 34). Otherwise, this can be used
with the REFMON and STATUS pins to monitor the voltage on the LD pin.
[3] = 0; disable LD pin comparator and ignore the LD pin voltage; internal/automatic holdover
controller treats this pin as true (high, default).
[3] = 1; enable LD pin comparator (use LD pin voltage to determine if the PLL was previously locked).
Enable external Enables the external hold control through the SYNC pin. (This disables the internal holdover mode.)
holdover
[1] = 0; automatic holdover mode, holdover controlled by automatic holdover circuit (default).
[1] = 1; external holdover mode, holdover controlled by SYNC pin.
Enables the internally controlled holdover function.
[0] = 0; holdover disabled (default).
[0] = 1; holdover enabled.
Enables zero delay function.
Enable zero
delay
[1] = 0; disables zero delay function (default).
[1] = 1; enables zero delay function.
Holdover active Readback register. Indicates if the part is in the holdover state (see Figure 34). This is not the same as
(read-only)
holdover enabled.
[5] = 0; not in holdover.
[5] = 1; holdover state active.
Readback register. Indicates which PLL reference is selected as the input to the PLL.
REF2 selected
(read-only)
[4] = 0; REF1 selected (or differential reference if in differential mode).
[4] = 1; REF2 selected.
CLK frequency Readback register. Indicates if the external CLK input frequency is greater than the threshold (see Table 14,
> threshold
REF1, REF2, and external CLK frequency status monitor parameter).
(read-only)
[3] = 0; CLK frequency is less than the threshold.
[3] = 1; CLK frequency is greater than the threshold.
REF2 frequency Readback register. Indicates if the frequency of the signal at REF2 is greater than the threshold frequency
> threshold
set by Register 0x01A[6].
(read-only)
[2] = 0; REF2 frequency is less than the threshold frequency.
[2] = 1; REF2 frequency is greater than the threshold frequency.
REF1 frequency Readback register. Indicates if the frequency of the signal at REF1 is greater than the threshold frequency
> threshold
set by Register 0x01A[6].
(read-only)
[1] = 0; REF1 frequency is less than the threshold frequency.
[1] = 1; REF1 frequency is greater than the threshold frequency.
Readback register. Digital lock detect.
Digital lock
detect
[0] = 0; PLL is not locked.
(read-only)
[0] = 1; PLL is locked.
Enable
holdover
Rev. 0 | Page 67 of 76
AD9522-5
Table 48. Output Driver Control
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
0F0 [7]
OUT0 format
0F0
[6:5]
OUT0 CMOS
configuration
0F0
[4:3]
OUT0 polarity
0F0
[2:1]
OUT0 LVDS
differential
voltage
0F0
[0]
OUT0 LVDS
power-down
0F1
0F2
0F3
0F4
0F5
0F6
0F7
0F8
0F9
0FA
0FB
0FC
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7:0]
[7]
OUT1 control
OUT2 control
OUT3 control
OUT4 control
OUT5 control
OUT6 control
OUT7 control
OUT8 control
OUT9 control
OUT10 control
OUT11 control
CSDLD En OUT7
0FC
0FC
0FC
0FC
[6]
[5]
[4]
[3]
CSDLD En OUT6
CSDLD En OUT5
CSDLD En OUT4
CSDLD En OUT3
Description
Selects the output type for OUT0.
[7] = 0; LVDS (default).
[7] = 1; CMOS.
Sets the CMOS output configuration for OUT0 when 0x0F0[7] = 1.
[6:5]
OUT0A
OUT0B
00
Tristate
Tristate
01
On
Tristate
10
Tristate
On
11 (default)
On
On
Sets the output polarity for OUT0.
[7]
[4]
[3]
Output Type
OUT0A
OUT0B
0 (default)
X
0
LVDS
Noninverting
Inverting
0
X
1
LVDS
Inverting
Noninverting
1
0 (default)
0 (default)
CMOS
Noninverting
Noninverting
1
0
1
CMOS
Inverting
Inverting
1
1
0
CMOS
Noninverting
Inverting
1
1
1
CMOS
Inverting
Noninverting
Sets the LVDS output differential voltage (VOD).
[2]
[1]
IOD (mA)
0
0
1.75 (VOD = 175 mV for 100 Ω termination across differential pair)
0 (default)
1 (default)
3.5 (VOD = 350 mV for 100 Ω termination across differential pair)
1
0
5.25 (VOD = 525 mV for 100 Ω termination across differential pair)
1
1
7.0 (VOD = 700 mV for 100 Ω termination across differential pair)
LVDS power-down.
[0] = 0; normal operation (default).
[0] = 1; power-down. Output driver is in a high impedance state.
This register controls OUT1, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT2, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT3, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT4, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT5, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT6, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT7, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT8, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT9, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT10, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
This register controls OUT11, and the bit assignments for this register are identical to Register 0x0F0.
OUT7 is enabled only if CSDLD is high.
[7]
CSDLD Signal OUT7 Enable Status
0
0
Not affected by CSDLD signal (default).
1
0
Asynchronous power-down.
1
1
Asynchronously enable OUT7 if not powered down by other settings.
To use this feature, the user must use current source digital lock detect,
and set the enable LD pin comparator bit (0x01D[3]).
OUT6 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT5 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT4 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT3 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
Rev. 0 | Page 68 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex)
0FC
0FC
0FC
0FD
Bit(s)
[2]
[1]
[0]
[3]
0FD
[2]
0FD
0FD
[1]
[0]
Name
CSDLD En OUT2
CSDLD En OUT1
CSDLD En OUT0
CSDLD En
OUT11
CSDLD En
OUT10
CSDLD En OUT9
CSDLD En OUT8
Description
OUT2 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT1 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT0 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT11 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT10 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT9 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
OUT8 is enabled only if CSDLD is high. Setting is identical to Register 0x0FC[7].
Table 49. LVDS Channel Dividers
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
190
[7:4] Divider 0 low cycles
190
[3:0]
Divider 0 high cycles
191
[7]
Divider 0 bypass
191
[6]
Divider 0 ignore SYNC
191
[5]
Divider 0 force high
191
[4]
Divider 0 start high
191
192
[3:0]
[2]
Divider 0 phase offset
Channel 0 power-down
192
[0]
Disable Divider 0 DCC
193
[7:4]
Divider 1 low cycles
193
[3:0]
Divider 1 high cycles
194
[7]
Divider 1 bypass
194
[6]
Divider 1 ignore SYNC
194
[5]
Divider 1 force high
Description
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
low. A value of 0x7 means the divider is low for eight input clock cycles (default: 0x7).
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
high. A value of 0x7 means the divider is high for eight input clock cycles (default: 0x7).
Bypasses and powers down the divider; routes input to divider output.
[7] = 0; use divider (default).
[7] = 1; bypass divider.
Ignore SYNC.
[6] = 0; obey chip-level SYNC signal (default).
[6] = 1; ignore chip-level SYNC signal.
Forces divider output to high. This requires that ignore SYNC also be set.
[5] = 0; divider output forced to low (default).
[5] = 1; divider output forced to high.
Selects clock output to start high or start low.
[4] = 0; start low (default).
[4] = 1; start high.
Phase offset (default: 0x0).
Channel 0 powers down.
[2] = 0; normal operation (default).
[2] = 1; powered down. (OUT0/OUT0, OUT1/OUT1, and OUT2/OUT2 are put into the high
impedance power-down mode by setting this bit.)
Duty-cycle correction function.
[0] = 0; enable duty-cycle correction (default).
[0] = 1; disable duty-cycle correction.
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
low. A value of 0x3 means the divider is low for four input clock cycles (default: 0x3).
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
high. A value of 0x3 means the divider is high for four input clock cycles (default: 0x3).
Bypasses and powers down the divider; routes input to divider output.
[7] = 0; use divider (default).
[7] = 1; bypass divider.
Ignore SYNC.
[6] = 0; obey chip-level SYNC signal (default).
[6] = 1; ignore chip-level SYNC signal.
Forces divider output to high. This requires that ignore SYNC also be set.
[5] = 0; divider output forced to low (default).
[5] = 1; divider output forced to high.
Rev. 0 | Page 69 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
194
[4]
Divider 1 start high
194
195
[3:0]
[2]
Divider 1 phase offset
Channel 1 power-down
195
[0]
Disable Divider 1 DCC
196
[7:4]
Divider 2 low cycles
196
[3:0]
Divider 2 high cycles
197
[7]
Divider 2 bypass
197
[6]
Divider 2 ignore SYNC
197
[5]
Divider 2 force high
197
[4]
Divider 2 start high
197
198
[3:0]
[2]
Divider 2 phase offset
Channel 2 power-down
198
[0]
Disable Divider 2 DCC
199
[7:4]
Divider 3 low cycles
199
[3:0]
Divider 3 high cycles
19A
[7]
Divider 3 bypass
19A
[6]
Divider 3 ignore SYNC
19A
[5]
Divider 3 force high
19A
[4]
Divider 3 start high
19A
[3:0]
Divider 3 phase offset
Description
Selects clock output to start high or start low.
[4] = 0; start low (default).
[4] = 1; start high.
Phase offset (default: 0x0).
Channel 1 powers down.
[2] = 0; normal operation (default).
[2] = 1; powered down. (OUT3/OUT3, OUT4/OUT4, and OUT5/OUT5 are put into the high
impedance power-down mode by setting this bit.)
Duty-cycle correction function.
[0] = 0; enable duty-cycle correction (default).
[0] = 1; disable duty-cycle correction.
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
low. A value of 0x1 means the divider is low for two input clock cycles (default: 0x1).
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
high. A value of 0x1 means the divider is high for two input clock cycles (default: 0x1).
Bypasses and powers down the divider; routes input to divider output.
[7] = 0; use divider (default).
[7] = 1; bypass divider.
Ignore SYNC.
[6] = 0; obey chip-level SYNC signal (default).
[6] = 1; ignore chip-level SYNC signal.
Forces divider output to high. This requires that ignore SYNC also be set.
[5] = 0; divider output forced to low (default).
[5] = 1; divider output forced to high.
Selects clock output to start high or start low.
[4] = 0; start low (default).
[4] = 1; start high.
Phase offset (default: 0x0).
Channel 2 powers down.
[2] = 0; normal operation (default).
[2] = 1; powered down. (OUT6/OUT6, OUT7/OUT7, and OUT8/OUT8 are put into the high
impedance power-down mode by setting this bit.)
Duty-cycle correction function.
[0] = 0; enable duty-cycle correction (default).
[0] = 1; disable duty-cycle correction.
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
low. A value of 0x0 means the divider is low for one input clock cycle (default: 0x0).
Number of clock cycles (minus 1) of the divider input during which the divider output stays
high. A value of 0x0 means the divider is high for one input clock cycle (default: 0x0).
Bypasses and powers down the divider; routes input to divider output.
[7] = 0; use divider (default).
[7] = 1; bypass divider.
Ignore SYNC.
[6] = 0; obey chip-level SYNC signal (default).
[6] = 1; ignore chip-level SYNC signal.
Forces divider output to high. This requires that ignore SYNC also be set.
[5] = 0; divider output forced to low (default).
[5] = 1; divider output forced to high.
Selects clock output to start high or start low.
[4] = 0; start low (default).
[4] = 1; start high.
Phase offset (default: 0x0).
Rev. 0 | Page 70 of 76
AD9522-5
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
19B
[2]
Channel 3 power-down
19B
[0]
Disable Divider 3 DCC
Description
Channel 3 powers down.
[2] = 0; normal operation (default).
[2] = 1; powered down. (OUT9/OUT9, OUT10/OUT10, and OUT11/OUT11 are put into the high
impedance power-down mode by setting this bit.)
Duty-cycle correction function.
[0] = 0; enable duty-cycle correction (default).
[0] = 1; disable duty-cycle correction.
Table 50. VCO Divider and CLK Input
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
1E0 [2:0] VCO divider
1E1
[4]
1E1
[0]
Description
[2]
[1]
[0]
Divide
0
0
0
2 (default)
0
0
1
3
0
1
0
4
0
1
1
5
1
0
0
6
1
0
1
Output static
1
1
0
1 (bypass)
1
1
1
Output static
Power-down clock input section Powers down the clock input section (including CLK buffer, VCO divider, and CLK tree).
[4] = 0; normal operation (default).
[4] = 1; power down.
Bypass VCO divider
Bypasses or uses the VCO divider.
[0] = 0; use VCO divider (default).
[0] = 1; bypass VCO divider.
Table 51. System
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
230 [3]
Disable power-on SYNC
230
[2]
Power-down SYNC
230
[1]
Power-down distribution reference
230
[0]
Soft SYNC
Description
Power-on SYNC mode. Used to disable the antiruntpulse circuitry.
[3] = 0; enable the antiruntpulse circuitry (default).
[3] = 1; disable the antiruntpulse circuitry.
Powers down the SYNC function.
[2] = 0; normal operation of the SYNC function (default).
[2] = 1; power-down the SYNC circuitry.
Powers down the reference for the distribution section.
[1] = 0; normal operation of the reference for the distribution section (default).
[1] = 1; powers down the reference for the distribution section.
The soft SYNC bit works the same as the SYNC pin, except that the polarity of the bit
is reversed; that is, a high level forces the selected channels into a predetermined
static state, and a 1-to-0 transition triggers a SYNC.
[0] = 0; same as SYNC high.
[0] = 1; same as SYNC low.
Rev. 0 | Page 71 of 76
AD9522-5
Table 52. Update All Registers
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
232 [0]
IO_UPDATE
Description
This bit must be set to 1 to transfer the contents of the buffer registers into the active registers. This happens
on the next SCLK rising edge. This bit is self-clearing; that is, it does not need to be set back to 0.
[0] = 1 (self-clearing); update all active registers to the contents of the buffer registers.
Table 53. EEPROM Buffer Segment
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
A00 to [7:0] EEPROM Buffer
A16
Segment Register 1
to EEPROM Buffer
Segment Register 23
Description
The EEPROM buffer segment section stores the starting address and number of bytes that are to be
stored and read back to and from the EEPROM. Because the AD9522 register space is noncontiguous,
the EEPROM controller needs to know the starting address and number of bytes in the AD9522 register
space to store and retrieve from the EEPROM. In addition, there are special instructions for the EEPROM
controller, operational codes (that is, IO_UPDATE and end-of-data) that are also stored in the EEPROM
buffer segment. The on-chip default setting of the EEPROM buffer segment registers is designed such
that all registers are transferred to/from the EEPROM, and an IO_UPDATE is issued after transfer. See the
Programming the EEPROM Buffer Segment section for more information.
Table 54. EEPROM Control
Reg.
Addr
(Hex) Bit(s) Name
Description
B00 [0]
STATUS_EEPROM This read-only register indicates the status of the data transferred between the EEPROM and the buffer
(read-only)
register bank during the writing and reading of the EEPROM. This signal is also available at the STATUS pin
when 0x01D[7] is set.
[0] = 0; data transfer is done.
[0] = 1; data transfer is not done.
B01 [0]
This read-only register indicates an error during the data transferred between the EEPROM and the buffer.
EEPROM
data error
[0] = 0; no error. Data is correct.
(read-only)
[0] = 1; incorrect data detected.
B02 [1]
Soft_EEPROM
When the EEPROM pin is tied low, setting Soft_EEPROM resets the AD9522 using the settings saved
in EEPROM.
[1] = 1; soft reset with EEPROM settings (self-clearing). This bit self-clears on the next serial port clock
cycle after the completion of writing to this register.
B02 [0]
Enable EEPROM Enables the user to write to the EEPROM.
write
[0] = 0; EEPROM write protection is enabled. User cannot write to EEPROM (default).
[0] = 1; EEPROM write protection is disabled. User can write to EEPROM.
B03 [0]
REG2EEPROM
Transfers data from the buffer register to the EEPROM (self-clearing).
[0] = 1; setting this bit initiates the data transfer from the buffer register to the EEPROM (writing process);
it is reset by the I²C master after the data transfer is done.
Rev. 0 | Page 72 of 76
AD9522-5
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
110
FREQUENCY PLANNING USING THE AD9522
The AD9522 is a highly flexible PLL. When choosing the PLL
settings and version of the AD9522, the following guidelines
should be kept in mind.
ADIsimCLK is a powerful PLL modeling tool that can be
downloaded from www.analog.com. ADIsimCLK is a very accurate
tool for determining the optimal loop filter for a given application.
USING THE AD9522 OUTPUTS FOR ADC CLOCK
APPLICATIONS
Any high speed ADC is extremely sensitive to the quality of the
sampling clock of the AD9522. An ADC can be thought of as a
sampling mixer, and any noise, distortion, or time jitter on the
clock is combined with the desired signal at the analog-todigital output. Clock integrity requirements scale with the analog
input frequency and resolution, with higher analog input
frequency applications at ≥14-bit resolution being the most
stringent. The theoretical SNR of an ADC is limited by the ADC
resolution and the jitter on the sampling clock. Considering an
ideal ADC of infinite resolution where the step size and
quantization error can be ignored, the available SNR can be
expressed approximately by
⎛ 1
SNR(dB) = 20log ⎜
⎜ 2πf t
A J
⎝
⎞
⎟
⎟
⎠
where:
fA is the highest analog frequency being digitized.
tJ is the rms jitter on the sampling clock.
Figure 57 shows the required sampling clock jitter as a function
of the analog frequency and effective number of bits (ENOB).
tJ =
100
fs
tJ =
14
200
fs
tJ =
400
fs
tJ =
1ps
tJ =
2ps
70
60
12
10
50
tJ =
10p
40
ENOB
80
8
s
6
30
10
100
1k
07240-044
Choosing a nominal charge pump current in the middle of the
allowable range as a starting point allows the designer to increase or
decrease the charge pump current, and thus allows the designer
to fine-tune the PLL loop bandwidth in either direction.
18
16
90
SNR (dB)
The AD9522 has four frequency dividers: the reference (or R)
divider, the feedback (or N) divider, the VCO divider, and the
channel divider. When trying to achieve a particularly difficult
frequency divide ratio requiring a large amount of frequency
division, some of the frequency division can be done by either
the VCO divider or the channel divider, thus allowing a higher
phase detector frequency and more flexibility in choosing the
loop bandwidth.
1
SNR = 20log 2πf t
A J
100
fA (MHz)
Figure 57. SNR and ENOB vs. Analog Input Frequency
See the AN-756 Application Note and the AN-501 Application
Note at www.analog.com.
Many high performance ADCs feature differential clock inputs
to simplify the task of providing the required low jitter clock on
a noisy PCB. Distributing a single-ended clock on a noisy PCB
can result in coupled noise on the sampling clock. Differential
distribution has inherent common-mode rejection that can
provide superior clock performance in a noisy environment.
The differential LVDS outputs of the AD9522 enable clock
solutions that maximize converter SNR performance.
The input requirements of the ADC (differential or singleended, logic level termination) should be considered when
selecting the best clocking/converter solution. In some cases,
the LVPECL outputs of the AD9522 may be desirable for
clocking a converter instead of the LVDS outputs of the AD9522.
LVDS CLOCK DISTRIBUTION
The AD9522 provides clock outputs that are selectable as either
CMOS or LVDS level outputs. LVDS is a differential output
option that uses a current mode output stage. The nominal
current is 3.5 mA, which yields 350 mV output swing across a
100 Ω resistor. An output current of 7 mA is also available in
cases where a larger output swing is required. The LVDS output
meets or exceeds all ANSI/TIA/EIA-644 specifications.
A recommended termination circuit for the LVDS outputs is
shown in Figure 58. If ac coupling is necessary, place decoupling
capacitors either before or after the 100 Ω termination resistor.
VS
100Ω
DIFFERENTIAL (COUPLES) 100Ω
LVDS
07240-047
LVDS
VS
Figure 58. LVDS Output Termination
See the AN-586 Application Note at www.analog.com for more
information on LVDS.
Rev. 0 | Page 73 of 76
AD9522-5
CMOS CLOCK DISTRIBUTION
The output drivers of the AD9522 can be configured as CMOS
drivers. When selected as a CMOS driver, each output becomes
a pair of CMOS outputs, each of which can be individually
turned on or off and set as inverting or noninverting. These
outputs are 3.3 V CMOS compatible.
When single-ended CMOS clocking is used, some of the
following guidelines apply.
VS
The value of the resistor is dependent on the board design and
timing requirements (typically 10 Ω to 100 Ω is used). CMOS
outputs are also limited in terms of the capacitive load or trace
length that they can drive. Typically, trace lengths less than
3 inches are recommended to preserve signal rise/fall times and
signal integrity.
CMOS
50Ω
100Ω
CMOS
Figure 60. CMOS Output with Far-End Termination
Because of the limitations of single-ended CMOS clocking,
consider using differential outputs when driving high speed
signals over long traces. The AD9522 offers LVDS outputs that
are better suited for driving long traces where the inherent noise
immunity of differential signaling provides superior performance
for clocking converters.
60.4Ω
(1.0 INCH)
MICROSTRIP
10Ω
100Ω
07240-076
CMOS
CMOS
07240-077
Point-to-point connections should be designed such that each
driver has only one receiver, if possible. Connecting outputs in
this manner allows for simple termination schemes and minimizes
ringing due to possible mismatched impedances on the output
trace. Series termination at the source is generally required to
provide transmission line matching and/or to reduce current
transients at the driver.
10Ω
Termination at the far end of the PCB trace is a second option.
The CMOS outputs of the AD9522 do not supply enough current
to provide a full voltage swing with a low impedance resistive, farend termination, as shown in Figure 60. The far-end termination
network should match the PCB trace impedance and provide the
desired switching point. The reduced signal swing may still meet
receiver input requirements in some applications. This can be
useful when driving long trace lengths on less critical nets.
Figure 59. Series Termination of CMOS Output
Rev. 0 | Page 74 of 76
AD9522-5
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
0.60 MAX
9.00
BSC SQ
0.60
MAX
48
64
49
PIN 1
INDICATOR
1
PIN 1
INDICATOR
0.50
BSC
0.50
0.40
0.30
1.00
0.85
0.80
SEATING
PLANE
33
32
16
17
0.05 MAX
0.02 NOM
0.30
0.23
0.18
0.25 MIN
7.50
REF
0.80 MAX
0.65 TYP
12° MAX
6.35
6.20 SQ
6.05
EXPOSED PAD
(BOTTOM VIEW)
0.20 REF
FOR PROPER CONNECTION OF
THE EXPOSED PAD, REFER TO
THE PIN CONFIGURATION AND
FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
SECTION OF THIS DATA SHEET.
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VMMD-4
091707-C
8.75
BSC SQ
TOP VIEW
Figure 61. 64-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ]
9 mm × 9 mm Body, Very Thin Quad
CP-64-4
Dimensions shown in millimeters
ORDERING GUIDE
Model
AD9522-5BCPZ 1
AD9522-5BCPZ-REEL71
AD9522-5/PCBZ1
1
Temperature Range
−40°C to +85°C
−40°C to +85°C
Package Description
64-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP_VQ)
64-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP_VQ)
Evaluation Board
Z = RoHS Compliant Part.
Rev. 0 | Page 75 of 76
Package Option
CP-64-4
CP-64-4
AD9522-5
NOTES
©2008 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
D07240-0-12/08(0)
Rev. 0 | Page 76 of 76