KAD5510P-50 ® Data Sheet January 30, 2009 FN6811.1 10-Bit, 500MSPS A/D Converter Features The KAD5510P-50 is a low-power, high-performance, 10-bit, 500MSPS analog-to-digital converter designed with Intersil’s proprietary FemtoCharge™ technology on a standard CMOS process. The KAD5510P-50 is part of a pin-compatible portfolio of 10, 12 and 14-bit A/Ds with sample rates ranging from 125MSPS to 500MSPS. • Programmable Gain, Offset and Skew Control The device utilizes two time-interleaved 10-bit, 250MSPS A/D cores to achieve the ultimate sample rate of 500MSPS. A single 500MHz conversion clock is presented to the converter, and all interleave clocking is managed internally. • Clock Phase Selection A serial peripheral interface (SPI) port allows for extensive configurability, as well as fine control of matching characteristics (gain, offset, skew) between the two converter cores. These adjustments allow the user to minimize spurs associated with the interleaving process. • Programmable Built-in Test Patterns Digital output data is presented in selectable LVDS or CMOS formats. The KAD5510P-50 is available in a 72-contact QFN package with an exposed paddle. Performance is specified over the full industrial temperature range (-40°C to +85°C). Pin-Compatible Family • 60fs Clock Jitter • Over-Range Indicator • Selectable Clock Divider: ÷1 or ÷2 • Nap and Sleep Modes • Two’s Complement, Gray Code or Binary Data Format • DDR LVDS-Compatible or LVCMOS Outputs • Single-Supply 1.8V Operation • Pb-Free (RoHS Compliant) Applications • Radar and Satellite Antenna Array Processing • Broadband Communications • High-Performance Data Acquisition Key Specifications RESOLUTION SPEED (MSPS) KAD5514P-25 14 250 KAD5514P-21 14 210 KAD5514P-17 14 170 KAD5514P-12 14 125 KAD5512P-50 12 500 KAD5512P-25, KAD5512HP-25 12 250 KAD5512P-21, KAD5512HP-21 12 210 KAD5512P-17, KAD5512HP-17 12 170 KAD5512P-12, KAD5512HP-12 12 125 KAD5510P-50 10 500 • SNR = 60.7dBFS for fIN = 105MHz (-1dBFS) • SFDR = 83.2dBc for fIN = 105MHz (-1dBFS) CLKP OVDD CLKDIV AVDD • Power Consumption = 414mW CLKOUTP CLOCK GENERATION & INTERLEAVE CONTROL CLKN SHA CLKOUTN 10-BIT 250 MSPS ADC D[9:0]P D[9:0]N VREF VINP ORP DIGITAL ERROR CORRECTION VINN ORN OUTFMT OUTMODE VCM SHA 10-BIT 250 MSPS ADC VREF 1 + – OGND CSB SCLK SDIO SDO SPI CONTROL RESETN NAPSLP 1.25V AGND MODEL • 1.3GHz Analog Input Bandwidth CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. 1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc. FemtoCharge is a trademark of Kenet Inc. Copyright Intersil Americas Inc. 2008, 2009. All Rights Reserved All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. KAD5510P-50 Ordering Information PART NUMBER (Note 1) PART MARKING KAD5510P-50Q72 KAD5510P-50 Q72EP-I SPEED (MSPS) TEMP. RANGE (°C) 500 -40 to +85 PACKAGE (Pb-Free) 72 Ld QFN PKG. DWG. # L72.10X10D NOTE: 1. These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged products employ special Pb-free material sets; molding compounds/die attach materials and NiPdAu plate - e4 termination finish, which is RoHS compliant and compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations. Intersil Pb-free products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020. 2 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Table of Contents Serial Peripheral Interface ........................................... 19 Absolute Maximum Ratings ......................................... 4 Thermal Information...................................................... 4 Electrical Specifications ............................................... 4 Digital Specifications .................................................... 6 Timing Diagrams ........................................................... 6 Switching Specifications .............................................. 7 Pinout/Package Information......................................... 8 Pin Descriptions.......................................................... 8 Pinout ......................................................................... 9 Typical Performance Curves ........................................ 10 Theory of Operation ...................................................... 13 Functional Description ................................................ Power-On Calibration ................................................. User Initiated Reset .................................................... Analog Input ............................................................... Clock Input ................................................................. Jitter............................................................................ Voltage Reference...................................................... Digital Outputs ............................................................ Over-Range Indicator ................................................. Power Dissipation....................................................... Nap/Sleep................................................................... Data Format ............................................................... 3 13 13 14 14 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 17 SPI Physical Interface................................................ SPI Configuration....................................................... Device Information ..................................................... Indexed Device Configuration/Control ....................... Global Device Configuration/Control.......................... Device Test ................................................................ SPI Memory Map ....................................................... 19 19 20 20 21 22 23 Equivalent Circuits ....................................................... 24 Layout Considerations................................................. 25 Split Ground and Power Planes................................. Clock Input Considerations ........................................ Exposed Paddle......................................................... Bypass and Filtering .................................................. LVDS Outputs ............................................................ LVCMOS Outputs ...................................................... Unused Inputs............................................................ Definitions .................................................................. 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 26 Revision History ........................................................... 26 Package Outline Drawing............................................. 27 L72.10x10D .................................................................... 27 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Absolute Maximum Ratings Thermal Information AVDD to AVSS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to 2.1V OVDD to OVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to 2.1V AVSS to OVSS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 0.3V Analog Inputs to AVSS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to AVDD + 0.3V Clock Inputs to AVSS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to AVDD + 0.3V Logic Input to AVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to OVDD + 0.3V Logic Inputs to OVSS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.4V to OVDD + 0.3V Thermal Resistance (Typical, Note 2) θJA (°C/W) 72 Ld QFN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Operating Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-40°C to +85°C Storage Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-65°C to +150°C Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +150°C CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact product reliability and result in failures not covered by warranty. NOTE: 2. θJA is measured in free air with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board with “direct attach” features. See Tech Brief TB379. Electrical Specifications All specifications apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = 1.8V, OVDD = 1.8V, TA = -40°C to +85°C (typical specifications at +25°C), AIN = -1dBFS, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. KAD5510P-50 PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS 1.40 1.47 1.54 VP-P DC SPECIFICATIONS Analog Input Full-Scale Analog Input Range VFS Differential Input Resistance RIN Differential 500 Ω Input Capacitance CIN Differential 1.9 pF Full Scale Range Temp. Drift AVTC Full Temp 90 ppm/°C Input Offset Voltage VOS Gain Error EG Common-Mode Output Voltage -10 ±2 10 ±2 435 VCM 535 mV % 635 mV Clock Inputs Inputs Common Mode Voltage .9 V CLKP,CLKN Input Swing 1.8 V Power Requirements 1.8V Analog Supply Voltage AVDD 1.7 1.8V Digital Supply Voltage OVDD 1.7 1.8V Analog Supply Current IAVDD 1.8V Digital Supply Current (Note 3) I OVDD Power Supply Rejection Ratio PSRR 1.8 1.9 V 1.8 1.9 V 171 178 mA 3mA LVDS 58 65 mA 30MHz, 200mVP-P -36 3mA LVDS 414 438 mW dB Power Dissipation Normal Mode PD Nap Mode PD 148 163 mW Sleep Mode PD 15 18 mW AC SPECIFICATIONS Differential Nonlinearity DNL -0.5 ±0.1 0.5 LSB Integral Nonlinearity INL -0.75 ±0.2 0.75 LSB 80 MSPS Minimum Conversion Rate (Note 5) fS MIN Maximum Conversion Rate fS MAX 4 500 MSPS FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Electrical Specifications All specifications apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = 1.8V, OVDD = 1.8V, TA = -40°C to +85°C (typical specifications at +25°C), AIN = -1dBFS, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) KAD5510P-50 PARAMETER SYMBOL Signal-to-Noise Ratio SNR CONDITIONS fIN = 10MHz SINAD ENOB SFDR dBFS fIN = 190MHz 60.6 dBFS fIN = 364MHz 60.5 dBFS fIN = 695MHz 59.9 dBFS fIN = 995MHz 59.0 dBFS IMD 59.5 fIN = 10MHz 60.7 dBFS 60.6 dBFS fIN = 190MHz 60.5 dBFS fIN = 364MHz 60.4 dBFS fIN = 695MHz 57.5 dBFS fIN = 995MHz 49.3 dBFS fIN = 10MHz 9.8 Bits 9.8 Bits fIN = 190MHz 9.8 Bits fIN = 364MHz 9.7 Bits fIN = 695MHz 9.3 Bits fIN = 995MHz 7.9 Bits fIN = 10MHz 83.2 dBc fIN = 105MHz 83.2 dBc 80.6 dBc fIN = 364MHz 75.7 dBc fIN = 695MHz 61.0 dBc fIN = 995MHz 49.1 dBc fIN = 70MHz -91.0 dBc fIN = 170MHz -90.3 dBc fIN = 190MHz Intermodulation Distortion UNITS 60.7 fIN = 105MHz Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (Note 4) MAX dBFS fIN = 105MHz Effective Number of Bits (Note 4) TYP 60.7 fIN = 105MHz Signal-to-Noise and Distortion (Note 4) MIN 59.3 9.6 70 Word Error Rate WER 10-12 Full Power Bandwidth FPBW 1.3 GHz NOTES: 3. Digital Supply Current is dependent upon the capacitive loading of the digital outputs. IOVDD specifications apply for 10pF load on each digital output. 4. SFDR, SINAD and ENOB specifications apply after gain error and timing skew between ADC cores have been minimized through external calibration. 5. The DLL Range setting must be changed for low speed operation. See Table 15 on page 22 for more detail. 5 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Digital Specifications PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS 0 1 10 µA -25 -12 -5 µA INPUTS Input Current High (SDIO,RESETN) IIH VIN = 1.8V Input Current Low (SDIO,RESETN) IIL VIN = 0V Input Voltage High (SDIO, RESETN) VIH Input Voltage Low (SDIO, RESETN) VIL Input Current High (OUTMODE, NAPSLP, CLKDIV, OUTFMT) (Note 6 IIH 15 Input Current Low (OUTMODE, NAPSLP, CLKDIV, OUTFMT) IIL -40 Input Capacitance 1.17 V .63 V 25 40 µA 25 -15 µA CDI 3 pF VT 620 mVP-P LVDS OUTPUTS Differential Output Voltage Output Offset Voltage VOS 950 965 980 mV Output Rise Time tR 500 ps Output Fall Time tF 500 ps CMOS OUTPUTS Voltage Output High VOH IOH = -500µA Voltage Output Low VOL IOL = 1mA OVDD - 0.3 OVDD - 0.1 0.1 V 0.3 V Output Rise Time tR 1.8 ns Output Fall Time tF 1.4 ns Timing Diagrams SAMPLE N SAMPLE N INP INP INN INN tA tA CLKN CLKP CLKN CLKP LATENCY = L CYCLES tCPD CLKOUTN CLKOUTP CLKOUTN CLKOUTP tDC D[9:0]P D[9:0]N LATENCY = L CYCLES tCPD tDC tPD DATA N-L DATA N-L+1 DATA N-L+2 FIGURE 1. LVDS TIMING DIAGRAM 6 DATA N D[9:0]P D[9:0]N tPD DATA N-L DATA N-L+1 DATA N-L+2 DATA N FIGURE 2. CMOS TIMING DIAGRAM FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Switching Specifications PARAMETER CONDITION SYMBOL MIN TYP MAX UNITS ADC OUTPUT Aperture Delay tA 375 ps RMS Aperture Jitter jA 60 fs Output Clock to Data Propagation Delay, LVDS Mode (Note 7) Rising Edge tDC -260 -50 120 ps Falling Edge tDC -160 10 230 ps Output Clock to Data Propagation Delay, CMOS Mode (Note 7) Rising Edge tDC -220 -10 200 ps Falling Edge tDC -310 -90 110 ps Latency (Pipeline Delay) Overvoltage Recovery L 15 cycles tOVR 1 cycles SPI INTERFACE (Notes 8, 9) SCLK Period Write Operation t CLK 64 ns Read Operation tCLK 264 ns SCLK Duty Cycle (tHI/tCLK or tLO/tCLK) Read or Write SCLK↑ to CSB↓ Setup Time Read or Write tS -4 ns SCLK↑ to CSB↑ Hold Time Read or Write tH -12 ns SCLK↑ to Data Setup Time Read or Write tDS -4 ns SCLK↑ to Data Hold Time Read or Write tDH -12 ns 25 50 75 % NOTES: 6. The Tri-Level Inputs internal switching thresholds are approximately .43V and 1.34V. It is advised to float the inputs, tie to ground or AVDD depending on desired function. 7. The input clock to output clock delay is a function of sample rate, using the output clock to latch the data simplifies data capture for most applications. Contact factory for more info if needed. 8. SPI Interface timing is directly proportional to the ADC sample period (tS). Values above reflect multiples of a 4ns sample period, and must be scaled proportionally for lower sample rates. 9. The SPI may operate asynchronously with respect to the ADC sample clock. 7 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Pinout/Package Information Pin Descriptions PIN NUMBER LVDS [LVCMOS] NAME LVDS [LVCMOS] FUNCTION 1, 6, 12, 19, 24, 71 AVDD 1.8V Analog Supply 2-5, 13, 14, 17, 18, 28-35 DNC Do Not Connect 7, 8, 11, 72 AVSS Analog Ground 9, 10 VINN, VINP 15 VCM 16 CLKDIV 20, 21 CLKP, CLKN Clock Input True, Complement 22 OUTMODE Output Mode (LVDS, LVCMOS) 23 NAPSLP Power Control (Nap, Sleep modes) 25 RESETN Power On Reset (Active Low, See page 14) 26, 45, 55, 65 OVSS Output Ground 27, 36, 56 OVDD 1.8V Output Supply 37, 38 D0N, D0P [NC, D0] LVDS Bit 0 (LSB) Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 0] 39, 40 D1N, D1P [NC, D1] LVDS Bit 1 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 1] 41, 42 D2N, D2P [NC, D2] LVDS Bit 2 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 2] 43, 44 D3N, D3P [NC, D3] LVDS Bit 3 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 3] 46 RLVDS LVDS Bias Resistor (connect to OVSS with a 10kΩ, 1% resistor) 47, 48 CLKOUTN, CLKOUTP [NC, CLKOUT] LVDS Clock Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS CLKOUT] 49, 50 D4N, D4P [NC, D4] LVDS Bit 4 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 4] 51, 52 D5N, D5P [NC, D5] LVDS Bit 5 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 5] 53, 54 D6N, D6P [NC, D6] LVDS Bit 6 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 6] 57, 58 D7N, D7P [NC, D7] LVDS Bit 7 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 7] 59, 60 D8N, D8P [NC, D8] LVDS Bit 8 Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 8] 61, 62 D9N, D9P [NC, D9] LVDS Bit 9 (MSB) Output Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Bit 9] 63, 64 ORN, ORP [NC, OR] LVDS Over Range Complement, True [NC, LVCMOS Over Range] 66 SDO SPI Serial Data Output (4.7kΩ pull-up to OVDD is required) 67 CSB SPI Chip Select (active low) 68 SCLK SPI Clock 69 SDIO SPI Serial Data Input/Output 70 OUTFMT Exposed Paddle AVSS Analog Input Negative, Positive Common Mode Output Clock Divider Control Output Data Format (Two’s Comp., Gray Code, Offset Binary) Analog Ground NOTE: LVCMOS Output Mode Functionality is shown in brackets (NC = No Connection) 8 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Pinout AVSS AVDD OUTFMT SDIO SCLK CSB SDO OVSS ORP ORN D9P D9N D8P D8N D7P D7N OVDD OVSS KAD5510P-50 (72 LD QFN) TOP VIEW 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 AVSS 7 48 CLKOUTP AVSS 8 47 CLKOUTN VINN 9 46 RLVDS VINP 10 45 OVSS AVSS 11 44 D3P AVDD 12 43 D3N DNC 13 42 D2P DNC 14 41 D2N VCM 15 40 D1P CLKDIV 16 39 D1N DNC 17 38 D0P DNC 18 37 D0N 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 OVDD 49 D4N DNC 6 DNC AVDD DNC 50 D4P DNC 5 DNC DNC DNC 51 D5N DNC 4 DNC DNC OVDD 52 D5P OVSS 3 RESETN DNC AVDD 53 D6N NAPSLP 2 OUTMODE DNC CLKN 54 D6P CLKP 1 AVDD AVDD FIGURE 3. PIN CONFIGURATION 9 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -1dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. 90 HD2 & HD3 MAGNITUDE (dBc) -50 SNR (dBFS) & SFDR (dBc) 85 SFDR 80 75 70 65 SNR 60 55 -55 -60 -65 -70 HD3 -75 HD2 -80 -85 -90 -95 -100 50 0 200 400 600 800 0 1000 200 FIGURE 4. SNR AND SFDR vs fIN 800 1000 -10 SFDRFS (dBFS) -20 HD2 & HD3 MAGNITUDE 90 80 SNR & SFDR 600 FIGURE 5. HD2 AND HD3 vs fIN 100 SNRFS (dBFS) 70 60 50 SFDR (dBc) 40 30 SNR (dBc) 20 10 HD2 (dBc) -30 HD3 (dBc) -40 -50 -60 HD2 (dBFS) -70 -80 -90 -100 HD3 (dBFS) -110 -60 -50 0 -60- 50 -40 -30 -20- 10 0 -40 INPUT AMPLITUDE (dBFS) -20 -10 0 FIGURE 7. HD2 AND HD3 vs AIN -60 HD2 and HD3 MAGNITUDE (dBc) 90 SFDR 85 80 75 70 65 SNR 60 55 300 -30 INPUT AMPLITUDE (dBFS) FIGURE 6. SNR AND SFDR vs AIN SNR (dBFS) & SFDR (dBc) 400 INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) 325 350 375 400 425 450 SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) FIGURE 8. SNR AND SFDR vs fSAMPLE 10 475 500 -70 HD3 -80 -90 HD2 -100 -110 -120 300 325 350 375 400 425 450 475 500 SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) FIGURE 9. HD2 AND HD3 vs fSAMPLE FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -1dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) 450 0.25 400 0.20 350 0.15 0.10 300 DNL (LSBs) TOTAL POWER (mW) Typical Performance Curves 250 200 150 0.05 0.00 -0.05 -0.10 100 -0.15 50 -0.20 0 80 -0.25 140 200 260 320 380 440 500 0 128 256 384 FIGURE 10. POWER vs fSAMPLE IN 3mA LVDS MODE 0.20 85 SNR (dBFS) & SFDR (dBc) 90 0.15 INL (LSBs) 0.10 0.05 0.00 -0.05 -0.10 -0.15 -0.20 256 384 512 640 768 896 1024 768 896 SFDR 80 75 70 65 SNR 60 55 50 300 -0.25 128 640 FIGURE 11. DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY 0.25 0 512 CODE SAMPLE RATE (MSPS) 1024 400 500 600 700 800 INPUT COMMON MODE (mV) CODE FIGURE 12. INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY FIGURE 13. SNR AND SFDR vs VCM 0 1000000 Ain = -1.0dBFS SNR = 60.7dBFS SFDR = 82.4dBc SINAD = 60.6dBFS -20 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) 900000 NUMBER OF HITS 800000 700000 600000 500000 400000 -40 -60 -80 300000 -100 200000 100000 0 508 -120 509 510 511 512 513 CODE 514 515 FIGURE 14. NOISE HISTOGRAM 11 516 517 0 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 250 FIGURE 15. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 105MHz FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Typical Performance Curves All Typical Performance Characteristics apply under the following conditions unless otherwise noted: AVDD = OVDD = 1.8V, TA = +25°C, AIN = -1dBFS, fIN = 105MHz, fSAMPLE = 500MSPS. (Continued) 0 0 Ain = -1.0dBFS SNR = 60.5dBFS SFDR = 77.7dBc SINAD = 60.4dBFS -40 -60 -80 -40 -60 -80 -100 -100 -120 -120 0 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 0 250 FIGURE 16. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 190MHz 50 100 150 FREQUENCY (MHz) 200 250 FIGURE 17. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 495MHz 0 0 IMD = -91.0dBFS Ain = -1.0dBFS SNR = 58.7dBFS SFDR = 49.6dBc SINAD = 49.7dBFS -20 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) -20 -40 -60 -80 -100 -40 -60 -80 -100 -120 -120 0 50 100 150 200 250 0 50 FREQUENCY (MHz) 100 150 200 250 FREQUENCY (MHz) FIGURE 18. SINGLE-TONE SPECTRUM @ 995MHz FIGURE 19. TWO-TONE SPECTRUM @ 70MHz 0 IMD = -90.3dBFS -20 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) AMPLITUDE (dBFS) Ain = -1.0dBFS SNR = 60.2dBFS SFDR = 69.4dBc SINAD = 59.8dBFS -20 AMPLITUDE (dBFS) AMPLITUDE (dBFS) -20 -40 -60 -80 -100 -120 0 50 100 150 200 250 FREQUENCY (MHz) FIGURE 20. TWO-TONE SPECTRUM @ 170MHz 12 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Theory of Operation Functional Description The KAD5510P-50 is based upon a 10-bit, 250MSPS A/D converter core that utilizes a pipelined successive approximation architecture (Figure 21). The input voltage is captured by a Sample-Hold Amplifier (SHA) and converted to a unit of charge. Proprietary charge-domain techniques are used to successively compare the input to a series of reference charges. Decisions made during the successive approximation operations determine the digital code for each input value. The converter pipeline requires twelve samples to produce a result. Digital error correction is also applied, resulting in a total latency of fifteen clock cycles. This is evident to the user as a latency between the start of a conversion and the data being available on the digital outputs. The device contains two units A/D converters with carefully matched transfer characteristics. The cores are clocked on alternate clock edges, resulting in a doubling of the sample rate. The gain, offset and skew errors between the two unit ADCs can be adjusted via the SPI port to minimize spurs associated with the interleaving process. Time–interleaved ADC systems can exhibit non–ideal artifacts in the frequency domain if the individual unit ADC characteristics are not well matched. Gain, offset and timing skew mismatches are of primary concern. Gain mismatch results in fundamental image spurs at fNYQUIST ± fIN. Mismatches in timing skew, which shift the sampling instances for the two unit ADCs, will result in spurs in the same locations. Offset mismatches create spurs at DC and multiples of fNYQUIST. The design of the KAD5510P-50 minimizes the effect of process, voltage and temperature variations on the matching characteristics of the two unit ADCs. The gain and offset of the two unit ADCs are adjusted after power-on calibration to minimize the mismatch between the channels. All calibration is performed using internally generated signals, with the analog input signal disconnected from the sample and hold amplifier (SHA). The KAD5510P-50 does not have the ability to adjust timing skew mismatches as part of the internal calibration sequence. Clock routing to each unit ADC is carefully matched, however some timing skew will exist that may result in a detectable fundamental image spur at fNYQUIST ± fIN. Power-On Calibration As mentioned previously, the cores perform a self-calibration at start-up. An internal power-on-reset (POR) circuit detects the supply voltage ramps and initiates the calibration when the analog and digital supply voltages are above a threshold. The following conditions must be adhered to for the power-on calibration to execute successfully: • A frequency-stable conversion clock must be applied to the CLKP/CLKN pins • DNC pins (especially 3, 4 and 18) must not be pulled up or down • SDO (pin 66) must be high • RESETN (pin 25) must begin low • SPI communications must not be attempted A user-initiated reset can subsequently be invoked in the event that the above conditions cannot be met at power-up. CLOCK GENERATION INP SHA 2.5-BIT FLASH 6-STAGE 1.5-BIT/STAGE 3-STAGE 1-BIT/STAGE 3-BIT FLASH INN 1.25V + – DIGITAL ERROR CORRECTION LVDS/LVCMOS OUTPUTS FIGURE 21. ADC CORE BLOCK DIAGRAM 13 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 The SDO pin requires an external 4.7kΩ pull-up to OVDD. If the SDO pin is pulled low externally during power-up, calibration will not be executed properly. A supply voltage variation of less than 100mV will generally result in an SNR change of less than 0.1dBFS and SFDR change of less than 3dBc. After the power supply has stabilized the internal POR releases RESETN and an internal pull-up pulls it high, which starts the calibration sequence. If a subsequent user-initiated reset is required, the RESETN pin should be connected to an open-drain driver with a drive strength of less than 0.5mA. In situations where the sample rate is not constant, best results will be obtained if the device is calibrated at the highest sample rate. Reducing the sample rate by less than 80MSPS will typically result in an SNR change of less than 0.1dBFS and an SFDR change of less than 3dBc. While RESETN is low, the output clock (CLKOUTP/CLKOUTN) is set low. Normal operation of the output clock resumes at the next input clock edge (CLKP/CLKN) after RESETN is deasserted. At 500MSPS the nominal calibration time is 200ms, while the maximum calibration time is 550ms. CLKN CLKP Figures 25 and 26 show the effect of temperature on SNR and SFDR performance without recalibration. In each plot the ADC is calibrated at +25°C and temperature is varied over the operating range without recalibrating. The average change in SNR/SFDR is shown, relative to the +25°C value. 4 3 SNR CHANGE (dBFS) The calibration sequence is initiated on the rising edge of RESETN, as shown in Figure 22. The over-range output (OR) is set high once RESETN is pulled low, and remains in that state until calibration is complete. The OR output returns to normal operation at that time, so it is important that the analog input be within the converter’s full-scale range to observe the transition. If the input is in an over-range condition the OR pin will stay high, and it will not be possible to detect the end of the calibration cycle. 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -40 -15 10 35 60 85 TEMPERATURE (°C) CALIBRATION TIME FIGURE 23. SNR PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE AFTER +25°C CALIBRATION RESETN CALIBRATION BEGINS 15 ORP CLKOUTP FIGURE 22. CALIBRATION TIMING User Initiated Reset 10 SFDR CHANGE (dBc) CALIBRATION COMPLETE 5 0 -5 -10 Recalibration of the ADC can be initiated at any time by driving the RESETN pin low for a minimum of one clock cycle. An open-drain driver with a drive strength of less than 0.5mA is recommended, RESETN has an internal high impedance pull-up to OVDD. As is the case during power-on reset, the SDO, RESETN and DNC pins must be in the proper state for the calibration to successfully execute. -15 -40 -15 10 35 60 85 TEMPERATURE (°C) FIGURE 24. SFDR PERFORMANCE vs TEMPERATURE AFTER +25°C CALIBRATION Analog Input The performance of the KAD5510P-50 changes with variations in temperature, supply voltage or sample rate. The extent of these changes may necessitate recalibration, depending on system performance requirements. Best performance will be achieved by recalibrating the ADC under the environmental conditions at which it will operate. 14 A single fully differential input (VINP/VINN) connects to the sample and hold amplifier (SHA) of each unit ADC. The ideal full-scale input voltage is 1.45V, centered at the VCM voltage of 0.535V as shown in Figure 25. FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Ω 348O 1.8 Ω 69.8O 1.4 1.0 Ω 25O Ω 100O INN INP 0.725V CM VCM 0.6 25O Ω Ω 69.8O Ω 49.9O 0.2 Ω 348O Best performance is obtained when the analog inputs are driven differentially. The common-mode output voltage, VCM, should be used to properly bias the inputs as shown in Figures 26 through 28. An RF transformer will give the best noise and distortion performance for wideband and/or high intermediate frequency (IF) inputs. Two different transformer input schemes are shown in Figures 26 and 27. ADT1-1WT 1000pF 0.1µF FIGURE 28. DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER INPUT FIGURE 25. ANALOG INPUT RANGE ADT1-1WT KAD5510P-50 VCM Ω 100O 0.22µF 0.535V 217O Ω KAD5510P-50 VCM 0.1µF FIGURE 26. TRANSFORMER INPUT FOR GENERAL PURPOSE APPLICATIONS A differential amplifier, as shown in Figure 28, can be used in applications that require DC-coupling. In this configuration the amplifier will typically dominate the achievable SNR and distortion performance. Clock Input The clock input circuit is a differential pair (see Figure 41). Driving these inputs with a high level (up to 1.8VP-P on each input) sine or square wave will provide the lowest jitter performance. A transformer with 4:1 impedance ratio will provide increased drive levels. The recommended drive circuit is shown in Figure 29. A duty range of 40% to 60% is acceptable. The clock can be driven single-ended, but this will reduce the edge rate and may impact SNR performance. The clock inputs are internally self-biased to AVDD/2 to facilitate AC-coupling. Ω 1kO Ω 1kO AVDD 200pF TC4-1W ADTL1-12 CLKP ADTL1-12 0.1µF 1000pF 1000pF 200pF KAD5510P-50 1000pF Ω 200O VCM CLKN 200pF FIGURE 27. TRANSMISSION-LINE TRANSFORMER INPUT FOR HIGH IF APPLICATIONS This dual transformer scheme is used to improve common-mode rejection, which keeps the common-mode level of the input matched to VCM. The value of the shunt resistor should be determined based on the desired load impedance. The differential input resistance of the KAD5510P-50 is 500Ω. The SHA design uses a switched capacitor input stage (see Figure 40), which creates current spikes when the sampling capacitance is reconnected to the input voltage. This causes a disturbance at the input which must settle before the next sampling point. Lower source impedance will result in faster settling and improved performance. Therefore a 1:1 transformer and low shunt resistance are recommended for optimal performance. 15 FIGURE 29. RECOMMENDED CLOCK DRIVE A selectable 2x frequency divider is provided in series with the clock input. The divider can be used in the 2x mode with a sample clock equal to twice the desired sample rate. This allows the use of the Phase Slip feature, which enables synchronization of multiple ADCs. TABLE 1. CLKDIV PIN SETTINGS CLKDIV PIN DIVIDE RATIO AVSS 2 Float 1 AVDD Not Allowed FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 The clock divider can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the CLKDIV pin setting. Details on this are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 19. Jitter In a sampled data system, clock jitter directly impacts the achievable SNR performance. The theoretical relationship between clock jitter (tJ) and SNR is shown in Equation 1 and is illustrated in Figure 30. 1 SNR = 20 log 10 ⎛ --------------------⎞ ⎝ 2πf t ⎠ should experiment to determine if performance degradation is observed. The output mode and LVDS drive current are selected via the OUTMODE pin as shown in Table 2. TABLE 2. OUTMODE PIN SETTINGS OUTMODE PIN MODE AVSS LVCMOS Float LVDS, 3mA AVDD LVDS, 2mA (EQ. 1) IN J 100 95 tj = 0.1ps 90 14 BITS SNR (dB) 85 80 tj = 1ps 75 12 BITS 70 tj = 10ps 65 60 10 BITS An external resistor creates the bias for the LVDS drivers. A 10kΩ, 1% resistor must be connected from the RLVDS pin to OVSS. Over-Range Indicator tj = 100ps 55 50 1 The output mode can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the OUTMODE pin setting. Details on this are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 19. 10 100 INPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) 1000 FIGURE 30. SNR vs CLOCK JITTER This relationship shows the SNR that would be achieved if clock jitter were the only non-ideal factor. In reality, achievable SNR is limited by internal factors such as linearity, aperture jitter and thermal noise. Internal aperture jitter is the uncertainty in the sampling instant shown in Figure 1. The internal aperture jitter combines with the input clock jitter in a root-sum-square fashion, since they are not statistically correlated, and this determines the total jitter in the system. The total jitter, combined with other noise sources, then determines the achievable SNR. The over-range (OR) bit is asserted when the output code reaches positive full-scale (e.g. 0xFFF in offset binary mode). The output code does not wrap around during an over-range condition. The OR bit is updated at the sample rate. Power Dissipation The power dissipated by the KAD5510P-50 is primarily dependent on the sample rate and the output modes: LVDS vs CMOS and DDR vs SDR. There is a static bias in the analog supply, while the remaining power dissipation is linearly related to the sample rate. The output supply dissipation changes to a lesser degree in LVDS mode, but is more strongly related to the clock frequency in CMOS mode. Nap/Sleep Voltage Reference A temperature compensated voltage reference provides the reference charges used in the successive approximation operations. The full-scale range of each A/D is proportional to the reference voltage. The nominal value of the voltage reference is 1.25V. Digital Outputs Output data is available as a parallel bus in LVDScompatible or CMOS modes. In either case, the data is presented in double data rate (DDR) format. Figures 1 and 2 show the timing relationships for LVDS and CMOS modes, respectively. Additionally, the drive current for LVDS mode can be set to a nominal 3mA or a power-saving 2mA. The lower current setting can be used in designs where the receiver is in close physical proximity to the ADC. The applicability of this setting is dependent upon the PCB layout, therefore the user 16 Portions of the device may be shut down to save power during times when operation of the ADC is not required. Two power saving modes are available: Nap and Sleep. Nap mode reduces power dissipation to less than 163mW and recovers to normal operation in approximately 1µs. Sleep mode reduces power dissipation to less than 18mW but requires 1ms to recover. All digital outputs (Data, CLKOUT and OR) are placed in a high impedance state during Nap or Sleep. The input clock should remain running and at a fixed frequency during Nap or Sleep. Recovery time from Nap mode will increase if the clock is stopped, since the internal DLL can take up to 52µs to regain lock at 250MSPS. FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 By default after the device is powered on, the operational state is controlled by the NAPSLP pin as shown in Table 3. TABLE 3. NAPSLP PIN SETTINGS NAPSLP PIN MODE AVSS Normal Float Sleep AVDD Nap Converting back to offset binary from Gray code must be done recursively, using the result of each bit for the next lower bit as shown in Figure 32. GRAY CODE 9 8 7 •••• 1 0 •••• The power down mode can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the NAPSLP pin setting. Details on this are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 19. This is an indexed function when controlled from the SPI, but a global function when driven from the pin. •••• Data Format Output data can be presented in three formats: two’s complement, Gray code and offset binary. The data format is selected via the OUTFMT pin as shown in Table 4. TABLE 4. OUTFMT PIN SETTINGS BINARY OUTFMT PIN MODE AVSS Offset Binary Float Two’s Complement AVDD Gray Code When calculating Gray code, the MSB is unchanged. The remaining bits are computed as the XOR of the current bit position and the next most significant bit. Figure 31 shows this operation. 8 7 7 •••• 1 0 Mapping of the input voltage to the various data formats is shown in Table 5. Offset binary coding maps the most negative input voltage to code 0x000 (all zeros) and the most positive input to 0xFFF (all ones). Two’s complement coding simply complements the MSB of the offset binary representation. 9 8 FIGURE 32. GRAY CODE TO BINARY CONVERSION The data format can also be controlled through the SPI port, which overrides the OUTFMT pin setting. Details on this are contained in “Serial Peripheral Interface” on page 19. BINARY 9 •••• 1 TABLE 5. INPUT VOLTAGE TO OUTPUT CODE MAPPING INPUT VOLTAGE OFFSET BINARY TWO’S COMPLEMENT GRAY CODE –Full Scale 000 00 000 00 100 00 000 00 000 00 000 00 –Full Scale + 1LSB 000 00 000 01 100 00 000 01 000 00 000 01 Mid–Scale 100 00 000 00 000 00 000 00 110 00 000 00 +Full Scale – 1LSB 111 11 111 10 011 11 111 10 100 00 000 01 +Full Scale 111 11 111 11 011 11 111 11 100 00 000 00 0 •••• GRAY CODE 9 8 7 •••• 1 0 FIGURE 31. BINARY TO GRAY CODE CONVERSION 17 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 CSB SCLK SDIO R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A1 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 FIGURE 33. MSB-FIRST ADDRESSING CSB SCLK SDIO A0 A1 A2 A11 A12 W0 W1 R/W D0 D1 FIGURE 34. LSB-FIRST ADDRESSING tH tCLK tS tDS tHI tDH CSB tLO SCLK SDIO R/W W1 W0 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 FIGURE 35. INSTRUCTION/ADDRESS PHASE CSB STALLING CSB SCLK SDIO INSTRUCTION/ADDRESS DATA WORD 1 DATA WORD 2 FIGURE 36. 2-BYTE TRANSFER LAST LEGAL CSB STALLING CSB SCLK SDIO INSTRUCTION/ADDRESS DATA WORD 1 DATA WORD N FIGURE 37. N-BYTE TRANSFER 18 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Serial Peripheral Interface A serial peripheral interface (SPI) bus is used to facilitate configuration of the device and to optimize performance. The SPI bus consists of chip select (CSB), serial clock (SCLK) serial data input (SDI), and serial data input/output (SDIO). The maximum SCLK rate is equal to the ADC sample rate (fSAMPLE) divided by 32 for write operations and fSAMPLE divided by 132 for reads. At fSAMPLE = 250MHz, maximum SCLK is 15.63MHz for writing and 3.79MHz for read operations. There is no minimum SCLK rate. The following sections describe various registers that are used to configure the SPI or adjust performance or functional parameters. Many registers in the available address space (0x00 to 0xFF) are not defined in this document. Additionally, within a defined register there may be certain bits or bit combinations that are reserved. Undefined registers and undefined values within defined registers are reserved and should not be selected. Setting any reserved register or value may produce indeterminate results. SPI Physical Interface The serial clock pin (SCLK) provides synchronization for the data transfer. By default, all data is presented on the serial data input/output (SDIO) pin in three-wire mode. The state of the SDIO pin is set automatically in the communication protocol (described in the following paragraphs). A dedicated serial data output pin (SDO) can be activated by setting 0x00[7] high to allow operation in four-wire mode. The SPI port operates in a half duplex master/slave configuration, with the KAD5510P-50 functioning as a slave. Multiple slave devices can interface to a single master in four-wire mode only, since the SDIO output of an unaddressed device is asserted in three wire mode. The chip-select bar (CSB) pin determines when a slave device is being addressed. Multiple slave devices can be written to concurrently, but only one slave device can be read from at a given time (again, only in four-wire mode). If multiple slave devices are selected for reading at the same time, the results will be indeterminate. The communication protocol begins with an instruction/address phase. The first rising SCLK edge following a high to low transition on CSB determines the beginning of the two-byte instruction/address command; SCLK must be static low before the CSB transition Data can be presented in MSB-first order or LSB-first order. The default is MSB-first, but this can be changed by setting 0x00[6] high. Figures 33 and 34 show the appropriate bit ordering for the MSB-first and LSB-first modes, respectively. In MSB-first mode the address is incremented for multi-byte transfers, while in LSB-first mode it’s decremented. In the default mode the MSB is R/W, which determines if the data is to be read (active high) or written. The next two bits, W1 and W0, determine the number of data bytes to be read 19 or written (see Table 6). The lower 13 bits contain the first address for the data transfer. This relationship is illustrated in Figure 35, and timing values are given in “Switching Specifications” on page 7. After the instruction/address bytes have been read, the appropriate number of data bytes are written to or read from the ADC (based on the R/W bit status). The data transfer will continue as long as CSB remains low and SCLK is active. Stalling of the CSB pin is allowed at any byte boundary (instruction/address or data) if the number of bytes being transferred is three or less. For transfers of four bytes or more, CSB is allowed stall in the middle of the instruction/address bytes or before the first data byte. If CSB transitions to a high state after that point the state machine will reset and terminate the data transfer. TABLE 6. BYTE TRANSFER SELECTION [W1:W0] BYTES TRANSFERRED 00 1 01 2 10 3 11 4 or more Figures 36 and 37 illustrate the timing relationships for 2-byte and N-byte transfers, respectively. The operation for a 3-byte transfer can be inferred from these diagrams. SPI Configuration ADDRESS 0X00: CHIP_PORT_CONFIG Bit ordering and SPI reset are controlled by this register. Bit order can be selected as MSB to LSB (MSB first) or LSB to MSB (LSB first) to accommodate various microcontrollers. Bit 7 SDO Active Bit 6 LSB First Setting this bit high configures the SPI to interpret serial data as arriving in LSB to MSB order. Bit 5 Soft Reset Setting this bit high resets all SPI registers to default values. Bit 4 Reserved This bit should always be set high. Bits 3:0 These bits should always mirror bits 4:7 to avoid ambiguity in bit ordering. ADDRESS 0X02: BURST_END If a series of sequential registers are to be set, burst mode can improve throughput by eliminating redundant addressing. In 3-wire SPI mode the burst is ended by pulling the CSB pin high. If the device is operated in 2-wire mode the CSB pin is not available. In that case, setting the burst_end address determines the end of the transfer. During a write operation, FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 the user must be cautious to transmit the correct number of bytes based on the starting and ending addresses. Bits 7:0 Burst End Address ADDRESS 0X22: GAIN_COARSE ADDRESS 0X23: GAIN_MEDIUM ADDRESS 0X24: GAIN_FINE This register value determines the ending address of the burst data. Device Information ADDRESS 0X08: CHIP_ID ADDRESS 0X09: CHIP_VERSION The generic die identifier and a revision number, respectively, can be read from these two registers. Indexed Device Configuration/Control ADDRESS 0X10: DEVICE_INDEX_A Bits 1:0 ADC01, ADC00 Determines which ADC is addressed. Valid states for this register are 0x01 or 0x10. The two ADC cores cannot be adjusted concurrently. A common SPI map, which can accommodate single-channel or multi-channel devices, is used for all Intersil ADC products. Certain configuration commands (identified as Indexed in the SPI map) can be executed on a per-converter basis. This register determines which converter is being addressed for an Indexed command. It is important to note that only a single converter can be addressed at a time. This register defaults to 00h, indicating that no ADC is addressed. Error code ‘AD’ is returned if any indexed register is read from without properly setting device_index_A. ADDRESS 0X20: OFFSET_COARSE ADDRESS 0X21: OFFSET_FINE The input offset of the ADC core can be adjusted in fine and coarse steps. Both adjustments are made via an 8-bit word as detailed in Table 7. The data format is two’s complement. The default value of each register will be the result of the self-calibration after initial power-up. If a register is to be incremented or decremented, the user should first read the register value then write the incremented or decremented value back to the same register. TABLE 7. OFFSET ADJUSTMENTS Gain of the ADC core can be adjusted in coarse, medium and fine steps. Coarse gain is a 4-bit adjustment while medium and fine are 8-bit. Multiple Coarse Gain Bits can be set for a total adjustment range of +/- 4.2%. ( ‘0011’ =~ -4.2% and ‘1100’ =~ +4.2% ) It is recommended to use one of the coarse gain settings (-4.2%, -2.8%, -1.4%, 0, 1.4%, 2.8%, 4.2%) and fine-tune the gain using the registers at 23h and 24h. The default value of each register will be the result of the self-calibration after initial power-up. If a register is to be incremented or decremented, the user should first read the register value then write the incremented or decremented value back to the same register. TABLE 8. COARSE GAIN ADJUSTMENT 0x22[3:0] NOMINAL COARSE GAIN ADJUST (%) Bit3 +2.8 Bit2 +1.4 Bit1 -2.8 Bit0 -1.4 TABLE 9. MEDIUM AND FINE GAIN ADJUSTMENTS PARAMETER 0x23[7:0] MEDIUM GAIN 0x24[7:0] FINE GAIN Steps 256 256 –Full Scale (0x00) -2% -0.20% Mid–Scale (0x80) 0.00% 0.00% +Full Scale (0xFF) +2% +0.2% Nominal Step Size 0.016% 0.0016% ADDRESS 0X25: MODES Two distinct reduced power modes can be selected. By default, the tri-level NAPSLP pin can select normal operation, nap or sleep modes (refer to “Nap/Sleep” on page 16). This functionality can be overridden and controlled through the SPI. This is an indexed function when controlled from the SPI, but a global function when driven from the pin. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. PARAMETER 0x20[7:0] COARSE OFFSET 0x21[7:0] FINE OFFSET Steps 255 255 –Full Scale (0x00) -133LSB (-47mV) -5LSB (-1.75mV) VALUE Mid–Scale (0x80) 0.0LSB (0.0mV) 0.0LSB 000 Pin Control +Full Scale (0xFF) +133LSB (+47mV) +5LSB (+1.75mV) 001 Normal Operation Nominal Step Size 1.04LSB (0.37mV) 0.04LSB (0.014mV) 010 Nap Mode 100 Sleep Mode 20 TABLE 10. POWER-DOWN CONTROL 0x25[2:0] POWER-DOWN MODE FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Global Device Configuration/Control overridden and controlled through the SPI, as shown in Table 12. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. ADDRESS 0X70: SKEW_DIFF The value in the skew_diff register adjusts the timing skew between the two ADCs cores. The nominal range and resolution of this adjustment are given in Table 11. The default value of this register after power-up is 80h. TABLE 11. DIFFERENTIAL SKEW ADJUSTMENT PARAMETER 0x70[7:0] DIFFERENTIAL SKEW Steps 256 –Full Scale (0x08) -6.5ps Mid–Scale (0x00) 0.0ps +Full Scale (0x07) +6.5ps Nominal Step Size 51fs ADDRESS 0X71: PHASE_SLIP When using the clock divider, it’s not possible to determine the synchronization of the incoming and divided clock phases. This is particularly important when multiple ADCs are used in a time-interleaved system. The phase slip feature allows the rising edge of the divided clock to be advanced by one input clock cycle when in CLK/2 mode, as shown in Figure 38. Execution of a phase_slip command is accomplished by first writing a ‘0’ to bit 0 at address 71h followed by writing a ‘1’ to bit 0 at address 71h (32 sclk cycles.) CLK TABLE 12. CLOCK DIVIDER SELECTION VALUE 0x72[2:0] CLOCK DIVIDER 000 Pin Control 001 Divide by 1 010 Divide by 2 100 Not Allowed ADDRESS 0X73: OUTPUT_MODE_A The output_mode_A register controls the physical output format of the data, as well as the logical coding. The KAD5510P-50 can present output data in two physical formats: LVDS or LVCMOS. Additionally, the drive strength in LVDS mode can be set high (3mA) or low (2mA). By default, the tri-level OUTMODE pin selects the mode and drive level (refer to “Digital Outputs” on page 16). This functionality can be overridden and controlled through the SPI, as shown in Table 13. Data can be coded in three possible formats: two’s complement, Gray code or offset binary. By default, the tri-level OUTFMT pin selects the data format (refer to “Data Format” on page 17). This functionality can be overridden and controlled through the SPI, as shown in Table 14. This register is not changed by a Soft Reset. 1.00ns TABLE 13. OUTPUT MODE CONTROL CLK÷2 2.00ns ADC0 CLOCK ADC1 CLOCK VALUE 0x93[7:5] 000 Pin Control 001 LVDS 2mA 010 LVDS 3mA 100 LVCMOS 4.00ns ADC0 CLOCK SLIP ONCE TABLE 14. OUTPUT FORMAT CONTROL ADC1 CLOCK SLIP ONCE ADC0 CLOCK SLIP TWICE ADC1 CLOCK SLIP TWICE FIGURE 38. PHASE SLIP: CLK÷2 MODE, fCLOCK = 1000MHz VALUE 0x93[2:0] OUTPUT FORMAT 000 Pin Control 001 Two’s Complement 010 Gray Code 100 Offset Binary ADDRESS 0X74: OUTPUT_MODE_B ADDRESS 0X72: CLOCK_DIVIDE ADDRESS 0X75: CONFIG_STATUS The KAD5510P-50 has a selectable clock divider that can be set to divide by two or one (no division). By default, the tri-level CLKDIV pin selects the divisor (refer to “Clock Input Considerations” on page 25). This functionality can be Bit 6 DLL Range 21 This bit sets the DLL operating range to fast (default) or slow. FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Internal clock signals are generated by a delay-locked loop (DLL), which has a finite operating range. Table 15 shows the allowable sample rate ranges for the slow and fast settings. ADDRESS 0XC0: TEST_IO Bits 7:6 User Test Mode These bits set the test mode to static (0x00) or alternate (0x01) mode. Other values are reserved. TABLE 15. DLL RANGES DLL RANGE MIN MAX UNIT Slow 80 200 MSPS Fast 160 500 MSPS The four LSBs in this register (Output Test Mode) determine the test pattern in combination with registers 0xC2 through 0xC5. Refer to Table 17. TABLE 16. OUTPUT TEST MODES The output_mode_B and config_status registers are used in conjunction to enable DDR mode and select the frequency range of the DLL clock generator. The method of setting these options is different from the other registers. READ OUTPUT_MODE_B 0x74 READ CONFIG_STATUS 0x75 WRITE TO 0x74 DESIRED VALUE FIGURE 39. SETTING OUTPUT_MODE_B REGISTER The procedure for setting output_mode_B is shown in Figure 39. Read the contents of output_mode_B and config_status and XOR them. Then XOR this result with the desired value for output_mode_B and write that XOR result to the register. Device Test The KAD5510P-50 can produce preset or user defined patterns on the digital outputs to facilitate in-situ testing. A static word can be placed on the output bus, or two different words can alternate. In the alternate mode, the values defined as Word 1 and Word 2 (as shown in Table 16) are set on the output bus on alternating clock phases. The test mode is enabled asynchronously to the sample clock, therefore several sample clock cycles may elapse before the data is present on the output bus. 22 VALUE 0xC0[3:0] OUTPUT TEST MODE 0000 Off 0001 WORD 1 WORD 2 Midscale 0x8000 N/A 0010 Positive Full-Scale 0xFFFF N/A 0011 Negative Full-Scale 0x0000 N/A 0100 Checkerboard 0xAAAA 0x5555 0101 Reserved N/A N/A 0110 Reserved N/A N/A 0111 One/Zero 0xFFFF 0x0000 1000 User Pattern user_patt1 user_patt2 ADDRESS 0XC2: USER_PATT1_LSB ADDRESS 0XC3: USER_PATT1_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the first user-defined test word. ADDRESS 0XC4: USER_PATT2_LSB ADDRESS 0XC5: USER_PATT2_MSB These registers define the lower and upper eight bits, respectively, of the second user-defined test word. FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 SPI Memory Map Indexed Device Config/Control Info SPI Config TABLE 17. SPI MEMORY MAP Addr (Hex) Parameter Name Bit 7 (MSB) Bit 6 Bit 5 00 port_config SDO Active LSB First Soft Reset 01 Reserved Reserved 02 burst_end Burst end address [7:0] 03-07 Reserved Reserved 08 chip_id 09 chip_version 10 device_index_A 11-1F Reserved Reserved 20 offset_coarse 21 offset_fine 22 gain_coarse 23 gain_medium 24 gain_fine 25 modes 26-5F Reserved Reserved 60-6F Reserved Reserved 70 skew_diff Differential Skew 71 phase_slip Global DeviceConfig/Control 72 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 (LSB) Def. Value (Hex) Indexed/ Global Mirror (bit5) Mirror (bit6) Mirror (bit7) 00h G 00h G Chip ID # Read only G Chip Version # Read only G 00h I Coarse Offset cal. value I Fine Offset cal. value I cal. value I Medium Gain cal. value I Fine Gain cal. value I 00h NOT affected by Soft Reset I Bit 4 Bit 3 Reserved ADC01 Reserved ADC00 Coarse Gain Power-Down Mode [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = Normal Operation 010 = Nap 100 = Sleep other codes = Reserved Reserved clock_divide 80h 00h G Clock Divide [2:0] 000=Pin Control 001=divide by 1 010=divide by 2 100=divide by 4 other codes=Reserved 00h NOT affected by Soft Reset G Output Format [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = Twos Complement 010 = Gray Code 100 = Offset Binary other codes = Reserved 00h NOT affected by Soft Reset G Next Clock Edge 73 output_mode_A Output Mode [2:0] 000 = Pin Control 001 = LVDS 2mA 010 = LVDS 3mA 100 = LVCMOS other codes = Reserved 74 output_mode_B DLL Range 0 = fast 1 = slow 00h NOT affected by Soft Reset G 75 config_status XOR Result Read Only G 76-BF Reserved 23 Reserved FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 TABLE 17. SPI MEMORY MAP (Continued) Addr (Hex) Parameter Name C0 test_io Bit 7 (MSB) Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 2 Bit 0 (LSB) Bit 1 Output Test Mode [3:0] User Test Mode [1:0] Def. Value (Hex) Indexed/ Global 00h G 00h G 7 = One/Zero Word Toggle 8 = User Input 9-15 = Reserved 0 = Off 1 = Midscale Short 2 = +FS Short 3 = -FS Short 4 = Checker Board 5 = Reserved 6 = Reserved 00 = Single 01 = Alternate 10 = Reserved 11 = Reserved Device Test Bit 3 C1 Reserved Reserved C2 user_patt 1_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h G C3 user_patt1_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h G C4 user_patt 2_lsb B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0 00h G C5 user_patt2_msb B15 B14 B13 B12 B11 B10 B9 B8 00h G C6-FF Reserved Reserved Equivalent Circuits AVDD TO CLOCKPHASE GENERATION AVDD CLKP AVDD CSAMP 1.6pF TO CHARGE PIPELINE Φ F3 INP Φ2 F Φ1 F Ω 500O CSAMP 1.6pF AVDD TO CHARGE PIPELINE Φ3 F INN Φ2 F Φ1 F AVDD 11kO Ω CLKN FIGURE 41. CLOCK INPUTS AVDD (20k PULL-UP ON RESETN ONLY) AVDD Ω 75kO AVDD Ω 18kO AVDD 11kO Ω FIGURE 40. ANALOG INPUTS AVDD 18kO Ω Ω 75kO OVDD TO SENSE LOGIC Ω 280O INPUT OVDD OVDD 20kΩ INPUT Ω 75kO Ω 75kO FIGURE 42. TRI-LEVEL DIGITAL INPUTS 24 280Ω TO LOGIC FIGURE 43. DIGITAL INPUTS FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Equivalent Circuits (Continued) OVDD 2mA OR 3mA OVDD DATA DATA D[9:0]P OVDD OVDD D[9:0]N OVDD DATA DATA DATA D[9:0] 2mA OR 3mA FIGURE 44. LVDS OUTPUTS FIGURE 45. CMOS OUTPUTS AVDD VCM 0.535V + – FIGURE 46. VCM_OUT OUTPUT Layout Considerations Split Ground and Power Planes Data converters operating at high sampling frequencies require extra care in PC board layout. Many complex board designs benefit from isolating the analog and digital sections. Analog supply and ground planes should be laid out under signal and clock inputs. Locate the digital planes under outputs and logic pins. Grounds should be joined under the chip. Clock Input Considerations Use matched transmission lines to the transformer inputs for the analog input and clock signals. Locate transformers and terminations as close to the chip as possible. device pins. Longer traces will increase inductance, resulting in diminished dynamic performance and accuracy. Make sure that connections to ground are direct and low impedance. Avoid forming ground loops. LVDS Outputs Output traces and connections must be designed for 50Ω (100Ω differential) characteristic impedance. Keep traces direct and minimize bends where possible. Avoid crossing ground and power-plane breaks with signal traces. LVCMOS Outputs Output traces and connections must be designed for 50Ω characteristic impedance. Exposed Paddle Unused Inputs The exposed paddle must be electrically connected to analog ground (AVSS) and should be connected to a large copper plane using numerous vias for optimal thermal performance. Standard logic inputs (RESETN, CSB, SCLK, SDIO, SDO) which will not be operated do not require connection to ensure optimal ADC performance. These inputs can be left floating if they are not used. Tri-level inputs (NAPSLP, OUTMODE, OUTFMT, CLKDIV) accept a floating input as a valid state, and therefore should be biased according to the desired functionality. Bypass and Filtering Bulk capacitors should have low equivalent series resistance. Tantalum is a good choice. For best performance, keep ceramic bypass capacitors very close to 25 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Definitions Analog Input Bandwidth is the analog input frequency at which the spectral output power at the fundamental frequency (as determined by FFT analysis) is reduced by 3dB from its full-scale low-frequency value. This is also referred to as Full Power Bandwidth. Aperture Delay or Sampling Delay is the time required after the rise of the clock input for the sampling switch to open, at which time the signal is held for conversion. Aperture Jitter is the RMS variation in aperture delay for a set of samples. Clock Duty Cycle is the ratio of the time the clock wave is at logic high to the total time of one clock period. Differential Non-Linearity (DNL) is the deviation of any code width from an ideal 1 LSB step. Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) is an alternate method of specifying Signal to Noise-and-Distortion Ratio (SINAD). In dB, it is calculated as: ENOB = (SINAD - 1.76)/6.02 Gain Error is the ratio of the difference between the voltages that cause the lowest and highest code transitions to the full-scale voltage less 2 LSB. It is typically expressed in percent. Signal-to-Noise Ratio (without Harmonics) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, excluding harmonics and DC. SNR and SINAD are either given in units of dB when the power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full scale) when the converter’s full-scale input power is used as the reference. Spurious-Free-Dynamic Range (SFDR) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS value of the largest spurious spectral component. The largest spurious spectral component may or may not be a harmonic. Revision History DATE REVISION 8/6/08 Rev 1 Initial Release of Production Datasheet 12/5/08 FN6811.0 Converted to intersil template. Assigned file number FN6811. Rev 0 - first release (as preliminary datasheet) with new file number. 1/19/09 FN6811.1 P1; revised Key Specs P2; added Part Marking column to Order Info P4; Moved Thermal Impedance under Thermal Info (used to be on p. 7). Added Theta JA Note 2. P4-7; edits throughout the Specs table. Added Notes 8 and 9. Revised Notes 6 and 7. P7; Removed ESD section P10-12; revised Performance Curves throughout P14; User Inititated Reset section; revised 2nd sentence of 1st paragraph P16; Nap/Sleep; revised 3rd and 4th sentences of 1st paragraph P19; Serial Peripheral Interface; revised 2nd to last sentence of 1st paragraph. SPI Physical Interface; revised 2nd and 3rd sentences of 4th paragraph P20; added last 2 sentences to 1st paragraph of "ADDRESS 0X24: GAIN_FINE". Revised Table 8 P21; revised last 2 sentences of "ADDRESS 0X71: PHASE_SLIP". Removed Figure of "PHASE SLIP: CLK÷1 MODE, fCLOCK = 500MHz" P24; revised Figure 43 P24; Table 17; revised Bits7:4, Addr C0 Throughout; formatted graphics to Intersil standards Integral Non-Linearity (INL) is the maximum deviation of the ADC’s transfer function from a best fit line determined by a least squares curve fit of that transfer function, measured in units of LSBs. Least Significant Bit (LSB) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight in a digital word. Its value in terms of input voltage is VFS/(2N-1) where N is the resolution in bits. Missing Codes are output codes that are skipped and will never appear at the ADC output. These codes cannot be reached with any input value. Most Significant Bit (MSB) is the bit that has the largest value or weight. Pipeline Delay is the number of clock cycles between the initiation of a conversion and the appearance at the output pins of the data. Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR) is the ratio of the observed magnitude of a spur in the ADC FFT, caused by an AC signal superimposed on the power supply voltage. Signal to Noise-and-Distortion (SINAD) is the ratio of the RMS signal amplitude to the RMS sum of all other spectral components below one half the clock frequency, including harmonics but excluding DC. CHANGE 2/25/09 6811.1 Changed date to 2009 from 2008 no rev All Intersil U.S. products are manufactured, assembled and tested utilizing ISO9000 quality systems. Intersil Corporation’s quality certifications can be viewed at www.intersil.com/design/quality Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design, software and/or specifications at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that data sheets are current before placing orders. Information furnished by Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its subsidiaries for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries. For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com 26 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009 KAD5510P-50 Package Outline Drawing L72.10x10D 72 LEAD QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE Rev 1, 11/08 10.00 A 4X 8.50 PIN 1 INDEX AREA B 55 6 72 1 54 68X 0.50 Exp. DAP 6.00 Sq. 10.00 18 37 (4X) PIN 1 INDEX AREA 6 0.15 36 19 72X 0.24 72X 0.40 TOP VIEW 4 0.10 M C A B BOTTOM VIEW SEE DETAIL "X" 0.90 Max C 0.10 C 0.08 C SEATING PLANE 68X 0.50 SIDE VIEW 72X 0.24 9.80 Sq 6.00 Sq C 0 . 2 REF 5 0 . 00 MIN. 0 . 05 MAX. 72X 0.60 DETAIL "X" TYPICAL RECOMMENDED LAND PATTERN NOTES: 1. Dimensions are in millimeters. Dimensions in ( ) for Reference Only. 2. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to AMSEY14.5m-1994. 3. Unless otherwise specified, tolerance : Decimal ± 0.05 4. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured between 0.15mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip. 5. Tiebar shown (if present) is a non-functional feature. 6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 identifier may be either a mold or mark feature. 27 FN6811.1 January 30, 2009