19-4456; Rev 0; 2/09 KIT ATION EVALU LE B A IL A AV Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Features The MAX1385/MAX1386 set and control bias conditions for dual RF LDMOS power devices found in cellular base stations. Each device includes a high-side current-sense amplifier with programmable gains of 2, 10, and 25 to monitor LDMOS drain current over the 20mA to 5A range. Two external diode-connected transistors monitor LDMOS temperatures while an internal temperature sensor measures the local die temperature of the MAX1385/MAX1386. A 12-bit ADC converts the programmable-gain amplifier (PGA) outputs, external/internal temperature readings, and two auxiliary inputs. The two gate-drive channels, each consisting of 8-bit coarse and 10-bit fine DACs and a gate-drive amplifier, generate a positive gate voltage to bias the LDMOS devices. The MAX1385 includes a gate-drive amplifier with a gain of 2 and the MAX1386 gate-drive amplifier provides a gain of 4. The 8-bit coarse and 10-bit fine DACs allow up to 18 bits of resolution. The MAX1385/ MAX1386 include autocalibration features to minimize error over time, temperature, and supply voltage. ♦ Integrated High-Side Drain Current-Sense PGA with Gain of 2, 10, or 25 The MAX1385/MAX1386 feature an I2C/SPI™-compatible serial interface. Both devices operate from a 4.75V to 5.25V analog supply (3.2mA supply current), a 2.7V to 5.25V digital supply (3.1mA supply current), and a 4.75V to 11.0V gate-drive supply (4.5mA supply current). The MAX1385/MAX1386 are available in a 48-pin thin QFN package. ♦ External Temperature Measurement by DiodeConnected Transistor (2N3904) Applications RF LDMOS Bias Control in Cellular Base Stations Industrial Process Control ♦ ±0.5% Accuracy for Sense Voltage Between 75mV and 250mV ♦ Full-Scale Sense Voltage of 100mV with Gain of 25 ♦ Full-Scale Sense Voltage of 250mV with Gain of 10 ♦ Common-Mode Range of 5V to 30V Drain Voltage for LDMOS ♦ Adjustable Low Noise 0 to 5V, 0 to 10V Output Gate-Bias Voltage Ranges with ±10mA Gate Drive ♦ Fast Clamp to 0V for LDMOS Protection ♦ 8-Bit DAC Control of Gate-Bias Voltage ♦ 10-Bit DAC Control of Gate-Bias Offset with Temperature ♦ Internal Die Temperature Measurement ♦ Internal 12-Bit ADC Measurement of Temperature, Current, and Voltages ♦ Selectable I2C-/SPI-Compatible Serial Interface 400kHz/1.7MHz/3.4MHz I2C-Compatible Control for Settings and Data Measurement 16MHz SPI-Compatible Control for Settings and Data Measurement ♦ Internal 2.5V Reference ♦ Three Address Inputs to Control Eight Devices in I2C Mode Ordering Information/Selector Guide PART MAX1385AETM+** TEMP RANGE PIN-PACKAGE TEMP ERROR (°C) VGATE (V) -40°C to +85°C 48 Thin QFN-EP* ±1 5 MAX1385BETM+ -40°C to +85°C 48 Thin QFN-EP* ±2 5 MAX1386AETM+** -40°C to +85°C 48 Thin QFN-EP* ±1 10 MAX1386BETM+** -40°C to +85°C 48 Thin QFN-EP* ±2 10 *EP = Exposed pad. **Future product—contact factory for availability. +Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package. Pin Configuration and Typical Operating Circuit (I2C Mode) appear at end of data sheet. SPI is a trademark of Motorola, Inc. ________________________________________________________________ Maxim Integrated Products For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim Direct at 1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim’s website at www.maxim-ic.com. 1 MAX1385/MAX1386 General Description MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Digital Inputs to DGND ............-0.3V to the lower of +6V and (DVDD + 0.3V) SDA/DIN, SCL to DGND...........................................-0.3V to +6V Digital Outputs to DGND .........................-0.3V to (DVDD + 0.3V) Maximum Continuous Current into Any Pin ........................50mA Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70°C) 48-Pin, 7mm x 7mm, Thin QFN (derate 27.8 mW/°C above +70°C).............................................................2222mW Maximum Junction Temperature .....................................+150°C Operating Temperature Range ...........................-40°C to +85°C Storage Temperature Range .............................-65°C to +150°C Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) .................................+300°C AVDD to AGND .........................................................-0.3V to +6V DVDD to DGND.........................................................-0.3V to +6V AGND to DGND.....................................................-0.3V to +0.3V CS1+, CS1-, CS2+, CS2- to GATEGND.................-0.3V to +32V CS1- to CS1+, CS2- to CS2+ ...................................-6V to +0.3V GATEVDD to GATEGND .........................................-0.3V to +12V GATE1, GATE2 to GATEGND ...........-0.3V to (GATEVDD + 0.3V) SAFE1, SAFE2 to GATEGND....................................-0.3V to +6V GATEGND to AGND..............................................-0.3V to +0.3V All Other Analog Inputs to AGND ............-0.3V to the lower of +6V and (AVDD + 0.3V) Stresses beyond those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, unless otherwise noted. TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at TA = +25°C.) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS 30 V HIGH-SIDE CURRENT SENSE WITH PGA Common-Mode Input Voltage Range Common-Mode Rejection Ratio Input-Bias Current VCS+, VCSCMRR ICS+ 5 11V < VCS+ < 30V 90 VSENSE < 100mV over the common-mode range 120 0.002 ICSFull-Scale Sense Voltage Range VSENSE = VCS_+ VCS_- Sense Voltage Range for Accuracy of ±0.5% VSENSE PGA gain = 25 0 dB 195 ±2 100 PGA gain = 10 0 250 PGA gain = 2 0 1250 PGA gain = 25 75 100 PGA gain = 10 75 250 PGA gain = 2 75 1250 PGA gain = 25 20 100 Sense Voltage Range for Accuracy of ±2% VSENSE PGA gain = 10 20 250 PGA gain = 2 20 1250 Total PGAOUT Voltage Error VSENSE = 75mV PGAOUT Capacitive Load PGAOUT Settling Time Saturation Recovery Time Sense-Amplifier Slew Rate 2 ±0.1 CPGAOUT tHSCS µA mV mV mV ±0.5 % 100 pF Settles to within ±0.5% of final value, RS = 50Ω, CGATE = 15pF < 25 µs Settles to within ±0.5% accuracy; from VSENSE = 3 x full scale < 45 µs AvPGA = 2 0.5 AvPGA = 10 2 AvPGA = 25 2 _______________________________________________________________________________________ V/µs Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, unless otherwise noted. TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at TA = +25°C.) PARAMETER SYMBOL Sense-Amplifier Bandwidth CONDITIONS MIN TYP AvPGA = 2 900 AvPGA = 10 720 AvPGA = 25 290 MAX UNITS kHz LDMOS GATE DRIVER (GAIN = 2 and 4) Output Gate-Drive Voltage Range IGATE = ±1mA 0.75 GATEVDD - 0.75 IGATE = ±10mA 1 GATEVDD -1 V VGATE Output Impedance RGATE Measured at DC 0.1 Ω VGATE Settling Time tGATE Settles to within ±0.5% of final value; RSERIES = 50Ω, CGATE = 15µF 10 ms Output Capacitive Load (Note 1) CGATE VGATE Noise No series resistance, RSERIES = 0Ω 0 10 RSERIES = 50Ω 0 25,000 RMS noise; 1kHz - 1MHz Maximum Power-On Transient Output Short-Circuit Current Limit ISC Total Unadjusted Error No Autocalibration and Offset Removal (Note 2) TUE Total Adjusted Error With Autocalibration and Offset Removal TUE Drift 250 nV/√Hz ±100 mV 1s, sinking or sourcing ±25 mA MAX1385, LOCODE = 128, HICODE = 180 ±6 ±20 MAX1386, LOCODE = 128, HICODE = 180 ±12 ±40 MAX1385, LOCODE = 128, HICODE = 180 ±1 ±8 MAX1386, LOCODE = 128, HICODE = 180 ±2 ±16 MAX1385, VGATE > 1V ±15 MAX1386, VGATE > 1V ±30 mV mV Clamp to Zero Delay Output Safe Switch OnResistance µV/°C 1 ROPSW Amplifier Bandwidth nF GATE_ clamped to AGND (Note 3) µs 500 MAX1385 300 MAX1386 150 Amplifier Slew Rate Ω kHz 0.375 V/µs MONITOR ADC DC ACCURACY Resolution NADC Differential Nonlinearity DNLADC Integral Nonlinearity INLADC 12 (Note 4) Offset Error Gain Error (Note 5) Bits ±0.5 ±2 LSB ±0.6 ±2 LSB ±2 ±4 LSB ±2 ±4 LSB Gain Temperature Coefficient ±0.4 ppm/°C Offset Temperature Coefficient ±0.4 ppm/°C _______________________________________________________________________________________ 3 MAX1385/MAX1386 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, unless otherwise noted. TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at TA = +25°C.) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS Channel-to-Channel Offset Matching ±0.1 LSB Channel-to-Channel Gain Matching ±0.1 LSB 70 dB MONITOR ADC DYNAMIC ACCURACY (1kHz sine-wave input, 2.5VP-P, up to 94.4ksps) Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion SINAD Total Harmonic Distortion THD Spurious-Free Dynamic Range SFDR Intermodulation Distortion IMD Up to the 5th harmonic fIN1 = 0.99kHz, fIN2 = 1.02kHz -82 dB 86 dB 76 dB Full-Power Bandwidth -3dB point 10 MHz Full-Linear Bandwidth S/(N + D) > 68dB 100 kHz External reference 0.8 Internal reference 70 Internally clocked 7.5 MONITOR ADC CONVERSION RATE Power-Up Time tPU Conversion Time tCONV µs 10 µs MONITOR ADC ANALOG INPUT (ADCIN1, ADCIN2) Input Range VADCIN Input Leakage Current Relative to AGND (Note 6) 0 VIN = 0V and VIN = AVDD Input Capacitance ±0.01 CADCIN VREF V ±1 µA 34 pF TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS MAX1385A/MAX1386A, TA = +25°C MAX1385A/MAX1386A, TA = TMIN to TMAX Internal Sensor Measurement Error (Note 1) ±0.25 -1.0 MAX1385B/MAX1386B, TA = +25°C MAX1385B/MAX1386B, TA = TMIN to TMAX TA = TMIN to TMAX +1.0 ±0.25 -2.0 TA = +25°C External Sensor Measurement Error (Notes 1, 7) ±0.25 ±0.35 +2.0 ±0.4 -3 Temperature Resolution ±0.75 +3 1/8 External Diode Drive 2.8 Drive Current Ratio (Note 8) °C °C °C/LSB 85 µA 16.5 INTERNAL REFERENCE REFADC/REFDAC Output Voltage REFADC/REFDAC Output Temperature Coefficient REFADC/REFDAC Output Impedance 4 VREFADC TA = +25°C 2.494 2.500 2.506 VREFDAC TA = +25°C 2.494 2.500 2.506 TCREFADC, TCREFDAC V ±14 ppm/°C 6.5 kΩ _______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, unless otherwise noted. TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at TA = +25°C.) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS Capacitive Bypass at REF Power-Supply Rejection Ratio MIN TYP MAX 270 PSRR AVDD = +5V ±5% VREFADC Limited code test UNITS nF 70 dB EXTERNAL REFERENCE REFADC Input Voltage Range REFADC Input Current IREFADC REFDAC Input Voltage Range VREFDAC REFDAC Input Current 1.0 AVDD VREF = 2.5V, fSAMPLE = 174ksps 60 80 Acquisition/between conversions ±0.01 ±1 (Note 9) 0.5 Static current when no DAC calibration 2.5 0.1 V µA V µA GATE-DRIVER COARSE-DAC DC ACCURACY Resolution NCDAC 8 Integral Nonlinearity INLCDAC Measured at GATE; fine DAC set at full scale Differential Nonlinearity DNLCDAC Guaranteed monotonic Bits ±0.15 ±1 LSB ±0.05 ±0.5 LSB GATE-DRIVER FINE-DAC DC ACCURACY Resolution NFDAC 10 Measured at GATE; coarse DAC set at full scale Integral Nonlinearity INLFDAC Differential Nonlinearity DNLFDAC Guaranteed monotonic Bits ±0.25 ±4 LSB ±0.1 ±1 LSB POWER SUPPLIES (Note 10) Analog Supply Voltage AVDD 4.75 5.25 V Digital Supply Voltage DVDD 2.7 AVDD + 0.3 V Gate-Drive Supply Voltage Analog Supply Current Digital Supply Current GATEVDD Supply Current Shutdown Current (Note 11) VGATEVDD 4.75 IAVDD AVDD = 5V IDVDD DVDD = 2.7V to 5.25V V 4 mA 3.1 4.3 mA 4.5 7 mA IAVDD 0.1 2 IDVDD 0.1 2 IVDDGATE 0.1 2 IGATEVDD IPD 11.00 3.2 3 µA _______________________________________________________________________________________ 5 MAX1385/MAX1386 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, unless otherwise noted. TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at TA = +25°C.) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS VIH AND VIL FOR SDA/DIN AND SCL IN I2C OPERATION ONLY Input High Voltage VIH Input Low Voltage VIL Input Hysteresis 0.7 x DVDD V 0.3 x DVDD VHYS V 0.1 x DVDD V 2.4 V VIH AND VIL FOR OPSAFE1 AND OPSAFE2 Input High Voltage VIH Input Low Voltage VIL 0.4 V VIH AND VIL FOR ALL OTHER DIGITAL INPUTS Input High Voltage VIH Input Low Voltage VIL 2.2 V 0.7 V 0.4 V VOH AND VOL FOR A1/DOUT (SPI), SDA/DIN, ALARM Output Low Voltage VOL ISINK = 3mA Output High Voltage VOH ISOURCE = 2mA DVDD - 0.5 V VOH AND VOL FOR SAFE1, SAFE2, BUSY Output Low Voltage Output High Voltage 6 VOL VOH ISINK = 0.5mA ISOURCE = 0.5mA 0.4 DVDD - 0.5 _______________________________________________________________________________________ V V Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface (GATEVDD = +5.5V for MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for MAX1386, AVDD = +5V, DVDD = 2.7V to 5.25V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted). PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS 400 kHz Serial-Clock Frequency fSCL 0 Bus Free Time Between STOP and START Condition tBUF 1.3 µs 0.6 µs Hold Time Repeated START Condition tHD;STA After this period, the first clock pulse is generated SCL Pulse-Width Low tLOW 1.3 µs SCL Pulse-Width High tHIGH 0.6 µs Setup Time Repeated START Condition tSU;STA 0.6 µs Data Hold Time tHD;DAT Data Setup Time tSU;DAT (Note 13) 0 0.9 100 µs ns Rise Time of Both SDA and SCL Signals, Receiving tR (Note 14) 0 300 ns Fall Time of Both SDA and SCL Signals, Receiving tF (Note 14) 0 300 ns Fall Time of SDA Signal, Transmitting tF (Notes 14, 15) 20 + 0.1Cb 250 ns Setup Time for STOP Condition tSU;STO Capacitive Load for Each Bus Line Cb Pulse Width of Spikes Suppressed by the Input Filter tSP 0.6 (Note 16) 0 µs 400 pF 50 ns _______________________________________________________________________________________ 7 MAX1385/MAX1386 I2C SLOW-/FAST-MODE TIMING CHARACTERISTICS (Note 12, see Figure 1) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface I2C HIGH-SPEED-MODE TIMING CHARACTERISTICS (Note 12, see Figure 2) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for MAX1386, AVDD = +5V, DVDD = 2.7V to 5.25V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted). PARAMETER Serial-Clock Frequency SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS 3.4 MHz fSCL 0 Setup Time Repeated START Condition tSU;STA 160 ns Hold Time Repeated START Condition tHD;STA 160 ns tLOW 160 ns ns SCL Pulse-Width Low SCL Pulse-Width High tHIGH 60 Data Setup Time tSU;DAT 10 Data Hold Time tHD;DAT (Note 17) ns 0 70 ns Rise Time of SCL Signal, Receiving tRCL 10 40 ns Rise Time of SCL Signal After a Repeated START Condition and After an Acknowledge Bit, Receiving tRCL1 10 80 ns Fall Time of SCL Signal, Receiving tFCL 10 40 ns Rise Time of SDA Signal, Receiving tRDA 10 80 ns Fall Time of SDA Signal, Transmitting tFDA 10 80 ns Setup Time for STOP Condition tSU;STO 160 Capacitive Load for Each Bus Line Cb Pulse Width of Spikes That are Suppressed by the Input Filter tSP 8 (Note 18) 0 _______________________________________________________________________________________ ns 100 pF 10 ns Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = +5V, DVDD = 2.7V to 5.25V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS SCL Clock Period tCP 62.5 ns SCL High Time tCH 25 ns SCL Low Time tCL 25 ns DIN Setup Time tDS 10 ns DIN Hold Time tDH 0 ns SCL Fall to DOUT Transition tDO CLOAD = 30pF CSB Fall to DOUT Enable tDV CLOAD = 30pF 40 ns CSB Rise to DOUT Disable tTR CLOAD = 30pF (Note 12) 100 ns 20 ns CSB Rise or Fall to SCL Rise tCSS 25 CSB Pulse-Width High tCSW 100 ns Last Clock Rise to CSB Rise tCSH 50 ns ns Note 1: Guaranteed by design. Note 2: Total unadjusted errors are for the entire gain drive channel including the 8- and 10-bit DACs and the gate driver. They are all measured at the GATE1 and GATE2 outputs. Offset removal refers to presetting the drain current after a room temperature calibration by the user. This effectively removes the channel offset. Note 3: During power-on reset, the output safe switch is closed. The output safe switch opens once both AVDD and DVDD supply voltages are established. Note 4: Integral nonlinearity is the deviation of the analog value at any code from its theoretical value after the gain and offset errors have been removed. Note 5: Offset nulled. Note 6: Absolute range for analog inputs is from 0 to AVDD. Note 7: The MAX1385/MAX1386 and external sensor are at the same temperature. External sensor measurement error is tested with a diode-connected 2N3904. Note 8: The drive current ratio is defined as the large drive current divided by the small drive current in a temperature measurement. See the Temperature Measurements section for further details. Note 9: Guaranteed monotonicity. Accuracy might be degraded at lower VREFDAC. Note 10: Supply current limits are valid only when digital inputs are at DVDD or DGND. Timing specifications are only guaranteed when inputs are driven rail-to-rail. Note 11: Shutdown supply currents are typically 0.1µA. Maximum specification is limited by automated test equipment. Note 12: All timing specifications referred to VIH or VIL levels. Note 13: A master device must provide a hold time of at least 300ns for the SDA signal (referred to VIL of SCL) to bridge the undefined region of SCL’s falling edge. Note 14: Cb = total capacitance of one bus line in pF; tR and tF are measured between 0.3 x DVDD and 0.7 x DVDD. Note 15: For a device operating in an I2C-compatible system. Note 16: Input filters on the SDA and SCL inputs suppress noise spikes less than 50ns. Note 17: A device must provide a data hold time to bridge the undefined part between VIH and VIL of the falling edge of the SCL signal. An input circuit with a threshold as low as possible for the falling edge of the SCL signal minimizes this hold time. Note 18: Cb = total capacitance of one bus line in pF. For bus loads between 100pF and 400pF, the timing parameters should be linearly interpolated. _______________________________________________________________________________________ 9 MAX1385/MAX1386 SPI TIMING CHARACTERISTICS (Note 12, See Figure 3) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface SDA tF tLOW t SU;DAT tR tF t HD;STA tSP tr tBUF SCL t HD;STA t HIGH t HD;DAT S t SU;STO t SU;STA Sr S P Figure 1. I2C Slow-/Fast-Mode Timing Diagram Sr Sr P t RDA t FDA SDA t SU;STA t HD;DAT t HD;STA t SU;STO t SU;DAT SCL t FCL t RCL1 t HIGH t LOW t RCL t LOW t RCL1 t HIGH Figure 2. I2C High-Speed-Mode Timing Diagram tCSW CSB tCSS tCL tCSH tCP tCH tCSS SCL tDH DIN D23 tDS D22 D0 D1 DOUT tTR tDO tDV D1 D0 Figure 3. SPI Timing Diagram 10 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface 3.5 TA = +25°C 3.4 3.3 TA = -40°C 3.2 3.1 3.0 4.7 4.8 4.9 5.0 5.1 5.2 2.50 2.25 1.50 1.25 1.00 4.1 4.0 3.2 3.7 4.7 4 5.2 AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V 0.45 0.40 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 35 50 65 9 10 11 -1.5 -2.0 -2.5 0.05 -3.5 -4.0 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 0 20 40 60 80 VSENSE (mV) VSENSE (mV) TOTAL PGAOUT_ ERROR vs. COMMON-MODE VOLTAGE PGAOUT_ OFFSET VOLTAGE vs. TEMPERATURE VSENSE TRANSIENT RESPONSE OFFSET VOLTAGE (μV) 0.08 0.07 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 ACQUISITION 100mV/div 0 -50 -100 100 MAX1385/86 toc09 AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V VSENSE = 100mV MAX1385/86 toc08 MAX1385/86 toc07 AvPGA = 2 VSENSE = 100mV 200 150 100 50 12 -1.0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0.10 0.09 8 -0.5 -3.0 80 7 AvPGA = 25 CMV = 12V 0 0.10 0 20 6 TOTAL PGAOUT_ ERROR vs. VSENSE 0.5 PGAOUT_ ERROR (%) TRACKING 5 5 GATEVDD (V) MAX1385/86 toc05 MAX1385/86 toc04 0.50 -0.075 -0.100 -0.125 -0.150 PGAOUT_ ERROR (%) 4.2 TOTAL PGAOUT_ ERROR vs. VSENSE ACQUISITION -40 -25 -10 TA = -40°C 4.2 2.7 PGAOUT_ ERROR (%) PGAOUT_ ERROR (%) 0.050 0.025 0 -0.025 -0.050 4.4 4.3 TOTAL PGAOUT_ ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE 0.100 0.075 4.5 DVDD (V) AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V VSENSE = 100mV TA = +85°C TA = +25°C 4.6 2.00 1.75 AVDD (V) 0.150 0.125 4.8 4.7 2.75 5.3 AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V VSENSE = 100mV 4.9 IGATEVDD (mA) TA = +85°C 5.0 MAX1385/86 toc03 TA = +85°C TA = +25°C TA = -40°C 3.00 3.6 IDVDD (mA) IAVDD (mA) 3.7 AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V VSENSE = 100mV MAX1385/86 toc02 AvPGA = 2 CMV = 12V VSENSE = 100mV 3.8 4.00 3.75 3.50 3.25 MAX1385/86 toc01 4.0 3.9 GATEVDD SUPPLY CURRENT vs. GATEVDD VOLTAGE DVDD SUPPLY CURRENT vs. DVDD VOLTAGE MAX1385/86 toc06 AVDD SUPPLY CURRENT vs. AVDD VOLTAGE VSENSE TRACKING PGAOUT_ -150 -200 -250 1V/div -300 -350 -400 0.01 0 5 10 15 20 25 COMMON-MODE VOLTAGE (V) 30 MAX1385/MAX1386 Typical Operating Characteristics (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) -40 -25 -10 5 20 35 50 65 80 10μs/div TEMPERATURE (°C) ______________________________________________________________________________________ 11 Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) PGAOUT_ 0mV TO 250mV VSENSE TRANSIENT RESPONSE PGAOUT_ PEDESTAL ERROR DURING CALIBRATION MAX1385/86 toc10 GATE_ OFFSET COMPENSATED ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE MAX1385/86 toc11 MAX1385/86 toc12 0 2V/div VSENSE BUSY PGAOUT_ PGAOUT_ 1V/div 10mV/div H_ERROR, AUTOCALIBRATION -2 -3 -4 -5 L_ERROR, AUTOCALIBRATION H_ERROR, NO AUTOCALIBRATION -6 -7 L_ERROR, NO AUTOCALIBRATION -8 20µs/div 10µs/div ERROR VOLTAGE (mV) -1 100mV/div -40 -25 -10 5 20 35 50 65 80 TEMPERATURE (°C) GATE_ SETTLING TIME vs. LOAD CAPACITANCE VGATE vs. POWER-ON TIME MAX1385/86 toc13 MAX1385/86 toc14 14 VGATE_ SETTLING TIME (ms) 50mV/div CHARGE CURRENT vs. VGATE MAX1385/86 toc15 16 RSERIES = 50Ω 12 VGATE_ 2V/div 10 8 6 20mA/div 4 IGATE_ 2 0 400µs/div 0.1 1 10 1ms/div 100 LOAD CAPACITANCE (µF) GATE_ VOLTAGE SWING vs. LOAD RESISTANCE GLITCH ENERGY MAX1385/86 toc17 MAX1385/86 toc16 10 9 GATE_ VOLTAGE SWING (V) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface 8 7 6 5 10mV/div 4 3 2 1 0 10 100 1000 10,000 100,000 1µs/div LOAD RESISTANCE (Ω) 12 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL INPUT CODE (8-BIT COARSE DAC) 0.8 1.0 0.6 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 -0.2 DNL (LSB) 0.4 INL (LSB) 0.4 0 0 -0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.6 -0.6 -0.6 -0.8 -0.8 -0.8 -1.0 -1.0 150 200 250 -1.0 0 200 DIGITAL INPUT CODE 400 600 800 0 1000 50 DIGITAL INPUT CODE DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL INPUT CODE (10-BIT FINE DAC) 0.6 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.2 INL (LSB) 0.4 0 -0.2 200 250 MAX1385/86 toc22 0.8 150 INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL OUTPUT CODE (ADC) MAX1385/86 toc21 1.0 100 DIGITAL INPUT CODE 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4 -0.6 -0.6 -0.8 -0.8 -1.0 -1.0 0 200 400 600 800 1000 0 1000 DIGITAL INPUT CODE DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL OUTPUT CODE (ADC) 0.8 0.6 3000 4000 FFT PLOT 0 MAX1385/86 toc23 1.0 2000 DIGITAL OUTPUT CODE -40 AMPLITUDE (dB) 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 fIN = 303Hz fSAMPLE = 49.15kHz -20 MAX1385/86 toc24 100 DNL (LSB) 50 DNL (LSB) 0 MAX1385/86 toc20 0.6 DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL INPUT CODE (8-BIT DAC) MAX1385/86 toc19 0.8 INL (LSB) 1.0 MAX1385/86 toc18 1.0 INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY vs. DIGITAL INPUT CODE (10-BIT FINE DAC) -60 -80 -100 -0.4 -120 -0.6 -140 -0.8 -1.0 -160 0 1000 2000 3000 DIGITAL OUTPUT CODE 4000 0 5 10 15 20 25 FREQUENCY (kHz) ______________________________________________________________________________________ 13 MAX1385/MAX1386 Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (GATEVDD = +5.5V for the MAX1385, GATEVDD = +11V for the MAX1386, AVDD = DVDD = +5V, external VREFADC = +2.5V, external VREFDAC = +2.5V, CREF = 0.1µF, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) INTERNAL REFERENCE vs. TEMPERATURE ADC OFFSET ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE AVDD = 5V 0.075 0.050 OFFSET ERROR (%) 2.499 2.494 MAX1385/86 toc26 AVDD = 5V 2.504 REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V) 0.100 MAX1385/86 toc25 2.509 0.025 0 -0.025 -0.050 2.489 -0.075 2.484 -0.100 5 20 35 50 65 80 -40 -25 -10 TEMPERATURE (°C) 20 35 50 65 80 ADC GAIN ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE ADC OFFSET ERROR vs. AVDD VOLTAGE 0.05 MAX1385/86 toc27 0.100 0.075 0.025 0 -0.025 AVDD = 5V 0.04 0.03 GAIN ERROR (%) 0.050 0.02 0.01 0 -0.01 -0.02 -0.050 -0.03 -0.075 -0.04 -0.100 -0.05 4.75 4.85 4.95 5.05 5.15 -40 -25 -10 5.25 5 20 35 50 65 80 AVDD (V) TEMPERATURE (°C) INTERNAL TEMPERATURE SENSOR ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE SENSOR ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE 1.0 MAX1385/86 toc29 0 -0.2 MAX1385/86 toc30 OFFSET ERROR (%) 5 TEMPERATURE (°C) MAX1385/86 toc28 -40 -25 -10 0.8 0.6 -0.4 0.4 ERROR (°C) ERROR (°C) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface -0.6 -0.8 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -1.0 -0.6 -1.2 -0.8 -1.4 -1.0 -40 -20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 14 60 80 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 TEMPERATURE (°C) ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface PIN NAME FUNCTION 1 DGND Digital Ground 2 SAFE1 Safe Status Channel 1 Output. Programmable active-high or active-low. SAFE1 asserts when programmed channel 1 temperature threshold or current threshold has been reached. 3 A0/CSB I2C-Compatible Address 0/ SPI-Compatible Chip Select. See the Digital Serial Interface section. In SPI mode, drive A0/CSB low to select the device. 4 CNVST Active-Low Conversion-Start Input. Drive CNVST low to start a conversion (clock modes 01 and 11). Connect CNVST to DVDD when initiating conversions through the serial interface (clock mode 00). 5 SEL Mode Select. Connect SEL to DGND to select I2C mode. Connect SEL to DVDD to select SPI mode. 6 ALARM Alarm Output. Program ALARM for comparator or interrupt output modes (see the Alarm Modes section). Program ALARM to assert on any combination of channel temperature or current thresholds. 7 SAFE2 Safe Status Channel 2 Output. Programmable active-high or active-low. SAFE2 asserts when programmed channel 2 temperature threshold or current threshold has been reached. 8, 19, 25, 28, 35–39, 42, 46 N.C. No Connection. Not internally connected. 9 REFDAC DAC Reference Input/Output 10 REFADC ADC Reference Input/Output 11 DXP1 Diode Positive Input 1. Connect to anode of temperature diode or the base and collector of an npn transistor. 12 DXN1 Diode Negative Input 1. Connect to cathode of temperature diode or the emitter of an npn transistor. 13 DXP2 Diode Positive Input 2. Connect to anode of temperature diode or the base and collector of an npn transistor. 14 DXN2 Diode Negative Input 2. Connect to cathode of temperature diode or the emitter of an npn transistor. 15 ADCIN1 ADC Input 1 16 ADCIN2 ADC Input 2 17 PGAOUT2 Programmable-Gain Amplifier Output 2 18 AVDD Analog Power-Supply Input 20, 21, 22 AGND Analog Ground ______________________________________________________________________________________ 15 MAX1385/MAX1386 Pin Description Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Pin Description (continued) 16 PIN NAME 23 GATEGND Gate-Drive Amplifier Ground FUNCTION 24 GATEVDD Gate-Drive Amplifier Supply Input 26 OPSAFE2 Operating Safe Channel 2 Input. Drive OPSAFE2 high to clamp GATE2 to AGND. 27 CS2+ Current-Sense Positive Input 2. CS2+ is the external sense resistor connection to the LDMOS 2 supply. 29 CS2- Current-Sense Negative Input 2. CS2- is the external sense resistor connection to the LDMOS 2 drain. 30 GATE2 Channel 2 Gate-Drive Amplifier Output 31 GATE1 Channel 1 Gate-Drive Amplifier Output 32 CS1- Current-Sense Negative Input 1. CS1- is the external sense resistor connection to the LDMOS 1 drain. 33 CS1+ Current-Sense Positive Input 1. CS1+ is the external sense resistor connection to the LDMOS 1 supply. 34 OPSAFE1 Operating Safe Channel 1 Input. Drive OPSAFE1 high to clamp GATE1 to AGND. 40 PGAOUT1 Programmable-Gain Amplifier Output 1 41 A2/N.C. 43 SCL 44 SDA/DIN I2C-Compatible Address 2. See the Digital Serial Interface section. No Connection. Leave unconnected in SPI mode. Digital Serial Clock Input I2C-Compatible Serial Data Input/Output SPI-Compatible Serial Data Input I2C-Compatible Address 1. See the Digital Serial Interface section. 45 A1/DOUT 47 BUSY Device Busy Output. See the BUSY Output section 48 DVDD Digital Supply Input — EP SPI-Compatible Serial Data Output Exposed Pad. Connect to AGND. Internally connected to analog ground. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface SAFE2 SAFE1 AVDD ALARM DIGITAL CURRENT AND TEMPERATURE COMPARATORS DVDD PGAOUT1 CS1+ PGA1 DGND CS1PGA REGISTERS CS2SCL PGA2 CS2+ SDA/DIN SERIAL INTERFACE A0/CSB REGISTER SECTION PGAOUT2 A1/DOUT A2/N.C. VREFDAC CHANNEL 1 DAC REGISTERS OPSAFE1 8-BIT HIGH CODE 8-BIT LOW CODE GATE1 DRV 10-BIT FINE ADJUST CODE GATEVDD 10-BIT DAC GATEGND VREFDAC CHANNEL 1 DAC REGISTERS OPSAFE2 8-BIT HIGH CODE 8-BIT LOW CODE GATE2 DRV 10-BIT FINE ADJUST CODE 10-BIT DAC AGND MAX1385 MAX1386 FIFO MEMORY TEMP SENSOR PGAOUT1 PGAOUT2 12-BIT ADC WITH T/H ADCIN0 ADCIN1 MUX EXTERNAL TEMP PROCESSING VREFDAC 2.5V REF REFDAC REFADC VREFADC DXP1 DXN1 DXP2 DXN2 CONVERSION AND SCAN OSCILLATOR AND CONTROL CNVST ______________________________________________________________________________________ 17 MAX1385/MAX1386 Functional Diagram MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Detailed Description The MAX1385/MAX1386 set and control bias conditions for dual RF LDMOS power devices found in cellular base stations. Each device includes a high-side current-sense amplifier with programmable gains of 2, 10, and 25 to monitor the LDMOS drain current over the 20mA to 5A range. Two external diode-connected transistors monitor the LDMOS temperatures while an internal temperature sensor measures the local die temperature of the MAX1385/MAX1386. A 12-bit ADC converts the programmable-gain amplifier (PGA) outputs, external/internal temperature readings, and two auxiliary inputs. The two gate-drive channels, each consisting of 8-bit coarse and 10-bit fine DACs and a gate-drive amplifier, generate a positive gate voltage to bias the LDMOS devices. The MAX1385 includes a gate-drive amplifier with a gain of 2 and the MAX1386 gate-drive amplifier provides a gain of 4. The 8-bit coarse and 10-bit fine DACs allow up to 18 bits of resolution. The MAX1385/ MAX1386 include autocalibration modes to minimize error over time, temperature, and supply voltage. The MAX1385/MAX1386 feature an I2C-/SPI-compatible serial interface. Both devices operate from a 4.75V to 5.25V analog supply (3.2mA supply current), a 2.7V to 5.25V digital supply (3.1mA supply current), and a 4.75V to 11.0V gate-drive supply (4.5mA supply current). Power-On Reset On power-up, the MAX1385/MAX1386 are in full powerdown mode (see the SSHUT (Write) section). To change to normal power mode, write two commands to the Software Shutdown register. The first command sets FULLPD to 0 (other bits in the Software Shutdown register are ignored). A second command is needed to activate any internal blocks. The recommended sequence of commands to ensure reliable startup following the application of power, is given in the Appendix: Recommended Power-Up Code Sequence section. ADC Description The MAX1385/MAX1386 ADC uses a fully differential successive approximation register (SAR) conversion technique and on-chip track-and-hold (T/H) circuitry to convert temperature and voltage signals into 12-bit digital results. The analog inputs accept single-ended input signals. Single-ended signals are converted using a unipolar transfer function. See the ADC transfer function of Figure 25 for more information. 18 The internal ADC block converts the results of the die temperature, remote diode temperature readings, PGAOUT1, PGAOUT2, ADCIN1, or ADCIN2 voltages according to which bits are set in the ADC Conversion register (see the ADCCON (Write) section). The results of the conversions are written to FIFO memory. The FIFO holds up to 15 words (each word is 16 bits) with channel tags to indicate which channel the 12-bit data comes from. The FIFO indicates an overflow condition and an underflow condition (read of an empty FIFO) by the Flag register (see the RDFLAG (Read) section) and channel tags. The FIFO always stores the most recent conversion results and allows the oldest data to be overwritten. Read the latest result stored in the FIFO by sending the appropriate read command byte (see the FIFO (Read) section). Read the data stored in the FIFO through the FIFO Read register. The FIFO (Read) section details which channel is being read and whether the FIFO has overflowed. Analog-to-Digital Conversion Scheduling The MAX1385/MAX1386 ADC multiplexer scans selected inputs in the order shown in Table 1. The ADC multiplexer skips over the items that are not selected in the Analog-to-Digital Conversion register. When writing a conversion command before a conversion is complete, the pending conversion may be canceled. In addition, using the serial interface while the ADC is converting may degrade the performance of the ADC. ADC Clock Modes The MAX1385/MAX1386 offer three different conversion/acquisition modes (known as clock modes) selectable through the Device Configuration register (see the DCFIG (Read/Write) section). Clock Mode 10 is reserved and cannot be used. For conversion/acquisition examples and timing diagrams, see the Applications Information section. If the analog-to-digital conversion requires the internal reference (temperature measurement or voltage measurement with internal reference selected) and the reference has not been previously forced on, the device inserts a worst-case delay of 81µs, for the reference to settle, before commencing the analog-to-digital conversion. The reference remains powered up while there are pending conversions. If the reference is not forced on, it automatically powers down at the end of a scan or when CONCONV in the Analog-to-Digital Conversion register is set back to 0. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Clock Mode 01 In clock mode 01, power-up, acquisition, conversion, and power-down are all initiated by setting CNVST low for at least 40ns. Conversions are performed automatically using the internal oscillator. The ADC sets the BUSY output high, powers up, scans all requested channels, stores the results in the FIFO, and then powers down. After the scan is complete, BUSY is pulled low and the results for all the commanded channels are available in the FIFO. Clock Mode 11 In clock mode 11, conversions are initiated one at a time through CNVST in the order shown in Table 1 and performed using the internal oscillator. In this mode, the acquisition time is controlled by the time CNVST is brought low. CNVST is resynchronized by the internal oscillator, which means there is a one-clock-cycle uncertainty (typically 320ns) in the exact sampling instant. Different timing parameters apply depending whether the conversion is temperature, voltage, using the external reference, or using the internal reference. Table 1. Order of ADC Conversion Scan ORDER OF SCAN DESCRIPTION OF CONVERSION 1 Internal device temperature 2 External diode 1 temperature 3 PGAOUT1 for current sense 4 ADCIN1 5 External diode 2 temperature 6 PGAOUT2 for current sense 7 ADCIN2 For a temperature conversion, set CNVST low for at least 40ns. The BUSY output goes high and the temperature conversion results are available after an additional 94µs (when BUSY goes low again). Thus, the worst-case conversion time of the initial temperature sensor scan (allowing the internal reference to settle) is 175µs. Subsequent temperature scans only take 85µs worst case as the internal reference and temperature sensor circuits are already powered. For a voltage conversion while using an internal or external reference, set CNVST low for at least 2µs but less than 6.7µs. The BUSY output goes high and the conversion results are available after an additional 7.5µs (typ) when BUSY goes low again. Continuous conversion is not supported in this clock mode (see the ADCCON (Write) section). Changing Clock Modes During ADC Conversions If a change is made to the clock mode in the Device Configuration register while the ADC is already performing a conversion (or series of conversions), the following descriptions show how the MAX1385/MAX1386 respond: • CKSEL = 00 and is then changed to another value The ADC completes the already triggered series of conversions and then goes idle. The BUSY output remains high until the conversions are completed. The MAX1385/MAX1386 then respond in accordance with the new CKSEL mode. • CKSEL = 01 and is then changed to another value If waiting for the initial external trigger, the MAX1385/MAX1386 immediately exit clock mode 01, power down the ADC, and go idle. The BUSY output stays low and waits for the external trigger. If a conversion sequence has started, the ADC completes the requested conversions and then goes idle. The BUSY output remains high until the conversions are completed. The MAX1385/MAX1386 then respond in accordance with the new CKSEL mode. • CKSEL = 11 and is then changed to another value If waiting for an external trigger, the MAX1385/ MAX1386 immediately exit clock mode 11, power down the ADC, and go idle. The BUSY output stays low and waits for the external trigger. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 19 MAX1385/MAX1386 Clock Mode 00 In clock mode 00, power-up, acquisition, conversion, and power-down are all initiated by writing to the Analogto-Digital Conversion register and performed automatically using the internal oscillator. This is the default clock mode. The ADC sets the BUSY output high, powers up, scans all requested channels, stores the results in the FIFO, and then powers down. After the scan is complete, BUSY is pulled low and the results for all the commanded channels are available in the FIFO. MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface CAPACITIVE DAC ADCIN_ CONTROL LOGIC AGND TRACK MODE CAPACITIVE DAC ADCIN_ CONTROL LOGIC AGND HOLD/CONVERSION MODE Figure 4. Equivalent ADC Input Circuit Analog Input Track and Hold The equivalent circuit (Figure 4) shows the MAX1385/MAX1386 ADC input architecture. In track mode, a positive input capacitor is connected to ADCIN_ and a negative input capacitor is connected to AGND. After the T/H enters hold mode, the difference between the sampled positive and negative input voltages is converted. The input capacitance charging rate determines the time required for the T/H to acquire an input signal. If the input signal’s source impedance is high, the required acquisition time lengthens. Any source impedance below 300Ω does not significantly affect the ADC’s AC performance. A high-imped- 20 ance source can be accommodated either by lengthening tACQ or by placing a 1µF capacitor between the positive input and AGND. The combination of the analog input source impedance and the capacitance at the analog input creates an RC filter that limits the analoginput bandwidth. Analog-Input Bandwidth The ADC’s input-tracking circuitry has a 10MHz bandwidth to digitize high-speed transient events. Anti-alias prefiltering of the input signals is necessary to avoid high-frequency signals aliasing into the frequency band of interest. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface DAC Description The MAX1385/MAX1386 include two 8-bit and 10-bit DAC blocks to independently control the voltage on each LDMOS gate. Both 10-bit and 8-bit DACs can be automatically calibrated to minimize output error over time, temperature, and supply voltage. The 8-bit and 10-bit DACs have unipolar transfer functions and have a relationship to the output voltage by the following equation: V V FINECODE VDACOUT = REF × LOCODE + REF × [HICODE − LOCODE] × 28 28 210 where LOCODE, HICODE, and FINECODE are the low wiper (8 bits), high wiper (8 bits), and fine DAC (10 bits) values written to the DAC by the user. LOCODE, HICODE, and FINECODE represent the values in the DAC input registers and may or may not be the actual values in the DAC output registers depending whether autocalibration is used or not (see the 8-Bit CoarseDAC Adjustment section). To find the actual voltage at GATE_, multiply the VDACOUT result by 2 (MAX1385) or 4 (MAX1386). Due to the buffer amplifiers, the voltage at GATE_ cannot be set below 100mV above AGND. It is recommended that the LOCODE for DAC1 and DAC2 are set so that the minimum possible output at GATE_ is 200mV (MAX1385) and 400mV (MAX1386). The DACs can be operated to produce an 18-bit monotonic DAC with 12-bit (typ) INL. Write to either HICODE or LOCODE in a leapfrog fashion, without commanding autocalibration, to configure the 18-bit monotonic DAC. When LOCODE > HICODE, invert the value of FINECODE. 8-Bit Coarse-DAC Adjustment Each DAC control block contains a resistor string with wipers that serve as an 8-bit coarse DAC. Wipers are set by writing to the appropriate DAC input registers and/or using the Load DAC Control register (LDAC) commands. The output of a coarse DAC is not updated until the appropriate DAC output register(s) have been set. See Figure 5 for the relationship between DAC input registers, DAC output registers, and wipers. DAC output registers are not directly accessible to the user. Choose which input register to write to based on whether automatic low or high calibration is desired, or if updates to the output of the DAC need to be initiated immediately. In the case of automatic low or high calibration, a correction code is added to or subtracted from the 10-bit fine-DAC input register. Transfers from the DAC input registers to DAC output registers can occur immediately after a write to the appropriate DAC input register or on a software command through the Software LDAC register. See the Register Descriptions section for bit-level descriptions of these registers. 10-Bit Fine-DAC Adjustment Each DAC control block contains a 10-bit fine DAC that operates between the high and low wiper positions from the 8-bit coarse DAC. The 10-bit fine DAC also has an optional automatic calibration mode and can be updated immediately or on a software-issued command in the Software LDAC register. Writing to the appropriate fine-DAC input register determines whether automatic calibration is used and/or when the DAC is updated. See Figure 6 for the relationship between DAC input registers, DAC output registers, and the Software LDAC register. The fine-DAC output registers are not directly accessible. Choose which DAC input register to write to based on whether automatic fine calibration is desired, or whether updates to the output of the DAC need to be initiated immediately. In the case of automatic fine calibration, a correction code is added to or subtracted from the input register code and transferred to the appropriate fine-DAC output register. Transfers from a fine-DAC input register to a fine-DAC output register can occur immediately after a write to the appropriate DAC input register or on a software command through the Software LDAC register. See the Register Descriptions section for bit-level detail of these registers. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 21 MAX1385/MAX1386 Analog-Input Protection Internal ESD protection diodes clamp all analog inputs to AVDD and AGND, allowing the inputs to swing from AGND - 0.3V to AVDD + 0.3V without damage. If an analog input voltage exceeds the supplies, limit the input current to 2mA. MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface HIGH-CAL COARSE DAC_ HIGH WIPER OUTPUT REGISTER INPUT REGISTERS HIWIPE_ REGISTER HCAL VDACREF THRUHI_ REGISTER TO 10-BIT FINE DAC THRULO_ REGISTER LOWIPE_ REGISTER COARSE DAC_ LOW WIPER OUTPUT REGISTER LCAL LOW-CAL LOAD DAC CONTROL REGISTER (LDAC) Figure 5. Coarse-DAC Register Diagram FROM 8-BIT COARSE DAC LOAD DAC CONTROL REGISTER (LDAC) INPUT REGISTERS FINE_ REGISTER FINECAL_ REGISTER FINE DAC_ OUTPUT REGISTER FINECALTHRU_ REGISTER 10-BIT FINE DAC TO GATE-DRIVE BLOCK FINE-CAL FINETHRU_ REGISTER FROM 8-BIT COARSE DAC Figure 6. Fine-DAC Register Diagram 22 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Temperature Measurements The MAX1385/MAX1386 measure the internal die temperature and two external remote-diode temperature sensors. Set up a temperature conversion by writing to the Analog-to-Digital Conversion register (see the ADCCON (Write) section). Optionally program SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs to depend on programmed temperature thresholds. The MAX1385/MAX1386 can perform temperature measurements with an internal diode-connected transistor. The diode bias current changes from 66µA to 4µA to produce a temperature-dependent bias voltage difference. The second conversion result at 4µA is subtracted from the first at 66µA to calculate a digital value that is proportional to the absolute temperature. The stored data result is the aforementioned digital code minus an offset to adjust from Kelvin to Celsius. The reference voltage for the temperature measurements is always derived from the internal reference source. Temperature results are in degrees Celsius (two’s-complement form). The temperature-sensing circuits power up for the first temperature measurement in an analog-to-digital conversion scan. The temperature-sensing circuits remain powered until the end of the scan to avoid a possible 67µs delay of internal reference power-up time for each individual temperature channel. If the continuous convert bit CONCONV is set high and the current ADC channel selection includes a temperature channel, the temperature-sensor circuits remain powered up until the CONCONV bit is set low. The external temperature-sensor drive current ratio has been optimized for a 2N3904 npn transistor with an ideality factor of 1.0065. The nonideality offset is removed internally by a preset digital coefficient. Use of a transistor with a different ideality factor produces a proportionate difference in the absolute measured temperature. More details on this topic and others related to using an external temperature sensor can be found in Maxim Application Note 1057: Compensating for Ideality and Series Resistance Differences Between Thermal Sense Diodes and Application Note 1944: Temperature Monitoring Using the MAX1253/MAX1254 and MAX1153/MAX1154. High-Side Current-Sense PGAs The MAX1385/MAX1386 provide two high-side currentsense amplifiers with programmable gain. The currentsense amplifiers are unidirectional and provide a 5V to 30V input common-mode range. Both CS1+ and CS2+ must be within the specified common-mode range for proper operation of each amplifier. The sense amplifiers measure the load current, ILOAD, through an external sense resistor, RSENSE_, between the CS_+ and CS_- inputs. The full-scale sense voltage range (VSENSE_ = VCS_+ - VCS_-) depends on the programmed gain, AvPGA_ (see the DCFIG (Read/Write) section). The sense amplifiers provide a voltage output at PGAOUT_ according to the following equation: VPGAOUT _ = AvPGA _ × (VCS _ + − VCS _ −) These outputs are also routed to the internal 12-bit ADC so that a digital representation of the amplified voltages can be read through the FIFO. The PGA scales the sensed voltages to fit the input range of the ADC. Program the PGA with gains of 2, 10, and 25 by setting the PGSET_ bits (see the DCFIG (Read/Write) section). The input stages have nominal input offset voltages of 0mV that can be adjusted by a trim DAC (not shown in the Functional Diagram) over the -3mV to +3mV range in 25µV steps. Autocalibration can be used to control the trim DAC to minimize the effective channel input offset voltage (see the PGACAL (Write) section). The PGA feedback network is referenced to AGND. ALARM Output The state of ALARM is logically equivalent to the inclusive OR of SAFE1 and SAFE2. The exception to this statement is when ALARM is configured for output interrupt mode (see the Alarm Modes section). When in output-interrupt mode, ALARM stays in its asserted state until its associated flag is cleared by reading from the ______________________________________________________________________________________ 23 MAX1385/MAX1386 ADC/DAC References The MAX1385/MAX1386 provide an internal low-noise 2.5V reference for the ADCs, DACs, and temperature sensor. See the Device Configuration Register section for information on configuring the device for external or internal reference. Connect a voltage source to REFADC in the 1V to AVDD range when using an external ADC reference. Connect a voltage source to REFDAC in the 0.5V to 2.5V range when using an external DAC reference. When using an external voltage reference, bypass the reference pin with a 0.1µF capacitor to AGND. The internal reference has a lowpass filter to reduce noise. The device allows 60µs (typ) and 81µs (typ) worst case for the reference to settle before permitting an analog-to-digital conversion. If reference mode 11 is selected, the required settling time is longer. In this case, the user should set at least one of DAC1PD, DAC2PD, or FBGON in the Software Shutdown register, any of which forces the reference to be permanently powered up. MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface HIGHEST POSSIBLE THRESHOLD VALUE (DEFAULT VALUE FOR HIGH THRESHOLD REGISTER) ALARM OUTPUT DEASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE FALLS BELOW THIS LEVEL* ALARM OUTPUT ASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE RISES ABOVE THIS LEVEL HIGH THRESHOLD BUILT-IN 8 TO 64 LSBs OF HYSTERESIS RANGE OF VALUES THAT DO NOT CAUSE AN ALARM BUILT-IN 8 TO 64 LSBs OF HYSTERESIS ALARM OUTPUT ASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE FALLS BELOW THIS LEVEL *ONLY WHEN ALARM IS CONFIGURED FOR OUTPUT-COMARATOR MODE. WHEN IN OUTPUT-INTERRUPT MODE, FLAG REGISTER MUST BE READ FOR ALARM TO BE DEASSERTED. LOW THRESHOLD ALARM OUTPUT DEASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE RISES ABOVE THIS LEVEL* LOWEST POSSIBLE THRESHOLD VALUE (DEFAULT VALUE FOR HIGH THRESHOLD REGISTER) Figure 7. Window-Threshold-Mode Diagram Flag register. Configure ALARM for open-drain/pushpull and active-high/active-low by setting the respective bits in the Hardware Alarm Configuration register. SAFE1/SAFE2 Outputs Set up the SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs to allow WiredOR/AND-type logic functions or to create additional interrupt-type signals to replace or supplement the existing ALARM output. SAFE1 and SAFE2 do not have any internal pullup/pulldown devices. The SAFE1 and SAFE2 output buffers are CMOS-compatible, noninverting, output buffers capable of driving to within 0.5V of either digital rail. The SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs power up as active-high CMOS outputs with standard logic levels. Configure the SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs for open-drain or push-pull by setting the appropriate bits in the Hardware Alarm Configuration register. When configuring SAFE1 and SAFE2 as open-drain outputs, an external pullup resistor is required. 24 BUSY Output The BUSY output is forced high to show that the MAX1385/MAX1386 are busy for a variety of reasons: • The ADC is in the middle of a user-commanded conversion cycle (but not in continuous convert mode) • The ADC is in the middle of an internally triggered conversion cycle (for a self-calibration measurement) • The device is in the middle of DAC calibration calculations • The device is in the middle of power-up initialization • One of the PGA channels is undergoing self-calibration The serial interface remains active regardless of the state of the BUSY output. Wait until BUSY goes low to read the current conversion data from the FIFO. When BUSY is high as a result of an ADC conversion, do not enter a second conversion command until BUSY has gone low to indicate the previous conversion is complete. The rising edge of BUSY occurs on the next internal oscillator clock after the start of a new conversion (either by CNVST or an interface command). ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 MEASUREMENT VALUE (TEMPERATURE OR CURRENT) HIGH THRESHOLD BUILT-IN HYSTERESIS BUILT-IN HYSTERESIS LOW THRESHOLD TIME ALARM OUTPUT OUTPUTCOMPARATOR MODE (ACTIVE LOW) OUTPUTINTERRUPT MODE (ACTIVE LOW) FLAG REGISTER READ FLAG REGISTER FLAG REGISTER READ READ TIME Figure 8. Window-Threshold-Mode Timing Diagram In single-conversion mode (CKSEL = 11), the BUSY signal remains high until the ADC has completed the current conversion (not the entire scan, just the current conversion), the data has been moved into the FIFO, and the alarm limits for the channel have been checked (if enabled). In multiple-conversion mode (CKSEL = 01 or CKSEL = 00), the BUSY signal remains high until all channels have been scanned and the data from the final channel has been moved into the FIFO and checked for alarm limits (if enabled). In continuous-conversion mode (CONCONV = 1), the BUSY signal does not go high as a result of ADC conversions; however, BUSY does go high when CONCONV is removed and remains high until the current scan is complete and the ADC sequence halts. After commanding any of the DAC autocalibration components, wait for BUSY to go low before setting OSCPD to 1. Alarm Modes The MAX1385/MAX1386 contain several programmable modes for configuring outputs ALARM, SAFE1, and SAFE2 behavior. Window-threshold mode allows SAFE_ to assert when the temperature/current is too high or too low (outside the window). Hysteresis-threshold mode allows SAFE_ to assert when the temperature/ current is too high, and then to deassert when the temperature/current falls back to an appropriate level. ALARM asserts when SAFE1 and/or SAFE2 asserts. Program ALARM for output-comparator mode to stay asserted after an alarm condition until temperature/current levels are back below programmed thresholds. Program ALARM for output-interrupt mode to stay asserted after an alarm condition until the Flag register is read. Window-Threshold Mode In window-threshold mode, ADC readings of current/temperature are compared to the configured current/temperature low/high thresholds that are programmed to cause an alarm condition. If an ADC reading falls out of the configured window and ALARM is configured for output-comparator mode, ALARM asserts until the current/temperature reading falls back into the window (past the built-in hysteresis). If an ADC reading falls out of the configured window and ALARM is configured for output-interrupt mode, ALARM asserts until the Flag register is read. Set the amount of built-in hysteresis from 8 LSBs to 64 LSBs (see the ALMSCFG (Read/Write) section). See Figures 7 and 8. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 25 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface HIGHEST POSSIBLE THRESHOLD VALUE (DEFAULT VALUE FOR HIGH THRESHOLD REGISTER) ALARM OUTPUT ASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE RISES ABOVE THIS LEVEL HIGH THRESHOLD ALARM OUTPUT ASSERTED WHEN MEASURED VALUE FALLS BELOW THIS LEVEL LOW THRESHOLD RANGE OF VALUES THAT DO NOT CAUSE AN ALARM *ONLY WHEN ALARM IS CONFIGURED FOR OUTPUT-COMARATOR MODE. WHEN IN OUTPUT-INTERRUPT MODE, FLAG REGISTER MUST BE READ FOR ALARM TO BE DEASSERTED. LOWEST POSSIBLE THRESHOLD VALUE (DEFAULT VALUE FOR LOW THRESHOLD REGISTER) Figure 9. Hysteresis-Threshold-Mode Diagram Hysteresis-Threshold Mode In hysteresis-threshold mode, ADC readings of current/temperature are compared to the configured current/temperature low/high thresholds that are programmed to cause an alarm condition. If an ADC reading exceeds its respective configured threshold and ALARM is configured for output-comparator mode, ALARM asserts until the current/temperature reading falls back below its respective threshold. If an ADC reading exceeds its respective configured threshold and ALARM is configured for output-interrupt mode, ALARM asserts until the Flag register is read. See Figures 9 and 10. Register Descriptions Communicate with the MAX1385/MAX1386 through the I2C/SPI-compatible serial interface. Complete read and write operations consist of slave address bytes, command bytes, and data bytes. The following register descriptions cover the contents of command bytes and data bytes. See the Digital Serial Interface section for a detailed description of how to construct full read and write operations. All registers are volatile and are reset to default states upon removal of power. These default states are referred to as power-on reset (POR) states. All accessible MAX1385/MAX1386 registers are shown in Table 2. 26 TH1 and TH2 (Read/Write) Write to Channel 1 and Channel 2 High Temperature Threshold registers by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 3). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Read channel 1 and channel 2 high-temperature thresholds by sending the appropriate read command byte. Channel 1 and Channel 2 Temperature Threshold registers are compared to temperature readings from the remote diode connected transistors. Temperature data is in two’s-complement format and the LSB corresponds to 1/8°C (see Figure 26 for the Temperature Transfer Function). TL1 and TL2 (Read/Write) Write to Channel 1 and Channel 2 Low-TemperatureThreshold registers by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 4). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Read channel 1 and channel 2 low-temperature thresholds by sending the appropriate read command. Channel 1 and Channel 2 Temperature Threshold registers are compared to temperature readings from the remote diode connected transistors. Temperature data is in two’s-complement format and the LSB corresponds to 1/8°C (see Figure 26 for the Temperature Transfer Function). ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface REGISTER DESCRIPTION Analog-to-Digital Conversion MNEMONIC ADCCON HEX COMMAND WRITE READ 62 — Channel 1 High-Current Threshold IH1 24 A4 Channel 1 High-Temperature Threshold TH1 20 A0 Channel 1 Low-Current Threshold IL1 26 A6 Channel 1 Low-Temperature Threshold TL1 22 A2 Channel 2 High-Current Threshold IH2 2C AC Channel 2 High-Temperature Threshold TH2 28 A8 Channel 2 Low-Current Threshold IL2 2E AE Channel 2 Low-Temperature Threshold TL2 2A AA Coarse DAC1 High Wiper Input HIWIPE1 34 B4 Coarse DAC1 Low Wiper Input LOWIPE1 36 B6 Coarse DAC1 Write-Through High Wiper Input THRUHI1 74 B4 Coarse DAC1 Write-Through Low Wiper Input THRULO1 76 B6 BA Coarse DAC2 High Wiper Input HIWIPE2 3A Coarse DAC2 Low Wiper Input LOWIPE2 3C BC Coarse DAC2 Write-Through High Wiper Input THRUHI2 7A BA Coarse DAC2 Write-Through Low Wiper Input THRULO2 7C BC DCFIG 30 B0 FIFO — 80 B8 Device Configuration FIFO Memory Fine DAC1 Input Read RDFINE1 — Fine DAC1 Input Register with Autocalibration FINECAL1 38 — FINE1 50 — Fine DAC1 Input Without Autocalibration Fine DAC1 Write-Through Input with Autocalibration Fine DAC1 Write-Through Input Without Autocalibration FINECALTHRU1 78 — FINETHRU1 52 — BE Fine DAC2 Input Read RDFINE2 — Fine DAC2 Input Register with Autocalibration FINECAL2 3E — FINE2 54 — FINECALTHRU2 7E — FINETHRU2 56 — RDFLAG — EA ALMHCFG 60 E0 PGACAL 4E — SCLR 68 — Fine DAC2 Input Without Autocalibration Fine DAC2 Write-Through Input with Autocalibration Fine DAC2 Write-Through Input Without Autocalibration Flag Hardware Alarm Configuration PGA Calibration Control Software Clear Software LDAC LDAC 66 — Software Shutdown SSHUT 64 — ALMSCFG 32 B2 Software Alarm Configuration ______________________________________________________________________________________ 27 MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 2. Register Listing (See Appendix: Recommended Power-Up Code Sequence section) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MEASUREMENT VALUE (TEMPERATURE OR CURRENT) HIGH THRESHOLD LOW THRESHOLD TIME ALARM OUTPUT OUTPUTCOMPARATOR MODE (ACTIVE LOW) OUTPUTINTERRUPT MODE (ACTIVE LOW) FLAG REGISTER READ FLAG REGISTER READ TIME Figure 10. Hysteresis-Threshold-Mode Timing Diagram Table 3. TH1 and TH2 (Read/Write) D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 (MSB) D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (LSB) POR X X X X 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Bit Value (°C) X X X X -256 +128 +64 +32 +16 +8 +4 +2 +1 +0.5 +0.25 +0.125 X = Don’t care. IH1 and IH2 (Read/Write) Write to Channel 1 and Channel 2 High-CurrentThreshold registers by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 5). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Read channel 1 and channel 2 high-current thresholds by sending the appropriate read command byte. Channel 1 and Channel 2 Current-Threshold registers are compared to ADC readings at PGAOUT1 and PGAOUT2. Use the following equation to find the required threshold code for a specified threshold current: I THRESH = IDRAIN × RSENSE × AvPGA × 28 4096 VREFADC where I DRAIN is the current threshold in amperes, RSENSE is the sense resistor, AvPGA is the voltage gain of the PGA, VREFADC is the ADC reference voltage, and I THRESH is the resulting threshold register value in decimal. IL1 and IL2 (Read/Write) Write to Channel 1 and Channel 2 Low-CurrentThreshold registers by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 6). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Read channel 1 and channel 2 low-current thresholds by sending the appropriate read command byte. Channel 1 and Channel 2 Low-Current Threshold registers are compared to ADC readings at PGAOUT1 and PGAOUT2. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 (MSB) D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (LSB) POR X X X X 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit Value (°C) X X X X -256 +128 +64 +32 +16 +8 +4 +2 +1 +0.5 +0.25 +0.125 X = Don’t care. Table 5. IH1 and IH2 (Read/Write) D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 (MSB) D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (LSB) POR X X X X 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Bit Value X X X X — — — — — — — — — — — — X = Don’t care. Table 6. IL1 and IL2 (Read/Write) POR Bit Value D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 (MSB) D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (LSB) X X X X X X X X 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — 0 — X = Don’t care. Use the following equation to find the required threshold code for a specified threshold current: I THRESH = IDRAIN × RSENSE × AvPGA × 4096 VREFADC where I DRAIN is the current threshold in amperes, RSENSE is the sense resistor, AvPGA is the voltage gain of the PGA, VREFADC is the ADC reference voltage, and I THRESH is the resulting threshold register value in decimal. DCFIG (Read/Write) Select PGA gain settings, clock modes, and DAC and ADC reference modes by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 7). Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. Read the Device Configuration register by sending the appropriate read command byte. Program PG2SET1 and PG2SET0 to set channel 2’s current-sense amplifier gain (see Table 7a). Program PG1SET1 and PG1SET0 to set channel 1’s current-sense amplifier gain (see Table 7a). Set CKSEL1 and CKSEL0 to determine the conversion and acquisition timing clock modes (see Table 7b). See the ADC Clock Modes section for a functional description of each clock mode. Set REFADC1 and REFADC0 to select external/internal reference for the ADC (see Table 7c). Set REFDAC1 and REFDAC0 to select external/internal reference for both DACs (see Table 7d). When mode 11 is selected, the external capacitor that is connected to the REFADC is charged by a resistor with a typical value of 400kΩ. This time constant needs to be allowed for powering up the reference. Avoid leakage paths to REFADC. ALMSCFG (Read/Write) The Software Alarm Configuration register controls the behavior of outputs SAFE1, SAFE2, and ALARM. Write to the Software Alarm Configuration register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 8). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Read the Software Alarm Configuration register by sending the appropriate command byte. Set ALMSCLR to 1 to immediately set all temperature/ current threshold registers to their POR state. In addition, temperature-/current-related bits of the Flag register are also reset to their POR state. The ALMSCLR resets to 0 immediately after a write. Set ALARMCMP to 1 to enable output-comparator mode for ALARM and to 0 to enable output-interrupt mode for ALARM (see the ______________________________________________________________________________________ 29 MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 4. TL1 and TL2 (Read/Write) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Table 7. DCFIG (Read/Write) Table 7a. Gain-Setting Modes BIT NAME DATA BIT POR PG_SET1 PG_SET0 X D15–D10 X Don’t care FUNCTION 0 0 PGA_ gain of 2 PG2SET1 D9 0 PGA 2 gain-setting 0 1 PGA_ gain of 10 PG2SET0 D8 0 PGA 2 gain-setting 1 X PGA_ gain of 25 PG1SET1 D7 0 PGA 1 gain-setting X = Don’t care. PG1SET0 D6 0 PGA 1 gain-setting CKSEL1 D5 0 Clock mode and CNVST configuration CKSEL0 D4 0 Clock mode and CNVST configuration REFADC1 D3 0 ADC reference select REFADC0 D2 0 ADC reference select REFDAC1 D1 0 DAC reference select REFDAC0 D0 0 DAC reference select Alarm Modes section). Setting ALARMCMP does not affect SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs. Program ALARMHYST1 and ALARMHYST0 to set the amount of built-in hysteresis used in window-threshold mode. See the ALARM Output and SAFE1/SAFE2 Outputs sections for a description of the relationship between ALARM and SAFE1 and SAFE2. Set TALARM2 to 1 to allow channel 2 temperature measurements to control the state of SAFE2 and ALARM based on channel 2 temperature thresholds. Set TWIN2 to 0 to enable hysteresis-threshold mode and to 1 to enable windowthreshold mode for channel 2 temperature measurements (see the Alarm Modes section). Set IALARM2 to 1 to allow channel 2 current measurements to control the state of SAFE2 and ALARM based on channel 2 current thresholds. Set IWIN2 to 0 to enable hysteresis-threshold mode and to 1 to enable windowthreshold mode for channel 2 current measurements. Set TALARM1 to 1 to allow channel 1 temperature measurements to control the state of SAFE1 and ALARM based on channel 1 temperature thresholds. Set TWIN1 to 0 to enable hysteresis-threshold mode and to 1 to enable window-threshold mode for channel 1 temperature measurements (see the Alarm Modes section). Set IALARM1 to 1 to allow channel 1 current measurements to control the state of SAFE1 and ALARM based on channel 1 current thresholds. Set IWIN1 to 0 to enable hysteresis-threshold mode and to 1 to enable windowthreshold mode for channel 1 current measurements. HIWIPE1 and HIWIPE2 (Read/Write) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 High Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate write command byte 30 FUNCTION Table 7b. Clock Modes CKSEL1 CKSEL0 0 CONVERSION CLOCK ACQUISITION/ SAMPLING Internal Internally timed acquisitions and conversions. Conversions started by a write to the Analogto-Digital Conversion register or setting the CONCONV bit. 0 0 1 Internal Internally timed acquisitions and conversions. Conversions begin with a high-to-low transition at CNVST. 1 0 — Reserved. Do not use. 1 1 Internal Externally timed acquisitions by CNVST. Conversions internally timed. Table 7c. ADC Reference Selection REFADC1 REFADC0 DESCRIPTION 0 X External. Bypass REFADC with a 0.1µF capacitor to AGND. 1 0 Internal. Leave REFADC unconnected. 1 1 Internal. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor to REFADC for better noise performance. X = Don’t care. followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 9). Bits D14–D8 are don’t care. Read the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 High Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate read command byte. The DAC output is not updated until an LDAC command is issued, at which point the ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface REFDAC1 REFDAC0 DESCRIPTION 0 X External. Bypass REFDAC with a 0.1µF capacitor to AGND. 1 0 Internal. Leave REFDAC unconnected. 1 1 Internal. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor to REFDAC for extra decoupling and better noise performance. X = Don’t care. DAC input register is transferred to the appropriate DAC output register. Automatic calibration of the high wiper is initiated if the HCAL bit in the DAC input register is set to 1 when the appropriate LDAC command is issued. LOWIPE1 and LOWIPE2 (Read/Write) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Low Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 10). Bits D14–D8 are don’t care. Read the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Low Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate read command byte. The DAC output is not updated until an LDAC command is issued, at which point the DAC input register is transferred to the appropriate DAC output register. Automatic calibration of the low wiper is initiated if the LCAL bit in the DAC input register is set to 1 when the appropriate LDAC command is issued. FINECAL1 and FINECAL2 (Write) Write to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input register with autocalibration by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 11). Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. A write to these registers triggers the autocalibration but does not automatically update the output of the DAC. Write to the Software LDAC register (LDAC) to transfer the Fine DAC Input register contents to the Fine DAC Output register, thereby updating the output of the DAC. POR contents for these registers are all zeros. Read the DAC input register values written to Fine DAC1 and DAC2 Input registers through the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input Read register. These read registers contain the latest user-write to any Fine DAC1 or Fine DAC2 Input Read register and do not contain autocalibration-corrected values. PGACAL (Write) Write to the PGA Calibration Control register to calibrate PGA1 and PGA2 internal amplifiers. Write to the PGA Calibration Control register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 12). Bits D15–D8 are reserved and must be set to 0. Bits D7–D3 are don’t care. Set FIRSTB to 1 to enable tracking-calibration mode, and to 0 to enable acquisition-calibration mode. During an offset calibration trial, for either mode, the corresponding PGAOUT_ is put into hold, which produces a pedestal error for 67µs typically and BUSY is set to 1. In acquisition mode, the calibration routine operates continuously, first on channel 1 and then on channel 2, until the channel-input offset voltage error has been reduced to within 50µV. The time taken for both channels to complete acquisition depends upon the initial channel offset voltage error but should never be longer than 112ms. In tracking mode, a pair of offset calibration trials, first on channel 1 and then on channel 2, are made each time DOCAL is set to 1 or every 20ms if the SELFTIME bit is set to 1. To reject noise, the offset trim DAC code (not shown in the Functional Diagram) only increments or decrements after the results of 16 calibration trials have been averaged. Set FIRSTB to 0 and DOCAL to 1 to initiate an acquisition calibration. Acquisition must be done before tracking the first time a PGA calibration is commanded. Set FIRSTB to 1, DOCAL to 1, and SELFTIME to 0 to trigger an offset calibration trial on PGA1 and PGA2. At the end of the routine, DOCAL returns to 0. Set FIRSTB to 1, DOCAL to 1 (optional to trigger calibration once immediately before SELFTIME starts periodic calibrations), and SELFTIME to 1, just once, to trigger periodic offset-calibration trials (approximately every 20ms). Set SELFTIME to 0 to halt the periodic calibration. FINE1 and FINE2 (Write) Write to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input register without autocalibration by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 13). Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. A write to these registers does not trigger the autocalibration and does not automatically update the output of the DAC. Write to the Software LDAC register (LDAC) to transfer the DAC input register contents to the Fine DAC Output register, thereby updating the output of the fine DAC. POR contents for these registers are all zeros. Read the DAC input register values written to Fine DAC1 and DAC2 Input registers through the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input Read register. These read registers contain the latest user-write to any Fine DAC1 or Fine DAC2 Input Read register and do not contain autocalibration corrected values. FINETHRU1 and FINETHRU2 (Write) Write to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Input register without autocalibration by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see ______________________________________________________________________________________ 31 MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 7d. DAC Reference Selection MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Table 8. ALMSCFG (Read/Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR D15–D12 X Don’t care ALMSCLR D11 0 1 = Temp/current thresholds set to POR state 0 = Temp/current thresholds unaffected ALARMCMP D10 0 1 = ALARM in output-comparator mode 0 = ALARM in output-interrupt mode ALARMHYST1 D9 0 ALARMHYST0 D8 0 TALARM2 D7 0 1 = SAFE2 and ALARM dependent on channel 2 temperature 0 = SAFE2 and ALARM not dependent on channel 2 temperature TWIN2 D6 0 1 = Channel 2 temperature thresholds are in window-threshold mode 0 = Channel 2 temperature thresholds are in hysteresis-threshold mode IALARM2 D5 0 1 = SAFE2 and ALARM dependent on channel 2 current 0 = SAFE2 and ALARM not dependent on channel 2 current IWIN2 D4 0 1 = Channel 2 current thresholds are in window-threshold mode 0 = Channel 2 current thresholds are in hysteresis-threshold mode TALARM1 D3 0 1 = SAFE1 and ALARM dependent on channel 1 temperature 0 = SAFE1 and ALARM not dependent on channel 1 temperature TWIN1 D2 0 1 = Channel 1 temperature thresholds are in threshold-window mode 0 = Channel 1 temperature thresholds are in hysteresis-threshold mode IALARM1 D1 0 1 = SAFE1 and ALARM dependent on channel 1 current 0 = SAFE1 and ALARM not dependent on channel 1 current IWIN1 D0 0 1 = Channel 1 current thresholds are in window-threshold mode 0 = Channel 1 current thresholds are in hysteresis-threshold mode X FUNCTION Thresholds hysteresis (ALARMHYST1 is MSB) 00 = 8 LSBs of hysteresis 01 = 16 LSBs of hysteresis 10 = 32 LSBs of hysteresis 11 = 64 LSBs of hysteresis X = Don’t care. Table 9. HIWIPE1 and HIWIPE2 (Read/Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR FUNCTION HCAL D15 1 1 = High wiper autocalibration. 0 = No high wiper autocalibration. — D14–D8 X Don’t care. — D7–D0 0000 0000 8-bit coarse high wiper DAC input code. D7 is the MSB. Table 14). Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. A write to these registers does not trigger the autocalibration but immediately updates the output of the DAC by transferring the DAC input register to the DAC output register (writing through the input register). POR contents for these registers are all zeros. Read the DAC input register val- 32 ues written to Fine DAC1 and DAC2 Input registers through the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input Read register. These read registers contain the latest user write to any Fine DAC1 or Fine DAC2 Input Read register and do not contain autocalibration corrected values. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface BIT NAME DATA BIT POR FUNCTION LCAL D15 1 1 = Low wiper autocalibration. 0 = No low wiper autocalibration. — D14–D8 X Don’t care. — D7–D0 0000 0000 8-bit coarse low wiper DAC input code. D7 is the MSB. ALMHCFG (Read/Write) The Hardware Alarm Configuration register controls SAFE1, SAFE2, and ALARM outputs. Write to the Hardware Alarm Configuration register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 15). Bits D15–D8 are don’t care. Read the Hardware Alarm Configuration register by sending the appropriate read command byte. Set SETSAFE1 to 1 to immediately force SAFE1 active. This is especially useful when SAFE1 is connected to OPSAFE1, giving the user software control over shutting down the LDMOS transistor. Set SETSAFE1 to 0 for normal operation. SETSAFE2 has the same functionality as SETSAFE1 but for channel 2. Set ALARMPOL to 1 to configure ALARM active-low. Set it to 0 to configure ALARM active-high. Set ALARMOPN to 1 to configure ALARM open-drain. Set it to 0 to configure ALARM push-pull. Set SAFE1POL to 1 to configure SAFE1 for active-low, and to 0 for active-high. Set SAFE2POL to 1 to configure SAFE2 for active-low, and to 0 for active-high. Set SAFE1OPN to 1 to configure SAFE1 for open-drain, and to 0 for push-pull. Set SAFE2OPN to 1 to configure SAFE2 for open-drain, and to 0 for push-pull. When connecting SAFE1 and SAFE2 outputs to OPSAFE1 and OPSAFE2 inputs, configure the device as follows: 1) Set SAFE1POL and SAFE2POL to 0s. Table 11. FINECAL1 and FINECAL2 (Write) DATA BIT POR D15–D10 X D9–D0 00 0000 0000 FUNCTION Don’t care. 10-bit fine DAC input code. D9 is the MSB. 2) Set SAFE1OPN and SAFE2OPN to 0s. This ensures that when SAFE1 and SAFE2 are asserted, and connected to OPSAFE1 and OPSAFE2, the LDMOS transistors are shut off. ADCCON (Write) The Analog-to-Digital Conversion register selects which inputs to the ADC are converted. Write to the Analog-toDigital Conversion register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 16). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. Bits D11–D8 are reserved bits and need to be set to 0. Read the results of the conversions in the FIFO by sending the appropriate read command byte. See the ADC Description section for a complete description of the ADC. Set CONCONV to 1 to convert selected inputs to the ADC continuously and to 0 to convert selected inputs to the ADC only once. Set ADCSEL2 to 1 to select voltages at ADCIN2 to be converted. Set IEXT2 to 1 to select voltages at PGAOUT2 to be converted. Set Table 12. PGACAL (Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT RESET STATE RESERVED D15–D8 0 Reserved. Set to 0. FUNCTION X D7–D3 X Don’t care. FIRSTB D2 0 1 = Tracking calibration mode. 0 = Acquisition calibration mode. DOCAL D1 0 1 = Initiate the calibration defined by FIRSTB (one time). 0 = Do not initiate a calibration. SELFTIME D0 0 1 = Initiate periodic calibrations defined by FIRSTB (every 15ms). 0 = Stop periodic calibrations. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 33 MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 10. LOWIPE1 and LOWIPE2 (Read/Write) MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface TEXT2 to 1 to select the temperature at external diode 2 to be converted. Set ADCSEL1 to 1 to select voltages at ADCIN1 to be converted. Set IEXT1 to 1 to select voltages at PGAOUT1 to be converted. Set TEXT1 to 1 to select the temperature at external diode 1 to be converted. Set TINT to 1 to select the internal temperature of the MAX1385/MAX1386 to be converted. During continuous conversions (CONCONV = 1), the ADC does not trigger the BUSY signal. When CONCONV is set to 0, the current scan (not just the current conversion) is completed and the ADC waits for the next command. During continuous conversions, the FIFO overflows if the user does not read it quickly enough. When the FIFO overflows, it contains a mixture of old and new conversion results (see the RDFLAG (Read) section). Continuous conversion mode is only available in clock modes 00 and 01. SSHUT (Write) The Software Shutdown register shuts down all internal blocks at once or the DAC, ADC, and PGA blocks individually. Write to the Software Shutdown register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 17). Bits D15–D8 and D6, D5, and D4 are don’t care. Set FULLPD to 1 to shut down all internal blocks and reduce the AVDD supply current to 0.2µA. FULLPD is set to 1 at power-up. To change to normal power mode, write two commands to the Software Shutdown register. The first command sets FULLPD to 0 (other bits in the Software Shutdown register are ignored). A second command is needed to activate any internal blocks. FULLPD overrides all other shutdown bits; however, all shutdown bits retain their data when FULLPD is set to 1. This means that if DAC1 and PGA1 are shut down before FULLPD is set to 1, they remain shut down after FULLPD is set to 0 again. Set FBGON to 1 to force the internal bandgap reference to be powered at all times. Set FBGON to 0 to transfer power-down control of the internal reference to the ADC. In the event of DAC1PD or DAC2PD being set to 0, the internal bandgap is forced on. Set OSCPD to 1 to shut down the internal oscillator. When the oscillator is shut down, the ADC ceases conversions and internal PGA calibration halts. Any interface command restarts the oscillator and allows the system to resume from where it left off. Set DAC2PD to 1 to shut down DAC2 and PGA2. Set DAC1PD to 1 to shut down DAC1 and PGA1. DAC1PD and DAC2PD power down the individual blocks regardless of additional commands; however, writes are still permitted to the DACs and PGAs. For maximum accuracy, do not command a DAC calibration while a DAC is powered down or powering up. 34 Table 13. FINE1 and FINE2 (Write) DATA BIT POR D15–D10 X FUNCTION D9–D0 00 0000 0000 Don’t care. 10-bit fine DAC input code. D9 is the MSB. Table 14. FINETHRU1 and FINETHRU2 (Write) DATA BIT POR FUNCTION D15–D10 X D9–D0 00 0000 0000 Don’t care. 10-bit fine DAC input code. D9 is the MSB. LDAC (Write) The Software LDAC register controls the loading of the DAC output registers with values from DAC input registers, allowing the user to update several changes to the DAC all at once (see Table 18). Write to the Software LDAC register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0. Bits D15–D6 are don’t care. Any bit set to 1 in the Software LDAC register is immediately set to 0 thereafter. Table 15. ALMHCFG (Read/Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR FUNCTION X D15–D8 X Don’t care SETSAFE1 D7 0 1 = Force SAFE1 active immediately 0 = Normal operation SETSAFE2 D6 0 1 = Force SAFE2 active immediately 0 = Normal operation ALARMPOL D5 0 1 = ALARM is active-low 0 = ALARM is active-high ALARMOPN D4 0 1 = ALARM is open-drain 0 = ALARM is push-pull SAFE1POL D3 0 1 = SAFE1 is active-low 0 = SAFE1 is active-high SAFE1OPN D2 0 1 = SAFE1 is open-drain 0 = SAFE1 is push-pull SAFE2POL D1 0 1 = SAFE2 is active-low 0 = SAFE2 is active-high SAFE2OPN D0 0 1 = SAFE2 is open-drain 0 = SAFE2 is push-pull ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 16. ADCCON (Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR X D15–D12 X FUNCTION Reserved D11–D8 0 Reserved; set these bits to 0 Don’t care CONCONV D7 0 1 = Continuous conversions (repeated scans) 0 = Noncontinuous conversions (one scan) ADCSEL2 D6 0 1 = Select voltages at ADCIN2 to be converted 0 = Do not select voltages at ADCIN2 to be converted IEXT2 D5 0 1 = Select voltages at PGAOUT2 to be converted 0 = Do not select voltages at PGAOUT2 to be converted TEXT2 D4 0 1 = Select temperature at remote diode 2 to be converted 0 = Do not select temperature at remote diode 2 to be converted ADCSEL1 D3 0 1 = Select voltages at ADCIN1 to be converted 0 = Do not select voltages at ADCIN1 to be converted IEXT1 D2 0 1 = Select voltages at PGAOUT1 to be converted 0 = Do not select voltages at PGAOUT1 to be converted TEXT1 D1 0 1 = Select temperature at remote diode 1 to be converted 0 = Do not select temperature at remote diode 1 to be converted TINT D0 0 1 = Select internal temperature of device to be converted 0 = Do not select internal temperature of device to be converted Set FINECH2 to 1 to load the fine DAC2 output register with the latest write to DAC2 input registers FINE2 or FINECAL2. This means that if FINE2 is written to after FINECAL2, FINE2 is sent to the fine DAC2 output register (no calibration code) when FINECH2 is set to 1. Set HIGHCH2 to 1 to load DAC input register HIWIPE2 into the Coarse DAC2 High Wiper register. Autocalibration of the DAC2 high wiper occurs if the HCAL bit in HIWIPE2 is set to 1. Set LOWCH2 to 1 to load DAC input register LOWIPE2 into the Coarse DAC2 Low Wiper register. Autocalibration of the DAC2 low wiper occurs if the LCAL bit in LOWIPE2 is set to 1. Set FINECH1 to 1 to load the fine DAC1 output register with the latest write to DAC input registers FINE1 or FINECAL1. If FINECAL1 is written to after FINE1, FINECAL1 is sent to the fine DAC1 output register (with calibration code) when FINECH1 is set to 1. Set HIGHCH1 to 1 to load DAC input register HIWIPE1 into the Coarse DAC1 output register. Autocalibration of the DAC1 high wiper occurs if the HCAL bit in HIWIPE1 is set to 1. Set LOWCH1 to 1 to load DAC input register LOWIPE1 into the coarse DAC1 output register. Autocalibration of the DAC1 low wiper occurs if the LCAL bit in LOWIPE1 is set to 1. SCLR (Write) Write to the Software Clear register to reset the DACs and FIFO to their POR states (see Table 19). Write to the Software Clear register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0. Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. A write to bits D5–D0 in the Software Clear register immediately changes the appropriate DAC output to its power-on state (regardless of LDAC). To reset all registers at once, set FULLRESET to 0 and ARMRESET to 1. Next set FULLRESET to 1 and ARMRESET to 0. This 2-byte reset operation protects the registers from being fully reset by inadvertent user writes. After a full reset, the device is in shutdown mode and the SSHUT register needs to be written to for full operation. Set CLFIFO to 1 to clear the entire 15-word FIFO and FIFO-associated flag bits in the Flag register. Set HIGHCL2 to 1 to reset the Coarse DAC2 High Wiper Output and Input registers to their POR states. Set LOWCL2 to 1 to reset the coarse DAC2 High Wiper Output and Input registers to their POR states. Set FINECL1 to 1 to reset Fine DAC1 Output and Input registers to their POR states. Set HIGHCL1 to 1 to reset the Coarse DAC1 High Wiper Output and Input registers to their POR states. Set LOWCL1 to 1 to reset the ______________________________________________________________________________________ 35 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Table 17. SSHUT (Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR X D15–D8 X Don’t care FUNCTION FULLPD D7 1 1 = Shut down all internal blocks 0 = Do not shut down all internal blocks X D6, D5, D4 X Don’t care FBGON D3 0 1 = Force internal bandgap reference to be powered always 0 = Let the ADC control power-down of the internal reference OSCPD D2 0 1 = Shut down the internal oscillator 0 = Do not shut down the internal oscillator DAC2PD D1 1 1 = Power down DAC2 0 = Do not power down DAC2 DAC1PD D0 1 1 = Power down DAC1 0 = Do not power down DAC1 Table 18. LDAC (Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR FUNCTION X D15–D6 X FINECH2 D5 N/A 1 = Update fine DAC2 with FINE2 or FINECAL2 0 = Do not update DAC2 HIGHCH2 D4 N/A 1 = Update coarse DAC2 with HIWIPE2 0 = Do not update DAC2 LOWCH2 D3 N/A 1 = Update coarse DAC2 with LOWIPE2 0 = Do not update DAC2 FINECH1 D2 N/A 1 = Update fine DAC1 with FINE1 or FINECAL1 0 = Do not update DAC1 HIGHCH1 D1 N/A 1 = Update coarse DAC1 with HIWIPE1 0 = Do not update DAC1 LOWCH1 D0 N/A 1 = Update coarse DAC1 with LOWIPE1 0 = Do not update DAC1 Don’t care Coarse DAC1 Low Wiper Output and Input registers to their POR states. Set FINECL2 to 1 to reset Fine DAC2 Output and Input registers to their POR states. THRUHI1 and THRUHI2 (Read/Write) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through High Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 20). Bits D15–D8 are don’t care. Writing to one of these registers automatically writes through to the appropriate DAC output register, thereby updating the DAC output immediately. Writing to one of these registers does not trigger automatic high wiper calibration. Read the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through High 36 Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate read command byte. THRULO1/THRULO2 (Read/Write) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Low Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 21). Bits D15–D8 are don’t care. Writing to one of these registers automatically writes through to the appropriate DAC output register, thereby updating the DAC output immediately. Writing to one of these registers does not trigger automatic low wiper calibration. Read the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Low ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 19. SCLR (Write) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR X D15–D10 X FUNCTION FULLRESET D9 N/A ARMRESET D8 0 Full reset of all DAC registers is a two write operation: 1) FULLRESET = 0, ARMRESET = 1 2) FULLRESET = 1, ARMRESET = 0 X D7 X Don’t care CLFIFO D6 N/A 1 = Clear FIFO and FIFO flag bits 0 = Do not clear FIFO or FIFO flag bits HIGHCL2 D5 N/A 1 = Reset coarse DAC2 high wiper to its POR state 0 = Do not reset coarse DAC2 high wiper to its POR state LOWCL2 D4 N/A 1 = Reset coarse DAC2 low wiper to its POR state 0 = Do not reset coarse DAC2 low wiper to its POR state FINECL1 D3 N/A 1 = Reset fine DAC1 to its POR state 0 = Do not reset fine DAC1 to its POR state HIGHCL1 D2 N/A 1 = Reset coarse DAC1 high wiper to its POR state 0 = Do not reset coarse DAC1 high wiper to its POR state LOWCL1 D1 N/A 1 = Reset coarse DAC1 high wiper to its POR state 0 = Do not reset coarse DAC1 high wiper to its POR state FINECL2 D0 N/A 1 = Reset fine DAC2 to its POR state 0 = Do not reset fine DAC2 to its POR state Don’t care Wiper Input register by sending the appropriate read command byte. the FIFO when the FIFO is empty results in the current contents of the Flag read register to be sent. FINETHRUCAL1 and FINETHRUCAL2 (Write) Write to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Input register with autocalibration by sending the appropriate write command byte followed by data bits D15–D0 (see Table 22). Bits D15–D10 are don’t care. A write to these registers not only triggers the autocalibration but immediately updates the output of the DAC by transferring the DAC input register with correction code to the Fine DAC output register. POR contents for these registers are all zeros. Read the DAC Input register values written to Fine DAC1 and DAC2 Input registers through the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input Read register. These read registers contain the latest user-write to any Fine DAC1 or Fine DAC2 Input register and do not contain autocalibration-corrected values. RDFINE1 and RDFINE2 (Read) Read the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input Read register by sending the appropriate read command byte and reading out data bits D15–D0 (see Table 24). Data contains the last write to any Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input registers and does not contain autocalibration-corrected values. FIFO (Read) Read the oldest result in the FIFO by sending the appropriate read command byte and reading out data bits D15–D0 (see Table 23). Bits D15–D12 are channel tag bits that indicate the source of the conversion. Bits D11–D0 contain the conversion result. Reading from RDFLAG (Read) The Flag register contains important system information regarding ADC/FIFO status and alarm conditions. Read the Flag register by sending the appropriate read command byte and reading out data bits D15–D0 (see Table 25). Bits D15–D12 are don’t care. ADCBUSY is set to 1 when the ADC is busy, an ALARM value is being checked, or the ADC results are being loaded into the FIFO. ADCBUSY is set to 0 when the ADC has completed all the conversions in the current scan. ALUBUSY is set to 1 when the ALU is busy and set to 0 when it is not. ALUBUSY is set to 1 for 134µs at powerup for initialization. FIFOEMP is set to 1 when the FIFO is empty and set to 0 when the FIFO contains data. Writing to the appropriate bit in the Software Clear register empties the FIFO and sets the FIFOEMP bit to 1. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 37 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface FIFOOVER is set to 1 when the FIFO overflows. FIFOOVER is set to 0 after reading the Flag register. All threshold-related bits in the Flag register can be cleared at once by writing to the ALMSCLR bit in the Software Alarm Configuration register (see the ALMSCFG (Read/Write) section). HIGHI2 is set to 1 when the channel 2 current exceeds its high threshold. HIGHI2 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. LOWI2 is set to 1 when the channel 2 current drops below its low threshold. LOWI2 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. HIGHT2 is set to 1 when the channel 2 temperature measurement exceeds its high threshold. HIGHT2 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. The LOWT2 is set to 1 when the channel 2 temperature measurement drops below its low threshold. LOWT2 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. HIGHI1 is set to 1 when the channel 1 current exceeds its high threshold. HIGHI1 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. LOWI1 is set to 1 when the channel 1 current drops below its low threshold. LOWI1 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. HIGHT1 is set to 1 when the channel 1 temperature measurement exceeds its high threshold. HIGHT1 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. LOWT1 is set to 1 when the channel 1 temperature measurement drops below its low threshold. LOWT1 resets to 0 after reading the Flag register. Digital Serial Interface The MAX1385/MAX1386 contain an I2C-/SPI-compatible serial interface for configuration. Connect the modeselect input, SEL, to DGND to select I2C mode. In I2C mode, the MAX1385/MAX1386 provide address inputs A0 to A2 to allow eight devices to be connected on the same bus (see the Slave Address Byte section). Connect SEL to DVDD to select SPI mode. In SPI mode, drive A0/CSB low to select the device. The MAX1385/ MAX1386 support fast (400kHz) and high-speed (1.7MHz or 3.4MHz) data-transfer modes. Data transfers occur in 8-bit bytes with acknowledge (ACK) or not-acknowledge (NACK) bits following each byte. The MAX1385/ MAX1386 are permanent slaves and do not generate their own clock signals. Figure 11 shows the various read/write formats. Write Format Use the following sequence to write a single word (see Figure 11): 1) After generating a START condition (S or Sr), address the MAX1385/MAX1386 by sending the appropriate slave address byte with its corresponding R/W bit set to zero (see the Slave Address Byte section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit (see the Acknowledge Bits section). 38 Table 20. THRUHI1 and THRUHI2 (Read/Write) DATA BIT POR D15–D8 X D7–D0 FUNCTION Don’t care. 8-bit coarse high wiper DAC input code. D7 is the MSB. 0000 0000 Table 21. THRULO1 and THRULO2 (Read/Write) DATA BIT POR D15–D8 X D7–D0 0000 0000 FUNCTION Don’t care. 8-bit coarse high wiper DAC input code. D7 is the MSB. Table 22. FINETHRUCAL1 and FINETHRUCAL2 (Write) DATA BIT POR D15–D10 X D9–D0 00 0000 0000 FUNCTION Don’t care. 10-bit fine DAC input code. D9 is the MSB. 2) Send the appropriate write command byte (see the Command Byte section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit. 3) Send the most significant 8-bit section of the 16-bit data word, sending the MSBs first (see the Data Bytes section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit. 4) Send the least significant 8-bit section of the 16-bit data word, sending the MSBs first. The MAX1385/ MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit. 5) Generate a (repeated) START or STOP condition (Sr or P). To write to a block of registers, use the same steps as above but repeat steps 2, 3, and 4 without any START, STOP, or repeated START conditions (Sr). Finish the block write by generating a STOP condition. Read Format All read operations can begin with a Sr as well as an S condition. One type of read is a 5-byte operation, one is a 3-byte operation, and the other is a continuous read operation. The 5-byte operation reads from the register address contained in one of the 5 bytes sent. The 3byte operation reads from the last register address accessed. Use the following 5-byte sequence to read ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 23. FIFO (Read) D14 0 D13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 DATA BITS D12 0 CONVERSION ORIGIN D11 MSB D0 LSB Internal temperature sensor 1 MSB LSB Channel 1 external temperature 1 0 MSB 1 1 MSB 1 0 0 MSB 0 1 0 1 MSB 0 1 1 0 MSB 0 1 1 1 — 1 0 0 0 — 1 0 0 1 — 1 0 1 0 — 1 0 1 1 — 1 1 0 0 — 1 1 0 1 — 1 1 1 0 MSB 1 1 1 1 MSB BITS D11–D0 CONTAIN THE CONVERSION RESULT D15 0 16 bits of data from a MAX1385/MAX1386 register (see Figure 11): 1) After generating a START condition (S or Sr), address the MAX1385/MAX1386 by sending the appropriate slave address byte and its corresponding R/W bit set to a 0 (see the Slave Address Byte section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 then answer with an ACK bit (see the Acknowledge Bits section). 2) Send the appropriate read command byte (see the Command Byte section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit. 3) After generating a repeated START condition (Sr), address the MAX1385/MAX1386 once more by sending the appropriate slave address byte and its R/W bit set to 1. The MAX1385/MAX1386 answer with an ACK bit. 4) The MAX1385/MAX1386 transmit the most significant 8-bit data byte of the 16-bit data word with the MSB first. Afterwards, the master needs to send an ACK bit. 5) The MAX1385/MAX1386 transmit the least significant 8-bit byte of the 16-bit word with the MSB first. LSB Channel 1 drain current (PGAOUT1) LSB ADCIN1 LSB Channel 2 external temperature LSB Channel 2 drain current (PGAOUT2) LSB ADCIN2 — Reserved — Reserved — Reserved — Reserved — Reserved — Reserved — Reserved LSB Conversion may be corrupted. This occurs only when arriving data causes the FIFO to overflow at the same time data is being read out. LSB Empty FIFO. The current value of the Flag register is provided in place of the FIFO data. Table 24. RDFINE1 and RDFINE2 (Read) DATA BITS POR D15–D10 X D9–D0 00 0000 0000 FUNCTION Don’t care. 10-bit fine DAC input code. D9 is the MSB. 6) The master issues a NACK bit and then generates a repeated START or STOP condition (Sr or P). Continue to poll the current register or read multiple words (e.g., empty FIFO of several conversion results) by omitting step 6 and keep issuing ACK bits after each data byte. Use the following 3-byte sequence to read 16 bits of data from the last accessed MAX1385/ MAX1386 register: 1) After generating a START condition (S or Sr), address the MAX1385/MAX1386 by sending the appropriate 7-bit slave address byte and its corresponding R/W bit set to 1 (see the Slave Address Byte section). The MAX1385/MAX1386 then answer with an ACK bit (see the Acknowledge Bits section). ______________________________________________________________________________________ 39 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface WRITE WORD FORMAT S OR Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 ACK WRITE COMMAND ACK DATA ACK ACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) 8 BITS (MSB) 8 BITS DATA WRITE BLOCK FORMAT S OR Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 ACK WRITE COMMAND ACK DATA ACK ACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) 8 BITS (MSB) 8 BITS DATA N 3-BYTE SEQUENCES (S, Sr, AND P NOT NEEDED) 5-BYTE READ S OR Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 ACK READ COMMAND ACK 8 BITS Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 1 ACK DATA 8 BITS (MSB) ACK DATA NACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) 3-BYTE READ S OR Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 1 ACK DATA ACK 8 BITS (MSB) DATA NACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) Figure 11. Read/Write Formats 2) The MAX1385/MAX1386 then transmit the contents of the last register accessed starting with the most significant 8-bit byte of the 16-bit word. MSBs are sent first. Afterwards, the master needs to send an ACK bit. 3) The MAX1385/MAX1386 transmit the least significant 8-bit byte of the 16-bit word. MSBs are sent first. 4) The master issues a NACK bit and then generates a repeated START or STOP condition (Sr or P). Poll the current register by omitting step 4 and continuing to issue ACK bits after each data byte. Stringing Commands The MAX1385/MAX1386 allow commands to be strung together to minimize configuration time, which is especially useful in HS mode. Figure 12 shows an example of stringing a write and read command together to form a write/readback command. 40 Figure 13 shows another useful sequence for a readmodify-write application. Slave Address Byte The MAX1385/MAX1386 include a 7-bit-long slave address. The first 4 bits (MSBs) of the slave address are factory programmed and always 0x4h. The logic state of the address inputs (A2, A1, and A0) determine the 3 LSBs of the device address (see Figure 14). Connect A2, A1, and A0 to DVDD or DGND. A maximum of eight MAX1385/MAX1386 devices can be connected on the same bus at one time using these address inputs. The 8th bit of the address byte is a R/W bit. The address byte R/W bit is set to 0 to notify the device that a command byte will be written to the device next. The address byte R/W bit is set to 1 to notify the device that a control byte will not be sent and to immediately send data from the last accessed register. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 25. RDFLAG (Read) BIT NAME DATA BIT POR X D15– D12 X Don’t care FUNCTION ADCBUSY D11 0 1 = ADC is busy 0 = ADC is not busy ALUBUSY D10 1 1 = ALU is busy 0 = ALU is not busy FIFOEMP D9 0 1 = FIFO is empty 0 = FIFO is not empty FIFOOVER D8 0 1 = FIFO overflowed 0 = FIFO not overflowed HIGHI2 D7 0 1 = Channel 2 high current threshold exceeded 0 = Channel 2 high current threshold not exceeded LOWI2 D6 0 1 = Channel 2 low current threshold surpassed 0 = Channel 2 low current threshold not surpassed HIGHT2 D5 0 1 = Channel 2 high temperature threshold exceeded 0 = Channel 2 high temperature threshold not exceeded LOWT2 D4 0 1 = Channel 2 low temperature threshold surpassed 0 = Channel 2 low temperature threshold not surpassed HIGHI1 D3 0 1 = Channel 1 high current threshold exceeded 0 = Channel 1 high current threshold not exceeded LOWI1 D2 0 1 = Channel 1 low current threshold surpassed 0 = Channel 1 low current threshold not surpassed HIGHT1 D1 0 1 = Channel 1 high temperature threshold exceeded 0 = Channel 1 high temperature threshold not exceeded LOWT1 D0 0 1 = Channel 1 low temperature threshold surpassed 0 = Channel 1 low temperature threshold not surpassed Command Byte The MAX1385/MAX1386 use read and write command bytes (see Figure 15). The command byte consists of 8 bits and contains the address of the register. The command byte also communicates to the device whether a read or write operation occurs. See the Register Description section for details on how to access specific registers through the command byte. Data Bytes Data bytes are clocked in/out of the device with the MSB first and the LSB last (see Figure 16). See the Register Description section for a description of data bytes for each register. Bit Transfer One data bit is transferred during each SCL clock cycle. The data on SDA must remain stable during the high period of the SCL clock pulse. Changes in SDA while SCL is high and stable are considered control signals (see the START and STOP Conditions section). Both SDA and SCL remain high when the bus is not active. The interface can support fast (400kHz) and high-speed (1.7MHz or 3.4MHz) data-transfer modes. START and STOP Conditions The master initiates a transmission with a START condition (S), which is a high-to-low transition on SDA while SCL is high. The master terminates a transmission with a STOP condition (P), which is a low-to-high transition on SDA while SCL is high (Figure 17). A repeated START condition (Sr) can be used in place of a STOP condition to leave the bus active and the interface transfer speed unchanged (see the Fast/High-Speed Modes section). ______________________________________________________________________________________ 41 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface S OR Sr Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 1 ACK WRITE COMMAND ACK 8 BITS ACK DATA ACK 8 BITS (MSB) ACK DATA 8 BITS (LSB) 8 BITS (MSB) DATA ACK DATA NACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) Figure 12. Write/Readback Sequence S OR Sr ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 Sr READ COMMAND ACK ACK Sr 8 BITS ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 0 ACK WRITE COMMAND ADDRESS R/W 7 BITS 1 ACK ACK DATA 8 BITS (MSB) DATA ACK 8 BITS (MSB) 8 BITS ACK DATA NACK 8 BITS (LSB) DATA ACK Sr OR P 8 BITS (LSB) Figure 13. Read-Modify-Write Sequence S SDA 0 1 0 SCL 1 2 3 0 4 A2 A1 A0 R/W 5 6 7 8 ACK 9 Figure 14. Slave Address Byte Acknowledge Bits Data transfers are acknowledged with an acknowledge bit (ACK) or a not-acknowledge bit (NACK). Both the master and the MAX1385/MAX1386 generate ACK bits. To generate an ACK, SDA must be pulled low before the rising edge of the ninth clock pulse and kept low during the high period of the ninth clock pulse (see Figure 20). To generate a NACK, SDA is pulled high before the rising edge of the ninth clock pulse and is left high for the duration of the ninth clock pulse. 42 Monitoring NACK bits allow for detection of unsuccessful data transfers. NACK bits can also be used by the master to interrupt the current data transfer to start another data transfer. The MAX1385/MAX1386 do not issue an ACK after the last byte of a full reset write to the Software Clear register. Fast/High-Speed Modes At power-up, the bus timing is set for slow-/fast-speed mode (FS mode), which allows bus speeds up to 400kHz. The MAX1385/MAX1386 are configurable for ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface C7 C6 C5 C4 C3 C2 C1 C0 ACK SCL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 MAX1385/MAX1386 SDA Figure 15. Command Byte SDA D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 ACK D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 NACK OR ACK SCL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Figure 16. Data Bytes S Sr P SDA SCL Figure 17. START and STOP Conditions high-speed mode (HS mode), allowing bus speeds up to 3.4MHz. Execute the following procedure to change from FS mode to HS mode (see Figure 21). 1) Generate a START condition (S). 2) Send byte 00001XXX (X = don’t care). The MAX1385/ MAX1386 issue a NACK bit. 3) HS mode is entered on the 10th rising clock edge. To remain in HS mode, use repeated START conditions (Sr) in place of the normal STOP conditions (P) (see Figure 22). All the same write and read formats supported in FS mode are supported in HS mode (with the replacement of repeated START conditions for STOP conditions). Generating a STOP condition (P) while in HS mode changes the bus speed back to FS mode. SPI Digital Serial Interface The MAX1385/MAX1386 feature a 4-wire SPI-compatible serial interface capable of supporting data rates up to 16MHz. Full data transfers occur in 24-bit sections. The first 8-bit byte is a command byte (C7–C0). The next 16 bits are data bits (D15–D0). Clock signal SCL may idle low or high but data is always clocked in on the rising edge of SCL (CPOL = CPHA). Write Format Use the following sequence to write 16 bits of data to a MAX1385/MAX1386 register (see Figure 18): 1) Pull CSB low to select the device. 2) Send the appropriate write command byte (see the Command Byte section). The command byte is clocked in on the rising edge of SCL. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 43 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface A RISING EDGE OF CSB DURING THIS PERIOD COMPLETES A VALID WRITE COMMAND. CSB SCL DIN CR/W C6 C5 C4 C3 C2 C1 C0 D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 Figure 18. SPI Write Format CSB SCL DIN CR/W C6 C5 C4 C3 C2 C1 C0 D15 DOUT D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 Figure 19. SPI Read Format S NOT ACKNOWLEDGE SDA ACKNOWLEDGE SCL 1 2 8 9 Figure 20. Acknowledge Bits 3) Send 16 bits of data (D15–D0) starting with the most significant bit and ending with the least significant bit. Data is clocked in on the rising edges of SCL. 4) Pull CSB high. Read Format Use the following sequence to read 16 bits of data from a MAX1385/MAX1386 register (see Figure 19): 1) Pull CSB low to select the device. 2) Send the appropriate read command byte (see the Command Byte section). The command byte is clocked in on the rising edges of SCL. 3) Receive 16 bits of data. Data is clocked out on the falling edges of SCL. Command Byte The MAX1385/MAX1386 use read and write command bytes. The command byte consists of 8 bits and contains the address of the register (C7–C0, see Figures 18 and 19). The command byte also communicates to the device whether a read or write operation occurs. See the Register Description section for details on how to access specific registers through the command byte. Data Bytes Data bytes are clocked in/out of the device with the most significant bit first and the least significant bit last (D15–D0, see Figures 18 and 19). See the Register Description section for a description of data bytes for each register. 4) Pull CSB high. 44 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 HS-MODE MASTER CODE S 0 0 0 0 X 1 X A X Sr SDA SCL HS MODE FS MODE Figure 21. Changing to HS Mode MASTER TO SLAVE SLAVE TO MASTER S MASTER CODE FS MODE FS MODE FS MODE A Sr SLAVE ADDRESS R/W A COMMAND/DATA A P N BYTES PLUS ACK HS MODE CONTINUES Sr SLAVE ADD HS MODE CAN ALSO BE CONTINUED WITH A COMMAND BYTE Figure 22. Changing to FS Mode or Staying in HS Mode Applications Information ADC Clock Mode 11 See Figure 23 for an example of configuring a conversion scan for internal temperature, PGAOUT1, and ADCIN1 in clock mode 11 using the internal reference. Timing symbols are referenced in the Miscellaneous Timing Characteristics section. See Figure 24 for an example of configuring a conversion scan for ADCIN1, external temperature sensor 2, and PGAOUT2 in clock mode 11 using the internal reference. Timing symbols are referenced in the Miscellaneous Timing Characteristics section. Leap-Frogging the DACs for 18 Bits of Resolution Each DAC stage is configurable for leapfrog operation by using the 8-bit coarse DACs in conjunction with the 10-bit fine DAC. Use the following procedure for setting 18 bits of resolution: 1) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Low Wiper Input register (THRULO1/THRULO2) 2) Write to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through High Wiper Input register (THRUHIGH1/THRUHIGH2) with a value one higher or one lower than written to the low wiper register. Temperature-Threshold Examples Table 26 shows some examples of temperature settings in two’s-complement form. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 45 MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface tCNV11 tACQ11 tACQ11 CNVST IDLE, BUT REF AND TEMP SENSOR STAY POWERED UP TEMP CONVERSION IN ~40µs INTERNAL TEMPERATURE CONVERSION RESULT IS STORED IN FIFO USER WRITES TO THE ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION REGISTER TO SET UP CONVERSION SCAN OF INTERNAL TEMPERATURE, PGAOUT1, AND ADCIN1 IDLE, BUT REF AND TEMP SENSOR STAY POWERED UP 2µs ACQUISITION FOR ADCIN1 5.5µs CONVERSION TIME FOR ADCIN1 INT REFERENCE POWERS UP IN ~60µs 47µs ACQUISITION FOR PGAOUT1 5.5µs CONVERSION TIME FOR PGAOUT1 INTERNAL TEMP SENSOR POWERS UP AND ACQUIRES IN ~6.7µs BUSY END OF SCAN, REF AND TEMP SENSOR POWER DOWN AUTOMATICALLY ADCIN1 CONVERSION RESULT STORED IN FIFO PGAOUT1 CONVERSION RESULT STORED IN FIFO Figure 23. ADC Clock Mode 11, Example 1 tCNV11 tACQ11 tAPUINT CNVST USER WRITES TO THE ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION REGISTER TO SET UP CONVERSION SCAN OF ADCIN2, EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE SENSOR2, AND PGAOUT2 ADCIN2 CONVERSION RESULT STORED IN FIFO IDLE, BUT REF AND TEMP SENSOR STAY POWERED UP 2.0µs ACQUISITION FOR ADCIN1 TEMP CONVERSION IN ~40µs 5.5µs CONVERSION TIME FOR ADCIN1 IDLE, BUT REF STAYS POWERED UP TEMP SENSOR POWERS UP AND ACQUIRES IN ~6.7µs 5.5µs CONVERSION TIME FOR ADCIN2 INTERNAL INT REFERENCE POWERS UP IN ~60µs 2µs ACQUISITION OF ADCIN2 BUSY END OF SCAN, REF AND TEMP SENSOR POWER DOWN AUTOMATICALLY EXTERNAL TEMPERATURE PGAOUT2 CONVERSION RESULT SENSOR 2 STORED IN FIFO CONVERSION RESULT STORED IN FIFO Figure 24. ADC Clock Mode 11, Example 2 3) Write to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Write-Through Input register without autocalibration (FINETHRU1/ FINETHRU2). If the coarse DAC1/DAC2 low wiper is higher than the coarse DAC1/DAC2 high wiper, invert the fine DAC1/DAC input register code. The resulting output when the high wiper is higher than the low wiper is shown below: VDACREF 18 2 V × FINECODE + DACREF × LOWCODE 28 where FINECODE is the value written to the Fine DAC1/DAC2 Input register, and LOWCODE is the value 46 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 27. Basic Software Initialization COMMAND BYTE DATA WORD 0x64 0x0008 DESCRIPTION Bring the device out of shutdown mode. 0x64 0x0008 Set internal reference and both DAC channels on. 0x20 0x02A8 Set the channel 1 high-temperature threshold to +85°C. 0x22 0x0EC0 Set the channel 1 low-temperature threshold to -40°C. 0x24 0x02C1 Set the channel 1 high-current threshold to 4.3A for 50mΩ RSENSE, AvPGA = 2, and VREFADC = 2.5V. 0x26 0x0106 Set the channel 1 low-current threshold to 1.6A for 50mΩ RSENSE, AvPGA = 2, and VREFADC = 2.5V. 0x28 0x02A8 Set the channel 2 high-temperature threshold to +85°C. 0x2A 0x0EC0 Set the channel 2 low-temperature threshold to -40°C. 0x2C 0x02C1 Set the channel 2 high-current threshold to 4.3A for 50mΩ RSENSE, AvPGA = 2, and VREFADC = 2.5V. 0x2E 0x0106 Set the channel 2 low-current threshold to 1.6A for 50mΩ RSENSE, AvPGA = 2, and VREFADC = 2.5V. 0x30 0x000F Set AvPGA1 and AvPGA2 to 2, clock mode to 00 and ADC/DAC references to internal. 0x32 0x0000 Set ALARM, SAFE1, and SAFE2 to depend on nothing (POR). 0x60 0x0000 Set ALARM, SAFE1, and SAFE2 for push-pull/active-high (POR). 0x74 0x00CC Set coarse DAC1 high wiper to 204. 0x76 0x0066 Set coarse DAC1 low wiper to 102 (VGATE = 1.99V for MAX1385, VGATE = 3.98V for MAX1386). 0x7A 0x00CC Set coarse DAC2 high wiper to 204. 0x7C 0x0066 Set coarse DAC2 low wiper to 102 (VGATE = 1.99V for MAX1385, VGATE = 3.98V for MAX1386). 0x52 0x01FF Set fine DAC1 to midscale. 0x56 0x01FF Set fine DAC2 to midscale. Table 26. Temperature-Threshold Settings Examples TEMPERATURE SETTING TWO’S COMPLEMENT -40°C 1110 1100 0000 -1.625°C 1111 1111 0011 0°C 0000 0000 0000 +27.125°C 0000 1101 1001 +105°C 0011 0100 1000 written to the Coarse DAC1/DAC2 Input Low Wiper register. The resulting output when the low wiper is higher than the high wiper is: V V − DACREF × FINECODE + DACREF × LOWCODE 18 2 28 Basic Software Initialization The MAX1385/MAX1386 do not power on all internal blocks when full power is first applied. Software must write to register 0x64 twice with bit D7 set to 0 during initialization to enable full operation. A basic initialization sequence is shown in Table 27. Regulating VGS vs. Temperature The MAX1385/MAX1386 can be used along with a microcontroller to perform closed-loop regulation of the LDMOS FET bias current. For example, software can read the temperature and use a calibrated look-up table to determine a new value for the gate drive. As an example, in noncontinuous conversion mode, read temperature from remote diode 1 by writing to the ADCCON register (0x62) with bit D1 set to 1. Wait for BUSY to go high and then low. Read the ADC result from the FIFO (0x80). The result bits D15–D12 = 0001 indicate the measurement source is the external temperature sensor DXP1/DXN1, and bits D11–D3 indicate two’s-complement temperature in degrees Celsius. Bits D2, D1, and D0 are temperature subLSBs. Gate voltage drive range must be previously determined during initialization by setting the coarse DAC1 high and low limits. Write a new value to FINETHRU1 to immediately change the output GATE1 between the high and low wiper limits based on the previous temperature measurement. The regulation software may also use the alarm threshold limits to determine whether temperature and current ______________________________________________________________________________________ 47 Table 28. DAC Write Commands Without Autocalibration ACTION REQUIRED RECOMMENDED COMMAND SEQUENCE OTHER POSSIBLE COMMAND SEQUENCES Update fine DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to FINE_. Write to LDAC to update fine DAC_. Write to FINETHRU_ to immediately update fine DAC_. Update high wiper coarse DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to HIWIPE_ with HCAL set to 0. Write to LDAC to update high wiper coarse DAC_. Write to THRUHI_ to immediately update high wiper coarse DAC_. Update low wiper coarse DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to LOWIPE_ with LCAL set to 0. Write to LDAC to update low wiper coarse DAC_. Write to THRULO_ to immediately update low wiper coarse DAC_. Immediately update fine DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to FINETHRU_. None. Immediately update high wiper coarse DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to THRUHI_. None. Immediately update low wiper coarse DAC_ without triggering autocalibration. Write to THRULO_. None. Update the high, low, and fine components of DAC_ simultaneously without triggering autocalibration. Write to HIWIPE_, LOWIPE, and FINE_. Write to LDAC to update DAC_. None. 1111 1111 1111 VREFADC 0111 1111 1111 FULL-SCALE TRANSITION 0111 1111 1110 1111 1111 1110 1 LSB = +0.125°C 0111 1111 1101 VREFADC 1 LSB = 4096 OUTPUT CODE 1111 1111 1101 1111 1111 1100 VREFADC BINARY OUTPUT CODE MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface 0000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 1111 1111 1111 0000 0000 0011 0000 0000 0010 1000 0000 0010 0000 0000 0001 1000 0000 0001 0000 0000 0000 1000 0000 0000 0 1 2 3 4093 INPUT VOLTAGE (LSB) 4095 -256°C 0°C TEMPERATURE (°C) +255.875°C Figure 25. ADC Transfer Function Figure 26. Temperature Transfer Function limits are within the safe operating area. Configure the ADC for continuous conversions to allow continuous measurement and testing against configured alarm thresholds. Connect SAFE_ to OPSAFE_ to immediately force the gate drive to GATEGND in the event of an alarm-related condition (current or temperature). Performing the autocalibration routines requires use of the internal ADC, the internal ALU, and can also increase the power dissipation of the part. Tables 28 and 29 detail which commands trigger autocalibration and which commands do not. 48 Triggering DAC Calibration ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Table 29. DAC Write Commands with Autocalibration ACTION REQUIRED RECOMMENDED COMMAND SEQUENCE OTHER POSSIBLE COMMAND SEQUENCES Update fine DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. Write to FINECAL_. Autocalibration begins after writing to FINECAL_. Write to LDAC to update fine DAC_. Write to FINECALTHRU_ to immediately update fine DAC_. Update high wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. Write to HIWIPE_ with HCAL set to 1. Autocalibration begins after writing to LDAC and high wiper coarse DAC_ is updated thereafter. None. Update low wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. Write to LOWIPE_ with LCAL set to 1. Autocalibration begins after writing to LDAC and low wiper coarse DAC_ is updated thereafter. None. Immediately update fine DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. Write to FINECALTHRU_. None. Immediately update high wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. This action is not possible. See the recommended sequence above “Update high wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration.” None. Immediately update low wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration. This action is not possible. See the recommended sequence “Update low wiper coarse DAC_ and trigger autocalibration.” None. Update the high, low, and fine components of DAC_. Write to HIWIPE_ with HCAL set to 1. Write LOWIPE_ with LCAL set to 1. Write to LDAC to update high and low wipers with autocalibrated values. Write to FINECALTHRU_ to trigger fine DAC_ autocalibration and update DAC_. HIWIPE_ and LOWIPE_ can be written to in any order but must be followed by LDAC and then a fine DAC_ write (to FINECALTHRU_ or FINECAL_ with another LDAC). This ensures that the fine DAC_ autocalibration is run after the coarse DAC_ autocalibration. ______________________________________________________________________________________ 49 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface MAX1385/MAX1386 Typical Operating Circuit (I2C Mode) 5V 5V EXTERNAL REFERENCE SCL DVDD SCL SDA SDA/DIN GATEVDD REFDAC REFADC AVDD DRAIN SUPPLY CS1+ ALARM C F* MICROCONTROLLER BUSY RF* CS1- SAFE2 SAFE1 +5V GATE1 A0/CSB A1/DOUT MAX1385 MAX1386 DGND RF OUTPUT A2/N.C. RF INPUT SEL OPSAFE1 ADCIN1 OPSAFE2 CNVST ADCIN2 DRAIN SUPPLY (AT LDMOSFET) DXP1 CS2+ CF* DXN1 (AT LDMOSFET) 5V RF* DXP2 CS2- DXN2 GATE2 PGAOUT1 PGAOUT2 AGND GATEGND RF OUTPUT RF INPUT *SELECT RF AND CF BASED ON DESIRED FILTER CUT-OFF FREQUENCY. LIMIT RF TO MINIMIZE OFFSET ERRORS. 50 ______________________________________________________________________________________ Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface N.C. CS2+ OPSAFE2 N.C. GATE2 CS2- GATE1 OPSAFE1 CS1+ CS1- N.C. N.C. TOP VIEW 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 N.C. 37 24 GATEVDD N.C. N.C. 38 23 39 22 GATEGND AGND 40 21 41 20 PGAOUT1 A2/N.C. N.C. SCL SDA/DIN A1/DOUT 42 19 MAX1385 MAX1386 43 44 18 13 DXP2 N.C. BUSY 46 15 DVDD 48 6 7 8 DOCUMENT NO. 48 TQFN-EP T4877-6 21-0044 9 10 11 12 DXN1 5 REFDAC REFADC DXP1 4 SAFE2 N.C. 3 CNVST SEL ALARM 2 A0/CSB 1 DGND SAFE1 + *EXPOSED PAD PACKAGE CODE N.C. AVDD 14 16 PACKAGE TYPE AGND AGND PGAOUT2 ADCIN2 ADCIN1 DXN2 17 45 47 Package Information For the latest package outline information and land patterns, go to www.maxim-ic.com/packages. TQFN *EXPOSED PAD INTERNALLY CONNECTED TO AGND ______________________________________________________________________________________ 51 MAX1385/MAX1386 Pin Configuration MAX1385/MAX1386 Dual RF LDMOS Bias Controllers with I2C/SPI Interface Appendix: Recommended Power-Up Code Sequence The following section shows the recommended startup code for the MAX1385. This code ensures clean startup of the part, irrespective of power-supply ramp speed and starts the device regulating to 312.5mV on both channels. Change the THRUDAC writes to change the voltage across the sense resistor. Note it should be run after the power supplies have stabilized. REGISTER MNEMONIC REGISTER ADDRESS (hex) CODE WRITTEN SHUT 0x64 0x0080 Removes the global power. SHUT 0x64 0x0080 Powers up all parts of the MAX1385 and forces the internal reference to remain powered. The internal oscillator is required for the subsequent reset command. SCLR 0x68 0x0100 Arms the full reset. SCLR 0x68 0x0200 Completes the full reset. SCLR 0x68 0x0100 Arms the full reset.* SCLR 0x68 0x0200 Completes the full reset.* SHUT 0x64 0x0080 Removes the global power. SHUT 0x64 0x0080 Powers up all parts of the MAX1385 and forces the internal reference to remain powered. The internal oscillator is required for the subsequent reset command. DCFIG 0x30 0x000A Selects internal references for both DAC and ADC. PGACAL 0x4E 0x0002 Runs autocalibration on both PGA channels to set the input referred offset to < 50µV. Busy goes low after approximately 30ms and then the VGATE DACs can be set. NOTES *Double reset. This ensures that the internal ROM is reset correctly after power-up and that the ROM data is latched correctly irrespective of power-supply ramp speed. Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time. 52 ____________________Maxim Integrated Products, 120 San Gabriel Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 408-737-7600 © 2009 Maxim Integrated Products Maxim is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.