MAXIM MAX7044_09

19-3221; Rev 3; 6/09
KIT
ATION
EVALU
E
L
B
AVAILA
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
The MAX7044 crystal-referenced phase-locked-loop
(PLL) VHF/UHF transmitter is designed to transmit
OOK/ASK data in the 300MHz to 450MHz frequency
range. The MAX7044 supports data rates up to 100kbps,
and provides output power up to +13dBm into a 50Ω
load while only drawing 7.7mA at 2.7V.
The crystal-based architecture of the MAX7044 eliminates many of the common problems with SAW-based
transmitters by providing greater modulation depth,
faster frequency settling, higher tolerance of the transmit frequency, and reduced temperature dependence.
The MAX7044 also features a low supply voltage of
+2.1V to +3.6V. These improvements enable better
overall receiver performance when using the MAX7044
together with a superheterodyne receiver such as the
MAX1470 or MAX1473.
A simple, single-input data interface and a buffered
clock-out signal at 1/16th the crystal frequency make
the MAX7044 compatible with almost any microcontroller or code-hopping generator.
The MAX7044 is available in an 8-pin SOT23 package
and is specified over the -40°C to +125°C automotive
temperature range.
Applications
Remote Keyless Entry (RKE)
Tire-Pressure Monitoring (TPM)
Security Systems
Garage Door Openers
RF Remote Controls
Wireless Game Consoles
Wireless Computer Peripherals
Wireless Sensors
Features
o +2.1V to +3.6V Single-Supply Operation
o OOK/ASK Transmit Data Format
o Up to 100kbps Data Rate
o +13dBm Output Power into 50Ω Load
o Low 7.7mA (typ) Operating Supply Current*
o Uses Small, Low-Cost Crystal
o Small 3mm x 3mm 8-Pin SOT23 Package
o Fast-On Oscillator: 250μs Startup Time
* At 50% duty cycle (315MHz, 2.7V supply, +13dBm output
power)
Ordering Information
PART
TEMP RANGE
MAX7044AKA+T
-40°C to +125°C
100nF
220pF
ANTENNA
680pF
2
3
4
XTAL1
GND
XTAL2
VDD
MAX7044
PAGND
AEJW
Pin Configuration
TOP VIEW
fXTAL
1
8 SOT23-8
+Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package.
T = Tape and reel.
Typical Application Circuit
3.0V
PINTOP MARK
PACKAGE
DATA
PAOUT CLKOUT
8
3.0V
+
7
8
XTAL2
7
VDD
3
6
DATA
PAOUT 4
5
CLKOUT
XTAL1 1
100nF
GND 2
6
5
MAX7044
DATA INPUT
CLOCK
OUTPUT
(fCLKOUT =
fXTAL/16)
PAGND
SOT23
________________________________________________________________ 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
MAX7044
General Description
MAX7044
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
VDD to GND ..........................................................-0.3V to +4.0V
All Other Pins to GND ................................-0.3V to (VDD + 0.3V)
Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70°C)
8-Pin SOT23 (derate 8.9mW/°C above +70°C)............714mW
Operating Temperature Range .........................-40°C to +125°C
Storage Temperature Range .............................-60°C to +150°C
Junction Temperature ......................................................+150°C
Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) .................................+300°C
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
(Typical Application Circuit, all RF inputs and outputs are referenced to 50Ω, VDD = +2.1V to +3.6V, TA = -40°C to +125°C, unless
otherwise noted. Typical values are at VDD = +2.7V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
3.6
V
SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
Supply Voltage
VDD
2.1
fRF = 315MHz
Supply Current
(Note 2)
IDD
fRF = 433MHz
Standby Current
Frequency Range (Note 4)
ISTDBY
VDATA < VIL for
more than WAIT
time (Notes 4, 7)
VDATA at 50% duty
cycle, (Notes 3, 4)
7.7
14.1
PA on (Note 5)
13.8
25.4
PA off (Note 6)
1.7
2.8
VDATA at 50% duty
cycle, (Notes 3, 4)
8.0
14.4
PA on (Note 5)
14.0
25.7
PA off (Note 6)
1.9
3.1
TA < +25°C
40
130
TA < +125°C
550
2900
fRF
Data Rate (Note 4)
Modulation Depth (Note 8)
Output Power, PA On
(Notes 4, 5)
fRF = 300MHz to
450MHz
450
MHz
0
100
kbps
90
9.6
12.5
15.4
TA = +125°C, VDD =
+2.1V
5.9
9.0
12.0
TA = -40°C, VDD =
+3.6V
13.1
15.8
18.5
220
Oscillator settled to within 5kHz
450
Transmit Efficiency with CW
(Notes 5, 10)
fRF = 315MHz
48
fRF = 433MHz
47
Transmit Efficiency with 50%
OOK (Notes 3, 10)
fRF = 315MHz
43
fRF = 433MHz
41
2
tON
dB
TA = +25°C, VDD =
+2.7V
Oscillator settled to within 50kHz
Turn-On Time (Note 9)
nA
300
ON to OFF POUT ratio
POUT
mA
_______________________________________________________________________________________
dBm
µs
%
%
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
(Typical Application Circuit, all RF inputs and outputs are referenced to 50Ω, VDD = +2.1V to +3.6V, TA = -40°C to +125°C, unless
otherwise noted. Typical values are at VDD = +2.7V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
PHASE-LOCKED LOOP (PLL)
VCO Gain
330
fRF = 315MHz
Phase Noise
fRF = 433MHz
Maximum Carrier Harmonics
Reference Spur
fOFFSET = 100kHz
-84
fOFFSET = 1MHz
-91
fOFFSET = 100kHz
-82
fOFFSET = 1MHz
-89
fRF = 315MHz
-50
fRF = 433MHz
-50
fRF = 315MHz
-74
fRF = 433MHz
-80
Loop Bandwidth
MHz/V
dBc/Hz
dBc
dBc
1.6
Crystal Frequency
fXTAL
MHz
fRF/32
MHz
Frequency Pulling by VDD
3
ppm/V
Maximum Crystal Inductance
50
µH
Crystal Load Capacitance
3
pF
DATA INPUT
Data Input High
VIH
Data Input Low
VIL
VDD 0.25
V
0.25
V
Maximum Input Current
10
µA
Pulldown Current
10
µA
CLKOUT OUTPUT
Output Voltage Low
VOL
ISINK = 650µA (Note 4)
Output Voltage High
VOH
ISOURCE = 350µA (Note 4)
Load Capacitance
CLOAD
CLKOUT Frequency
0.25
VDD 0.25
V
V
(Note 4)
10
fXTAL /
16
pF
Hz
Note 1: Supply current, output power, and efficiency are greatly dependent on board layout and PAOUT match.
Note 2: Production tested at TA = +25°C with fRF = 300MHz and 450MHz. Guaranteed by design and characterization over temperature and frequency.
Note 3: 50% duty cycle at 10kbps with Manchester coding.
Note 4: Guaranteed by design and characterization, not production tested.
Note 5: PA output is turned on in test mode by VDATA = VCC/2 + 100mV.
Note 6: PA output is turned off in test mode by VDATA = VCC/2 – 100mV.
Note 7: Wait time: tWAIT = (216 x 32) / fRF.
Note 8: Generally limited by PC board layout.
Note 9: VDATA = VIL to VDATA = VIH after VDATA = VIL for WAIT time: tWAIT = (216 x 32) / fRF.
Note 10: VDATA = VIH. Efficiency = POUT/(VDD x IDD).
_______________________________________________________________________________________
3
MAX7044
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Typical Operating Characteristics
(Typical Application Circuit, VDD = +2.7V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
TA = +25°C
15
TA = +85°C
13
11
TA = +25°C
10
TA = -40°C
9
8
TA = +85°C
7
TA = +125°C
9
2.7
3.0
3.3
TA = +85°C
12
8
2.1
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
2.1
3.6
2.4
2.7
OUTPUT POWER
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
OUTPUT POWER
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
TA = +85°C
TA = +125°C
MAX7044 toc05
TA = -40°C
TA = +25°C
14
18
TA = +85°C
12
TA = +125°C
10
fRF = 433MHz
PA ON
TA = +25°C
14
TA = +85°C
12
10
TA = +125°C
7
6
2.7
3.0
3.3
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
FREQUENCY STABILITY
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
2
fRF = 433MHz
1
0
fRF = 315MHz
-1
-2
fRF = 315MHz
2.7
3.0
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
3.3
3.6
fRF = 315MHz
PA ON
65
TA = -40°C
60
3.6
TA = +25°C
55
50
45
TA = +85°C
40
TA = +125°C
35
-3
2.4
70
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY (%)
FREQUENCY STABILITY (ppm)
-76
3
MAX7044 toc08
REFERENCE SPUR MAGNITUDE
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
MAX7044 toc07
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
fRF = 433MHz
2.1
2.1
3.6
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
-72
-78
2.1
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
REFERENCE SPUR = fRF ± fXTAL
-74
3.6
-80
4
8
8
2.4
TA = -40°C
16
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)
TA = +25°C
fRF = 315MHz
PA ON
16
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)
TA = -40°C
8
18
3.6
MAX7044 toc06
SUPPLY CURRENT
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
9
-70
3.3
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
11
2.1
3.0
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
12
10
TA = +25°C
14
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
fRF = 433MHz
PA 50% DUTY CYCLE AT 10kHz
13
3.6
MAX7044 toc04
14
2.4
16
TA = +125°C
5
2.1
TA = -40°C
18
10
TA = +125°C
6
7
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
11
fRF = 433MHz
PA ON
20
MAX7044 toc09
17
12
22
MAX7044 toc03
TA = -40°C
19
fRF = 315MHz
PA 50% DUTY CYCLE AT 10kHz
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
fRF = 315MHz
PA ON
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
21
13
MAX7044 toc01
23
SUPPLY CURRENT
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
SUPPLY CURRENT
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
MAX7044 toc02
SUPPLY CURRENT
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
REFERENCE SPUR MAGNITUDE (dBc)
MAX7044
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
30
2.1
2.4
2.7
3.0
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
3.3
3.6
2.1
2.4
2.7
3.0
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
_______________________________________________________________________________________
3.3
3.6
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
TA = +85°C
30
TA = +125°C
25
55
50
45
TA = +85°C
40
TA = +125°C
35
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
PHASE NOISE vs. OFFSET FREQUENCY
SUPPLY CURRENT AND OUTPUT POWER
vs. EXTERNAL RESISTOR
-80
-90
-100
-110
-120
POWER
16
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
-70
MAX7044 toc14
18
MAX7044 toc13
-60
0.1
1
10
100
1
12
4
CURRENT
0
8
-4
6
-8
2.7
3.0
3.3
MAX7044 toc12
3.6
fRF = 315MHz
0
1
12
10
100
1000
FREQUENCY SETTLING TIME
AM DEMODULATION OF PA OUTPUT
DATA RATE = 100kHz
PA ON
9
6
3
-16
10,000
EXTERNAL RESISTOR (Ω)
50% DUTY CYCLE
0
-10
-6
-2
2
6
10
14
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)
MAX7044 toc17
OUTPUT SPECTRUM
0dB
fRF = 315MHz
10dB/
div
5dB/
div
25µs/div
18
-12
fRF = 315MHz
PA ON
OFFSET FREQUENCY (kHz)
50kHz/
div
2.4
SUPPLY CURRENT vs. OUTPUT POWER
10
10
TA = +125°C
25
2.1
16
8
MAX7044 toc16
0.01
TA = +85°C
30
12
14
2
-140
35
15
4
-130
40
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
-50
TA = -40°C
45
3.6
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
-40
50
TA = +25°C
15
2.1
3.6
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
2.1
fRF = 433MHz
PA 50% DUTY CYCLE AT 10kHz
20
30
20
PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz)
TA = +25°C
60
55
MAX7044 toc15
35
TA = -40°C
MAX7044 toc18
40
65
60
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY (%)
45
fRF = 433MHz
PA ON
MAX7044 toc11
TA = +25°C
TA = -40°C
50
70
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)
55
fRF = 315MHz
PA 50% DUTY CYCLE AT 10kHz
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY (%)
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY (%)
60
MAX7044 toc10
TRANSMIT POWER EFFICIENCY
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
3.2µs/div
100MHz/div
_______________________________________________________________________________________
5
MAX7044
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Typical Application Circuit, VDD = +2.7V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Typical Application Circuit, VDD = +2.7V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
-40
MAX7044 toc19
CLKOUT SPUR MAGNITUDE
vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE
CLKOUT SPUR MAGNITUDE (dBc)
MAX7044
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
fRF = 315MHz
-43
-46
-49
-52
-55
2.1
2.4
2.7
3.0
3.3
3.6
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
Pin Description
PIN
NAME
1
XTAL1
FUNCTION
1st Crystal Input. fXTAL = fRF/32.
2
GND
3
PAGND
Ground for the Power Amplifier (PA). Connect to system ground.
4
PAOUT
Power-Amplifier Output. The PA output requires a pullup inductor to the supply voltage, which can be
part of the output-matching network to an antenna.
5
CLKOUT
6
DATA
7
VDD
8
XTAL2
Ground. Connect to system ground.
Buffered Clock Output. The frequency of CLKOUT is fXTAL/16.
OOK Data Input. DATA also controls the power-up state (see the Shutdown Mode section).
Supply Voltage. Bypass to GND with a 100nF capacitor as close to the pin as possible.
2nd Crystal Input. fXTAL = fRF/32.
Functional Diagram
DATA
MAX7044
DATA
ACTIVITY
DETECTOR
VDD
GND
PA
PAOUT
PAGND
LOCK DETECT
XTAL1
XTAL2
6
32x PLL
CRYSTALOSCILLATOR
DRIVER
Detailed Description
The MAX7044 is a highly integrated ASK transmitter
operating over the 300MHz to 450MHz frequency
band. The IC requires only a few external components
to complete a transmit solution. The MAX7044 includes
a complete PLL and a highly efficient power amplifier.
The device is automatically placed into a low-power
shutdown mode and powers up when data is detected
on the data input.
Shutdown Mode
/16
CLKOUT
The MAX7044 has an automatic shutdown mode that
places the device in low-power mode if the DATA input
has not toggled for a specific amount of time (wait time).
The wait time is equal to 216 clock cycles of the crystal.
This equates to a wait time of approximately 6.66ms for
_______________________________________________________________________________________
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
tWAIT =
216
x 32
fRF
where tWAIT is the wait time to shutdown and fRF is the
RF transmit frequency.
When the device is in shutdown, a rising edge on DATA
initiates the warm up of the crystal and PLL. The crystal
and PLL must have 220µs settling time before data can
be transmitted. The 220µs turn-on time of the MAX7044
is dominated by the crystal oscillator startup time. Once
the oscillator is running, the 1.6MHz PLL loop bandwidth allows fast frequency recovery during power
amplifier toggling.
When the device is operating, each edge on the data
line resets an internal counter to zero and it begins to
count again. If no edges are detected on the data line,
the counter reaches the end-of-count (216 clock cycles)
and places the device in shutdown mode. If there is an
edge on the data line before the counter hits the end of
count, the counter is reset and the process starts over.
Phase-Locked Loop
The PLL block contains a phase detector, charge
pump, integrated loop filter, VCO, asynchronous 32x
clock divider, and crystal oscillator. This PLL requires
no external components. The relationship between the
carrier and crystal frequency is given by:
fXTAL = fRF/32
The lock-detect circuit prevents the power amplifier
from transmitting until the PLL is locked. In addition, the
device shuts down the power amplifier if the reference
frequency is lost.
overall efficiency is 48% with the efficiency of the power
amplifier itself greater than 54%.
Buffered Clock Output
The MAX7044 provides a buffered clock output
(CLKOUT) for easy interface to a microcontroller or frequency-hopping generator. The frequency of CLKOUT is
1/16 the crystal frequency. For a 315MHz RF transmit frequency, a crystal of 9.84375MHz is used, giving a clock
output of 615.2kHz. For a 433.92MHz RF frequency, a
crystal of 13.56MHz is used for a clock output of
847.5kHz.
The clock output is inactive when the device is in shutdown mode. The device is placed in shutdown mode by
the internal data activity detector (see the Shutdown
Mode section). Once data is detected on the data input,
the clock output is stable after approximately 220µs.
Applications Information
Output Power Adjustment
It is possible to adjust the output power down to -15dBm
with the addition of a resistor (see RPWRADJ in Figure 1).
The addition of the power adjust resistor also reduces
power consumption. See the Supply Current and
Output Power vs. External Resistor and Supply Current
vs. Output Power graphs in the Typical Operating
Characteristics section. It is imperative to add both a
low-frequency and a high-frequency decoupling
capacitor as shown in Figure 1.
Crystal Oscillator
The crystal oscillator in the MAX7044 is designed to
present a capacitance of approximately 3pF between
the XTAL1 and XTAL2 pins. If a crystal designed to
oscillate with a different load capacitance is used, the
crystal is pulled away from its intended operating fre3.0V
Power Amplifier (PA)
The PA of the MAX7044 is a high-efficiency, opendrain, switch-mode amplifier. With a proper output
matching network, the PA can drive a wide range of
impedances, including the small-loop PC board trace
antenna and any 50Ω antenna. The output-matching
network for an antenna with a characteristic impedance
of 50Ω is shown in the Typical Application Circuit. The
output-matching network suppresses the carrier harmonics and transforms the antenna impedance to an
optimal impedance at PAOUT, which is about 125Ω.
When the output matching network is properly tuned,
the power amplifier transmits power with high efficiency.
The Typical Application Circuit delivers +13dBm at
+2.7V supply with 7.7mA of supply current. Thus, the
fXTAL
100nF
RPWRADJ
1
2
220pF
ANTENNA
680pF
3
4
XTAL1
GND
XTAL2
VDD
MAX7044
PAGND
DATA
PAOUT CLKOUT
8
7
6
5
3.0V
100nF
DATA INPUT
CLOCK
OUTPUT
(fCLKOUT =
fXTAL/16)
Figure 1. Output Power Adjustment Circuit
_______________________________________________________________________________________
7
MAX7044
a 315MHz RF frequency and 4.84ms for a 433MHz RF
frequency. For other frequencies, calculate the wait
time with the following equation:
MAX7044
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
quency, thus introducing an error in the reference frequency. Crystals designed to operate with higher differential load capacitance always pull the reference
frequency higher. For example, a 9.84375MHz crystal
designed to operate with a 10pF load capacitance
oscillates at 9.84688MHz with the MAX7044, causing
the transmitter to be transmitting at 315.1MHz rather
than 315.0MHz, an error of about 100kHz, or 320ppm.
In actuality, the oscillator pulls every crystal. The crystal’s natural frequency is really below its specified frequency, but when loaded with the specified load
capacitance, the crystal is pulled and oscillates at its
specified frequency. This pulling is already accounted
for in the specification of the load capacitance.
Additional pulling can be calculated if the electrical
parameters of the crystal are known. The frequency
pulling is given by:
⎞
1
1
C ⎛
fp = m ⎜
−
x 106
2 ⎝ Ccase + Cload
Ccase + Cspec ⎟⎠
where:
fp is the amount the crystal frequency is pulled in ppm.
Cm is the motional capacitance of the crystal.
Ccase is the case capacitance.
Cspec is the specified load capacitance.
Cload is the actual load capacitance.
When the crystal is loaded as specified, i.e., Cload =
Cspec, the frequency pulling equals zero.
Output Matching to 50Ω
When matched to a 50Ω system, the MAX7044 PA is
capable of delivering up to +13dBm of output power at
VDD = 2.7V. The output of the PA is an open-drain transistor that requires external impedance matching and
pullup inductance for proper biasing. The pullup inductance from PA to VDD serves three main purposes: it
resonates the capacitance of the PA output, provides
biasing for the PA, and becomes a high-frequency
choke to reduce the RF energy coupling into VDD. The
recommended output-matching network topology is
shown in the Typical Application Circuit. The matching
network transforms the 50Ω load to approximately
125Ω at the output of the PA in addition to forming a
bandpass filter that provides attenuation for the higher
order harmonics.
8
Output Matching to
PC Board Loop Antenna
In some applications, the MAX7044 power amplifier
output has to be impedance matched to a small-loop
antenna. The antenna is usually fabricated out of a copper trace on a PC board in a rectangular, circular, or
square pattern. The antenna will have an impedance
that consists of a lossy component and a radiative
component. To achieve high radiating efficiency, the
radiative component should be as high as possible,
while minimizing the lossy component. In addition, the
loop antenna will have an inherent loop inductance
associated with it (assuming the antenna is terminated
to ground). For example, in a typical application, the
radiative impedance is less than 0.5Ω, the lossy impedance is less than 0.7Ω, and the inductance is approximately 50nH to 100nH.
The objective of the matching network is to match the
power amplifier output to the small-loop antenna. The
matching components thus transform the low radiative
and resistive parts of the antenna into the much higher
value of the PA output. This gives higher efficiency. The
low radiative and lossy components of the small-loop
antenna result in a higher Q matching network than the
50Ω network; thus, the harmonics are lower.
Layout Considerations
A properly designed PC board is an essential part of
any RF/microwave circuit. At the power amplifier output, use controlled-impedance lines and keep them as
short as possible to minimize losses and radiation. At
high frequencies, trace lengths that are approximately
1/20 the wavelength or longer become antennas. For
example, a 2in trace at 315MHz can act as an antenna.
Keeping the traces short also reduces parasitic inductance. Generally, 1in of PC board trace adds about
20nH of parasitic inductance. The parasitic inductance
can have a dramatic effect on the effective inductance.
For example, a 0.5in trace connecting a 100nH inductor adds an extra 10nH of inductance, or 10%.
To reduce the parasitic inductance, use wider traces
and a solid ground or power plane below the signal
traces. Using a solid ground plane can reduce the parasitic inductance from approximately 20nH/in to 7nH/in.
Also, use low-inductance connections to ground on all
GND pins, and place decoupling capacitors close to all
VDD connections.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
PROCESS: CMOS
For the latest package outline information and land patterns, go
to www.maxim-ic.com/packages. Note that a “+”, “#”, or “-” in
the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status.
PACKAGE TYPE
PACKAGE CODE
DOCUMENT NO.
8 SOT23
K8SN+1
21-0078
_______________________________________________________________________________________
9
MAX7044
Package Information
Chip Information
MAX7044
300MHz to 450MHz High-Efficiency,
Crystal-Based +13dBm ASK Transmitter
Revision History
REVISION
NUMBER
REVISION
DATE
3
6/09
DESCRIPTION
Changed part number in Ordering Information to lead-free and made correction
in Power Amplifier (PA) section
PAGES
CHANGED
1, 7
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.
10 ____________________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.