High Speed, 200 dB Range, Logarithmic Converter ADL5304 Data Sheet A single positive supply of 5 V is all that is required for operation over a specified 1 pA to 3 mA input range. Dual-supply operation extends the specified input current range to 10 mA. FEATURES Optimized for very fast response at all input currents Overall bandwidth of >4 MHz for inputs >1 μA Bandwidth: 25 kHz at input of 1 nA and 350 kHz at 10 nA 10 decades of input range: 1 pA to 10 mA Law conformance: ±0.25 dB from 100 pA to 100 μA Log ratio or fixed-intercept operation Precision voltage references and reference current Adaptive photodiode (PD) bias for low dark current Programmable log slope and intercept Default log slope of 10 mV/dB at VLOG pin Single- or dual-supply operation The ADL5304 accepts two current inputs to the logarithmic argument. The numerator input, INUM, flows in the collector of an NPN transistor, connected in a feedback path around a low offset JFET amplifier. The denominator current, IDEN, is treated in the same way, which allows for log ratio operation. The input summing nodes (INUM and IDEN) operate at a constant default voltage of 1.5 V. The VSM1 to VSM4 pins flank the INUM and IDEN inputs to provide a guard voltage to minimize leakage currents. Adaptive photodiode biasing is provided for optical measurements. A monitor current 1.1 times INUM is output at the IMON pin, and an external resistor, RMNTR, at 10 times the photodiode series resistance (RS) applies a voltage across the photodiode that 1st order keeps the internal PD junction at 0 V to minimize dark current. APPLICATIONS High accuracy optical power measurement Wide range baseband log compression Versatile detector for high speed APC loops GENERAL DESCRIPTION The VLOG output is buffered and can be rescaled through internal gain setting resistors. The internal ILOG varies from −400 μA to +400 μA as INUM changes over 10 decades from 1 pA to 10 mA. This corresponds to 0.5 V to 2.5 V at the VLOG pin in the default configuration shown in Figure 1. The ADL5304 is a high speed logarithmic converter with fast response and low noise over a 200 dB (1 pA to 10 mA) measurement range. The ADL5304 provides a nominal logarithmic slope of 10 mV/dB (200 mV/decade); other values are easily configured. Logarithmic intercept can be programmed over a wide range with the internal 100 nA current source or externally for log ratio applications. The default intercept value of 3.162 fA places the midpoint of the measurement range of 100 nA at VLOG = 1.5 V. Accurate 1.5 V (Pin 1P5V) and 2.0 V (Pin 2VLT) reference outputs allow precise repositioning of the intercept using external resistors. The ADL5304 is available in a 32-lead, 5 mm × 5 mm LFCSP and specified for operation from −40°C to +85°C. SIMPLIFIED BLOCK DIAGRAM IMON VNUM 30 VSM1 VSM2 INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 2 3 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V 31 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 29 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 8 SCL2 7.5kΩ 19 VDEN 7 18 1.5V SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 VDEN 10 11 INDN 12 13 1kΩ VNEG 14 15 16 1kΩ 09459-001 RMNTR INNM 32 Figure 1. Rev. 0 Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use. Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A. 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ADL5304 Data Sheet TABLE OF CONTENTS Features .............................................................................................. 1 Terminology .................................................................................... 16 Applications....................................................................................... 1 Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 17 General Description ......................................................................... 1 Basic Concepts............................................................................ 17 Simplified Block Diagram ............................................................... 1 Optical Measurements............................................................... 17 Revision History ............................................................................... 2 Circuit Description .................................................................... 18 Specifications..................................................................................... 3 Applications Information .............................................................. 25 Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 5 Using the ADL5304.................................................................... 25 ESD Caution.................................................................................. 5 Using a Negative Supply ............................................................ 26 Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 6 Evaluation Board Schematic and Silkscreens ............................. 27 Typical Performance Characteristics ............................................. 7 Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 29 Test Circuits..................................................................................... 13 Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 29 REVISION HISTORY 9/11—Revision 0: Initial Version Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 SPECIFICATIONS VPOS = 5 V, VNEG = 0 V, TA = 25°C; IDEN = IREF; VSM1 to VSM4, 1P5V, DCBI, and INPS tied together; SCL1 = VLOG; SCL2 = INMS; SCL3 = open; scale = 200 mV/dec; VLOG output load RL > 2 kΩ, unless otherwise noted. Upper case indicates a pin name (for example, VLOG) and subscripted indicates signal name (for example, VLOG). Table 1. Parameter INPUT INTERFACES Specified Current Range Temperature Drift (INUM and IDEN) Input Guard Offset Voltage LOGARITHMIC OUTPUT Logarithmic Slope, VY Logarithmic Intercept, IZ 2 Logarithmic Offset Logarithmic Law Conformance Error VLOG OUTPUT Output Buffer Offset Voltage Output Buffer Bias Current Incremental Input Resistance Output Range Output Noise Spectral Density 3 Small Signal Bandwidth Falling Edge Settling Times 4 Nominal Voltage Swing Output Impedance REFERENCE OUTPUTS 1P5V (Referenced to ACOM) Output Current 2VLT (Referenced to ACOM) Output Current IREF 5 PHOTODIODE BIAS Midrange Value Maximum Value Test Conditions/Comments INUM, IDEN, VSMx pins Flows toward each input pin (INUM and IDEN), −5 V ≤ VNEG ≤ −2 V VNEG = 0 V −40°C < TA < +85°C VINUM − VVSUM VLOG pin, referenced to ACOM; input applied to INUM 1 25°C −40°C < TA < +85°C Extrapolated input current at VLOG = 0 V Difference between VLOG and VSUM with INUM = IDEN −40°C < TA < +85°C Maximum deviation from best fit over 1 nA to 100 μA range INPS, INMS, VLOG, SCL1, SCL2, SCL3 pins Min Max Unit 1−12 10−3 A 1−12 3−3 A mV/°C mV −2 195 −2 25°C −40°C < TA < +85°C Sourcing only 25°C −40°C < TA < +85°C IMON pin; IMON = 1.1 × INUM At a photodiode current = INUM = 100 nA At INUM = 1 mA (RS ≤ 100 Ω), RMNTR = 10 × RS (RS = photodiode series resistance) IMON Compliance Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 32 0.01 ±0.6 200 +2 205 +3 3.162 −8 −0.7 −3 Flowing out of the INPS pin Pin INPS RL open INUM > 1 nA INUM = 1 nA INUM = 10 nA INUM = 100 nA INUM > 1 μA INUM = 100 nA to 10 nA INUM = 1 μA to 100 nA INUM = 10 μA to 1 μA INUM > 10 μA For input current range of 1 pA to 10 mA Frequency < 1 MHz 1P5V, 2VLT, IREF pins 25°C −40°C < TA < +85°C Typ +5 25 ±0.2 +0.1 −1.3 12 VNEG + 0.2 +0.7 +3 VPOS − 0.2 <6 25 350 1.2 4 10 2.2 0.5 <0.5 0.5 2.5 <2 1.495 −10 1.995 1.500 30 2.000 31 0 1.505 +5 2.005 20 100 −70 10.5 110 11 0 3.0 11.5 mV/dec mV/dec fA mV μV/°C dB mV μA MΩ V μV/√Hz kHz kHz MHz MHz μs μs μs μs V Ω V μV/°C mA V μV/°C mA nA pA/°C nA mA V ADL5304 Parameter POWER SUPPLY VPOS Quiescent Current VNEG 6 Quiescent Current Data Sheet Test Conditions/Comments VPOS, VNEG INUM = IDEN = 10 μA; VPOS = 5 V, VNEG = 0 V 4.5 V ≤ VPOS ≤ 5.5 V Nominal 0 V for single supply INUM = IDEN = 10 μA; VPOS = 5 V, VNEG = 0 V VNEG = −5 V 1 Min Typ Max Unit 4.5 5.0 13.5 5.5 16 17 −5 V mA mA V mA mA 10 0 −8.5 −10.5 −7.3 −6 Slope is of the same magnitude but opposite sign for input applied to IDEN. IZ = IREF/10(VOFS/VY). Note that the error of IZ is dependent on three parameters, IREF, VOFS, and VY. All three of those are trimmed. 3 Output noise and small signal bandwidth are functions of input current; measured from the INUM input to the VLOG output. See the Typical Performance Characteristics section. 4 High-to-low currents (falling edge) represent the worst-case settling condition. Low-to-high currents (rising edge) settling times are ~2× faster than the falling edge settling. Settling time is measured to 1 dB error (10 mV/dB; VLOG settles to within 10 mV of the final value). 5 IREF applied to IDEN together with 1P5V determines the logarithmic intercept current, IZ, and thereby the accuracy of the intercept. 6 Using dual-supply operation with the VSMx, DCBI, and INPS pins at ground, VNEG needs to be in the −2 V to −5 V range for proper device function. 2 Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Rating +6 V −6 V 20 mA Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational section of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. 61.6°C/W 1.2°C/W 0.6 W ESD CAUTION Table 2. Parameter VPOS VNEG Input Current to INUM, IDEN Thermal Data, 2-Layer JEDEC Board No Air Flow (Exposed Pad Soldered to PCB) θJA θJC Maximum Power Dissipation (Exposed Pad Soldered to PC Board) Maximum Junction Temperature Operating Temperature Range Storage Temperature Range Lead Temperature (Soldering 60 sec) 125°C −40°C to +85°C −65°C to +150°C 300°C Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 32 ADL5304 Data Sheet 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 VNUM INNM IMON VPOS BSDC DCBI 1P5V NC PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 PIN 1 INDICATOR ADL5304 TOP VIEW (Not to Scale) 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 INPS INMS VLOG SCL1 SCL2 SCL3 ACOM 2VLT NOTES 1. NC = NO CONNECT. DO NOT CONNECT TO THIS PIN. 2. CONNECT EXPOSED PADDLE TO VSM1 THROUGH VSM4 PINS TO PROVIDE LOW LEAKAGE GUARD. 09459-002 VDEN INDN COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 NC VSM1 VSM2 INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 Figure 2. 32-Lead LFCSP Pin Configuration Table 3. Pin Function Descriptions Pin No. 1, 25 2, 3, 7, 8 Mnemonic NC VSM1 to VSM4 4 5 6 9 INUM IDEN IREF VDEN 10 11 12 13 14 15, 18 16 17 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 INDN COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 2VLT SCL3 SCL2 SCL1 VLOG INMS INPS 1P5V DCBI BSDC VPOS IMON INNM VNUM EPAD PAD Description No Connect. Do not connect to these pins. Guard Pins for the INUM and IDEN Inputs. Connect these pins to the 1P5V, DCBI, and INPS pins for default single-supply setup; connect to ground if INUM (photodiode bias) is desired to be at ground (must have −5 V < VNEG < −2 V). Numerator Current Input. Denominator Current Input. Connect to the IREF pin for most applications. 100 nA Trimmed Reference Current Output. Connect to the IDEN pin for most applications. Voltage Output of Denominator Log Amplifier. Connect this pin to the INDN pin and decouple with an external 0.1 μF capacitor to ground. Denominator Voltage Input to Temperature Compensation Circuit. Main Ground. Numerator Speed Bias (Nominal 1 kΩ Resistor to VNEG Pin). Negative Supply. Denominator Speed Bias (Nominal 1 kΩ Resistor to VNEG Pin). Analog Common, Low Noise Reference Ground. Important that both pins are always grounded. High Frequency Compensation. 2.0 V Reference Output. 7.5 kΩ Scaling Resistor (See Figure 1). Default is NC. 5 kΩ Scaling Resistor (See Figure 1). Default is to connect to the INMS pin. 5 kΩ Scaling Resistor (See Figure 1). Default is to connect to the VLOG pin. Primary Logarithmic Output. For INUM = IDEN, the VLOG pin is at the voltage applied to the INPS pin. Output Buffer Amplifier Inverting Input. Output Buffer Amplifier Noninverting Input. The INPS, DCBI, and VSM1 to VSM4 pins must be tied together. 1.5 V Reference Output. Connect to the INPS, DCBI, and VSM1 to VSM4 pins for single-supply operation. ~1.3 mA Bias Current. Connect this pin to the VSM1 to VSM4 pins. See Pin 2, Pin 3, Pin 7, and Pin 8 description. Internal Bias Node. Decouple with a series connection of 4 Ω and 1 μF to ground. Positive Supply. Photodiode Monitor Output. IMON = 1.1 × INUM. Numerator Voltage Input to Temperature Compensation Circuit. Voltage Output of Numerator Log Amplifier. Connect this pin to the INNM pin. For the fastest response, do not add an external capacitor. Exposed paddle. Connect the exposed paddle to the VSM1 to VSM4 pins to provide low leakage guard. Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS VPOS = 5 V, VNEG = 0 V, TA = 25°C; IDEN = IREF; VSM1 to VSM4, 1P5V, DCBI, and INPS tied together; SCL1 = VLOG; SCL2 = INMS; SCL3 = open; scale = 200 mV/dec; VLOG output load RL > 2 kΩ, unless otherwise noted. 3 3.0 2 2.0 1.5 1.0 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ INUM CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m 1.0 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ IDEN CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m 100μ 1m 10m 1 0 –1 –3 1p 09459-004 10p +85°C +70°C +25°C 0°C –40°C 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ IDEN CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m Figure 7. Law Conformance Error vs. IDEN for Multiple Temperatures; INUM = 100 nA; Normalized to 25°C Figure 4. VLOG vs. IDEN for Multiple Temperatures; INUM = 100 nA 3 100pA 1nA 10nA 100nA 1µA 10µA 100µA 1mA 1mA 100µA 10µA 1µA 100nA 10nA 1nA 100pA ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB 2 1.5 1.0 1 0 –1 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ INUM CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m –3 1p 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ INUM CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m 09459-008 –2 0.5 09459-005 VLOG OUTPUT (V) 10n 100n 1μ 10μ INUM CURRENT (A) –2 0.5 0 1p 1n 09459-007 ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB VLOG OUTPUT (V) 1.5 2.0 100p 2 2.0 2.5 10p 3 +85°C +70°C +25°C 0°C –40°C 2.5 3.0 +85°C +70°C +25°C 0°C –40°C Figure 6. Law Conformance Error vs. INUM for Multiple Temperatures; Normalized to 25°C 3.0 3.5 –1 –3 1p 09459-003 10p Figure 3. VLOG vs. INUM for Multiple Temperatures 0 1p 0 –2 0.5 0 1p 1 09459-006 ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB VLOG OUTPUT (V) 2.5 +85°C +70°C +25°C 0°C –40°C Figure 8. Law Conformance Error vs. INUM for Multiple Values of IDEN (Decade Steps from 100 pA to 1 mA) Figure 5. VLOG vs. INUM for Multiple Values of IDEN (Decade Steps from 100 pA to 1 mA) Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 32 ADL5304 Data Sheet 2.5 2 ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB 3.0 2.0 1.5 1.0 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ IDEN CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ 10μ IDEN CURRENT (A) 100μ 1m 10m Figure 12. Law Conformance Error vs. IDEN for Multiple Values of INUM (Decade Steps from 100 pA to 1 mA) 3.0 3.0 +3σ –3σ 2.5 1.5 ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 –0.5 –1.0 0.5 0 –0.5 –1.0 –1.5 –2.0 –2.0 –2.5 –2.5 1n 10n 100n 1μ INUM (A) 10μ 100μ 1m 10m –3.0 1p 09459-065 100p ±3σ –40°C 1.0 –1.5 10p ±3σ +85°C 2.5 2.0 –3.0 1p 1mA 100µA 10µA 1µA 100nA 10nA 1nA 100pA –1 –3 1p 09459-009 10p Figure 9. VLOG vs. IDEN for Multiple Values of INUM (Decade Steps from 100 pA to 1 mA) ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB 0 –2 0.5 0 1p 1 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ INUM (A) 10μ 100μ 5 3.0 ±3σ 70°C +3σ –3σ 4 ±3σ 0°C 2.0 10m Figure 13. Law Conformance Error Distribution vs. INUM for −40°C and +85°C (3 σ Either Side of Mean) Figure 10. Law Conformance Error Distribution vs. INUM (3 σ Either Side of Mean) 2.5 1m 09459-013 VLOG OUTPUT (V) 3 1mA 100µA 10µA 1µA 100nA 10nA 1nA 100pA 09459-010 3.5 3 INPUT OFFSET (mV) 1.0 0.5 0 –0.5 –1.0 –1.5 1 0 –1 –2 –3 –2.0 –4 –2.5 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1μ INUM (A) 10μ 100μ 1m 10m –5 –40 09459-011 –3.0 1p 2 Figure 11. Law Conformance Error Distribution vs. INUM for 0°C and 70°C (3 σ Either Side of Mean) Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 32 –20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 80 Figure 14. (VINUM − VSUM) vs. INUM for Multiple Temperatures 09459-014 ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB 1.5 Data Sheet ADL5304 103 102 250 101 200 100 COUNT 99 150 100 98 –20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 0 09459-015 80 1.00 Figure 15. IREF Current vs. Temperature +3σ –3σ 4 3 3 2 2 2VLT DRIFT (mV) 1P5V DRIFT (mV) 1.20 5 +3σ –3σ 4 1 0 –1 –2 1 0 –1 –2 –3 –3 –4 –4 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 80 –5 –40 09459-016 –20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 80 2.000 1.515 1.995 REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V) 1.510 1.505 1.500 1.495 1.990 1.985 1.980 1.975 0 1 2 3 4 5 LOAD CURRENT (mA) 6 7 8 9 10 1.970 –20 09459-017 1.490 –5 –4 –3 –2 –1 –20 Figure 19. 2VLT Drift vs. Temperature Figure 16. 1P5V Drift vs. Temperature REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V) 1.10 1.15 IMON CURRENT (mA) Figure 18. IMON Histogram at INUM = 1 mA 5 –5 –40 1.05 09459-019 96 –40 09459-018 50 97 Figure 17. 1P5V vs. ILOAD (Positive Current Defined into 1P5V Pin) –15 –10 LOAD CURRENT (mA) –5 0 Figure 20. 2VLT vs. ILOAD (Positive Current Defined into 2VLT Pin) Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 32 09459-020 IREF CURRENT (nA) 300 TYPICAL +3σ –3σ ADL5304 Data Sheet 10 10 NORMALIZED RESPONSE (dB) 5 –20 –30 1mA 100µA 10µA 1µA 100nA 10nA 1nA –40 –50 –60 –70 100 1k 0 –5 –10 –15 –20 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz) 10M 100M 1mA 100µA 10µA 1µA 100nA 10nA –25 100 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz) 10M 100M Figure 21. Small Signal AC Response from INUM to VLOG for INUM in Decade Steps from 1 nA to 1 mA, IDEN = 100 nA Figure 24. Small Signal AC Response from IDEN to VLOG for IDEN in Decade Steps from 10 nA to 1 mA; INUM = 100 nA 100 100 100pA 1nA 10nA 100nA 1µA 10µA 100µA 1mA EQUIP LIMIT 100Hz 1kHz 10kHz 100kHz 1MHz 10MHz 10 SPOT NOISE (µV rms/ Hz) SPOT NOISE (µV rms/ Hz) 10 1 0.1 09459-027 –10 09459-024 NORMALIZED RESPONSE (dB) 0 1 0.1 0.001 100p 10µ 100µ 40 VLOG OUTPUT ERROR (mV) 10µA TO 100µA 2.1 1µA TO 10µA 1.9 100nA TO 1µA 1.7 10nA TO 100nA 1.5 1nA TO 10nA 1.3 1.1 0.9 10 20 30 TIME (µs) 40 50 60 20 Figure 23. Pulse Response for INUM in Decade Steps from 1 nA to 1 mA, IDEN = 100 nA Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 32 3 2 10 1 0 0 –10 –1 –20 –2 –30 –3 –40 –2 09459-026 0 100nA TO 10nA 1µA TO 100nA 10µA TO 1µA 100µA TO 10µA 1mA TO 100µA INPUT 30 100µA TO 1mA 2.3 1m 4 1mA TO 10mA 2.5 VLOG (V) 100n 1µ INUM (A) Figure 25. Spot Noise Spectral Density at VLOG vs. INUM in Decade Frequency Steps from 100 Hz to 10 MHz 2.7 0.7 10n 0 2 4 6 TIME (µs) 8 10 –4 12 Figure 26. Normalized Falling Edge Settling of INUM to Within 1 dB (Error = 10 mV/dB) ERROR (dB); 10mV/dB Figure 22. Spot Noise Spectral Density at VLOG vs. Frequency for INUM in Decade Steps from 1 nA to 1 mA (Noise at lower frequencies, where NSD is flat, is limited by resistance used to generate dc INUM current. See the Noise vs. Current section for further explanation.) 1n 09459-033 10M 1M 09459-028 STEP IS ANALYZER ARTIFACT 0.01 100 1k 10k 100k FREQUENCY (Hz) 09459-029 0.01 Data Sheet ADL5304 2.3 10 2.1 8 1.9 6 4 DELTA VLOG (mV) 10nA TO 100nA 1.5 100nA TO 1µA 1µA TO 10µA 1.1 10µA TO 100µA 0.9 100µA TO 1mA 0.7 0.3 0 10 20 30 TIME (µs) 0 –2 –4 –6 1mA TO 10mA 0.5 2 –8 40 50 60 –10 –40 –20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 80 09459-130 1.3 09459-030 VLOG (V) 1.7 +3σ –3σ Figure 30. Logarithmic Offset Drift vs. Temperature (3 σ to Either Side of Mean) Figure 27. Pulse Response for IDEN in Decade Steps from 1 nA to 1 mA; INUM = 100 nA 250 10m 100µ 150 10µ 100 1µ 50 100n 0 20 40 TIME (µs) 60 80 0 –1.0 0 INUM VOS (mV) 0.5 1.0 Figure 31. (VNUM − VSUM) Histogram at 25°C Figure 28. IMON Pulse Response vs. INUM 250 5 +3σ –3σ 4 200 3 2 150 COUNT 1 0 –1 100 –2 50 –3 –5 –40 –20 0 20 40 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 80 0 1.496 1.498 1.500 1.502 1P5V VOLTAGE (V) Figure 32. 1P5V Histogram Figure 29. Slope Drift vs. Temperature for 200 mV/dec (3 σ to Either Side of Mean) Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 32 1.504 09459-132 –4 09459-129 DELTA SLOPE (mV/dec) –0.5 09459-131 200 COUNT 1m 09459-032 IMON CURRENT (A) 1.1µA TO 11µA 11µA TO 110µA 110µA TO 1.1mA ADL5304 Data Sheet 300 180 160 250 140 120 COUNT COUNT 200 150 100 80 60 100 40 50 1.998 2.000 2.002 2.004 2VLT VOLTAGE (V) 0 1.495 09459-133 0 1.996 300 20 250 15 SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) 1.505 150 100 50 10 2 V POS SINGLE SUPPLY V NEG SINGLE SUPPLY V POS DUAL SUPPLY V NEG DUAL SUPPLY 0 –5 –10 197.5 200.0 202.5 205.0 INUM SLOPE (mV/dec) –15 09459-134 0 195.0 140 120 100 80 60 40 100.0 102.5 IREF CURRENT (nA) 105.0 09459-135 20 97.5 –20 0 20 40 60 80 TEMPERATURE (°c) Figure 34. Distribution of Logarithmic Slope (Nominally 200 mV/dec) 95.0 –40 Figure 35. Distribution of IREF (Nominally 100 nA) Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 32 Figure 37. Supply Current vs. Temperature (|VPOS|, |VVNEG|) 09459-137 COUNT 1.503 Figure 36. Distribution of VLOG for INUM = IDEN = 100 nA (Nominally 1.500 V) 200 COUNT 1.500 VOFFSET (V) Figure 33. 2VLT Histogram 0 1.498 09459-136 20 Data Sheet ADL5304 TEST CIRCUITS KEITHLEY 236 SMU SOURCE CURRENT MEASURE VOLTAGE AGILENT 34970A DATA ACQUISITION UNIT VSUM VPOS VNEG 1P5V 2VLT KEITHLEY 236 SMU SOURCE CURRENT MEASURE VOLTAGE IMON VNUM 30 VSM2 INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 29 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 2 3 31 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 8 SCL2 7.5kΩ 19 VDEN 7 18 1.5V SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 10 11 12 INDN VDEN 13 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 1kΩ 09459-038 VSM1 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V INNM 32 0.1µF VNEG Figure 38. Setup for Measuring Logarithmic/Slope/Offset Conformance HP3577B NETWORK ANALYZER OUTPUT INPUT R INPUT A 50Ω AD8138 EVALUATION BOARD MODIFIED TO PROVIDE DC OFFSET J2 J3 50Ω INPUT HP11667B SPLITTER J4 IMON VNUM 30 VSM1 VSM2 1kΩ TO 10MΩ TO SET CURRENT 50Ω TERM INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 2 3 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V INNM 32 31 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 29 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 19 SCL3 VDEN 18 1.5V SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 8 SCL1 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 VDEN 10 11 INDN 12 13 1kΩ 0.1µF VNEG Figure 39. Setup for Measuring Bandwidth Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 32 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 09459-039 J1 ADL5304 Data Sheet LECROY SDA6000 AGILENT 33250A PULSE GENERATOR PULSE OUTPUT TRIGGER OUTPUT SCOPE INPUT 50Ω AP1M 1MΩ TRIGGER INPUT INPUT HP11667B SPLITTER IMON VNUM 30 VSM2 1kΩ TO 10MΩ TO SET CURRENT 50Ω TERM INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 3 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 29 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 2 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V 31 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 19 VDEN 18 1.5V SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 8 SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 VDEN 10 11 12 INDN 13 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 1kΩ 09459-040 VSM1 INNM 32 0.1µF VNEG Figure 40. Setup for Measuring Pulse Settling LECROY SDA6000 BCP MODEL 400 1300nm LASER LASER OUTPUT AGILENT 33250A PULSE GENERATOR MODULATION INPUT PULSE OUTPUT TRIGGER OUTPUT TRIGGER INPUT SCOPE INPUT AP1M 1MΩ JDS FITEL HA9 ATTENUATOR IMON VNUM 30 8/125µm SINGLE MODE FIBER VSM1 VSM2 INUM ABB HAFO 1A227 IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 2 3 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V 31 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 29 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 19 VDEN 18 1.5V SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 8 SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 VDEN 10 INDN 11 12 13 1kΩ 0.1µF VNEG Figure 41. Setup for Measuring Photodiode Pulse Response Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 32 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 09459-041 100Ω INNM 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 KEITHLEY 236 SMU SOURCE CURRENT MEASURE VOLTAGE IMON KEITHLEY 236 SMU SOURCE CURRENT MEASURE VOLTAGE VNUM 30 VSM2 INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 3 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 29 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 2 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V 31 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 8 SCL2 7.5kΩ 19 VDEN 7 18 1.5V SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 10 VDEN 11 12 INDN 13 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 1kΩ 09459-042 VSM1 INNM 32 0.1µF VNEG Figure 42. Setup for Measuring Output LECROY SDA6000 AGILENT 33250A PULSE GENERATOR TRIGGER OUTPUT TRIGGER INPUT SCOPE INPUT 50Ω AP1M 1MΩ INPUT 1kΩ TO 100kΩ LOAD HP11667B SPLITTER IMON VNUM 30 VSM1 VSM2 1kΩ TO 10MΩ TO SET CURRENT 50Ω TERM INUM IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 2 3 INNM 32 BSDC 2VLT VPOS 1P5V 31 26 28 17 100nA DCBI 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 29 1.5V 22 INPS INMS VLOG ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 19 VDEN 18 1.5V SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 8 SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 VDEN 10 11 INDN 12 13 1kΩ 14 1kΩ 0.1µF VNEG Figure 43. Setup for Measuring IMON Pulse Response Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 32 15 16 0.1µF 09459-043 PULSE OUTPUT ADL5304 Data Sheet TERMINOLOGY IPD = ρ × POPT (1) where typical values for ρ of InGaAs p-intrinsic-n (PIN) photodiodes are in the range of 0.6 A/W to 1 A/W. In the case of 1 A/W, this means that for 1 mW of incident optical power, POPT, the PD delivers 1 mA of current, IPD. When the photodiode current input to the ADL5304 is divided by the responsivity, the log slope directly represents the change in input optical power, POPT. Dark Current All reverse-biased diodes develop a current due to the random generation of electrons/holes in the depletion region. In photodiodes, this current occurs with no incident light falling on the diode and is called the dark current, IDK. Dark current limits the minimum signal that can be reliably detected. For high speed InGaAs PIN photodiodes, the IDK is typically around 5 nA. For a photodiode with a responsivity of 1 A/W, a 5 nA IDK limits minimum measureable optical power to −53 dBm. Logarithmic Function The logarithmic function is ⎛I VLOG = VY × log10 ⎜⎜ NUM ⎝ IZ ⎞ ⎟ ⎟ ⎠ (2) Logarithmic Slope Logarithmic slope is the change in output voltage (VLOG) for a given change in input current usually shown as a semi-log graph where one input current (INUM or IDEN) is plotted on a log scale, and the output voltage (VLOG) is plotted on a linear scale. The other input current is fixed. Typically, slope is denoted as VY with units of mV/decade or mV/dB. For the ADL5304, in the default configuration, VY = 200 mV/decade (10 mV/dB). Logarithmic Intercept Logarithmic intercept, IZ, is an extrapolated value representing the input current where VLOG = 0 V. In single-supply operation (the VSMx pins = DCBI = INPS = 1P5V), VLOG is always positive, and when the ADL5304 is operating in the default configuration of IDEN = IREF = 100 nA, the logarithmic intercept occurs at INUM = 3.162 fA. For example, if connected to ground, then the intercept is at IZ = IDEN = INUM for which log(INUM/IDEN) = 0. This is how most people interpret the function log(x). The most practical way to define intercept is to simply always use log10(INUM/IDEN) = 0 as the reference point. The only consequence is that a VOFS needs to be introduced depending on how the output buffer gain and offset is set up. ⎛I VLOG = VY × log10 ⎜⎜ NUM ⎝ I DEN ⎞ ⎟ + VOFS ⎟ ⎠ (3) For the default single-supply setup, as shown in Figure 1, VY = 0.2 V/decade and VOFS = 1.5 V (derived from the 1P5V pin), and IDEN is supplied by the on-chip trimmed IREF = 100 nA. The relationship between IZ and VOFS is as follows: IZ = I DEN ⎛ VOFS ⎜ ⎜ 10 ⎝ VY ⎞ ⎟ ⎟ ⎠ = I REF ⎛ V1 P 5V ⎜ ⎜ 10 ⎝ VY ⎞ ⎟ ⎟ ⎠ = 100 nA (4) ⎛ 1.5V ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ 10 ⎝ 0.2V/dec ⎠ Because IREF and VY are trimmed for the default setup with VOFS = 1.500 V, IZ should also be a stable quantity; however, because it is a calculated value determined by the IREF, V1P5V, and VY parameters, its distribution is the combination of the three parameters and wider than the original parameters. The ideal single- and dual-supply ADL5304 responses are shown in Figure 44. Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 32 2.6 2.4 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 –0.2 –0.4 –0.6 –0.8 –1.0 1p SINGLE SUPPLY VSUM = 1.5V INUM = IDEN 200mV/DEC DUAL SUPPLY VSUM = 0V INUM = IDEN 200mV/DEC 10p 100p 1n 10n 100n 1µ 10µ 100µ INUM INPUT CURRENT (A) Figure 44. Ideal Transfer Function 1m 10m 09459-054 Photodiode Responsivity Photodiode (PD) responsivity, ρ, is a constant that correlates optical power (POPT) with PD current (IPD). In the case of dual-supply operation of the device, the intercept can be shifted to different values depending on where the VSM1 to VSM4, DCBI, and INPS pins are biased; the only recommended values are either 1.5 V via connection to the 1P5V pin, as in the case of single-supply operation, or ground when a dual supply is used. VLOG OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) Optical Power Optical power is defined as photon energy per unit of time measured as radiant flux (Φ) or radiant power, which is radiant energy (Q) per unit time. Data Sheet ADL5304 THEORY OF OPERATION BASIC CONCEPTS The ADL5304 exploits the logarithmic relationship between base emitter voltage, VBE, and the collector current, IC, of a bipolar junction transistor (see Equation 5). This is the fundamental basis of the extended class of translinear circuits. A log amp based on this unique property of the bipolar transistor is called a translinear log amp to distinguish it from log amps designed for RF applications, which use different principles while having similar objectives. VBE = VT log (IC/IS) (5) Two scaling quantities appear in Equation 5: the thermal voltage, VT = kT/q, and the saturation current, IS. The thermal voltage is of crucial importance in determining the logarithmic slope in a translinear log amp. VT has a process invariant value of 25.69 mV at T = 25°C and varies in proportion to the absolute temperature (PTAT). Saturation current, unlike VT, is a process and device dependent parameter. Saturation current is typically approximately 10−16 A at 25°C, but exhibits enormous variation over temperature, by a factor of more than a billion. The temperature dependence of saturation current is compensated in the ADL5304 by using a second reference transistor, having an identical variation, to stabilize the intercept by using the difference between the two VBEs. Input currents, INUM and IDEN, are the numerator and denominator of the logarithmic argument that follows: ΔVBE = VT log (INUM/IDEN) (6) In log ratio applications, both INUM and IDEN may each vary over the full specified range of 1 pA to 10 mA. However, in default operation, IDEN takes the internally preset current of IREF = 100 nA. Equation 6 shows that the ΔVBE is still PTAT, but the required logarithmic slope must be temperature stable; therefore, this is corrected using proprietary circuit techniques. Using this correction the relationship between a photodiode current, IPD, applied to INUM, and the voltage appearing at the output at VLOG is VLOG = VY log10(IPD/IZ) The relationship between VY and ΔVBE is a factor close to 3.333 in the default configuration from (VNUM − VDEN) to the output of VLOG. Because a decade change in the input current ratio results in close to a 60 mV/decade change in ΔVBE; multiplying this by 3.333 results in 0.2 V/decade. During fabrication, VY is trimmed to 0.2 V/decade (10 mV/dB), IREF to 100 nA, VOFS to 1.500 V, and IZ to 3.162 fA. When IPD = 1 pA, the output VLOG has a value of 0.5 V (see Figure 44). IZ is small because VLOG is always above ground potential even at the lowest end of the dynamic range, when using VOFS = 1.500 V. If a negative supply is used, this voltage can cross zero at the intercept value. The output for the value of IPD can be calculated using Equation 8. For example, with an input current of 100 nA, VLOG = 0.2 V log10(100 nA/3.162 fA) = 1.500 V The slope and intercept can be adjusted to suit the application, to either higher or lower values, without significant loss of calibration accuracy. OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS It is important to understand the transducer aspects of a photodiode when interpreting the photodiode current relative to the incident optical power. In purely electrical circuits, current applied to a resistive load results in a power proportional to the square of the current. For a photodiode interface, however, there is a difference in scaling because photon-generated photodiode current (IPD) flows in an element biased at a fixed voltage. IPD is equal to the optical power (POPT) absorbed in the detector times the responsivity of the photodiode (ρ). IPD = ρ × POPT (9) A similar relationship exists between the intercept current, IZ, and effective intercept power, PZ. IZ = ρ × P Z (10) Therefore, the VOUT equation for the ADL5304 may be written as VLOG = VYlog10(POPT/PZ) (7) where: VY is the log slope voltage (and, for the case of base-10 logarithms, it is also the volts per decade ). IZ is the extrapolated log intercept. (8) (11) For the ADL5304 operating in its default mode, an IZ of 3.162 fA corresponds to a PZ of 3.95 fW for a diode having a responsivity of 0.8 A/W. An optical power of 12.5 μW therefore generates VLOG = 0.2 V log10(12.5 μW/3.95 fW) = 1.900 V In optical applications, the interpretation of VLOG is as an equivalent optical power; therefore, the slope for calculation purposes remains 10 mV/dB (for either current or power). Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 32 (12) ADL5304 Data Sheet Decibel Scaling IMON VNUM 30 When signal power is expressed in decibels above a reference level (for example, dBm, when the reference is 1 mW), logarithmic conversion has already been implicitly performed. Therefore, the log ratio in the previous expressions becomes a simple difference. Be careful in assigning variable names, because P is often used to denote actual power as well as this same power expressed in decibels. These are very different quantities. Misunderstandings can be avoided by using D to denote decibel powers. RMNTR PD 1.5V VREF VSM2 2 3 1.5V Q3 VNUM Q1 INUM 4 IDEN Y SHIELD TEMP COMP 5 Q2 IREF (13) (14) the same result calculated with Equation 12. ILOG VDEN 6 7 VSM3 1.5V 8 VSM4 9 VDEN 09459-055 where: DOPT is the optical power expressed in decibels above a reference level. DZ denotes the equivalent intercept power relative to the same level. VLOG = 20 mV{−19.03 − (−114.03)} = 1.900 V VSM1 1P5V 26 100nA SHIELD of a power measurement), it can be written Using the previous example and assuming a reference power of 1 mW, a POPT of 12.5 μW corresponds to a DOPT of 10 log10(12.5 μW/1 mW) = −19.03 dBm; the equivalent intercept power of 3.95 fW corresponds to a DZ of −114.03 dBm. Therefore, 31 MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) When VY (the volts/decade ) is converted to its decibel value, V ′ = VY/10 (because there are 10 dB per decade in the context VLOG = 20 mV(DOPT − DZ) INNM 32 10 INDN Figure 45. Simplified Front-End Schematic In conventional translinear log amps, the collector and base of Q1 are both held at ground potential, this is not possible in a single-supply part. A second transistor, Q2, operates at a collector current of IDEN. In most applications, this is the reference of IREF = 100 nA, supplied internally and laser trimmed. The difference between the two VBEs with Q1 accepting a photodiode current of INUM = IPD is CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION The ADL5304 addresses a wide variety of interfacing conditions to meet the needs of fiber optic supervisory systems, as well as many nonoptical applications. This section explains the general structure of this log amp. The ADL5304 is an order of magnitude faster than any previous log amp that Analog Devices, Inc., has made, through careful FET amp design; the key limitation in the speed at low currents. Figure 45 is a simplified schematic of the front-end section of the ADL5304. The numerator current, INUM, is received at the INUM pin. The voltage at this node is equal to that on the two adjacent guard pins, VSM2 and IDEN, differing only by the offset voltage of the JFET op amp that supports the operation of the Translinear Device Q1 that converts the INUM current to a logarithmic voltage. VSM2 is needed to provide the collectoremitter bias for Q1, and it is preset to 1.5 V via the external connection to Pin 1P5V. VBE1 − VBE2 = VT log10(IPD/IREF) (15) By adding an accurate PTAT voltage of magnitude, VOFS = VT log10(IREF/IZ) = 1.500 V (16) resulting in VBE1 − VBE2 + VOFS = VT [log10(IPD/IREF) + log10(IREF/IZ)] = (kT/q) log10(IPD/IZ) (17) The temperature variation of kT/q is then eliminated by an analog divider that essentially puts a variable proportional to temperature underneath the T in Equation 17 and raising the magnitude of kT/q to a stable value of 0.2 V. Therefore, for photodiode applications, VLOG = 0.2 V log10(IPD/IZ) (18) When the VSM1to VSM4, DCBI, and INPS pins are tied to ground and VNEG < −2 V, the offset (VOFS) is removed, leaving the more general form. VLOG = 0.2 V log10(INUM/IDEN) Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 32 (19) Data Sheet ADL5304 Bandwidth vs. Current Both the response time and wideband noise of translinear log amps are functions of the transistor collector current, IC, and only slightly amenable to improvement by circuit design. The bandwidth falls at low values of IC due to the effects of junction capacitances in Q1 and the decrease in transconductance (gm) of a bipolar transistor, which is a linear function of IC, or in the case of a photodiode application, the photocurrent, IPD. The corresponding incremental emitter resistance is re = 1/gm = VT/IPD = kT/qIPD (20) and becomes extremely high at low currents (260 MΩ at IC = 100 pA). Therefore, even minute capacitances associated with the transistor can generate very long time constants. If the net effect of these capacitances is represented loosely as CJ, the corresponding low-pass corner frequency is f−3dB = qIPD/2πkTCJ (21) showing the proportionality of bandwidth to current. Using a value of 0.3 pF for CJ, this becomes 20 MHz/μA. The small signal bandwidth at IPD = 100 pA is thus only 2 kHz. However, whereas this simple model can be useful in making the basic point, it excludes many other effects that limit its accuracy. At high currents, the subsequent signal processing limits the maximum overall bandwidth. Noise vs. Current For an ideal bipolar transistor, the voltage noise spectral density, SNSD, referred to VBE, and caused by shot-noise mechanisms, evaluates to SNSD = 14.6/√IC nV/√Hz (TA = 27°C) (22) where IC is in μA. For example, at an IC of 1 nA, SNSD evaluates to approximately 0.5 μV/√Hz. 10µV Note how at low frequencies the NSD flattens for input currents less than 10 nA, this noise is limited by the resistor that makes the dc current. A 10 MΩ resistor was used for these three currents with a dc bias voltage across the resistor of 1 mV, 10 mV, and 100 mV, respectively. A 10 MΩ resistor makes a noise current of 40.7 fA/√Hz, which is converted via the gm of the logging transistor into a noise voltage. This voltage adds to the noise voltage of the bipolar transistor itself, as shown in Figure 46. The re of the transistor is 1/gm and equal to 25.85 MΩ at IC equals 1 nA. Together with the noise current of the source resistor, this makes a noise voltage at the emitter of the logging transistor (VNUM) of 1.05 μV/√Hz; this contrasts with the noise voltage of the transistor itself of 0.46 μV/√Hz (~0.5 μV/√Hz). The total combined noise is ~1.15 μV/√Hz. The effect of the 10 MΩ resistor at 100 pA of dc current becomes even more pronounced because the noise at VNUM due to the source resistor is 10.5 μV/√Hz, whereas the transistor only contributes 1.46 μV/√Hz for a total of 10.6 μV/√Hz. Therefore, unless the resistor that makes the dc current becomes very large, in general, measurement at the lower currents is limited by the noise of the source resistor. This problem does not exist when using a photodiode because the resistance of the photodiode increases at the same rate as the logging transistor (see Figure 47). 1µV 100nV 10nV 1nV 100pV 100p 1n 10n 100n 1µ 10µ 100µ IC (A) 1m 10m 09459-056 NOISE SPECTRAL DENSITY (V/ Hz) NOISE SPECTRAL DENSITY OF VBE Assuming a 20 kHz net system bandwidth at this current, the integrated noise voltage is 70 μV rms. The theoretical noise of VBE vs. IC is shown in Figure 46. However, the log scaling of the VBE is ~3 mV/dB, and in the ADL5304, this is increased to a slope of 10 mV/dB at the VLOG pin. Therefore, the noise at VLOG, predicted by Equation 22, is multiplied by a factor of 3.33. Secondary sources of noise, mostly in the analog divider used for temperature stabilization of the slope and the input FET buffer amplifiers, add to this basic noise. The measured data are shown in Figure 22. Figure 46. Noise Spectral Density of VBE vs. IC Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 32 ADL5304 Data Sheet R&S FSEA30 SPECTRUM ANALYZER 20MHz TO 3.5GHz INPUT COAX SHIELD BIASED TO VLOG DC LEVEL DUT 5V IMON VNUM 30 VSM1 VSM2 BUFFER +9V INUM AD8597 1MΩ log CONDUCTIVE PLASTIC BUFFER –9V DUT 5V 10kΩ LINEAR 15 TURN IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 31 26 28 17 100nA 29 VPOS DCBI 27 2V 24 BIAS AND VREF 23 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 2 3 32 BSDC 2VLT 1P5V INNM 1.5V 22 SHIELD BIAS INPS INMS VLOG COAX SHIELD BROKEN ADL5304 VNUM 4 ILOG 21 5kΩ TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 5kΩ 20 19 VDEN 18 1.5V SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 8 SCL1 SCL3 ACOM COMM NMFS VNEG DNFS ACOM HFCP 9 4kΩ METAL FILM 10 11 12 INDN VDEN 13 14 1kΩ 15 16 0.1µF 1kΩ 0.1µF VNEG + – 9V DUT 5V BUFFER –9V – 9V + + 1kΩ LINEAR 15 TURN 7805 9V – 09459-047 BUFFER +9V SHIELD BIAS SHIELDED ENCLOSURE Figure 47. Setup for Measuring Noise for INUM = 100 pA, INUM = 1 nA, and INUM = 10 nA Filtering to Improve Noise and Dynamic Behavior C2N The noise at the output of a log amp, particularly at low current levels, leads to uncertainty in the measurement. Noise amplitude is limited by the finite bandwidth. VSM1 C1N VSM2 INUM 2 3 31 26 22 6 VSM4 8 VDEN 1.5V 21 ILOG 5kΩ 5kΩ 20 7.5kΩ 19 18 9 VLOG C2D SCL1 SCL2 SCL3 ACOM 10 VDEN INDN RD C3D Figure 48. Possible External Filtering Locations Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 32 INPS INMS CFB VNUM 7 23 BIAS 4 VSM3 24 100nA 1.5V 5 C1D DCBI 27 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) IDEN IREF 1P5V INNM 32 09459-057 Typically, capacitors are not used on the numerator side (INUM) to keep the speed of the device as high as possible. On the denominator side (IDEN), additional filtering is useful to reduce noise. In applications where INUM is used as the reference to the logarithmic equation and IDEN is a variable, for example, where a reverse logarithmic slope is desired, filtering can be done on the numerator side (INUM). VNUM TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION If measurement speed is not of primary concern, additional filtering can reduce noise. Figure 48 shows the recommended locations for additional external filtering. Note the ADL5304 consists of a current-to-voltage (transimpedance) conversion (INUM or IDEN to VNUM − VDEN), followed by a voltage-to-current conversion (VNUM − VDEN to ILOG), and then followed by another current-to-voltage conversion (ILOG to VLOG). C3N RN Data Sheet ADL5304 FROM 1.5V VREF Capacitor, C1D, effectively reduces the bandwidth of the denominator input stage. A few picofarads of capacitance (<5 pF) reduce the bandwidth significantly for currents below approximately 1 μA, though whereas 1 nF to 10 nF are normally enough to reduce the bandwidth up to the maximum 10 mA of input current. When measurement speed is of primary importance, it is better to add filtering after the FET amp outputs, in which case, C2D, RD, and C3D are the best locations. The resistor in this case should not be much larger than 1 kΩ because there is a bias current that is approximately 35 μA that flows from the temperature compensation block into each of the VDEN and VNUM pins. Inserting a resistor, as shown in Figure 48, lifts up the voltages at the INNM and/or INDN pins and potentially causes headroom problems in the temperature compensation block. IMON VSM1 RMNTR VNUM 30 CMON 2 VSM2 3 32 MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 1.5V Q3 PD 100nA SHIELD Q1 INUM 4 IDEN SHIELD IREF VSM3 5 Q2 6 7 1.5V 8 Figure 49. Adaptive Photodiode Bias Adding a capacitor, CFB, adds additional filtering at the buffer output. This capacitor also helps to optimize the pulse response by placing a zero across the feedback resistor (2.5 kΩ in the default configuration). A good value to start with is 22 pF, this introduces a zero at 2.9 MHz that can improve the pulse responses for input currents above approximately 100 μA. One example of dual-supply operation is shown in Figure 50, where the 2.000 V (the 2VLT pin) reference ensures a precisely controlled, reverse bias across the PD. The user can use other reverse bias voltages but needs to provide them separately. Note that when the VSMx pins are grounded, the DCBI and INPS pins must also be grounded. VSM4 9 VDEN IMON Photodiode Bias VNUM 30 If the adaptive bias is not used, the IMON pin must be connected to ground. It is easy to provide a 0.5 V reverse bias across the diode by using the 2VLT reference and connecting it to the cathode. Because the ADL5304 forces the voltage at INUM very close to 1.500 V, the trimmed 2.000 V ensures a precise 0.5 V reverse bias for the PD. Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 32 VSM1 FROM 2.0V VREF VSM2 2 32 MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 3 Q3 PD 100nA SHIELD Q1 INUM 4 SHIELD IDEN IREF VSM3 VSM4 5 Q2 6 7 8 9 VDEN 09459-150 The ADL5304 provides for adaptive photodiode bias. A monitoring transistor, Q3, connected in parallel with Q1 (see Figure 49), samples 1/10th the input current, INUM. This sampled current is multiplied by a factor of 11 to give an effective output current at the IMON pin of 1.1 times INUM. Because the photodiode produces INUM, the additional current has to flow in an external resistor, RMNTR, equal to 10 × RS, where RS is the value of the internal parasitic series resistance of the photodiode. This ensures that the actual junction of the photodiode is biased as close as possible to 0 V to minimize dark current. Capacitor, CMON, provides potential filtering and dynamic currents during fast transients. The value for best bias response depends on the photodiode used and should be determined experimentally. Nominally, CMON = 0. 09459-058 When IDEN is used as the reference, as is normally done, then it is recommended that C1D is zero, C2D is a 0.1 μF ceramic decoupling capacitor, RD is a short, and C3D is not placed. Figure 50. PD Bias with VSUM at Ground and Using 2.000 V ADL5304 Data Sheet Reference Outputs 1P5V The ADL5304 has three trimmed precision references, two voltages, and one current (IREF). The voltages are 1.500 V and 2.000 V at the 1P5V and 2VLT pins, respectively. The 1P5V reference is intended to provide the bias to the VSM1 to VSM4, DCBI, and INPS pins; it can sink up to 10 mA and source a maximum of about 5 mA. Buffer Amplifier A buffer amplifier completes the signal chain that takes the ILOG current from the temperature compensation block and converts it to a voltage at the VLOG pin. The buffer amplifier gain and offset can be configured to provide different logarithmic slope and intercept at the VLOG output. On-chip resistors provide optimized scale factors and intercepts via the SCL1, SCL2, and SCL3 pins. For example, in Figure 51, the default setup provides a scale of 0.2 V/decade and an intercept of 3.162 fA. VOFS = VLOG = 1.5 V when the internal ILOG = 0 A, which corresponds to INUM = IDEN. ILOG varies from −400 μA to +400 μA with a scale of 80 μA/decade over the full 200 dB input current range. In the default configuration, ILOG is negative for INUM > IDEN and positive for INUM < IDEN. If the input current is applied to the IDEN pin and the reference current (IREF) to the INUM pin, the slope of VLOG is negative and the range is inverted, that is, VLOG is 2.5 V for IDEN = 1 pA, and VLOG is 0.5 V for IDEN = 10 mA. 27 INPS 1.5V 24 BIAS 23 INMS 22 The 2VLT reference can source up to 20 mA of current, but it cannot sink any current. The primary use of the 2.0 V reference is for photodiode bias, or to generate reference currents other than the 100 nA provided by IREF. Together with a precision resistor, the 1.5 V and 2.0 V references can reliably generate any current up to approximately 5 mA. VLOG 21 TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION ILOG 5kΩ 5kΩ 20 7.5kΩ SCL1 SCL2 19 SCL3 15 ACOM 09459-060 The IREF current, nominally 100 nA, flows out of the IREF pin and is primarily used as an input to the IDEN pin to provide the denominator current, IDEN. The choice of 100 nA places it in the middle of the 1 pA to 10 mA range. IREF can also be used as the input to the INUM pin and thereby invert the basic log response of the ADL5304. If IDEN = IREF, VLOG increases with increasing INUM. Whereas if INUM = IREF and the input current is applied to IDEN, VLOG decreases with increasing IDEN. DCBI 26 Figure 51. Buffer Amplifier in Default Configuration The buffer amplifier is a voltage feedback op amp with supplies between VPOS and VNEG. For single-supply operation, the VNEG pin is tied to ground, and the INPS pin, the positive input of the op amp, to the 1P5V pin. If a ground referenced input is desired at the INUM or IDEN pins, then the INPS and DCBI pins together with the VSMx pins must be tied to ground, and VNEG needs to be less than −2 V. If larger slopes are required, VPOS can increase to +5 V, and VNEG can increase to −5 V. For example, if the SCL3 pin is connected to VLOG, and SCL1 and SCL2 remain open, the internal 7.5 kΩ resistor, together with the 80 μA/decade ILOG, provides a slope of 0.6 V/decade at the VLOG pin. Implementation of slopes of 0.2 V/decade to 0.8 V/decade is easily accomplished. Setting the Log Slope and Intercept The choice of optimal slope and intercept depends on the application and supply voltage(s). For example, when an input current range of less than the full 200 dB is desired, a higher slope can be chosen to better use the full voltage span available at VLOG, and perhaps optimally position it to suit the input capacity of a subsequent analog-to-digital converter (ADC). Very high slopes, such as 0.8 V/decade, can be realized, allowing a smaller range of IPD to be measured at high sensitivity. Any other intercept and slope can be realized using external resistors, but these do not, in general, form accurate ratios to the on-chip resistors. Therefore, some inaccuracies should be expected. If the SCL1, SCL2, and SCL3 pins are not connected and a resistor is placed between the INMS and VLOG pins, the ILOG current is forced through the external resistor and thereby has a log slope that is 80 μA/decade times REXT; VOFS is equal to the voltage applied to the INPS pin. Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 Table 4. VLOG Scaling Options Option Single-Supply Operation (VNEG = 0 V; VSMx = DCBI = INPS = 1P5V) 11 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dual-Supply Operation (VNEG < −2 V; VSMx = DCBI = INPS = Ground) 92 10 11 12 13 1 2 Pin SCL1 Pin SCL2 Pin SCL3 Pin INPS Pin INMS VY (V/dec) IZ (A) VOFS (V) VLOG VLOG VLOG VLOG VLOG Open Open VLOG INMS INMS INMS Open Open Open VLOG INMS Open VLOG Ground Ground Open VLOG Open 2VLT 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V 1P5V SCL2 SCL2 SCL2 Open Open Open Open SCL2 0.2 0.15 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.2 3.16 f 0.01 f 0.01 f 56.2 f 17.8 p 316 p 1.33 n 21.6 f 1.5 1.5 2.0 2.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.333 VLOG VLOG VLOG Open Open INMS INMS Open Open VLOG Open VLOG Open VLOG Open Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground SCL2 SCL2 Open Open Open 0.2 0.15 0.4 0.6 0.8 100 n 100 n 100 n 100 n 100 n 0 0 0 0 0 Default setup for single supply and VSMx = 1.5 V. Default setup for dual supply and VSMx = ground. The default setups are noted in Table 4. Slope Inversion Other intercepts are achieved by injecting different currents into the IDEN pin, for example, if IDEN = 1 μA, as shown in Figure 52, the VLOG transfer function is simply shifted by one decade to the right. One way of doing this is to put a precision 500 kΩ resistor between the 2VLT and IDEN pins in the singlesupply default setup. The intercept is moved up to 31.62 fA, and all output voltages for a given INUM are lowered by one decade, that is, by 0.2 V at VLOG. For example, the new IDEN = 1 μA, and VLOG = 1.3 V for INUM = 100 nA. Table 4 lists only those slopes that are positive because this is the expected normal operation in measurement mode. The slopes can be inverted by two methods. By using INUM = IREF = 100 nA, in which case, the intercepts, IZ, are at larger currents mirrored from the values shown in Table 4 around the 100 nA reference current. For example, for the default setup with VY = 0.2 V/decade and IZ = 3.162 fA, swapping INUM and IDEN connections result in VY = −0.2 V/decade and IZ = 3.162 A. This is particularly useful if the slope is already as desired but the desired intercept cannot be achieved with the on-chip resistors. Only a shift toward the right makes sense because a shift to the left requires excessively large resistors. IMON VNUM 2VLT 17 VSM2 31 1P5V 1.5V VREF 2 VSM1 3 1.5V RMNTR Q3 4 VSM4 TEMP COMP 5 Q2 SHIELD ILOG 31 MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) SHIELD VNUM TEMP COMP 5 Q2 VDEN 6 IREF 7 8 Q3 Q1 INUM IDEN VDEN 6 3 4 7 1.5V VSM3 9 VDEN 10 INDN 09459-061 IREF VSM3 INNM 32 100nA VNUM Q1 INUM IDEN VSM2 PD 100nA SHIELD VNUM 30 2 PD SHIELD IMON FROM 1.5V VREF 26 Figure 52. Intercept Shifted One Decade Right via External Resistor, Reference Current IDEN = 1 μA 8 VSM4 9 10 VDEN Figure 53. Simple Slope Inversion Method Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 32 INDN 09459-062 VSM1 INNM 32 MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 500kΩ RMNTR 30 The second method is to simply swap the connections between the VNUM and VDEN pins and the inputs to the temperature compensation cell (INNM and INDN), as shown in Figure 53 (compare to Figure 52). This technique is particularly useful if both negative log slope and adaptive photodiode biasing via IMON are desired together. ADL5304 Data Sheet Log Ratio Operation Because the ADL5304 has two equal inputs, INUM and IDEN, log ratio operation is possible. The only difference between INUM and IDEN is that the IMON current derives from the INUM signal and allows adaptive photodiode bias at this input only. Assuming that the ratio INUM/IDEN can, in general, be either greater or less than unity, VLOG can be of either polarity, requiring a negative supply in some cases. The value of VLOG depends on the minimum ratio and the slope chosen for the application. For example, if the ratio can vary from 1:1000 to 1000:1 and a slope of 20 mV/dB is required, the peak swing is ±1.2 V around VOFS. Option 5 in Table 4 provides this with an intercept IZ of 17.8 pA (VOFS = 1.5 V) with VLOG = ±1.2 V around VOFS = 1.5 V, which results in 0.3 V ≤ VLOG ≤ 2.7 V. Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING THE ADL5304 Using the Adaptive Bias The basic connections for single-supply operation are shown in Figure 55. Supply decoupling is not critical and the suggested values are conservative; however, it is recommended that a ferrite bead be placed in the supply lines together with a 0.1 μF decoupling capacitor. Ferrite beads are preferable to resistors because they do not produce a dc voltage drop that can affect reference levels. In Figure 55, the slope is 10 mV/dB or 0.2 V/decade, and the intercept is 3.162 fA. For the full dynamic range of 200 dB (100 dB optical), VLOG varies from 0.5 V to 2.5 V (see small diagram at the output in Figure 55) with VLOG = VOFS = 1.5 V, when INUM = IDEN. Because the IDEN pin is connected to the IREF pin, IDEN = 100 nA. Figure 55 also shows the setup for the adaptive photodiode bias. If this is not desired, ground the IMON pin, remove RMNTR, and provide the desired bias voltage greater than 1.5 V to the cathode of the PD. As noted in the Photodiode Bias section, the on-chip 2 V reference can be used for this purpose and provides an exact 0.5 V reverse bias together with the 1.5 V that is forced by the FET amp to the anode via the INUM pin. The positive bias on the photodiode cathode must be adequate to support the peak current, which is limited by its internal series resistance, RS. Typical values of RS are 5 Ω. A model of a representative photodiode (JDSU EPM 605) is shown in Figure 54. 1nH 5nH 2 0.55pF PD 0.13pF CASE 0.5pF 1.5nH Rs 5nH 1 Figure 54. Photodiode Model It is desirable to use a small bias at very low levels of illumination to minimize the error due to current leakage across the diode terminals. The adaptive bias achieves this automatically even for larger currents through the addition of the external resistor, RMNTR, that is 10 times RS. In case of uncertainty in RS, an RMNTR that is slightly greater than 10 times RS is recommended. In the limit, when RMNTR is not present at all, the voltage at the IMON pin increases until the current source saturates and absorbs the excess 10% of current that the IMON output generates. However, this defeats the purpose of the adaptive bias; therefore, users must ensure that RMNTR is present when using the adaptive bias. 1µF VPOS FB 0.1µF 0.1µF 0.1µF 4.02Ω IMPORTANT: ~1mA BIAS CURRENT FLOWS OUT OF DCBI. NEEDS TO BE CONNECTED TO 1P5V. VNUM INNM IMON 1P5V 30 2 31 26 BSDC 28 100nA VPOS DCBI 17 29 27 24 2V 1.5V MONITOR AND PD BIAS (1.1× INUM ) 2VLT BIAS AND VREF 23 RMNTR PD SHIELD SHIELD VSM2 1.5V INUM IDEN IREF 22 3 INPS INMS VLOG 2.5V 1.5V 0.5V 1p 100n 10m RLOAD ADL5304 4 VNUM 21 TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION 5 6 ILOG 5kΩ 5kΩ 20 VDEN 19 SCL3 18 COMM NMFS VDEN 0.1µF 9 10 SCL2 7.5kΩ 7 VSM3 1.5V 8 VSM4 1.5V SCL1 INDN 11 12 VNEG DNFS 13 RNMFS ACOM HFCP 14 15 RDNFS 16 0.1µF Figure 55. Basic Connections for Single-Supply Operation Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 32 ACOM 09459-064 VSM1 1.5V 32 09459-063 0.5pF ADL5304 Data Sheet Summing Node Voltage It is important to reiterate that the VSM1 to VSM4, DCBI, and INPS pins always need to be tied together. Failure to do so results in erroneous outputs at VLOG. Some pulse response measurement results with an actual photodiode (1A227, 0.8 A/W, 0.7 pF) are shown in Figure 56 and Figure 57 for the setup in Figure 55. 2.3 LASER LIMIT 2.1 The VSMx pins must be well decoupled to provide a good ac ground. 1µA 1.9 10nA 1.5 1nA 1.3 100pA 1.1 0.5 0 20 40 60 The VLOG output is somewhat sensitive to loading and does not like to drive large capacitances or very small resistors, for this reason, it is recommended to keep CLOAD < 5 pF and RLOAD > 10 kΩ. Dynamic Response The ADL5304 does not require input compensation networks to stabilize the circuit. However, a negative going current can happen during normal dynamic operation, for example, during current steps that decreases from larger to smaller values. During a large step, the input loop can temporarily open causing a transient invalid VLOG output. Loop recovery time is directly related to the input current; therefore, the smaller the input current, the longer it takes for the ADL5304 to recover. Careful design that reduces parasitic capacitance at the INUM and IDEN inputs helps to reduce this recovery time; however, this behavior cannot be eliminated because it is characteristic of translinear log amps. 100 Figure 56. Photodiode Response for Input Currents of Approximately 10 pA to >1 μA Where Laser Limit Encountered 1.3 100pA 10pA 1pA 1.1 0.9 0.7 0.5 0.3 0 2 4 6 TIME (ms) VLOG Output 80 TIME (µs) 09459-035 10pA 0.7 8 10 09459-034 Even worse, if the current is negative (that is, pulls current out of the input pin), the input voltage pulls low, and the FET amp output rails positive. This can happen rather easily when the input is biased at 1.5 V. For example, a 1 GΩ resistor between the input pin and ground generates a 1.5 nA current that flows from the input pin to ground and thereby pulls the input nodes low. A log amp input is unidirectional, and it can accept current in only one direction. A current that flows in the wrong direction breaks the loop that biases the inputs. For this reason, if currents of less than about 1 nA are to be measured, it is critical that a guard be used, and that the boards are cleaned of any contaminants including solder flux. In the case where the leakage is so large that it cannot be overcome by the input current, the VLOG output rails to the negative or positive ends of the output range, depending on whether it is INUM or IDEN that has the leakage. 1.7 0.9 VLOG OUTPUT (V) VSM2 and VSM3 are critical nodes because they are used by the FET amplifiers to define the voltages on the INUM and IDEN pins. Furthermore, the voltage applied to VSM2 and VSM3 is also used to drive the shield around the inputs, which becomes critical at low currents (<1 nA) to minimize leakage. A voltage difference between the INUM and VSM2 pins of 1 mV together with a leakage resistor of 100 MΩ results in a current of 10 pA. If the current flows into the device, this leakage current limits the lowest measurable input current. VLOG OUTPUT (V) 100nA Leakage Figure 57. Increased Time Scale to Show Measurements Down to INUM ~ 1 pA (~1.25 pW; −89.03 dBm) USING A NEGATIVE SUPPLY In most applications of the ADL5304, a single supply is adequate. A single supply also provides the lowest power operation. Dual supplies are needed if the user wants to bias the anode of the photodiode at ground, as was shown in Figure 50. The negative supply needs to absorb the device bias current, the load current of the buffer, and the maximum input currents. With the summing node moved to ground, the ADL5304 can be used as a voltage-input log amp, using a suitably scaled resistor from the voltage source to the INUM pin. The logarithmic accuracy for small voltages is limited by the offset of the JFET op amp, appearing between this pin and VSUM. The IDEN pin can likewise be driven from a voltage signal. When very large input currents (INUM or IDEN greater than ~5 mA) and very low temperatures (−40°C) are expected, use a negative voltage on VNEG. Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 EVALUATION BOARD SCHEMATIC AND SILKSCREENS 09459-202 Figure 58. Evaluation Board Schematic Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 32 Data Sheet 09459-200 ADL5304 09459-201 Figure 59. Evaluation Board, Primary Side Figure 60. Evaluation Board, Secondary Side Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 OUTLINE DIMENSIONS 5.00 BSC SQ TOP VIEW 0.50 BSC 4.75 BSC SQ 0.50 0.40 0.30 1.00 0.85 0.80 0.05 MAX 0.02 NOM 0.30 0.25 0.18 SEATING PLANE 32 1 2.85 2.70 SQ 2.55 EXPOSED PAD (BOTTOM VIEW) 17 16 PIN 1 INDICATOR 9 8 0.20 MIN 3.50 REF 0.80 MAX 0.65 TYP 12° MAX 25 24 0.20 REF COPLANARITY 0.08 FOR PROPER CONNECTION OF THE EXPOSED PAD, REFER TO THE PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS SECTION OF THIS DATA SHEET. 032807-A PIN 1 INDICATOR 0.60 MAX 0.60 MAX COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VHHD-2 Figure 61. 32-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ] 5 mm × 5 mm Body, Very Thin Quad (CP-32-8) Dimensions shown in millimeters ORDERING GUIDE Model 1 ADL5304ACPZ-R2 ADL5304ACPZ-R7 ADL5304ACPZ-RL ADL5304-EVALZ 1 Temperature Range −40°C to +85°C −40°C to +85°C −40°C to +85°C Package Description 32-Lead LFCSP_VQ 32-Lead LFCSP_VQ, 7” Tape and Reel 32-Lead LFCSP_VQ, 13” Tape and Reel Evaluation Board Z = RoHS Compliant Part. Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 32 Ordering Quantity 250 1500 5000 Package Option CP-32-8 CP-32-8 CP-32-8 ADL5304 Data Sheet NOTES Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 32 Data Sheet ADL5304 NOTES Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 32 ADL5304 Data Sheet NOTES ©2011 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. D09459-0-9/11(0) Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 32