AD5316RBRUZ [ADI]

Quad, 10-Bit nanoDAC Reference, I2C Interface;
AD5316RBRUZ
型号: AD5316RBRUZ
厂家: ADI    ADI
描述:

Quad, 10-Bit nanoDAC Reference, I2C Interface

光电二极管 转换器
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Quad, 10-Bit nanoDAC with 2 ppm/°C  
Reference, I2C Interface  
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
FEATURES  
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM  
V
GND  
V
REF  
DD  
Low drift 2.5 V on-chip reference: 2 ppm/°C typical  
Tiny package: 3 mm × 3 mm, 16-lead LFCSP  
Total unadjusted error (TUE): 0.1% of FSR maximum  
Offset error: 1.5 mV maximum  
Gain error: 0.1% of FSR maximum  
High drive capability: 20 mA, 0.5 V from supply rails  
User-selectable gain of 1 or 2 (GAIN pin)  
Reset to zero scale or midscale (RSTSEL pin)  
1.8 V logic compatibility  
400 kHz I2C-compatible serial interface  
4 I2C addresses available  
2.5V  
AD5316R  
REFERENCE  
V
LOGIC  
SCL  
STRING  
DAC A  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
DAC  
V
V
V
V
A
B
C
D
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
REGISTER  
BUFFER  
BUFFER  
BUFFER  
BUFFER  
STRING  
DAC B  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
DAC  
REGISTER  
SDA  
A1  
STRING  
DAC C  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
DAC  
REGISTER  
A0  
STRING  
DAC D  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
DAC  
REGISTER  
Low glitch: 0.5 nV-sec  
Low power: 3.3 mW at 3 V  
2.7 V to 5.5 V power supply  
POWER-ON  
RESET  
GAIN =  
×1/×2  
POWER-  
DOWN  
LOGIC  
LDAC RESET  
RSTSEL  
GAIN  
−40°C to +105°C temperature range  
Figure 1.  
APPLICATIONS  
Digital gain and offset adjustment  
Programmable attenuators  
Industrial automation  
Data acquisition systems  
GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The AD5316R, a member of the nanoDAC® family, is a low power,  
quad, 10-bit buffered voltage output DAC. The device includes  
a 2.5 V, 2 ppm/°C internal reference (enabled by default) and a  
gain select pin giving a full-scale output of 2.5 V (gain = 1) or 5 V  
(gain = 2). The device operates from a single 2.7 V to 5.5 V supply,  
is guaranteed monotonic by design, and exhibits less than 0.1%  
FSR gain error and 1.5 mV offset error performance. The device  
is available in a 3 mm × 3 mm LFCSP package and in a TSSOP  
package.  
Table 1. Related Devices  
Interface  
Reference  
Internal  
External  
Internal  
External  
12-Bit  
10-Bit  
SPI  
AD5684R  
AD5684  
AD5694R  
AD5694  
AD5317R  
AD5317  
I2C  
AD53161  
1 The AD5316R and the AD5316 are not pin-to-pin or software compatible.  
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS  
The AD5316R also incorporates a power-on reset circuit and a  
RSTSEL pin; the RSTSEL pin ensures that the DAC outputs power  
up to zero scale or midscale and remain at that level until a valid  
write takes place. The part contains a per-channel power-down  
feature that reduces the current consumption of the device in  
power-down mode to 4 µA at 3 V.  
1. Precision DC Performance.  
Total unadjusted error: 0.1% of FSR maximum  
Offset error: 1.5 mV maximum  
Gain error: 0.1% of FSR maximum  
2. Low Drift 2.5 V On-Chip Reference.  
2 ppm/°C typical temperature coefficient  
5 ppm/°C maximum temperature coefficient  
3. Two Package Options.  
The AD5316R uses a versatile 2-wire serial interface that operates  
at clock rates up to 400 kHz and includes a VLOGIC pin intended  
for 1.8 V/3 V/5 V logic.  
3 mm × 3 mm, 16-lead LFCSP  
16-lead TSSOP  
Rev. C  
Document Feedback  
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  
rightsof third parties that may result fromits 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 andregisteredtrademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.  
Tel: 781.329.4700 ©2012–2017 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.  
Technical Support  
www.analog.com  
 
 
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Features .............................................................................................. 1  
I2C Slave Address........................................................................ 18  
Serial Operation ......................................................................... 18  
Write Operation.......................................................................... 18  
Read Operation........................................................................... 19  
Multiple DAC Readback Sequence.......................................... 19  
Power-Down Operation ............................................................ 20  
Applications....................................................................................... 1  
Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 1  
General Description......................................................................... 1  
Product Highlights ........................................................................... 1  
Revision History ............................................................................... 2  
Specifications..................................................................................... 3  
AC Characteristics........................................................................ 4  
Timing Characteristics ................................................................ 5  
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 6  
Thermal Resistance ...................................................................... 6  
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 6  
Pin Configurations and Function Descriptions ........................... 7  
Typical Performance Characteristics ............................................. 8  
Terminology .................................................................................... 14  
Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 16  
Digital-to-Analog Converter .................................................... 16  
Transfer Function ....................................................................... 16  
DAC Architecture....................................................................... 16  
Serial Interface ............................................................................ 17  
Write and Update Commands.................................................. 17  
LDAC  
Load DAC (Hardware  
Pin)........................................... 20  
Mask Register ................................................................. 21  
Hardware Reset Pin ( ) ................................................... 21  
LDAC  
RESET  
Reset Select Pin (RSTSEL) ........................................................ 21  
Internal Reference Setup ........................................................... 22  
Solder Heat Reflow..................................................................... 22  
Long-Term Temperature Drift ................................................. 22  
Thermal Hysteresis .................................................................... 22  
Applications Information .............................................................. 23  
Microprocessor Interfacing....................................................... 23  
AD5316R to ADSP-BF531 Interface ........................................ 23  
Layout Guidelines....................................................................... 23  
Galvanically Isolated Interface ................................................. 23  
Outline Dimensions....................................................................... 24  
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 24  
REVISION HISTORY  
5/2017—Rev. B to Rev. C  
2/2014—Rev. A to Rev. B  
Changes to Features Section............................................................ 1  
Changes to Table 2 Summary.......................................................... 3  
Changes to Table 3............................................................................ 4  
Changes to Table 4 Summary.......................................................... 5  
Changes to Table 5............................................................................ 6  
Change to Table 2 ..............................................................................3  
Change to Table 7 ..............................................................................9  
Deleted Figure 7, Renumbered Sequentially .................................8  
Deleted Long-Term Temperature Drift Section and  
Figure 48 .......................................................................................... 22  
RESET  
Changes to VLOGIC Pin Description and  
Pin Description,  
7/2012—Rev. 0 to Rev. A  
Table 7 ................................................................................................ 7  
Changes to Figure 13 to Figure 16.................................................. 9  
Changes to Figure 17 to Figure 21................................................ 10  
Changes to Figure 27...................................................................... 11  
Changes to Figure 34...................................................................... 12  
Changes to Figure 35...................................................................... 13  
Change to Features Section..............................................................1  
Change to Relative Accuracy Parameter in Table 2 ......................3  
Change to Differential Nonlinearity Parameter in Table 2..........3  
Changes to Ordering Guide.......................................................... 24  
7/2012—Revision 0: Initial Version  
RESET  
Changes to Hardware Reset (  
) Section............................ 21  
Added Long-Term Temperature Drift Section and Figure 47;  
Renumbered Sequentially.............................................................. 22  
Changes to Ordering Guide .......................................................... 24  
Rev. C | Page 2 of 24  
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
SPECIFICATIONS  
VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; VREF = 2.5 V; 1.62 V ≤ VLOGIC ≤ 5.5 V; RL = 2 kΩ; CL = 200 pF; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.  
Table 2.  
Parameter  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
Test Conditions/Comments1, 2  
STATIC PERFORMANCE3  
Resolution  
10  
Bits  
Relative Accuracy  
Differential Nonlinearity  
Zero-Code Error  
Offset Error  
Full-Scale Error  
Gain Error  
0.12  
0.5  
0.5  
1.5  
1.5  
0.1  
0.1  
0.1  
0.2  
LSB  
LSB  
mV  
mV  
% of FSR  
% of FSR  
% of FSR  
% of FSR  
µV/°C  
ppm  
Guaranteed monotonic by design  
All 0s loaded to DAC register  
0.4  
+0.1  
+0.01  
0.02  
0.01  
All 1s loaded to DAC register  
Total Unadjusted Error  
External reference, gain = 2, TSSOP  
Internal reference, gain = 1, TSSOP  
Offset Error Drift4  
1
1
0.15  
2
Gain Temperature Coefficient4  
DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio4  
DC Crosstalk4  
Of FSR/°C  
DAC code = midscale; VDD = 5 V 10%  
Due to single channel, full-scale output  
change  
mV/V  
µV  
3
2
µV/mA  
µV  
Due to load current change  
Due to power-down (per channel)  
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS4  
Output Voltage Range  
0
0
VREF  
2 × VREF  
V
V
nF  
nF  
kΩ  
Gain = 1  
Gain = 2 (see Figure 25)  
RL = ∞  
Capacitive Load Stability  
2
10  
RL = 1 kΩ  
Resistive Load5  
Load Regulation  
1
DAC code = midscale  
80  
80  
40  
25  
2.5  
µV/mA  
µV/mA  
mA  
µs  
5 V 10%; −30 mA ≤ IOUT ≤ +30 mA  
3 V 10%; −20 mA ≤ IOUT ≤ +20 mA  
Short-Circuit Current6  
Load Impedance at Rails7  
Power-Up Time  
See Figure 25  
Coming out of power-down mode; VDD = 5 V  
REFERENCE OUTPUT  
Output Voltage8  
2.4975  
2.5025  
5
V
At TA  
Reference TC9  
2
0.04  
12  
240  
20  
40  
ppm/°C  
See the Terminology section  
Output Impedance4  
Output Voltage Noise4  
Output Voltage Noise Density4  
Load Regulation, Sourcing4  
Load Regulation, Sinking4  
Output Current Load Capability4  
Line Regulation4  
µV p-p  
nV/√Hz  
µV/mA  
µV/mA  
mA  
µV/V  
ppm  
ppm  
0.1 Hz to 10 Hz  
At TA, f = 10 kHz, CL = 10 nF  
At TA  
At TA  
VDD ≥ 3 V  
At TA  
First cycle  
Additional cycles  
5
100  
125  
25  
Thermal Hysteresis4  
LOGIC INPUTS4  
Input Current  
2
µA  
V
V
Per pin  
Input Low Voltage, VINL  
Input High Voltage, VINH  
Pin Capacitance  
0.3 × VLOGIC  
0.7 × VLOGIC  
2
pF  
Rev. C | Page 3 of 24  
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
Parameter  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
Test Conditions/Comments1, 2  
LOGIC OUTPUTS (SDA)4  
Output Low Voltage, VOL  
0.4  
V
ISINK = 3 mA  
Floating State Output Capacitance  
4
pF  
POWER REQUIREMENTS  
VLOGIC  
ILOGIC  
VDD  
1.8  
5.5  
3
5.5  
5.5  
V
µA  
V
2.7  
VREF + 1.5  
Gain = 1  
Gain = 2  
V
IDD  
VIH = VDD, VIL = GND, VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V  
Internal reference off  
Internal reference on, at full scale  
−40°C to +85°C  
Normal Mode10  
0.59  
1.1  
1
0.7  
1.3  
4
mA  
mA  
µA  
All Power-Down Modes11  
6
µA  
−40°C to +105°C  
1 Temperature range is −40°C to +105°C.  
2 The AD5316R and the AD5316 are not pin-to-pin or software compatible.  
3 DC specifications are tested with the outputs unloaded, unless otherwise noted. Upper dead band (10 mV) exists only when VREF = VDD with gain = 1 or when VREF/2 = VDD  
with gain = 2. Linearity calculated using a reduced code range of 4 to 1020.  
4 Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.  
5 Channel A and Channel B can have a combined output current of up to 30 mA. Similarly, Channel C and Channel D can have a combined output current of up to  
30 mA up to a junction temperature of 110°C.  
6 VDD = 5 V. The device includes current limiting that is intended to protect the device during temporary overload conditions. Junction temperature can be exceeded  
during current limit. Operation above the specified maximum junction temperature may impair device reliability.  
7 When drawing a load current at either rail, the output voltage headroom with respect to that rail is limited by the 25 Ω typical channel resistance of the output  
devices. For example, when sinking 1 mA, the minimum output voltage = 25 Ω × 1 mA = 25 mV (see Figure 25).  
8 Initial accuracy presolder reflow is 750 µV; output voltage includes the effects of preconditioning drift. See the Solder Heat Reflow section.  
9 Reference is trimmed and tested at two temperatures and is characterized from −40°C to +105°C. Reference temperature coefficient is calculated as per the box method.  
See the Terminology section for more information.  
10 Interface inactive. All DACs active. DAC outputs unloaded.  
11 All DACs powered down.  
AC CHARACTERISTICS  
VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; VREF = 2.5 V; 1.62 V ≤ VLOGIC ≤ 5.5 V; RL = 2 kΩ; CL = 200 pF; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.  
Table 3.  
Parameter1, 2  
Min  
Typ  
5
Max  
Unit  
Test Conditions/Comments3  
Output Voltage Settling Time  
Slew Rate  
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse  
Digital Feedthrough  
Digital Crosstalk  
7
µs  
V/µs  
¼ to ¾ scale settling to 1 LSB  
0.8  
0.5  
0.13  
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
−80  
300  
nV-sec  
nV-sec  
nV-sec  
nV-sec  
nV-sec  
dB  
1 LSB change around major carry transition  
Analog Crosstalk  
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk  
Total Harmonic Distortion4  
Output Noise Spectral Density  
At TA, BW = 20 kHz, VDD = 5 V, fOUT = 1 kHz  
DAC code = midscale, 10 kHz, gain = 2,  
internal reference enabled  
nV/√Hz  
Output Noise  
6
µV p-p  
0.1 Hz to 10 Hz  
1 Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.  
2 See the Terminology section.  
3 Temperature range is −40°C to +105°C; typical at 25°C.  
4 Digitally generated sine wave at 1 kHz.  
Rev. C | Page 4 of 24  
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS  
VDD = 2.7 V to 5.5 V; 1.62 V ≤ VLOGIC ≤ 5.5 V; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.  
Table 4.  
Parameter1, 2 Min  
Max  
Unit  
µs  
µs  
µs  
µs  
ns  
µs  
µs  
µs  
µs  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
pF  
Description  
t1  
t2  
t3  
t4  
t5  
t6  
t7  
t8  
t9  
t10  
t11  
t12  
t13  
tSP  
2.5  
0.6  
1.3  
0.6  
100  
0
0.6  
0.6  
1.3  
0
20 + 0.1CB  
20  
400  
0
SCL cycle time  
tHIGH, SCL high time  
tLOW, SCL low time  
tHD,STA, start/repeated start hold time  
tSU,DAT, data setup time  
tHD,DAT, data hold time  
tSU,STA, repeated start setup time  
tSU,STO, stop condition setup time  
tBUF, bus free time between a stop condition and a start condition  
tR, rise time of SCL and SDA when receiving  
tF, fall time of SCL and SDA when transmitting/receiving  
LDAC pulse width  
3
0.9  
4
300  
300  
4, 5  
SCL rising edge to LDAC rising edge  
6
50  
400  
Pulse width of suppressed spike  
Capacitive load for each bus line  
5
CB  
1 See Figure 2.  
2 Guaranteed by design and characterization; not production tested.  
3 A master device must provide a hold time of at least 300 ns for the SDA signal (referred to the VIH min of the SCL signal) to bridge the undefined region of the SCL  
falling edge.  
4 tR and tF are measured from 0.3 × VDD to 0.7 × VDD  
5 CB is the total capacitance of one bus line in pF.  
.
6 Input filtering on the SCL and SDA inputs suppresses noise spikes that are less than 50 ns.  
Timing Diagram  
START  
CONDITION  
REPEATED START  
CONDITION  
STOP  
CONDITION  
SDA  
t9  
t10  
t11  
t4  
t3  
SCL  
t4  
t2  
t1  
t6  
t5  
t7  
t8  
t12  
1
2
t13  
LDAC  
LDAC  
t12  
NOTES  
1
ASYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE.  
SYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE.  
2
Figure 2. 2-Wire Serial Interface Timing Diagram  
Rev. C | Page 5 of 24  
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.  
THERMAL RESISTANCE  
θJA is specified for the worst-case conditions, that is, a device  
soldered in a circuit board for surface-mount packages. This  
value was measured using a JEDEC standard 4-layer board with  
zero airflow. For the LFCSP package, the exposed pad must be  
tied to GND.  
Table 5.  
Parameter  
Rating  
VDD to GND  
VLOGIC to GND  
VOUT to GND  
VREF to GND  
Digital Input Voltage to GND1  
SDA and SCL to GND  
Operating Temperature Range  
Storage Temperature Range  
Junction Temperature  
−0.3 V to +7 V  
−0.3 V to +7 V  
−0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V  
−0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V  
−0.3 V to VLOGIC + 0.3 V  
−0.3 V to +7 V  
−40°C to +105°C  
−65°C to +150°C  
125°C  
Table 6. Thermal Resistance  
Package Type  
16-Lead LFCSP  
16-Lead TSSOP  
θJA  
Unit  
°C/W  
°C/W  
70  
112.6  
Reflow Soldering Peak Temperature,  
Pb Free (J-STD-020)  
260°C  
ESD CAUTION  
1 Excluding SDA and SCL.  
Stresses at or above those listed under Absolute Maximum  
Ratings may cause permanent damage to the product. This is a  
stress rating only; functional operation of the product at these  
or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational  
section of this specification is not implied. Operation beyond  
the maximum operating conditions for extended periods may  
affect product reliability.  
Rev. C | Page 6 of 24  
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
PIN CONFIGURATIONS AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
AD5316R  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
16  
15  
14  
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
V
RSTSEL  
RESET  
A1  
REF  
V
V
B
A
OUT  
V
V
A 1  
12 A1  
11 SCL  
10 A0  
OUT  
OUT  
GND 2  
AD5316R  
GND  
SCL  
TOP VIEW  
V
3
4
DD  
(Not to Scale)  
V
A0  
DD  
9
V
LOGIC  
C
OUT  
V
V
C
D
V
LOGIC  
OUT  
OUT  
GAIN  
LDAC  
SDA  
TOP VIEW  
(Not to Scale)  
NOTES  
1. THE EXPOSED PAD MUST BE TIED TO GND.  
Figure 3. 16-Lead LFCSP Pin Configuration  
Figure 4. 16-Lead TSSOP Pin Configuration  
Table 7. Pin Function Descriptions  
Pin No.  
TSSOP  
LFCSP  
Mnemonic  
VOUT  
Description  
1
2
3
3
4
5
A
GND  
VDD  
Analog Output Voltage from DAC A. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.  
Ground Reference Point for All Circuitry on the Part.  
Power Supply Input. The part can be operated from 2.7 V to 5.5 V. The supply should be decoupled  
with a 10 µF capacitor in parallel with a 0.1 µF capacitor to GND.  
4
5
6
6
7
8
VOUT  
VOUT  
SDA  
C
D
Analog Output Voltage from DAC C. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.  
Analog Output Voltage from DAC D. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.  
Serial Data Input. This pin is used in conjunction with the SCL line to clock data into or out of the  
24-bit input shift register. SDA is a bidirectional, open-drain data line that should be pulled to the  
supply with an external pull-up resistor.  
7
8
9
LDAC  
GAIN  
LDAC can be operated in two modes, asynchronous update mode and synchronous update mode.  
Pulsing this pin low allows any or all DAC registers to be updated if the input registers have new  
data; all DAC outputs are simultaneously updated. This pin can also be tied permanently low.  
10  
Gain Select Pin. When this pin is tied to GND, all four DAC outputs have a span of 0 V to VREF.  
When this pin is tied to VLOGIC, all four DAC outputs have a span of 0 V to 2 × VREF  
.
9
10  
11  
11  
12  
13  
VLOGIC  
A0  
SCL  
Digital Power Supply. Voltage ranges from 1.62 V to 5.5 V.  
Address Input. Sets the first LSB of the 7-bit slave address.  
Serial Clock Line. This pin is used in conjunction with the SDA line to clock data into or out of the  
24-bit input shift register.  
12  
13  
14  
15  
A1  
RESET  
Address Input. Sets the second LSB of the 7-bit slave address.  
Asynchronous Reset Input. The RESET input is falling edge sensitive. When RESET is activated (low), the  
input register and the DAC register are updated with zero scale or midscale, depending on the  
state of the RSTSEL pin. When RESET is low, all LDAC pulses are ignored. If the pin is not used, tie it  
permanently to VLOGIC. If the pin is forced low at power-up, the POR circuit does not initialize correctly  
until the pin is released.  
14  
15  
16  
1
RSTSEL  
VREF  
Power-On Reset Pin. When this pin is tied to GND, all four DACs are powered up to zero scale.  
When this pin is tied to VLOGIC, all four DACs are powered up to midscale.  
Reference Voltage. The AD5316R has an internal reference. When the internal reference is used,  
VREF is the reference output pin. When an external reference is used, VREF is the reference input  
pin. By default, the internal reference is used, and this pin is a reference output.  
16  
17  
2
N/A  
VOUT  
EPAD  
B
Analog Output Voltage from DAC B. The output amplifier has rail-to-rail operation.  
Exposed Pad. The exposed pad must be tied to GND.  
Rev. C | Page 7 of 24  
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS  
2.5020  
DEVICE 1  
DEVICE 2  
DEVICE 3  
DEVICE 4  
DEVICE 5  
V
= 5V  
DD  
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
T
A
2.5015  
2.5010  
2.5005  
2.5000  
2.4995  
2.4990  
2.4985  
2.4980  
1
–40  
–20  
0
20  
40  
60  
80  
100  
120  
CH1 2µV  
M1.0s  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 8. Internal Reference Noise, 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz  
Figure 5. Internal Reference Voltage vs. Temperature  
2.5000  
2.4999  
2.4998  
2.4997  
2.4996  
2.4995  
2.4994  
2.4993  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
V
= 5V  
V
= 5V  
DD  
DD  
= 25°C  
T
A
–0.005  
–0.003  
–0.001  
I
0.001  
(A)  
0.003  
0.005  
0
0.5  
1.0  
1.5  
2.0  
2.5  
3.0  
3.5  
4.0  
4.5  
5.0  
TEMPERATURE DRIFT (ppm/°C)  
LOAD  
Figure 6. Reference Output Temperature Drift Histogram  
Figure 9. Internal Reference Voltage vs. Load Current  
1600  
1400  
1200  
1000  
800  
600  
400  
200  
0
2.5002  
2.5000  
2.4998  
2.4996  
2.4994  
2.4992  
2.4990  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
T
= 25°C  
A
T
A
DEVICE 1  
DEVICE 3  
DEVICE 2  
4.0  
10  
100  
1k  
10k  
100k  
1M  
2.5  
3.0  
3.5  
4.5  
5.0  
5.5  
FREQUENCY (Hz)  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 7. Internal Reference Noise Spectral Density vs. Frequency  
Figure 10. Internal Reference Voltage vs. Supply Voltage  
Rev. C | Page 8 of 24  
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
0.5  
0.15  
0.12  
0.09  
0.06  
0.03  
0
0.3  
0.1  
INL  
DNL  
–0.1  
–0.3  
–0.03  
–0.06  
–0.09  
–0.12  
–0.15  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
DD  
T
T
A
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
–0.5  
0
0.5  
1.0  
1.5  
2.0  
2.5  
3.0  
3.5  
4.0  
4.5  
5.0  
0
156  
312  
468  
CODE  
624  
780  
936  
V
(V)  
REF  
Figure 11. INL  
Figure 14. INL Error and DNL Error vs. VREF  
0.5  
0.3  
0.15  
0.12  
0.09  
0.06  
0.03  
0
0.1  
INL  
DNL  
–0.1  
–0.3  
–0.5  
–0.03  
–0.06  
–0.09  
–0.12  
–0.15  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
T
= 25°C  
A
T
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
0
156  
312  
468  
CODE  
624  
780  
936  
2.7  
3.2  
3.7  
4.2  
4.7  
5.2  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 12. DNL  
Figure 15. INL Error and DNL Error vs. Supply Voltage  
0.15  
0.12  
0.09  
0.06  
0.03  
0
0.10  
0.08  
0.06  
0.04  
0.02  
0
FULL-SCALE ERROR  
GAIN ERROR  
INL  
DNL  
–0.03  
–0.06  
–0.09  
–0.12  
–0.15  
–0.02  
–0.04  
–0.06  
–0.08  
–0.10  
V
= 5V  
V
= 5V  
DD  
DD  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
–40 10  
60  
110  
–20  
0
20  
40  
60  
80  
100  
120  
–40  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 16. Gain Error and Full-Scale Error vs. Temperature  
Figure 13. INL Error and DNL Error vs. Temperature  
Rev. C | Page 9 of 24  
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
0.10  
0.09  
0.08  
0.07  
0.06  
0.05  
0.04  
0.03  
0.02  
0.01  
0
V
= 5V  
DD  
V
= 5V  
1.4  
1.2  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
DD  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
ZERO-CODE ERROR  
OFFSET ERROR  
–40  
–20  
0
20  
40  
60  
80  
100  
120  
–40  
–20  
0
20  
40  
60  
80  
100  
120  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 20. TUE vs. Temperature  
Figure 17. Zero-Code Error and Offset Error vs. Temperature  
0.10  
0.08  
0.06  
0.04  
0.02  
0
0.10  
0.08  
0.06  
0.04  
0.02  
0
GAIN ERROR  
FULL-SCALE ERROR  
–0.02  
–0.04  
–0.06  
–0.08  
–0.10  
–0.02  
–0.04  
–0.06  
–0.08  
–0.10  
T
= 25°C  
A
T
= 25°C  
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
2.7  
3.2  
3.7  
4.2  
4.7  
5.2  
2.7  
3.2  
3.7  
4.2  
4.7  
5.2  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 18. Gain Error and Full-Scale Error vs. Supply Voltage  
Figure 21. TUE vs. Supply Voltage, Gain = 1  
1.5  
1.0  
0
–0.01  
–0.02  
–0.03  
–0.04  
–0.05  
–0.06  
–0.07  
–0.08  
–0.09  
–0.10  
0.5  
ZERO-CODE ERROR  
0
OFFSET ERROR  
–0.5  
–1.0  
V
= 5V  
DD  
T
= 25°C  
A
T = 25°C  
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
156 312 468  
CODE  
–1.5  
2.7  
3.2  
3.7  
4.2  
4.7  
5.2  
0
624  
780  
936 1023  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 19. Zero-Code Error and Offset Error vs. Supply Voltage  
Figure 22. TUE vs. Code  
Rev. C | Page 10 of 24  
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
7
6
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
T
A
T
A
EXTERNAL  
REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL  
REFERENCE = 2.5V  
GAIN = 2  
0xFFFF  
5
4
0xC000  
0x8000  
0x4000  
0x0000  
3
2
1
0
–1  
0
–2  
–0.06  
540  
560  
580  
600  
620  
640  
–0.04  
–0.02  
0
0.02  
0.04  
0.06  
I
(mA)  
DD  
LOAD CURRENT (A)  
Figure 26. Source and Sink Capability at 5 V  
Figure 23. IDD Histogram with External Reference, 5 V  
5
4
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
V
= 3V  
= 25°C  
DD  
30  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
T
A
T
A
INTERNAL  
REFERENCE = 2.5V  
GAIN = 1  
EXTERNAL  
REFERENCE = 2.5V  
0xFFFF  
0xC000  
3
2
0x8000  
0x4000  
1
0x0000  
0
–1  
–2  
0
1000  
1020  
1040  
I
1060  
1080  
1100  
1120  
1140  
–0.06  
–0.04  
–0.02  
0
0.02  
0.04  
0.06  
FULL SCALE (mA)  
DD  
LOAD CURRENT (A)  
Figure 24. IDD Histogram with Internal Reference, VREF = 2.5 V, Gain = 2  
Figure 27. Source and Sink Capability at 3 V  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
1.4  
1.2  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
FULL-SCALE  
ZERO CODE  
0.4  
SINKING, 2.7V  
0.2  
SINKING, 5V  
0
EXTERNAL REFERENCE, FULL-SCALE  
–0.2  
SOURCING, 5V  
–0.4  
–0.6  
–0.8  
–1.0  
SOURCING, 2.7V  
15  
–40  
10  
60  
110  
0
5
10  
20  
25  
30  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
Figure 25. Headroom/Footroom vs. Load Current  
Figure 28. Supply Current vs. Temperature  
Rev. C | Page 11 of 24  
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
4.0  
3.5  
3.0  
2.5  
2.0  
1.5  
1.0  
2.5008  
2.5003  
2.4998  
2.4993  
2.4988  
V
V
V
V
A
B
C
D
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
CHANNEL B  
= 25°C  
T
A
V
T
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
V
= 5.25V  
DD  
0.5  
0
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
CODE = 0x7FFF TO 0x8000  
ENERGY = 0.227206nV-sec  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
¼ TO ¾ SCALE  
10  
20  
40  
80  
160  
320  
0
2
4
6
8
10  
12  
TIME (µs)  
TIME (µs)  
Figure 29. Settling Time  
Figure 32. Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse  
0.06  
0.05  
0.04  
0.03  
0.02  
0.01  
0
6
0.003  
0.002  
0.001  
0
V
V
V
V
V
A
B
C
D
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
DD  
V
V
V
B
C
D
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
5
4
3
2
1
–0.001  
–0.002  
0
T
= 25°C  
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
–0.01  
–1  
15  
–10  
–5  
0
5
10  
0
5
10  
15  
20  
25  
TIME (µs)  
TIME (µs)  
Figure 30. Power-On Reset to 0 V  
Figure 33. Analog Crosstalk, VOUT  
A
3
V
V
V
V
A
B
C
D
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
T
GAIN = 2  
2
1
0
GAIN = 1  
1
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
T
A
T
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
EXTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
–5  
0
5
10  
TIME (µs)  
CH1 2µV M1.0s  
A CH1  
802mV  
Figure 31. Exiting Power-Down to Midscale  
Figure 34. 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Output Noise Plot, 2.5 V External Reference  
Rev. C | Page 12 of 24  
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
20  
0
V
= 5V  
DD  
= 25°C  
T
T
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
–20  
–40  
–60  
–80  
1
–100  
–120  
–140  
–160  
–180  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
T
A
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
0
2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 16000 18000 20000  
FREQUENCY (Hz)  
CH1 2µV M1.0s  
A CH1  
802mV  
Figure 35. 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Output Noise Plot, 2.5 V Internal Reference  
Figure 37. Total Harmonic Distortion at 1 kHz  
1600  
4.0  
3.9  
3.8  
3.7  
3.6  
3.5  
3.4  
3.3  
3.2  
3.1  
3.0  
V
T
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
0nF  
FULL-SCALE  
MIDSCALE  
ZERO-SCALE  
V
= 5V  
= 25°C  
DD  
0.1nF  
0.22nF  
4.7nF  
10nF  
A
T
A
1400  
1200  
1000  
800  
600  
400  
200  
0
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
INTERNAL REFERENCE = 2.5V  
10  
100  
1k  
10k  
100k  
1M  
1.590 1.595 1.600 1.605 1.610 1.615 1.620 1.625 1.630  
FREQUENCY (Hz)  
TIME (ms)  
Figure 36. Noise Spectral Density  
Figure 38. Settling Time vs. Capacitive Load  
Rev. C | Page 13 of 24  
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
TERMINOLOGY  
Relative Accuracy or Integral Nonlinearity (INL)  
Relative accuracy or integral nonlinearity is a measurement of  
the maximum deviation, in LSBs, from a straight line passing  
through the endpoints of the DAC transfer function. Figure 11  
shows a typical INL vs. code plot.  
Output Voltage Settling Time  
The output voltage settling time is the amount of time it takes  
for the output of a DAC to settle to a specified level for a ¼ to ¾  
full-scale input change.  
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse  
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)  
Digital-to-analog glitch impulse is the impulse injected into the  
analog output when the input code in the DAC register changes  
state. It is normally specified as the area of the glitch in nV-sec,  
and is measured when the digital input code is changed by 1 LSB  
at the major carry transition (0x7FFF to 0x8000) (see Figure 32).  
Differential nonlinearity is the difference between the measured  
change and the ideal 1 LSB change between any two adjacent  
codes. A specified differential nonlinearity of 1 LSB maximum  
ensures monotonicity. The AD5316R is guaranteed monotonic  
by design. Figure 12 shows a typical DNL vs. code plot.  
Digital Feedthrough  
Zero-Code Error  
Digital feedthrough is a measurement of the impulse injected  
into the analog output of the DAC from the digital inputs of the  
DAC, but is measured when the DAC output is not updated. It  
is specified in nV-sec and measured with a full-scale code change  
on the data bus, that is, from all 0s to all 1s and vice versa.  
Zero-code error is a measurement of the output error when  
zero code (0x0000) is loaded to the DAC register. Ideally, the  
output should be 0 V. The zero-code error is always positive in  
the AD5316R because the output of the DAC cannot go below  
0 V due to a combination of the offset errors in the DAC and  
the output amplifier. Zero-code error is expressed in mV.  
Figure 17 shows a plot of zero-code error vs. temperature.  
Noise Spectral Density (NSD)  
Noise spectral density is a measurement of the internally gener-  
ated random noise. Random noise is characterized as a spectral  
density (nV/√Hz) and is measured by loading the DAC to mid-  
scale and measuring noise at the output. It is measured in nV/√Hz.  
Figure 36 shows a plot of noise spectral density.  
Full-Scale Error  
Full-scale error is a measurement of the output error when full-  
scale code (0xFFFF) is loaded to the DAC register. Ideally, the  
output should be VDD − 1 LSB. Full-scale error is expressed as a  
percentage of the full-scale range (% of FSR). Figure 16 shows a  
plot of full-scale error vs. temperature.  
DC Crosstalk  
DC crosstalk is the dc change in the output level of one DAC  
in response to a change in the output of another DAC. It is  
measured with a full-scale output change on one DAC (or soft  
power-down and power-up) while monitoring another DAC  
kept at midscale. It is expressed in μV.  
Gain Error  
Gain error is a measurement of the span error of the DAC. It is  
the deviation in slope of the DAC transfer characteristic from  
the ideal expressed in % of FSR.  
DC crosstalk due to load current change is a measurement  
of the impact that a change in load current on one DAC has  
on another DAC kept at midscale. It is expressed in μV/mA.  
Gain Temperature Coefficient  
Gain temperature coefficient is a measurement of the change in  
gain error with changes in temperature. It is expressed in ppm  
of FSR/°C.  
Digital Crosstalk  
Digital crosstalk is the glitch impulse transferred to the output  
of one DAC at midscale in response to a full-scale code change  
(all 0s to all 1s and vice versa) in the input register of another  
DAC. It is expressed in nV-sec.  
Offset Error  
Offset error is a measurement of the difference between VOUT  
(actual) and VOUT (ideal) expressed in mV in the linear region  
of the transfer function. It can be negative or positive.  
Analog Crosstalk  
Offset Error Drift  
Offset error drift is a measurement of the change in offset error  
with changes in temperature. It is expressed in µV/°C.  
Analog crosstalk is the glitch impulse transferred to the output  
of one DAC in response to a change in the output of another DAC.  
To measure analog crosstalk, load one of the input registers with  
a full-scale code change (all 0s to all 1s and vice versa), and then  
execute a software LDAC and monitor the output of the DAC  
whose digital code was not changed. The area of the glitch is  
expressed in nV-sec.  
DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR)  
DC PSRR indicates how the output of the DAC is affected by  
changes in the supply voltage. PSRR is the ratio of the change  
in VOUT to a change in VDD for midscale output of the DAC. It  
is measured in mV/V. VREF is held at 2.5 V, and VDD is varied  
by 10%.  
Rev. C | Page 14 of 24  
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
DAC-to-DAC Crosstalk  
Voltage Reference Temperature Coefficient (TC)  
DAC-to-DAC crosstalk is the glitch impulse transferred to the  
output of one DAC in response to a digital code change and  
subsequent analog output change of another DAC. It is measured  
by loading one channel with a full-scale code change (all 0s to  
all 1s and vice versa) using the write to and update commands  
while monitoring the output of another channel that is at mid-  
scale. The energy of the glitch is expressed in nV-sec.  
Voltage reference TC is a measurement of the change in the  
reference output voltage with a change in temperature. The  
reference TC is calculated using the box method, which defines  
the TC as the maximum change in the reference output over a  
given temperature range expressed in ppm/°C, as follows:  
VREFmax VREFmin  
TC =  
× 106  
V
×TempRange  
REFnom  
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)  
THD is the difference between an ideal sine wave and its  
attenuated version using the DAC. The sine wave is used as the  
reference for the DAC; THD is a measurement of the harmonics  
present on the DAC output. It is measured in dB.  
where:  
REFmax is the maximum reference output measured over the  
total temperature range.  
REFmin is the minimum reference output measured over the total  
temperature range.  
REFnom is the nominal reference output voltage, 2.5 V.  
V
V
V
TempRange is the specified temperature range of −40°C to  
+105°C.  
Rev. C | Page 15 of 24  
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
THEORY OF OPERATION  
The resistor string structure is shown in Figure 40. Each resistor  
in the string has a value R. The code loaded to the DAC register  
determines the node on the string from which the voltage is  
tapped off and fed into the output amplifier. The voltage is  
tapped off by closing one of the switches that connect the string  
to the amplifier. Because the AD5316R is a string of resistors, it  
is guaranteed monotonic.  
DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTER  
The AD5316R is a quad, 10-bit, serial input, voltage output DAC  
with an internal reference. The part operates from supply  
voltages of 2.7 V to 5.5 V. Data is written to the AD5316R in a  
24-bit word format via a 2-wire serial interface. The AD5316R  
incorporates a power-on reset circuit to ensure that the DAC  
output powers up to a known output state. The device also has  
a software power-down mode that reduces the typical current  
consumption to 1 µA.  
V
REF  
R
TRANSFER FUNCTION  
R
R
The internal reference is on by default. Because the input coding  
to the DAC is straight binary, the ideal output voltage when using  
an external reference is given by  
TO OUTPUT  
AMPLIFIER  
D
2
VOUT = VREF × Gain  
N
where:  
REF is the value of the external reference.  
Gain is the gain of the output amplifier and is set to 1 by default.  
The gain can be set to 1 or 2 using the gain select pin. When the  
GAIN pin is tied to GND, all four DAC outputs have a span of  
0 V to VREF. When this pin is tied to VDD, all four DAC outputs  
V
R
R
have a span of 0 V to 2 × VREF  
D is the decimal equivalent of the binary code that is loaded to  
the DAC register (0 to 1023).  
.
Figure 40. Resistor String Structure  
Internal Reference  
N is the DAC resolution (10 bits).  
The AD5316R on-chip reference is on at power-up but can be  
disabled via a write to a control register. For more information,  
see the Internal Reference Setup section.  
DAC ARCHITECTURE  
The DAC architecture consists of a string DAC followed by an  
output amplifier. Figure 39 shows a block diagram of the DAC  
architecture.  
The 2.5 V, 2 ppm/°C internal reference provides a full-scale  
output of 2.5 V or 5 V, depending on the state of the GAIN pin.  
The internal reference is available at the VREF pin. This buffered  
reference is capable of driving external loads of up to 10 mA.  
V
REF  
2.5V  
REF  
Output Amplifiers  
REF (+)  
The output buffer amplifier can generate rail-to-rail voltages on  
its output for an output range of 0 V to VDD. The actual range  
depends on the value of VREF, the GAIN pin, the offset error,  
and the gain error. The GAIN pin selects the gain of the output.  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
DAC  
REGISTER  
RESISTOR  
STRING  
V
X
OUT  
REF (–)  
GAIN  
(GAIN = 1 OR 2)  
GND  
When this pin is tied to GND, all four outputs have a gain  
of 1, and the output range is from 0 V to VREF  
When this pin is tied to VDD, all four outputs have a gain  
of 2, and the output range is from 0 V to 2 × VREF  
Figure 39. Single DAC Channel Architecture Block Diagram  
.
.
The output amplifiers are capable of driving a load of 1 kΩ in  
parallel with 2 nF to GND. The slew rate is 0.8 V/µs with a ¼  
to ¾ scale settling time of 5 µs.  
Rev. C | Page 16 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
Table 9. Address Bits and Selected DACs  
SERIAL INTERFACE  
Address Bits  
The AD5316R has a 2-wire, I2C-compatible serial interface (see  
the I2C-Bus Specification, Version 2.1, January 2000, available  
from Philips Semiconductor). See Figure 2 for a timing diagram  
of a typical write sequence. The AD5316R can be connected to  
an I2C bus as a slave device, under the control of a master device.  
The AD5316R supports standard (100 kHz) and fast (400 kHz)  
data transfer modes. Support is not provided for 10-bit address-  
ing or general call addressing.  
DAC D DAC C DAC B DAC A Selected DAC Channels1  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
DAC A  
DAC B  
DAC A and DAC B  
DAC C  
DAC A and DAC C  
DAC B and DAC C  
DAC A, DAC B, and DAC C  
DAC D  
DAC A and DAC D  
All DACs  
Input Shift Register  
The input shift register of the AD5316R is 24 bits wide. Data  
is loaded into the device, MSB first, as a 24-bit word under the  
control of the serial clock input, SCL. The input shift register  
consists of an 8-bit command byte and a 16-bit data-word (see  
Figure 41). The first eight MSBs make up the command byte.  
1 Any combination of DAC channels can be selected using the address bits.  
The 8-bit command byte is followed by two data bytes, which con-  
tain the data-word. The data-word comprises the 10-bit input code,  
followed by six don’t care bits (see Figure 41). The data bits are  
transferred to the input register on the 24 falling edges of SCL.  
The first four bits of the command byte are the command  
bits (C3, C2, C1, and C0), which control the mode of  
operation of the device (see Table 8).  
The last four bits of the command byte are the address bits  
(DAC D, DAC C, DAC B, and DAC A), which select the  
DAC that is operated on by the command (see Table 9).  
Commands can be executed on one DAC channel, any two or  
three DAC channels, or on all four DAC channels, depending  
on the address bits selected (see Table 9).  
Table 8. Command Definitions  
WRITE AND UPDATE COMMANDS  
Command Bits  
C3  
0
0
C2  
0
0
C1  
0
0
C0  
0
1
Command  
LDAC  
Pin) section.  
For more information about the  
LDAC  
function, see the Load  
No operation  
Write to Input Register n (dependent  
on LDAC)  
DAC (Hardware  
Write to Input Register n (Dependent on  
)
LDAC  
Command 0001 allows the user to write to each DACs  
LDAC  
0
0
1
0
Update DAC Register n with contents  
of Input Register n  
dedicated input register individually. When  
is low, the  
LDAC  
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
Write to and update DAC Channel n  
Power down/power up DAC  
Hardware LDAC mask register  
Software reset (power-on reset)  
Internal reference setup register  
Reserved  
input register is transparent (if not controlled by the  
mask register).  
Update DAC Register n with Contents of Input Register n  
1
1
X1  
1
1
X1  
0
1
X1  
Command 0010 loads the DAC registers/outputs with the  
contents of the input registers selected by the address bits  
(see Table 9) and updates the DAC outputs directly.  
1 X = don’t care.  
Write to and Update DAC Channel n (Independent of  
)
LDAC  
Command 0011 allows the user to write to the DAC registers  
and update the DAC outputs directly, independent of the state  
LDAC  
of the  
pin.  
DB23 DB22 DB21 DB20 DB19 DB18 DB17 DB16 DB15 DB14 DB13 DB12 DB11 DB10 DB9 DB8 DB7 DB6 DB5 DB4 DB3 DB2 DB1 DB0  
C3  
C2  
C1  
C0 DAC D DAC C DAC B DAC A D9  
D8  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
X
X
X
X
X
X
COMMAND  
DAC ADDRESS  
DAC DATA  
DAC DATA  
COMMAND BYTE  
DATA HIGH BYTE  
DATA LOW BYTE  
Figure 41. Input Shift Register Contents  
Rev. C | Page 17 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
I2C SLAVE ADDRESS  
3. Data is transmitted over the serial bus in sequences of nine  
clock pulses (eight data bits followed by an acknowledge bit).  
Transitions on the SDA line must occur during the low period  
of SCL; SDA must remain stable during the high period of SCL.  
4. After all data bits are read or written, a stop condition is  
established. In write mode, the master pulls the SDA line high  
during the 10th clock pulse to establish a stop condition. In  
read mode, the master issues a no acknowledge for the 9th  
clock pulse (that is, the SDA line remains high). The master  
then brings the SDA line low before the 10th clock pulse and  
then high again during the 10th clock pulse to establish a  
stop condition.  
The AD5316R has a 7-bit I2C slave address. The five MSBs are  
00011 and the two LSBs (A1 and A0) are set by the state of the  
A1 and A0 address pins. The ability to make hardwired changes  
to A1 and A0 allows the user to incorporate up to four AD5316R  
devices on one bus (see Table 10).  
Table 10. Device Address Selection  
A1 Pin Connection  
A0 Pin Connection  
A1 Bit  
A0 Bit  
GND  
GND  
VLOGIC  
VLOGIC  
GND  
VLOGIC  
GND  
VLOGIC  
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
WRITE OPERATION  
SERIAL OPERATION  
The 2-wire I2C serial bus protocol operates as follows:  
When writing to the AD5316R, the user must begin with a start  
W
command followed by an address byte (R/ = 0), after which the  
DAC acknowledges that it is prepared to receive data by pulling  
SDA low. The AD5316R requires two bytes of data for the DAC  
and a command byte that controls various DAC functions. Three  
bytes of data must, therefore, be written to the DAC with the  
command byte followed by the most significant data byte and the  
least significant data byte, as shown in Figure 42. All these data  
bytes are acknowledged by the AD5316R. A stop condition follows.  
1. The master initiates a data transfer by establishing a start  
condition when a high-to-low transition on the SDA line  
occurs while SCL is high. The following byte is the address  
byte, which consists of the 7-bit slave address.  
2. The slave device with the transmitted address responds by  
pulling SDA low during the 9th clock pulse (this is called  
the acknowledge bit). At this stage, all other devices on the  
bus remain idle while the selected device waits for data to  
be written to, or read from, its input shift register.  
1
9
1
9
SCL  
SDA  
0
0
0
1
1
A1  
A0  
R/W  
DB23 DB22 DB21 DB20 DB19 DB18 DB17 DB16  
ACK BY  
ACK BY  
AD5316R  
START BY  
MASTER  
AD5316R  
FRAME 1  
SLAVE ADDRESS  
FRAME 2  
COMMAND BYTE  
1
9
1
9
SCL  
(CONTINUED)  
SDA  
(CONTINUED)  
DB15 DB14 DB13 DB12 DB11 DB10 DB9  
DB7  
DB6 DB5 DB4  
DB3  
DB2  
DB1  
DB0  
DB8  
STOP BY  
MASTER  
ACK BY  
AD5316R  
ACK BY  
AD5316R  
FRAME 3  
MOST SIGNIFICANT  
DATA BYTE  
FRAME 4  
LEAST SIGNIFICANT  
DATA BYTE  
Figure 42. I2C Write Operation  
Rev. C | Page 18 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
READ OPERATION  
MULTIPLE DAC READBACK SEQUENCE  
When reading data back from the AD5316R, the user must begin  
When reading data back from multiple AD5316R DACs, the  
W
W
with a start command followed by an address byte (R/ = 0), after  
user begins with an address byte (R/ = 0), after which the  
which the DAC acknowledges that it is prepared to receive data  
by pulling SDA low. The address byte must be followed by the  
command byte, which determines both the read command that  
is to follow and the pointer address to read from; the command  
byte is also acknowledged by the DAC. The user configures the  
channel to read back the contents of one or more DAC registers  
and sets the readback command to active using the command byte.  
DAC acknowledges that it is prepared to receive data by pulling  
SDA low. The address byte must be followed by the command  
byte, which is also acknowledged by the DAC. The user selects  
the first channel to read back using the command byte.  
Following this, the master establishes a repeated start condition,  
W
and the address is resent with R/ = 1. This byte is acknowledged  
by the DAC, indicating that it is prepared to transmit data. The  
first two bytes of data are then read from DAC Input Register n  
(selected using the command byte), most significant byte first, as  
shown in Figure 43. The next two bytes read back are the contents  
of DAC Input Register n + 1, and the next bytes read back are the  
contents of DAC Input Register n + 2. Data is read from the DAC  
input registers in this auto-incremented fashion until a NACK  
followed by a stop condition follows. If the contents of DAC Input  
Register D are read out, the next two bytes of data that are read  
are the contents of DAC Input Register A.  
Following this, the master establishes a repeated start condition,  
W
and the address is resent with R/ = 1. This byte is acknowledged  
by the DAC, indicating that it is prepared to transmit data. Two  
bytes of data are then read from the DAC, as shown in Figure 43.  
A NACK condition from the master, followed by a stop condition,  
completes the read sequence. If more than one DAC is selected,  
Channel A is read back by default.  
1
9
1
9
SCL  
SDA  
0
0
0
1
1
A1  
A0  
R/W  
DB23 DB22 DB21 DB20 DB19 DB18 DB17 DB16  
ACK BY  
ACK BY  
AD5316R  
START BY  
MASTER  
AD5316R  
FRAME 1  
SLAVE ADDRESS  
FRAME 2  
COMMAND BYTE  
1
9
1
9
SCL  
SDA  
0
0
0
1
1
A1  
A0  
R/W  
DB15 DB14 DB13 DB12 DB11 DB10 DB9  
DB8  
REPEATED START BY  
MASTER  
ACK BY  
AD5316R  
ACK BY  
MASTER  
FRAME 3  
SLAVE ADDRESS  
FRAME 4  
MOST SIGNIFICANT  
DATA BYTE n  
1
9
1
9
SCL  
(CONTINUED)  
SDA  
(CONTINUED)  
DB15 DB14 DB13 DB12 DB11 DB10 DB9  
DB8  
DB7 DB6  
DB5 DB4  
DB3 DB2  
DB1  
DB0  
ACK BY  
MASTER  
NACK BY  
MASTER  
STOP BY  
MASTER  
FRAME 5  
LEAST SIGNIFICANT  
DATA BYTE n  
FRAME 6  
MOST SIGNIFICANT  
DATA BYTE n + 1  
Figure 43. I2C Read Operation  
Rev. C | Page 19 of 24  
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
POWER-DOWN OPERATION  
AMPLIFIER  
V
X
Command 0100 is designated for the power-down function.  
The AD5316R provides three separate power-down modes  
(see Table 11). These power-down modes are software program-  
mable by setting Bit DB7 to Bit DB0 in the input shift register  
(see Table 12). Two bits are associated with each DAC channel.  
Table 11 shows how the state of these two bits corresponds to  
the mode of operation of the device.  
DAC  
OUT  
POWER-DOWN  
CIRCUITRY  
RESISTOR  
NETWORK  
Figure 44. Output Stage During Power-Down  
Table 11. Modes of Operation  
The bias generator, output amplifier, resistor string, and other  
associated linear circuitry are shut down when power-down  
mode is activated. However, the contents of the DAC registers  
are unaffected in power-down mode, and the DAC registers can  
be updated while the device is in power-down mode. The time  
required to exit power-down is typically 2.5 µs for VDD = 5 V.  
Operating Mode  
Normal Operation  
Power-Down Modes  
1 kΩ to GND  
100 kΩ to GND  
Three-State  
PDx1  
PDx0  
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
To reduce the current consumption further, the on-chip reference  
can be powered off (see the Internal Reference Setup section).  
Any or all DACs (DAC A to DAC D) can be powered down  
to the selected mode by setting the corresponding bits in the  
input shift register. See Table 12 for the contents of the input  
shift register during the power-down/power-up operation.  
LOAD DAC (HARDWARE LDAC PIN)  
The AD5316R DAC has double buffered interfaces consisting of  
two banks of registers: input registers and DAC registers. The user  
can write to any combination of the input registers (see Table 9).  
When both Bit PDx1 and Bit PDx0 (where x is the DAC selected)  
in the input shift register are set to 0, the part works normally  
with its normal power consumption of 1.1 mA at 5 V. When Bit  
PDx1, Bit PDx0, or both Bit PDx1 and Bit PDx0 are set to 1, the  
part is in power-down mode. In power-down mode, the supply  
current falls to 4 μA at 5 V.  
LDAC  
Updates to the DAC registers are controlled by the  
pin.  
OUTPUT  
AMPLIFIER  
10-BIT  
DAC  
V
V
X
REF  
OUT  
In power-down mode, the output stage is internally switched  
from the output of the amplifier to a resistor network of known  
values. In this way, the output impedance of the part is known  
when the part is in power-down mode.  
DAC  
LDAC  
REGISTER  
INPUT  
REGISTER  
Table 11 lists the three power-down options. The output is  
connected internally to GND through either a 1 kΩ or a 100 kΩ  
resistor, or it is left open-circuited (three-state). The output stage  
is illustrated in Figure 44.  
SCL  
SDA  
INPUT SHIFT  
REGISTER  
Figure 45. Simplified Diagram of Input Loading Circuitry for a Single DAC  
Table 12. 24-Bit Input Shift Register Contents for Power-Down/Power-Up Operation1  
DB23  
(MSB) DB22  
DB15  
DB0  
(LSB)  
DB21  
DB20  
DB19 to DB16 to DB8 DB7  
DB6  
DB5  
DB4  
DB3  
DB2  
DB1  
0
1
0
0
X
X
PDD1  
PDD0  
PDC1  
PDC0  
PDB1  
PDB0  
PDA1  
PDA0  
Command bits (C3 to C0)  
Address bits  
(don’t care)  
Don’t  
care  
Power-down  
select, DAC D  
Power-down  
select, DAC C  
Power-down  
select, DAC B  
Power-down  
select, DAC A  
1 X = don’t care.  
Rev. C | Page 20 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
LDAC  
LDAC  
Instantaneous DAC Updating (  
Held Low)  
Table 13.  
Overwrite Definition  
Load  
Register  
LDAC  
LDAC  
For instantaneous updating of the DACs,  
is held low while  
Bit  
LDAC  
data is clocked into the input register using Command 0001. Both  
the addressed input register and the DAC register are updated on  
the 24th clock, and the output begins to change (see Table 14).  
Pin  
Operation  
LDAC  
LDAC  
1 or 0  
X1  
(DB3 to DB0)  
0
1
Determined by the LDAC pin.  
DAC channels are updated. (DAC  
channels see LDAC pin as 1.)  
LDAC  
Deferred DAC Updating (  
For deferred updating of the DACs,  
is clocked into the input register using Command 0001. All DAC  
Pulsed Low)  
LDAC  
is held high while data  
1 X = don’t care.  
HARDWARE RESET PIN (  
)
RESET  
LDAC  
outputs are asynchronously updated by pulling  
low after the  
LDAC  
th  
24 clock. The update occurs on the falling edge of  
.
RESET  
is an active low reset that allows the outputs to be cleared  
to either zero scale or midscale. The clear code value is user select-  
able via the reset select pin (RSTSEL). It is necessary to  
LDAC MASK REGISTER  
LDAC  
Command 0101 is reserved for the software  
When this command is executed, the address bits are ignored.  
LDAC  
function.  
RESET  
keep  
low for a minimum of 30 ns to complete the  
operation.  
When writing to the DAC using Command 0101, the 4-bit  
LDAC  
RESET  
When the  
signal is returned high, the output remains at  
mask register (DB3 to DB0) is loaded. Bit DB3 of the  
mask  
the cleared value until a new value is programmed. The outputs  
RESET  
register corresponds to DAC D; Bit DB2 corresponds to DAC C;  
Bit DB1 corresponds to DAC B; and Bit DB0 corresponds to  
DAC A.  
cannot be updated with a new value while the  
pin is low.  
There is also a software executable reset function that resets the  
DAC to the power-on reset code. Command 0110 is designated  
for this software reset function (see Table 8). Any events  
LDAC  
The default value of these bits is 0; that is, the  
normally. Setting any of these bits to 1 forces the selected DAC  
LDAC  
pin works  
LDAC  
RESET  
on  
during a power-on reset are ignored. If the  
pin  
channel to ignore transitions on the  
pin, regardless of the  
pin. This flexibility is useful in appli-  
cations where the user wishes to select which channels respond  
LDAC  
is pulled low at power-up, the device does not initialize correctly  
until the pin is released.  
LDAC  
state of the hardware  
RESET SELECT PIN (RSTSEL)  
to the  
pin.  
The AD5316R contains a power-on reset circuit that controls  
the output voltage during power-up. When the RSTSEL pin is  
tied to GND, the outputs power up to zero scale (note that this  
is outside the linear region of the DAC). When the RSTSEL pin  
is tied to VDD, the outputs power up to midscale. The outputs  
remain powered up at the level set by the RSTSEL pin until a  
valid write sequence is made to the DAC.  
LDAC  
control over the hardware  
The  
mask register allows the user extra flexibility and  
LDAC  
pin (see Table 13). Setting  
LDAC  
the  
bit (DB3 to DB0) to 0 for a DAC channel allows the  
LDAC  
hard-ware  
pin to control the updating of that channel.  
1
LDAC  
Table 14. Write Commands and  
Pin Truth Table  
Hardware  
Pin State  
LDAC  
Input Register  
Contents  
Command  
Description  
DAC Register Contents  
No change (no update)  
Data update  
0001  
Write to Input Register n (dependent on LDAC)  
VLOGIC  
GND2  
Data update  
Data update  
No change  
0010  
Update DAC Register n with contents of Input  
Register n  
VLOGIC  
Updated with input register  
contents  
GND  
No change  
Updated with input register  
contents  
0011  
Write to and update DAC Channel n  
VLOGIC  
GND  
Data update  
Data update  
Data update  
Data update  
1 A high to low transition on the hardware  
pin always updates the contents of the DAC register with the contents of the input register on channels that are not  
LDAC  
masked (blocked) by the  
mask register.  
LDAC  
pin is permanently tied low, the  
2 When the  
mask bits are ignored.  
LDAC  
LDAC  
Rev. C | Page 21 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
INTERNAL REFERENCE SETUP  
LONG-TERM TEMPERATURE DRIFT  
By default, the internal reference is on at power-up. To reduce  
the supply current, the on-chip reference can be turned off.  
Command 0111 is reserved for setting up the internal reference.  
To turn off the internal reference, set the software programmable  
bit, DB0, in the input shift register using Command 0111, as  
shown in Table 16. Table 15 shows how the state of the DB0 bit  
corresponds to the mode of operation.  
Figure 47 shows the change in the VREF (ppm) value after  
1000 hours at 25°C ambient temperature.  
140  
120  
100  
80  
Table 15. Internal Reference Setup Register  
60  
Internal Reference  
Setup Register (Bit DB0)  
40  
Action  
0
1
Reference on (default)  
Reference off  
20  
0
SOLDER HEAT REFLOW  
–20  
0
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000  
ELAPSED TIME (Hours)  
As with all IC reference voltage circuits, the reference value  
experiences a shift induced by the soldering process. Analog  
Devices, Inc., performs a reliability test called precondition to  
mimic the effect of soldering a device to a board. The output  
voltage specification in Table 2 includes the effect of this  
reliability test.  
Figure 47. Reference Drift Through to 1000 Hours  
THERMAL HYSTERESIS  
Thermal hysteresis is the voltage difference induced on the  
reference voltage by sweeping the temperature from ambient  
to cold, then to hot, and then back to ambient.  
Figure 46 shows the effect of solder heat reflow (SHR) as  
measured through the reliability test (precondition).  
Thermal hysteresis data is shown in Figure 48. It is measured by  
sweeping the temperature from ambient to −40°C, then to +105°C,  
and then back to ambient. The VREF delta is then measured between  
the two ambient measurements (shown in blue in Figure 48). The  
same temperature sweep and measurements were immediately  
repeated, and the results are shown in red in Figure 48.  
9
POSTSOLDER  
HEAT REFLOW  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
PRESOLDER  
HEAT REFLOW  
FIRST TEMPERATURE SWEEP  
SUBSEQUENT TEMPERATURE SWEEPS  
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
2.498  
2.499  
2.500  
(V)  
2.501  
2.502  
V
REF  
Figure 46. SHR Reference Voltage Shift  
–200  
–150  
–100  
–50  
0
50  
DISTORTION (ppm)  
Figure 48. Thermal Hysteresis  
Table 16. 24-Bit Input Shift Register Contents for Internal Reference Setup Command1  
DB23 (MSB) DB22  
DB21  
DB20  
DB19 to DB16  
DB15 to DB1  
DB0 (LSB)  
0
1
1
1
X
X
1 or 0  
Command bits (C3 to C0)  
Address bits (don’t care)  
Don’t care  
Reference setup register  
1 X = don’t care.  
Rev. C | Page 22 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
AD5316R  
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION  
For enhanced thermal, electrical, and board level performance,  
solder the exposed pad on the bottom of the LFCSP package  
to the corresponding thermal land paddle on the PCB. Design  
thermal vias into the PCB land paddle area to further improve  
heat dissipation.  
MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACING  
Microprocessor interfacing to the AD5316R is via a serial  
bus that uses a standard protocol that is compatible with DSP  
processors and microcontrollers. The communications channel  
requires a 2-wire interface consisting of a clock signal and a  
data signal.  
The GND plane on the device can be increased (as shown in  
Figure 50) to provide a natural heat sinking effect.  
AD5316R TO ADSP-BF531 INTERFACE  
The I2C interface of the AD5316R is designed for easy connec-  
tion to industry-standard DSPs and microcontrollers. Figure 49  
shows the AD5316R connected to the Analog Devices Blackfin®  
processor. The Blackfin processor has an integrated I2C port  
that can be connected directly to the I2C pins of the AD5316R.  
AD5316R  
GND  
PLANE  
AD5316R  
BOARD  
ADSP-BF531  
GPIO1  
GPIO2  
SCL  
SDA  
Figure 50. Paddle Connection to Board  
GALVANICALLY ISOLATED INTERFACE  
PF9  
PF8  
LDAC  
In many process control applications, it is necessary to provide  
an isolation barrier between the controller and the unit being  
controlled to protect and isolate the controlling circuitry from  
any hazardous common-mode voltages that may occur.  
RESET  
Figure 49. AD5316R to ADSP-BF531 Interface  
LAYOUT GUIDELINES  
In any circuit where accuracy is important, careful consider-  
ation of the power supply and ground return layout helps to  
ensure the rated performance. The PCB on which the AD5316R  
is mounted should be designed so that the AD5316R lies on the  
analog plane.  
The Analog Devices iCoupler® products provide voltage isolation  
in excess of 2.5 kV. The serial loading structure of the AD5316R  
makes the part ideal for isolated interfaces because the number of  
interface lines is kept to a minimum. Figure 51 shows a 4-channel  
isolated interface to the AD5316R using the ADuM1400. For  
more information, visit http://www.analog.com/icouplers.  
The AD5316R should have ample supply bypassing of 10 μF  
in parallel with 0.1 μF on each supply, located as close to the  
package as possible, ideally right up against the device. The 10 μF  
capacitor is the tantalum bead type. The 0.1 μF capacitor should  
have low effective series resistance (ESR) and low effective series  
inductance (ESI), such as the common ceramic types; these  
capacitors provide a low impedance path to ground at high  
frequencies to handle transient currents due to internal logic  
switching.  
CONTROLLER  
ADuM1400  
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
IA  
IB  
IC  
ID  
OA  
OB  
OC  
OD  
TO  
SERIAL  
ENCODE  
ENCODE  
ENCODE  
ENCODE  
DECODE  
DECODE  
DECODE  
DECODE  
SCL  
CLOCK IN  
TO  
SDA  
SERIAL  
DATA OUT  
TO  
RESET  
RESET OUT  
In systems where many devices are on one board, it is often  
useful to provide some heat sinking capability to allow the  
power to dissipate easily.  
LOAD DAC  
OUT  
TO  
LDAC  
Figure 51. Isolated Interface  
The AD5316R LFCSP models have an exposed pad beneath the  
device. Connect this pad to the GND supply for the part. For  
optimum performance, use special considerations to design the  
motherboard and to mount the package.  
Rev. C | Page 23 of 24  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
AD5316R  
Data Sheet  
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS  
3.10  
3.00 SQ  
2.90  
0.30  
0.23  
0.18  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
13  
16  
0.50  
BSC  
1
4
12  
EXPOSED  
PAD  
1.75  
1.60 SQ  
1.45  
9
8
5
0.50  
0.40  
0.30  
0.25 MIN  
TOP VIEW  
BOTTOM VIEW  
FOR PROPER CONNECTION OF  
THE EXPOSED PAD, REFER TO  
THE PIN CONFIGURATION AND  
FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
0.80  
0.75  
0.70  
0.05 MAX  
0.02 NOM  
COPLANARITY  
0.08  
SECTION OF THIS DATA SHEET.  
SEATING  
PLANE  
0.20 REF  
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-WEED-6.  
Figure 52. 16-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_WQ]  
3 mm × 3 mm Body, Very Very Thin Quad  
(CP-16-22)  
Dimensions shown in millimeters  
5.10  
5.00  
4.90  
16  
9
8
4.50  
4.40  
4.30  
6.40  
BSC  
1
PIN 1  
1.20  
MAX  
0.15  
0.05  
0.20  
0.09  
0.75  
0.60  
0.45  
8°  
0°  
0.30  
0.19  
0.65  
BSC  
SEATING  
PLANE  
COPLANARITY  
0.10  
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-153-AB  
Figure 53. 16-Lead Thin Shrink Small Outline Package [TSSOP]  
(RU-16)  
Dimensions shown in millimeters  
ORDERING GUIDE  
Reference  
Temperature  
Range  
Accuracy  
(INL)  
Tempco  
(ppm/°C)  
Package  
Description  
Package  
Model1  
Resolution  
10 Bits  
10 Bits  
10 Bits  
Option  
CP-16-22  
RU-16  
Branding  
AD5316RBCPZ-RL7  
AD5316RBRUZ  
AD5316RBRUZ-RL7  
EVAL-AD5316RDBZ  
−40°C to +105°C  
−40°C to +105°C  
−40°C to +105°C  
0.5 LSB  
0.5 LSB  
0.5 LSB  
5 ꢀ(aꢁx  
5 ꢀ(aꢁx  
5 ꢀ(aꢁx  
16-Lead LFCSP_WQ  
16-Lead TSSOP  
16-Lead TSSOP  
Evaluation Board  
DJT  
RU-16  
1 Z = RoHS Co(pliant Part.  
I2C refers to a co((unications protocol originally developed by Philips Se(iconductors ꢀnow NXP Se(iconductorsx.  
©2012–2017 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and  
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
D10819-0-5/17(C)  
Rev. C | Page 24 of 24  
 
 

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