AD7985BCPZ-RL7 [ADI]

16-Bit, 2.5 MSPS, PulSAR 15.5 mW ADC in LFCSP; 16位, 2.5 MSPS , 15.5的PulSAR ADC毫瓦的LFCSP
AD7985BCPZ-RL7
型号: AD7985BCPZ-RL7
厂家: ADI    ADI
描述:

16-Bit, 2.5 MSPS, PulSAR 15.5 mW ADC in LFCSP
16位, 2.5 MSPS , 15.5的PulSAR ADC毫瓦的LFCSP

文件: 总28页 (文件大小:586K)
中文:  中文翻译
下载:  下载PDF数据表文档文件
16-Bit, 2.5 MSPS, PulSAR  
15.5 mW ADC in LFCSP  
AD7985  
APPLICATION DIAGRAM  
FEATURES  
1.8V  
TO  
16-bit resolution with no missing codes  
Throughput: 2.5 MSPS (TURBO high), 2.0 MSPS (TURBO low)  
Low power dissipation  
15.5 mW at 2.5 MSPS, with external reference  
28 mW at 2.5 MSPS, with internal reference  
INL: 0.7 LSB typical, 1.5 LSB maximum  
SNR  
5V  
2.5V  
2.7V  
VIO  
TURBO  
SDI  
BVDD  
AVDD,  
DVDD  
0V  
TO  
VIO  
IN+  
IN–  
3- OR 4-WIRE  
INTERFACE:  
SPI, CS,  
DAISY CHAIN  
(TURBO = LOW)  
V
REF  
AD7985  
SCK  
SDO  
CNV  
GND REF  
88.5 dB, with on-chip reference  
90 dB, with external reference  
10µF  
4.096 V internal reference: typical drift of 10 ppm/°C  
Pseudo differential analog input voltage range  
0 V to VREF with VREF up to 5.0 V  
NOTES  
1. GND REFERS TO REFGND, AGND, AND DGND.  
Allows use of any input range  
Figure 1.  
No pipeline delay  
Logic interface: 1.8 V/2.5 V/2.7 V  
GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The AD7985 is a 16-bit, 2.5 MSPS successive approximation  
analog-to-digital converter (SAR ADC). It contains a low power,  
high speed, 16-bit sampling ADC, an internal conversion clock,  
an internal reference (and buffer), error correction circuits, and  
a versatile serial interface port. On the rising edge of CNV, the  
AD7985 samples an analog input, IN+, between 0 V and REF  
with respect to a ground sense, IN−. The AD7985 features a  
very high sampling rate turbo mode (TURBO is high) and a  
reduced power normal mode (TURBO is low) for low power  
applications where the power is scaled with the throughput.  
Serial interface: SPI-/QSPI™-/MICROWIRE™-/DSP-compatible  
Ability to daisy-chain multiple ADCs with busy indicator  
20-lead, 4 mm × 4 mm LFCSP (QFN)  
APPLICATIONS  
Battery-powered equipment  
Communications  
ATE  
Data acquisition systems  
Medical instruments  
In normal mode (TURBO is low), the SPI-compatible serial inter-  
face also features the ability, using the SDI input, to daisy-chain  
several ADCs on a single 3-wire bus and provide an optional busy  
indicator. It is compatible with 1.8 V, 2.5 V, and 2.7 V supplies  
using the separate VIO supply.  
The AD7985 is available in a 20-lead LFCSP with operation  
specified from −40°C to +85°C.  
Table 1. MSOP, LFCSP, 14-/16-/18-Bit PulSAR® ADCs1  
Type  
14-Bit  
16-Bit  
100 kSPS  
AD7940  
AD7680  
AD7683  
AD7684  
250 kSPS  
AD79422  
AD76852  
AD76872  
AD7694  
400 kSPS to 500 kSPS  
AD79462  
≥1000 kSPS  
ADC Driver  
AD76862  
AD79802  
AD79832  
AD79853  
AD79822  
AD79842  
AD79863  
ADA4941-1  
ADA4841-x  
AD8021  
ADA4941-1  
ADA4841-x  
AD8021  
AD76882  
AD76932  
18-Bit  
AD76912  
AD76902  
1 See www.analog.com for the latest selection of PulSAR ADCs and ADC drivers.  
2 Pin-for-pin compatible with all other parts marked with this endnote.  
3 The AD7985 and AD7986 are pin-for-pin compatible.  
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 registeredtrademarks arethe property of their respective owners.  
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.  
Tel: 781.329.4700  
Fax: 781.461.3113  
www.analog.com  
©2009 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.  
 
 
AD7985  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Features .............................................................................................. 1  
Analog Inputs ............................................................................. 15  
Driver Amplifier Choice ........................................................... 15  
Voltage Reference Input ............................................................ 16  
Power Supply............................................................................... 16  
Digital Interface.............................................................................. 17  
Data Reading Options ............................................................... 18  
Applications....................................................................................... 1  
Application Diagram........................................................................ 1  
General Description......................................................................... 1  
Revision History ............................................................................... 2  
Specifications..................................................................................... 3  
Timing Specifications .................................................................. 5  
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 6  
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 6  
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 7  
Typical Performance Characteristics ............................................. 9  
Terminology .................................................................................... 12  
Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 13  
Circuit Information.................................................................... 13  
Converter Operation.................................................................. 13  
Conversion Modes of Operation.............................................. 13  
Typical Connection Diagram ................................................... 14  
CS  
CS  
CS  
CS  
Mode, 3-Wire Without Busy Indicator ............................. 19  
Mode, 3-Wire with Busy Indicator .................................... 20  
Mode, 4-Wire Without Busy Indicator ............................. 21  
Mode, 4-Wire with Busy Indicator .................................... 22  
Chain Mode Without Busy Indicator...................................... 23  
Chain Mode with Busy Indicator............................................. 24  
Applications Information.............................................................. 25  
Layout .......................................................................................... 25  
Evaluating AD7985 Performance............................................. 25  
Outline Dimensions....................................................................... 27  
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 27  
REVISION HISTORY  
9/09—Revision 0: Initial Version  
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 28  
 
AD7985  
SPECIFICATIONS  
AVDD = DVDD = 2.5 V, BVDD = 5 V, VIO = 1.8 V to 2.7 V, VREF = 4.096 V, TA = −40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.  
Table 2.  
Parameter  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
RESOLUTION  
16  
Bits  
ANALOG INPUT  
Voltage Range  
Absolute Input Voltage  
(IN+) − (IN−)  
IN+  
IN−  
0
−0.1  
−0.1  
VREF  
VREF + 0.1  
+0.1  
V
V
V
Leakage Current at 25°C  
Input Impedance  
Acquisition phase  
250  
nA  
See the Analog Inputs section  
ACCURACY  
No Missing Codes  
16  
−0.99  
−1.50  
Bits  
LSB1  
LSB1  
LSB1  
LSB1  
Differential Nonlinearity Error, DNL  
Integral Nonlinearity Error, INL  
Transition Noise  
0.50  
0.7  
0.8  
+0.99  
+1.50  
2
Gain Error, TMIN to TMAX  
−15  
2
+15  
Gain Error Temperature Drift  
Zero Error, TMIN to TMAX  
0.8  
0.08  
ppm/°C  
mV  
2
−0.99  
+0.99  
Zero Temperature Drift  
Power Supply Sensitivity  
THROUGHPUT  
Conversion Rate  
Transient Response  
AC ACCURACY  
0.55  
90  
ppm/°C  
dB3  
AVDD = 2.5 V 5%  
Full-scale step  
0
2.5  
100  
MSPS  
ns  
Dynamic Range  
VREF = 4.096 V, internal reference  
VREF = 5.0 V, external reference  
fIN = 20 kHz, VREF = 4.096 V, internal 87.0  
reference  
fIN = 20 kHz, VREF = 5.0 V, external  
reference  
87.5  
89.0  
89  
90  
88.5  
dB3  
dB3  
dB3  
Signal-to-Noise Ratio, SNR  
89.0  
90.0  
dB3  
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range, SFDR  
Total Harmonic Distortion4, THD  
fIN = 20 kHz  
fIN = 20 kHz, VREF = 4.096 V, internal  
reference  
103  
−100  
dB3  
dB3  
Signal-to-Noise-and-Distortion Ratio,  
SINAD  
fIN = 20 kHz, VREF = 4.096 V  
90.5  
dB3  
SAMPLING DYNAMICS  
−3 dB Input Bandwidth  
Aperture Delay  
19  
0.7  
MHz  
ns  
1 LSB means least significant bit. With the 4.096 V input range, one LSB is 62.5 μV.  
2 See the Terminology section. These specifications include full temperature range variation but not the error contribution from the external reference.  
3 All specifications expressed in decibels are referred to a full-scale input FSR and tested with an input signal at 0.5 dB below full scale, unless otherwise specified.  
4 Tested fully in production at fIN = 1 kHz.  
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
Table 3.  
Parameter  
Test Conditions/Comments  
PDREF is low  
TA = 25°C  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
INTERNAL REFERENCE  
Output Voltage  
Temperature Drift  
Line Regulation  
Turn-On Settling Time  
REFIN Output Voltage  
REFIN Output Resistance  
EXTERNAL REFERENCE  
Voltage Range  
Current Drain  
REFERENCE BUFFER  
REFIN Input Voltage Range  
REFIN Input Current  
DIGITAL INPUTS  
Logic Levels  
4.081  
4.096  
10  
50  
40  
1.2  
6
4.111  
V
−40°C to +85°C  
ppm/°C  
ppm/V  
ms  
V
kΩ  
AVDD = 2.5 V 5%  
CREF = 10 ꢀF, CREFIN = 0.1 ꢀF  
REFIN at 25°C  
PDREF is high, REFIN is low  
2.4  
5.1  
V
μA  
500  
1.2  
160  
V
μA  
VIL  
VIH  
IIL  
IIH  
−0.3  
0.9 × VIO  
−1  
0.1 × VIO  
VIO + 0.3  
+1  
V
V
μA  
μA  
−1  
+1  
DIGITAL OUTPUTS  
Data Format  
Serial 16 bits, straight binary  
Pipeline Delay  
Conversion results available immediately  
after completed conversion  
VOL  
VOH  
ISINK = +500 μA  
ISOURCE = −500 μA  
0.4  
V
V
VIO − 0.3  
POWER SUPPLIES  
AVDD, DVDD  
BVDD  
2.375  
4.75  
1.8  
2.5  
5.0  
2.5  
1.0  
2.625  
5.25  
2.7  
V
V
V
μA  
VIO  
Specified performance  
AVDD = DVDD = VIO = 2.5 V  
Standby Current1, 2  
Power Dissipation  
With Internal Reference  
2.5 MSPS throughput  
2.0 MSPS throughput  
2.5 MSPS throughput  
2.0 MSPS throughput  
28  
25  
15.5  
12  
33  
30  
17  
13  
mW  
mW  
mW  
mW  
With External Reference  
TEMPERATURE RANGE3  
Specified Performance  
TMIN to TMAX  
−40  
+85  
°C  
1 With all digital inputs forced to VIO or GND as required.  
2 During acquisition phase.  
3 Contact an Analog Devices, Inc., sales representative for the extended temperature range.  
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 28  
 
AD7985  
TIMING SPECIFICATIONS  
AVDD = DVDD = 2.5 V, BVDD = 5 V, VIO = 1.8 V to 2.7 V, VREF = 4.096 V, TA = −40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.1  
Table 4.  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
Conversion Time: CNV Rising Edge  
to Data Available  
tCONV  
Turbo mode/normal mode  
320/420  
ns  
Acquisition Time  
Time Between Conversions  
CNV Pulse Width  
tACQ  
tCYC  
tCNVH  
tDATA  
tQUIET  
80  
400/500  
10  
ns  
ns  
ns  
Turbo mode/normal mode  
CS mode  
Data Read During Conversion  
Quiet Time During Acquisition from Last SCK  
Falling Edge to CNV Rising Edge  
Turbo mode/normal mode  
190/290  
ns  
ns  
20  
SCK Period  
tSCK  
CS mode  
9
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
tSCK  
Chain mode  
11  
3.5  
3.5  
2
SCK Low Time  
SCK High Time  
tSCKL  
tSCKH  
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
tEN  
SCK Falling Edge to Data Remains Valid  
SCK Falling Edge to Data Valid Delay  
CNV or SDI Low to SDO D15 MSB Valid  
CNV or SDI High or Last SCK Falling Edge  
to SDO High Impedance  
4
5
8
tDIS  
CS mode  
SDI Valid Setup Time from CNV Rising Edge  
SDI Valid Hold Time from CNV Rising Edge  
tSSDICNV  
tHSDICNV  
tHSDICNV  
tSSCKCNV  
tHSCKCNV  
tSSDISCK  
tHSDISCK  
tDSDOSDI  
4
0
0
5
5
2
3
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
CS mode  
Chain mode  
Chain mode  
Chain mode  
Chain mode  
Chain mode  
Chain mode with busy indicator  
SCK Valid Setup Time from CNV Rising Edge  
SCK Valid Hold Time from CNV Rising Edge  
SDI Valid Setup Time from SCK Falling Edge  
SDI Valid Hold Time from SCK Falling Edge  
SDI High to SDO High  
15  
1 See Figure 2 and Figure 3 for load conditions.  
10% VIO  
500µA  
I
OL  
90% VIO  
tDELAY  
tDELAY  
1
V
1
V
IH  
IH  
1.4V  
TO SDO  
1
1
V
V
IL  
IL  
C
L
20pF  
1
MINIMUM V AND MAXIMUM V USED. SEE DIGITAL INPUTS  
IH  
IL  
SPECIFICATIONS IN TABLE 3.  
500µA  
I
OH  
Figure 2. Load Circuit for Digital Interface Timing  
Figure 3. Voltage Levels for Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
Table 5.  
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.  
Parameter  
Rating  
Analog Inputs  
IN+, IN− to GND1  
−0.3 V to VREF + 0.3 V  
or 130 mA  
Supply Voltage  
REF, BVDD to GND, REFGND  
AVDD, DVDD, VIO to GND  
AVDD, DVDD to VIO  
−0.3 V to +6.0 V  
−0.3 V to +2.7 V  
−6 V to +3 V  
ESD CAUTION  
Digital Inputs to GND  
Digital Outputs to GND  
Storage Temperature Range  
Junction Temperature  
θJA Thermal Impedance  
20-Lead LFCSP (QFN)  
Lead Temperatures  
−0.3 V to VIO + 0.3 V  
−0.3 V to VIO + 0.3 V  
−65°C to +150°C  
150°C  
30.4°C/W  
Vapor Phase (60 sec)  
Infrared (15 sec)  
215°C  
220°C  
1 See the Analog Inputs section for an explanation of IN+ and IN−.  
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
REF  
REF  
REFGND  
REFGND  
IN–  
1
2
3
4
5
15 TURBO  
14 SDI  
13 CNV  
12 SCK  
11 DVDD  
AD7985  
TOP VIEW  
(Not to Scale)  
NOTES  
1. THE EXPOSED PAD IS NOT CONNECTED  
INTERNALLY. FOR INCREASED  
RELIABILITY OF THE SOLDER JOINTS, IT  
IS RECOMMENDED THAT THE PAD BE  
SOLDERED TO THE SYSTEM  
GROUND PLANE.  
Figure 4. Pin Configuration  
Table 6. Pin Function Descriptions  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic  
Type1 Description  
1, 2  
REF  
AI  
Reference Output/Input Voltage.  
When PDREF is low, the internal reference and buffer are enabled, producing 4.096 V on this pin.  
When PDREF is high, the internal reference and buffer are disabled, allowing an externally supplied  
voltage reference up to 5.0 V.  
Decoupling is required with or without the internal reference and buffer. This pin is referred to the  
REFGND pins and should be decoupled closely to the REFGND pins with a 10 μF capacitor.  
3, 4  
5
6
REFGND  
IN−  
IN+  
AI  
AI  
AI  
Reference Input Analog Ground.  
Analog Input Ground Sense. Connect this pin to the analog ground plane or to a remote ground sense.  
Analog Input. This pin is referred to IN−. The voltage range, that is, the difference between IN+ and IN−,  
is 0 V to VREF  
.
7
8
PDREF  
VIO  
DI  
P
Internal Reference Power-Down Input. When this pin is low, the internal reference is enabled. When  
this pin is high, the internal reference is powered down and an external reference must be used.  
Input/Output Interface Digital Power. Nominally at the same supply voltage as the host interface  
(1.8 V, 2.5 V, or 2.7 V).  
9
SDO  
DO  
P
P
DI  
DI  
Serial Data Output. The conversion result is output on this pin. It is synchronized to SCK.  
Digital Power Ground.  
Digital Power. Nominally at 2.5 V.  
10  
11  
12  
13  
DGND  
DVDD  
SCK  
Serial Data Clock Input. When the part is selected, the conversion result is shifted out by this clock.  
CNV  
Convert Input. This input has multiple functions. On its leading edge, it initiates the conversions  
and selects the interface mode of the part: chain mode or CS mode. In CS mode, the SDO pin is  
enabled when CNV is low. In chain mode, the data should be read when CNV is high.  
14  
SDI  
DI  
Serial Data Input. This input has multiple functions. It selects the interface mode of the ADC as follows.  
Chain mode is selected if SDI is low during the CNV rising edge. In chain mode, SDI is used as a data  
input to daisy-chain the conversion results of two or more ADCs onto a single SDO line. The digital data  
level on SDI is output on SDO with a delay of 16 SCK cycles.  
CS mode is selected if SDI is high during the CNV rising edge. In CS mode, either SDI or CNV can enable  
the serial output signals when low. If SDI or CNV is low when the conversion is complete, the busy  
indicator feature is enabled.  
15  
TURBO  
DI  
Conversion Mode Selection. When TURBO is high, the maximum throughput (2.5 MSPS) is achieved,  
and the ADC does not power down between conversions. When TURBO is low, the maximum throughput  
is lower (2.0 MSPS), and the ADC powers down between conversions.  
16  
17, 18  
AVDD  
AGND  
P
P
Input Analog Power. Nominally at 2.5 V.  
Analog Power Ground.  
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 28  
 
AD7985  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic  
Type1 Description  
19  
BVDD  
P
Reference Buffer Power. Nominally at 5.0 V. If an external reference buffer is used to achieve the maximum  
SNR performance with a 5 V reference, the reference buffer must be powered down by connecting the  
REFIN pin to ground. The external reference buffer must be connected to the BVDD pin.  
20  
REFIN  
AI/O  
Internal Reference Output/Reference Buffer Input.  
When PDREF is low, the internal band gap reference produces a 1.2 V (typical) voltage on this pin,  
which needs external decoupling (0.1 μF typical).  
When PDREF is high, use an external reference to provide 1.2 V (typical) to this pin.  
When PDREF is high and REFIN is low, the on-chip reference buffer and the band gap reference are  
powered down. An external reference must be connected to REF and BVDD.  
21  
Exposed Pad  
EP  
The exposed pad is not connected internally. For increased reliability of the solder joints, it is  
recommended that the pad be soldered to the system ground plane.  
1 AI = analog input, AI/O = bidirectional analog, DI = digital input, DO = digital output, and P = power.  
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 28  
 
AD7985  
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS  
AVDD = DVDD = VIO = 2.5 V, BVDD = 5.0 V, VREF = 5.0 V, external reference (PDREF is high, REFIN is low), unless otherwise noted.  
1.25  
1.00  
0.75  
0.50  
0.25  
0
1.00  
0.75  
0.50  
0.25  
0
POSITIVE INL = +0.38LSB  
NEGATIVE INL = –0.46LSB  
POSITIVE DNL = +0.19LSB  
NEGATIVE DNL = –0.20LSB  
–0.25  
–0.50  
–0.75  
–1.00  
–1.25  
–0.25  
–0.50  
–0.75  
–1.00  
0
16,384  
32,768  
CODE  
49,152  
65,536  
0
16,384  
32,768  
CODE  
49,152  
65,536  
Figure 5. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Code  
Figure 8. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Code  
60,000  
50,000  
40,000  
30,000  
20,000  
10,000  
0
60,000  
50,000  
40,000  
30,000  
20,000  
10,000  
0
57,138  
53,522  
48,730  
38,843  
26,249  
15,645  
11,888  
6150  
2537  
800  
479  
122  
0
2
6
0
0
33  
0
7FFC 7FFD 7FFE 7FFF 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004  
CODE IN HEX  
7FFB 7FFC 7FFD 7FFE 7FFF 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004  
CODE IN HEX  
Figure 6. Histogram of DC Input at Code Center (External Reference)  
Figure 9. Histogram of DC Input at Code Transition (External Reference)  
60,000  
50,000  
46,649  
43,622  
45,000  
49,585  
50,000  
40,000  
35,000  
30,000  
25,000  
40,000  
33,064  
31,957  
30,000  
20,000  
20,474  
20,000  
15,598  
15,000  
10,000  
8455  
10,000  
7024  
5000  
2947  
1662  
565  
403  
0
11  
8
0
90  
0
30  
0
0
0
7FFB 7FFC 7FFD 7FFE 7FFF 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004 8005  
CODE IN HEX  
7FFC 7FFD 7FFE 7FFF 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004 8005  
CODE IN HEX  
Figure 7. Histogram of DC Input at Code Center (Internal Reference)  
Figure 10. Histogram of DC Input at Code Transition (Internal Reference)  
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 28  
 
AD7985  
0
0
–20  
fS = 2.5MSPS  
fIN = 20kHz  
SNR = 89.87dB  
THD = –102.76dB  
SINAD = 89.66dB  
fS = 2.5MSPS  
fIN = 20kHz  
SNR = 88.45dB  
THD = –103.42dB  
SINAD = 88.32dB  
–20  
–40  
–40  
–60  
–60  
–80  
–80  
–100  
–120  
–140  
–160  
–100  
–120  
–140  
–160  
–180  
–180  
0
250  
500  
750  
1000  
1250  
0
250  
500  
750  
1000  
1250  
FREQUENCY (kHz)  
FREQUENCY (kHz)  
Figure 11. FFT Plot (External Reference)  
Figure 14. FFT Plot (Internal Reference)  
100  
95  
16  
15  
14  
13  
12  
–90  
100  
95  
90  
85  
80  
–95  
–100  
–105  
–110  
SFDR  
ENOB  
SNR  
90  
SINAD  
85  
THD  
80  
2.50 2.75 3.00 3.25 3.50 3.75 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75 5.00  
2.50 2.75 3.00 3.25 3.50 3.75 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75 5.00  
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)  
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 12. SNR, SINAD, and ENOB vs. Reference Voltage  
Figure 15. THD and SFDR vs. Reference Voltage  
95  
90  
85  
80  
75  
70  
65  
–85  
–90  
–95  
–100  
–105  
–110  
1
10  
100  
1000  
1
10  
100  
1000  
FREQUENCY (kHz)  
FREQUENCY (kHz)  
Figure 13. SINAD vs. Frequency  
Figure 16. THD vs. Frequency  
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 28  
AD7985  
95  
94  
93  
92  
91  
90  
89  
88  
87  
86  
85  
2.0  
1.8  
1.6  
1.4  
1.2  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
I
AVDD  
I
BVDD  
I
REF  
–10  
–9  
–8  
–7  
–6  
–5  
–4  
–3  
–2  
–1  
0
–55  
–35  
–15  
5
25  
45  
65  
85  
105  
125  
INPUT LEVEL (dBFS)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 17. SNR vs. Input Level  
Figure 19. Operating Current vs. Temperature  
2.0  
14  
12  
10  
8
1.8  
1.6  
1.4  
1.2  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
I
AVDD  
I
DVDD  
I
VIO  
6
I
BVDD  
4
I
REF  
I
+ I  
DVDD  
+ I  
VIO  
AVDD  
2
0
2.375  
2.425  
2.475  
2.525  
2.575  
2.625  
–55  
–35  
–15  
5
25  
45  
65  
85  
105  
125  
AVDD AND DVDD VOLTAGE (V)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 18. Operating Current vs. Supply Voltage  
Figure 20. Power-Down Current vs. Temperature  
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 28  
AD7985  
TERMINOLOGY  
Aperture Delay  
Noise-Free Code Resolution  
Aperture delay is the measure of the acquisition performance  
and is the time between the rising edge of the CNV input and  
when the input signal is held for a conversion.  
Noise-free code resolution is the number of bits beyond which it  
is impossible to distinctly resolve individual codes. It is expressed  
in bits and is calculated as follows:  
Differential Nonlinearity Error (DNL)  
Noise-Free Code Resolution = log2(2N/Peak-to-Peak Noise)  
In an ideal ADC, code transitions are 1 LSB apart. DNL is the  
maximum deviation from this ideal value. It is often specified in  
terms of resolution for which no missing codes are guaranteed.  
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)  
SNR is the ratio of the rms value of the actual input signal to  
the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist  
frequency, excluding harmonics and dc. The value for SNR is  
expressed in decibels.  
Dynamic Range  
Dynamic range is the ratio of the rms value of the full scale to  
the total rms noise measured with the inputs shorted together.  
The value for dynamic range is expressed in decibels. It is mea-  
sured with a signal at −60 dBFS so that it includes all noise  
sources and DNL artifacts.  
Signal-to-Noise-and-Distortion Ratio (SINAD)  
SINAD is the ratio of the rms value of the actual input signal to  
the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist  
frequency, including harmonics but excluding dc. The value for  
SINAD is expressed in decibels.  
Effective Number of Bits (ENOB)  
ENOB is a measurement of the resolution with a sine wave  
input. It is expressed in bits and is related to SINAD as follows:  
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (SFDR)  
SFDR is the difference, in decibels (dB), between the rms  
amplitude of the input signal and the peak spurious signal.  
ENOB = (SINADdB − 1.76)/6.02  
Effective Resolution  
Effective resolution is expressed in bits and is calculated as follows:  
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)  
THD is the ratio of the rms sum of the first five harmonic  
components to the rms value of a full-scale input signal and is  
expressed in decibels.  
Effective Resolution = log2(2N/RMS Input Noise)  
Gain Error  
Transient Response  
Transient response is the time required for the ADC to accurately  
acquire its input after a full-scale step function is applied.  
The last transition (from 111 … 10 to 111 … 11) should occur  
for an analog voltage 1½ LSB below the nominal full scale  
(4.999886 V for the 0 V to 5 V range). The gain error is the  
deviation of the difference between the actual level of the last  
transition and the actual level of the first transition from the  
difference between the ideal levels.  
Zero Error  
Zero error is the difference between the ideal midscale voltage,  
that is, 0 V, from the actual voltage producing the midscale  
output code, that is, 0 LSB.  
Integral Nonlinearity Error (INL)  
INL refers to the deviation of each individual code from a line  
drawn from negative full scale through positive full scale. The  
point used as negative full scale occurs ½ LSB before the first  
code transition. Positive full scale is defined as a level 1½ LSB  
beyond the last code transition. The deviation is measured from  
the middle of each code to the true straight line (see Figure 22).  
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 28  
 
AD7985  
THEORY OF OPERATION  
IN+  
SWITCHES CONTROL  
MSB  
LSB  
SW+  
32,768C 16,384C  
4C  
4C  
2C  
2C  
C
C
C
C
BUSY  
REF  
CONTROL  
COMP  
LOGIC  
REFGND  
OUTPUT CODE  
32,768C 16,384C  
MSB  
LSB  
SW–  
CNV  
IN–  
Figure 21. ADC Simplified Schematic  
When the conversion phase begins, SW+ and SW− are opened  
first. The two capacitor arrays are then disconnected from the  
analog inputs and connected to the REFGND input. Therefore,  
the differential voltage between the IN+ and IN− inputs captured  
at the end of the acquisition phase is applied to the comparator  
inputs, causing the comparator to become unbalanced. By switch-  
ing each element of the capacitor array between REFGND and  
REF, the comparator input varies by binary-weighted voltage  
steps (VREF/2, VREF/4, … VREF/65,536). The control logic toggles  
these switches, starting with the MSB, to bring the comparator  
back into a balanced condition. After the completion of this  
process, the part returns to the acquisition phase, and the control  
logic generates the ADC output code and a busy signal indicator.  
CIRCUIT INFORMATION  
The AD7985 is a fast, low power, single-supply, precise, 16-bit  
ADC using a successive approximation architecture. The AD7985  
features different modes to optimize performance according to the  
application. In turbo mode, the AD7985 is capable of converting  
2,500,000 samples per second (2.5 MSPS).  
The AD7985 provides the user with an on-chip track-and-hold  
and does not exhibit any pipeline delay or latency, making it  
ideal for multiple multiplexed channel applications.  
The AD7985 can be interfaced to any 1.8 V to 2.7 V digital logic  
family. It is available in a space-saving 20-lead LFCSP that allows  
flexible configurations. It is pin-for-pin compatible with the  
18-bit AD7986.  
Because the AD7985 has an on-board conversion clock, the  
serial clock, SCK, is not required for the conversion process.  
CONVERTER OPERATION  
The AD7985 is a successive approximation ADC based on a  
charge redistribution DAC. Figure 21 shows the simplified  
schematic of the ADC. The capacitive DAC consists of two  
identical arrays of 16 binary-weighted capacitors that are  
connected to the two comparator inputs.  
CONVERSION MODES OF OPERATION  
The AD7985 features two conversion modes of operation: turbo  
and normal. Turbo conversion mode (TURBO is high) allows  
the fastest conversion rate of up to 2.5 MSPS and does not  
power down between conversions. The first conversion in turbo  
mode should be ignored because it contains meaningless data.  
For applications that require lower power and slightly slower  
sampling rates, the normal mode (TURBO is low) allows a  
maximum conversion rate of 2.0 MSPS and powers down  
between conversions. The first conversion in normal mode  
contains meaningful data.  
During the acquisition phase, the terminals of the array tied to  
the input of the comparator are connected to AGND via SW+  
and SW−. All independent switches are connected to the analog  
inputs. Therefore, the capacitor arrays are used as sampling  
capacitors and acquire the analog signal on the IN+ and IN−  
inputs. When the acquisition phase is completed and the CNV  
input goes high, a conversion phase is initiated.  
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
Transfer Functions  
Table 7. Output Codes and Ideal Input Voltages  
Analog Input, Digital Output  
REF = 4.096 V  
The ideal transfer characteristic for the AD7985 is shown in  
Figure 22 and Table 7.  
Description  
FSR – 1 LSB  
Midscale + 1 LSB  
Midscale  
V
Code (Hex)  
0xFFFF1  
0x8001  
4.095938 V  
2.048063 V  
2.048 V  
111 ... 111  
111 ... 110  
111 ... 101  
0x8000  
Midscale – 1 LSB  
–FSR + 1 LSB  
–FSR  
2.047938 V  
62.5 μV  
0 V  
0x7FFF  
0x0001  
0x00002  
1 This is also the code for an overranged analog input (VIN+ − VIN− above VREF  
REFGND).  
2 This is also the code for an underranged analog input (VIN+ − VIN− below REFGND).  
000 ... 010  
000 ... 001  
000 ... 000  
TYPICAL CONNECTION DIAGRAM  
Figure 23 shows an example of the recommended connection  
diagram for the AD7985 when multiple supplies are available.  
–FSR  
–FSR + 1 LSB  
+FSR – 1 LSB  
+FSR – 1.5 LSB  
ANALOG INPUT  
–FSR + 0.5 LSB  
Figure 22. ADC Ideal Transfer Function  
1.8V  
TO  
2.7V  
5V  
2.5V  
V+  
VIO  
BVDD  
AVDD,  
DVDD  
VIO  
TURBO  
SDI  
15  
2.7nF  
IN+  
IN–  
3- OR 4-WIRE  
INTERFACE:  
SPI, CS,  
0V TO V  
REF  
AD7985  
SCK  
SDO  
CNV  
V–  
DAISY CHAIN  
(TURBO = LOW)  
REF  
GND  
10µF  
NOTES  
1. GND REFERS TO REFGND, AGND, AND DGND.  
Figure 23. Typical Application Diagram with Multiple Supplies  
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 28  
 
 
 
 
 
AD7985  
ANALOG INPUTS  
DRIVER AMPLIFIER CHOICE  
Figure 24 shows an equivalent circuit of the input structure of  
the AD7985.  
Although the AD7985 is easy to drive, the driver amplifier must  
meet the following requirements:  
The two diodes, D1 and D2, provide ESD protection for the  
analog inputs, IN+ and IN−. Care must be taken to ensure that  
the analog input signal does not exceed the reference input  
voltage (REF) by more than 0.3 V. If the analog input signal  
exceeds this level, the diodes become forward-biased and start  
conducting current. These diodes can handle a forward-biased  
current of 130 mA maximum. However, if the supplies of the  
input buffer (for example, the V+ and V− supplies of the buffer  
amplifier in Figure 23) are different from those of REF, the  
analog input signal may eventually exceed the supply rails by  
more than 0.3 V. In such a case (for example, an input buffer  
with a short circuit), the current limitation can be used to  
protect the part.  
The noise generated by the driver amplifier must be kept as  
low as possible to preserve the SNR and transition noise  
performance of the AD7985. The noise from the driver is  
filtered by the AD7985 analog input circuits one-pole, low-  
pass filter, made by RIN and CIN, or by the external filter, if  
one is used. Because the typical noise of the AD7985 is  
50 μV rms, the SNR degradation due to the amplifier is  
50  
SNRLOSS = 20 log  
π
2
502 + f3dB (NeN )2  
where:  
REF  
f
–3dB is the input bandwidth, in megahertz, of the AD7985  
(20 MHz) or the cutoff frequency of the input filter, if  
one is used.  
N is the noise gain of the amplifier (for example, 1 in buffer  
D1  
D2  
C
IN  
R
IN  
IN+ OR IN–  
REFGND  
C
PIN  
configuration).  
eN is the equivalent input noise voltage of the op amp, in  
nV/√Hz.  
Figure 24. Equivalent Analog Input Circuit  
The analog input structure allows the sampling of the true  
differential signal between IN+ and IN−. By using these  
differential inputs, signals common to both inputs are rejected.  
For ac applications, the driver should have a THD perfor-  
mance commensurate with that of the AD7985.  
For multichannel multiplexed applications, the driver  
amplifier and the AD7985 analog input circuit must settle  
for a full-scale step onto the capacitor array at a 16-bit level  
(0.0015%, 15 ppm). In the data sheet of the driver amplifier,  
settling at 0.1% to 0.01% is more commonly specified. This  
value may differ significantly from the settling time at a  
16-bit level and should be verified prior to driver selection.  
During the acquisition phase, the impedance of the analog inputs  
(IN+ and IN−) can be modeled as a parallel combination of  
Capacitor CPIN and the network formed by the series connection  
of RIN and CIN. CPIN is primarily the pin capacitance. RIN is typically  
400 Ω and is a lumped component composed of serial resistors  
and the on resistance of the switches. CIN is typically 30 pF and  
is mainly the ADC sampling capacitor.  
Table 8. Recommended Driver Amplifiers  
Amplifier  
During the sampling phase, where the switches are closed, the  
input impedance is limited to CPIN. RIN and CIN make a one-pole,  
low-pass filter that reduces undesirable aliasing effects and  
limits noise.  
Typical Application  
AD8021  
AD8022  
ADA4899-1  
AD8014  
Very low noise and high frequency  
Low noise and high frequency  
Ultralow noise and high frequency  
Low power and high frequency  
When the source impedance of the driving circuit is low, the  
AD7985 can be driven directly. Large source impedances  
significantly affect the ac performance, especially THD. The  
dc performances are less sensitive to the input impedance. The  
maximum source impedance depends on the amount of THD  
that can be tolerated. The THD degrades as a function of the  
source impedance and the maximum input frequency.  
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 28  
 
 
 
 
AD7985  
Reference Decoupling  
VOLTAGE REFERENCE INPUT  
The AD7985 voltage reference input, REF, has a dynamic input  
impedance that requires careful decoupling between the REF  
and REFGND pins. The Layout section describes how this can  
be done.  
The AD7985 allows the choice of a very low temperature drift  
internal voltage reference, an external reference, or an external  
buffered reference.  
The internal reference of the AD7985 provides excellent  
performance and can be used in almost all applications.  
When using an external reference, a very low impedance source  
(for example, a reference buffer using the AD8031 or the AD8605)  
and a 10 μF (X5R, 0805 size) ceramic chip capacitor are appro-  
priate for optimum performance.  
Internal Reference, REF = 4.096 V (PDREF Low)  
To use the internal reference, the PDREF input must be low.  
This enables the on-chip band gap reference and buffer, result-  
ing in a 4.096 V reference on the REF pin (1.2 V on REFIN).  
If an unbuffered reference voltage is used, the decoupling value  
depends on the reference used. For example, a 22 μF (X5R,  
1206 size) ceramic chip capacitor is appropriate for optimum  
performance using a low temperature drift ADR43x reference.  
The internal reference is temperature compensated to  
4.096 V 15 mV. The reference is trimmed to provide  
a typical drift of 10 ppm/°C.  
If desired, a reference decoupling capacitor with a value as small  
as 2.2 μF can be used with minimal impact on performance,  
especially DNL.  
The output resistance of REFIN is 6 kΩ when the internal  
reference is enabled. It is necessary to decouple this pin with a  
ceramic capacitor of at least 100 nF. The output resistance of  
REFIN and the decoupling capacitor form an RC filter, which  
helps to reduce noise.  
In any case, there is no need for an additional lower value ceramic  
decoupling capacitor (for example, 100 nF) between the REF  
and REFGND pins.  
Because the output impedance of REFIN is typically 6 kΩ,  
relative humidity (among other industrial contaminants) can  
directly affect the drift characteristics of the reference. A guard  
ring is typically used to reduce the effects of drift under such  
circumstances. However, the fine pitch of the AD7985 makes  
this difficult to implement. One solution, in these industrial  
and other types of applications, is to use a conformal coating,  
such as Dow Corning® 1-2577 or HumiSeal® 1B73.  
POWER SUPPLY  
The AD7985 has four power supply pins: an analog supply  
(AVDD), a buffer supply (BVDD), a digital supply (DVDD),  
and a digital input/output interface supply (VIO). VIO allows  
direct interface with any logic from 1.8 V to 2.7 V. To reduce the  
number of supplies needed, VIO, DVDD, and AVDD can be tied  
together. The power supplies do not need to be started in a par-  
ticular sequence. In addition, the AD7985 is very insensitive to  
power supply variations over a wide frequency range.  
External 1.2 V Reference and Internal Buffer (PDREF High)  
To use an external reference along with the internal buffer, PDREF  
must be high. This powers down the internal reference and allows  
the 1.2 V reference to be applied to REFIN, producing 4.096 V  
(typically) on the REF pin.  
In normal mode, the AD7985 powers down automatically at  
the end of each conversion phase and, therefore, the power  
scales linearly with the sampling rate. This makes the part ideal  
for low sampling rates (even a few SPS) and battery-powered  
applications.  
External Reference (PDREF High, REFIN Low)  
To apply an external reference voltage directly to the REF pin,  
PDREF should be tied high and REFIN should be tied low.  
BVDD should also be driven to the same potential as REF. For  
example, if REF = 2.5 V, BVDD should be tied to 2.5 V.  
10  
1
The advantages of directly using an external voltage reference  
are as follows:  
SNR and dynamic range improvement (about 1.7 dB)  
resulting from the use of a larger reference voltage (5 V)  
instead of a typical 4.096 V reference when the internal  
reference is used. This is calculated by  
0.1  
I
I
I
I
I
BVDD  
AVDD  
DVDD  
VIO  
4.096  
5.0  
VREF  
SNR =20 log  
0.01  
0.1  
1
SAMPLING RATE (MSPS)  
Power savings when the internal reference is powered  
down (PDREF high).  
Figure 25. Operating Current vs. Sampling Rate in Normal Mode  
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 28  
 
AD7985  
DIGITAL INTERFACE  
Although the AD7985 has a reduced number of pins, it offers  
flexibility in its serial interface modes.  
CS  
mode if CNV or  
SDI is low when the ADC conversion ends (see Figure 29 and  
Figure 33). TURBO must be kept low for both digital interfaces.  
The busy indicator feature is enabled in  
CS  
In  
mode, the AD7985 is compatible with SPI, MICROWIRE,  
CS  
When CNV is low, readback can occur during conversion or  
acquisition, or it can be split across acquisition and conversion,  
as described in the following sections.  
QSPI, and digital hosts. In  
mode, the AD7985 can use either  
a 3-wire or a 4-wire interface. A 3-wire interface that uses the  
CNV, SCK, and SDO signals minimizes wiring connections,  
which is useful, for example, in isolated applications. A 4-wire  
interface that uses the SDI, CNV, SCK, and SDO signals allows  
CNV, which initiates conversions, to be independent of the  
readback timing (SDI). This is useful in low jitter sampling  
or simultaneous sampling applications.  
A discontinuous SCK is recommended because the part is selected  
with CNV low, and SCK activity begins to clock out data.  
Note that in the following sections, the timing diagrams indicate  
digital activity (SCK, CNV, SDI, and SDO) during the conversion.  
However, due to the possibility of performance degradation, digi-  
tal activity should occur only prior to the safe data reading time,  
tDATA, because the AD7985 provides error correction circuitry  
that can correct for an incorrect bit decision during this time.  
From tDATA to tCONV, there is no error correction, and conversion  
results may be corrupted.  
In chain mode, the AD7985 provides a daisy-chain feature that  
uses the SDI input for cascading multiple ADCs on a single data  
line similar to a shift register. Chain mode is available only in  
normal mode (TURBO is low).  
The mode in which the part operates depends on the SDI level  
CS  
when the CNV rising edge occurs.  
mode is selected if SDI  
Similarly, tQUIET, the time from the last falling edge of SCK to  
the rising edge of CNV, must remain free of digital activity.  
The user should configure the AD7985 and initiate the busy  
is high, and chain mode is selected if SDI is low. The SDI hold  
time is such that when SDI and CNV are connected together,  
chain mode is always selected.  
indicator (if desired in normal mode) prior to tDATA  
.
In normal mode operation, the AD7985 offers the option of  
forcing a start bit in front of the data bits. This start bit can be  
used as a busy signal indicator to interrupt the digital host and  
trigger the data reading. Otherwise, without a busy indicator,  
the user must time out the maximum conversion time prior to  
readback.  
It is also possible to corrupt the sample by having SCK near the  
sampling instant. Therefore, it is recommended that the digital  
pins be kept quiet for approximately 20 ns before and 10 ns after  
the rising edge of CNV, using a discontinuous SCK whenever  
possible to avoid any potential performance degradation.  
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 28  
 
AD7985  
To determine how to split the read for a particular SCK frequency,  
follow these examples to read data from conversion (n − 1).  
DATA READING OPTIONS  
There are three different data reading options for the AD7985.  
There is the option to read during conversion, to split the read  
across acquisition and conversion (see Figure 28 and Figure 29),  
and, in normal mode, to read during acquisition. The desired  
SCK frequency largely determines which reading option to use.  
For turbo mode (2.5 MSPS):  
f
SCK = 70 MHz; tDATA = 190 ns  
Number_SCK_Edges = 70 MHz × 190 ns = 13.3  
Thirteen bits are read during conversion (n), and three bits are  
read during acquisition (n).  
Reading During Conversion, Fast Host (Turbo or  
Normal Mode)  
For normal mode (2.0 MSPS):  
When reading during conversion (n), conversion results are for  
the previous (n − 1) conversion. Reading should occur only up  
to tDATA and, because this time is limited, the host must use a  
fast SCK.  
fSCK = 45 MHz; tDATA = 290 ns  
Number_SCK_Edges = 45 MHz × 290 ns = 13.05  
Thirteen bits are read during conversion (n), and three bits are  
read during acquisition (n).  
The required SCK frequency is calculated by  
Number _ SCK _ Edges  
For slow throughputs, the time restriction is dictated by the  
throughput required by the user; the host is free to run at any  
speed. Similar to reading during acquisition, data access for  
slow hosts must take place during the acquisition phase with  
additional time into the conversion.  
fSCK  
tDATA  
To determine the minimum SCK frequency, follow these  
examples to read data from conversion (n − 1).  
For turbo mode (2.5 MSPS):  
Note that data access spanning conversion requires the CNV  
pin to be driven high to initiate a new conversion, and data  
access is not allowed when CNV is high. Thus, the host must  
perform two bursts of data access when using this method.  
Number_SCK_Edges = 16; tDATA = 190 ns  
f
SCK = 16/190 ns = 84.2 MHz  
For normal mode (2.0 MSPS):  
Reading During Acquisition, Any Speed Host (Turbo or  
Normal Mode)  
Number_SCK_Edges = 16; tDATA = 290 ns  
f
SCK = 16/290 ns = 55.2 MHz  
When reading during acquisition (n), conversion results are  
for the previous (n − 1) conversion. Maximum throughput is  
achievable in normal mode (2.0 MSPS); however, in turbo  
mode, 2.5 MSPS throughput is not achievable.  
The time between tDATA and tCONV is an I/O quiet time during  
which digital activity should not occur, or sensitive bit decisions  
may be corrupted.  
Split-Reading, Any Speed Host (Turbo or Normal Mode)  
For the maximum throughput, the only time restriction is that  
reading take place during the tACQ (minimum) time. For slow  
throughputs, the time restriction is dictated by the throughput  
required by the user; the host is free to run at any speed. Thus,  
for slow hosts, data access must take place during the acquisi-  
tion phase.  
To allow for a slower SCK, there is the option of a split read,  
where data access starts at the current acquisition (n) and spans  
into the conversion (n). Conversion results are for the previous  
(n − 1) conversion.  
Similar to reading during conversion, split-reading should  
occur only up to tDATA. For the maximum throughput, the  
only time restriction is that split-reading take place during the  
tACQ (minimum) + (tDATA − tQUIET) time. The time between the  
falling edge of SCK and CNV rising is an acquisition quiet  
time, tQUIET  
.
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 28  
 
AD7985  
minimum conversion time elapses and then held high for the  
maximum possible conversion time to avoid the generation of  
the busy signal indicator.  
CS MODE, 3-WIRE WITHOUT BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode is usually used when a single AD7985 is connected  
to an SPI-compatible digital host. The connection diagram is  
shown in Figure 26, and the corresponding timing is given in  
Figure 27.  
When the conversion is complete, the AD7985 enters the  
acquisition phase and powers down. When CNV goes low, the  
MSB is output onto SDO. The remaining data bits are clocked  
by subsequent SCK falling edges. The data is valid on both SCK  
edges. Although the rising edge can be used to capture the data,  
a digital host using the SCK falling edge allows a faster reading  
rate, provided that it has an acceptable hold time. After the 16th  
SCK falling edge or when CNV goes high (whichever occurs  
first), SDO returns to high impedance.  
With SDI tied to VIO, a rising edge on CNV initiates a con-  
CS  
version, selects  
mode, and forces SDO to high impedance.  
When a conversion is initiated, it continues until completion,  
irrespective of the state of CNV. This can be useful, for example,  
to bring CNV low to select other SPI devices, such as analog  
multiplexers; however, CNV must be returned high before the  
CONVERT  
DIGITAL HOST  
CNV  
VIO  
SDI  
SDO  
DATA IN  
AD7985  
SCK  
CLK  
CS  
Figure 26. Mode, 3-Wire Without Busy Indicator Connection Diagram (SDI High)  
tCYC  
>tCONV  
tCONV  
tCONV  
tDATA  
tDATA  
tCNVH  
SDI = 1  
CNV  
tACQ  
(I/O QUIET ACQUISITION  
TIME)  
(n + 1)  
ACQUISITION  
(n – 1)  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
ACQUISITION (n)  
CONVERSION (n – 1)  
CONVERSION (n)  
tQUIET  
SCK  
SDO  
1
14  
15  
16  
2
14  
15  
16  
tSCK  
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
tEN  
tEN  
2
1
0
15  
14  
13  
BEGIN DATA (n – 1)  
2
1
0
tDIS  
tDIS  
tDIS  
tDIS  
END DATA (n – 2)  
END DATA (n – 1)  
CS  
Figure 27. Mode, 3-Wire Without Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing (SDI High)  
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
When the conversion is complete, SDO goes from high imped-  
ance to low impedance. With a pull-up on the SDO line, this  
transition can be used as an interrupt signal to initiate the data  
readback controlled by the digital host. The AD7985 then enters  
the acquisition phase and powers down. The data bits are then  
clocked out, MSB first, by subsequent SCK falling edges. The  
data is valid on both SCK edges. Although the rising edge can  
be used to capture the data, a digital host using the SCK falling  
edge allows a faster reading rate, provided that it has an acceptable  
hold time. After the optional 17th SCK falling edge, SDO returns  
to high impedance.  
CS MODE, 3-WIRE WITH BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode is usually used when a single AD7985 is connected  
to an SPI-compatible digital host that has an interrupt input. It  
is available only in normal conversion mode (TURBO is low).  
The connection diagram is shown in Figure 28, and the corre-  
sponding timing is given in Figure 29.  
With SDI tied to VIO, a rising edge on CNV initiates a con-  
CS  
version, selects  
mode, and forces SDO to high impedance.  
SDO is maintained in high impedance until the completion of  
the conversion, irrespective of the state of CNV. Prior to the  
minimum conversion time, CNV can be used to select other SPI  
devices, such as analog multiplexers, but CNV must be returned  
low before the minimum conversion time elapses and then held  
low for the maximum possible conversion time to guarantee the  
generation of the busy signal indicator.  
If multiple AD7985 devices are selected at the same time, the  
SDO output pin handles this contention without damage or  
induced latch-up. Meanwhile, it is recommended that this  
contention be kept as short as possible to limit extra power  
dissipation.  
CONVERT  
VIO  
47k  
DIGITAL HOST  
CNV  
VIO  
SDI  
SDO  
DATA IN  
IRQ  
AD7985  
SCK TURBO  
CLK  
CS  
Figure 28. Mode, 3-Wire with Busy Indicator Connection Diagram (SDI High)  
TURBO = 0  
SDI = 1  
tCYC  
tCNVH  
CNV  
tCONV  
tACQ  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
ACQUISITION  
CONVERSION  
ACQUISITION  
tSCK  
tQUIET  
tSCKL  
SCK  
SDO  
1
2
3
15  
16  
17  
tHSDO  
tSCKH  
tDSDO  
tDIS  
D15  
D14  
D1  
D0  
CS  
Figure 29. Mode, 3-Wire with Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing (SDI High)  
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
conversion time elapses and then held high for the maximum  
possible conversion time to avoid the generation of the busy  
signal indicator.  
CS MODE, 4-WIRE WITHOUT BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode is usually used when multiple AD7985 devices are  
connected to an SPI-compatible digital host. A connection dia-  
gram example using two AD7985 devices is shown in Figure 30,  
and the corresponding timing is given in Figure 31.  
When the conversion is complete, the AD7985 enters the  
acquisition phase and powers down. Each ADC result can be  
read by bringing its SDI input low, which consequently outputs  
the MSB onto SDO. The remaining data bits are then clocked by  
subsequent SCK falling edges. The data is valid on both SCK  
edges. Although the rising edge can be used to capture the data,  
a digital host using the SCK falling edge allows a faster reading  
rate, provided that it has an acceptable hold time. After the 16th  
SCK falling edge, SDO returns to high impedance and another  
AD7985 can be read.  
With SDI high, a rising edge on CNV initiates a conversion,  
CS  
selects  
mode, and forces SDO to high impedance. In this  
mode, CNV must be held high during the conversion phase  
and the subsequent data readback. (If SDI and CNV are low,  
SDO is driven low.) Prior to the minimum conversion time,  
SDI can be used to select other SPI devices, such as analog multi-  
plexers, but SDI must be returned high before the minimum  
CS2  
CS1  
CONVERT  
CNV  
CNV  
DIGITAL HOST  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
SCK  
SCK  
DATA IN  
CLK  
CS  
Figure 30. Mode, 4-Wire Without Busy Indicator Connection Diagram  
tCYC  
tCONV  
tCONV  
tDATA  
tDATA  
CNV  
tACQ  
ACQUISITION  
(n – 1)  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
ACQUISITION  
(n + 1)  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
ACQUISITION (n)  
CONVERSION (n – 1)  
tHSDICNV  
CONVERSION (n)  
SDI  
tSSDICNV  
tQUIET  
SCK  
SDO  
1
14  
15  
16  
2
14  
2
15  
1
16  
tSCK  
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
tEN  
tEN  
2
1
0
15  
14  
13  
BEGIN DATA (n – 1)  
0
tHSDO  
tDIS  
tDIS  
END DATA (n – 2)  
END DATA (n – 1)  
CS  
Figure 31. Mode, 4-Wire Without Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
used to select other SPI devices, such as analog multiplexers, but  
SDI must be returned low before the minimum conversion time  
elapses and then held low for the maximum possible conversion  
time to guarantee the generation of the busy signal indicator.  
CS MODE, 4-WIRE WITH BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode is usually used when a single AD7985 is connected  
to an SPI-compatible digital host with an interrupt input and  
when it is desired to keep CNV, which is used to sample the  
analog input, independent of the signal used to select the data  
reading. This independence is particularly important in applica-  
tions where low jitter on CNV is desired. This mode is available  
only in normal conversion mode (TURBO is low). The connection  
diagram is shown in Figure 32, and the corresponding timing is  
given in Figure 33.  
When the conversion is complete, SDO goes from high imped-  
ance to low impedance. With a pull-up on the SDO line, this  
transition can be used as an interrupt signal to initiate the data  
readback controlled by the digital host. The AD7985 then enters  
the acquisition phase and powers down. The data bits are then  
clocked out, MSB first, by subsequent SCK falling edges. The  
data is valid on both SCK edges. Although the rising edge can  
be used to capture the data, a digital host using the SCK falling  
edge allows a faster reading rate, provided that it has an accept-  
able hold time. After the optional 17th SCK falling edge or when  
SDI goes high (whichever occurs first), SDO returns to high  
impedance.  
With SDI high, a rising edge on CNV initiates a conversion,  
CS  
selects  
mode, and forces SDO to high impedance. In this  
mode, CNV must be held high during the conversion phase and  
the subsequent data readback. (If SDI and CNV are low, SDO is  
driven low.) Prior to the minimum conversion time, SDI can be  
CS1  
CONVERT  
VIO  
47k  
DIGITAL HOST  
CNV  
SDI  
SDO  
DATA IN  
IRQ  
AD7985  
TURBO  
SCK  
CLK  
CS  
Figure 32. Mode, 4-Wire with Busy Indicator Connection Diagram  
TURBO = 0  
CNV  
tCYC  
tACQ  
tCONV  
(I/O QUIET  
TIME)  
ACQUISITION  
CONVERSION  
ACQUISITION  
tSSDICNV  
SDI  
tSCK  
tHSDICNV  
tSCKL  
tQUIET  
SCK  
SDO  
1
2
3
15  
tSCKH  
16  
17  
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
tDIS  
tEN  
D15  
D14  
D1  
D0  
CS  
Figure 33. Mode, 4-Wire with Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
When the conversion is complete, the MSB is output onto SDO,  
and the AD7985 enters the acquisition phase and powers down.  
The remaining data bits stored in the internal shift register are  
clocked by subsequent SCK falling edges. For each ADC, SDI  
feeds the input of the internal shift register and is clocked by the  
SCK falling edge. Each ADC in the chain outputs its data MSB  
first, and 16 × N clocks are required to read back the N ADCs.  
The data is valid on both SCK edges. Although the rising edge  
can be used to capture the data, a digital host using the SCK  
falling edge allows a faster reading rate and consequently more  
AD7985 devices in the chain, provided that the digital host has  
an acceptable hold time. The maximum conversion rate may be  
reduced due to the total readback time.  
CHAIN MODE WITHOUT BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode can be used to daisy-chain multiple AD7985 devices on  
a 3-wire serial interface. It is available only in normal conversion  
mode (TURBO is low). This feature is useful for reducing com-  
ponent count and wiring connections, for example, in isolated  
multiconverter applications or for systems with a limited inter-  
facing capacity. Data readback is analogous to clocking a shift  
register. A connection diagram example using two AD7985  
devices is shown in Figure 34, and the corresponding timing is  
given in Figure 35.  
When SDI and CNV are low, SDO is driven low. With SCK low,  
a rising edge on CNV initiates a conversion, selects chain mode,  
and disables the busy indicator. In this mode, CNV is held high  
during the conversion phase and the subsequent data readback.  
CONVERT  
CNV  
CNV  
DIGITAL HOST  
DATA IN  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
A
B
TURBO  
TURBO  
SCK  
SCK  
CLK  
Figure 34. Chain Mode Without Busy Indicator Connection Diagram  
TURBO = 0  
SDI = 0  
A
tCYC  
CNV  
tACQ  
tCONV  
ACQUISITION  
CONVERSION  
ACQUISITION  
tSCK  
tSCKL  
tQUIET  
SCK  
1
A
B
2
3
A
B
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
30  
31  
32  
tHSCKCNV  
tSSDISCK  
tSCKH  
tHSDISCK  
tEN  
D
D
15  
D
14  
D
D
13  
13  
D
1
1
D
0
SDO = SDI  
A
A
A
A
B
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
15  
D
14  
D
B
D
0
D
15  
D
14  
D
1
D 0  
A
SDO  
B
B
A
A
A
B
Figure 35. Chain Mode Without Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
When all ADCs in the chain have completed their conversions, the  
SDO pin of the ADC closest to the digital host (see the AD7985  
ADC labeled C in Figure 36) is driven high. This transition on  
SDO can be used as a busy indicator to trigger the data read-  
back controlled by the digital host. The AD7985 then enters the  
acquisition phase and powers down. The data bits stored in the  
internal shift register are clocked out, MSB first, by subsequent SCK  
falling edges. For each ADC, SDI feeds the input of the internal  
shift register and is clocked by the SCK falling edge. Each ADC  
in the chain outputs its data MSB first, and 16 × N + 1 clocks  
are required to read back the N ADCs. Although the rising edge  
can be used to capture the data, a digital host using the SCK  
falling edge allows a faster reading rate and consequently more  
AD7985 devices in the chain, provided that the digital host has  
an acceptable hold time.  
CHAIN MODE WITH BUSY INDICATOR  
This mode can be used to daisy-chain multiple AD7985 devices  
on a 3-wire serial interface while providing a busy indicator. It  
is available only in normal conversion mode (TURBO is low).  
This feature is useful for reducing component count and wiring  
connections, for example, in isolated multiconverter applications  
or for systems with a limited interfacing capacity. Data readback  
is analogous to clocking a shift register. A connection diagram  
example using three AD7985 devices is shown in Figure 36, and  
the corresponding timing is given in Figure 37.  
When SDI and CNV are low, SDO is driven low. With SCK high,  
a rising edge on CNV initiates a conversion, selects chain mode,  
and enables the busy indicator feature. In this mode, CNV is  
held high during the conversion phase and the subsequent data  
readback.  
CONVERT  
CNV  
CNV  
CNV  
DIGITAL HOST  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
SDI  
SDO  
SDI  
SDO  
AD7985  
AD7985  
DATA IN  
IRQ  
A
B
C
SCK  
SCK  
SCK  
TURBO  
TURBO  
TURBO  
CLK  
Figure 36. Chain Mode with Busy Indicator Connection Diagram  
TURBO = 0  
tCYC  
CNV = SDI  
A
tCONV  
tACQ  
ACQUISITION  
CONVERSION  
ACQUISITION  
tSCK  
tSSCKCNV  
tSCKH  
SCK  
1
2
3
4
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
47  
48  
49  
tHSCKCNV  
tSSDISCK  
tSCKL  
tDSDOSDI  
tHSDISCK  
tEN  
SDO = SDI  
D
15  
D
14  
D
13  
A
D
1
D 0  
A
A
B
A
A
A
tHSDO  
tDSDO  
tDSDOSDI  
tDSDOSDI  
tDSDOSDI  
SDO = SDI  
B
D
15  
D
D
14  
D
13  
B
D
D
1
D
0
D
15  
D
14  
D 1  
A
D 0  
A
C
B
B
B
B
A
A
tDSDOSDI  
SDO  
D
15  
14  
D
13  
1
D
0
D
15  
D
14  
D
1
D
0
D
15  
D
14  
D
1
D 0  
A
C
C
C
C
C
C
B
B
B
B
A
A
A
Figure 37. Chain Mode with Busy Indicator Serial Interface Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 28  
 
 
 
AD7985  
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION  
Finally, the power supplies, VDD and VIO of the AD7985,  
LAYOUT  
should be decoupled with ceramic capacitors, typically 100 nF,  
placed close to the AD7985 and connected using short, wide  
traces to provide low impedance paths and to reduce the effect  
of glitches on the power supply lines.  
The printed circuit board (PCB) that houses the AD7985  
should be designed so that the analog and digital sections  
are separated and confined to certain areas of the board.  
The pinout of the AD7985, with its analog signals on the left  
side and its digital signals on the right side, eases this task.  
EVALUATING AD7985 PERFORMANCE  
Avoid running digital lines under the device because they  
couple noise onto the die, unless a ground plane under the  
AD7985 is used as a shield. Fast switching signals, such as  
CNV or clocks, should not run near analog signal paths.  
Crossover of digital and analog signals should be avoided.  
Other recommended layouts for the AD7985 are outlined  
in the documentation for the AD7985 evaluation board  
(EVAL-AD7985EBZ). The evaluation board package includes  
a fully assembled and tested evaluation board, documentation,  
and software for controlling the board from a PC via the  
EVAL-CED1Z board.  
At least one ground plane should be used. It can be common or  
split between the digital and analog sections. In the latter case,  
the planes should be joined underneath the AD7985 devices.  
The AD7985 voltage reference inputs (REF) have a dynamic  
input impedance and should be decoupled with minimal  
parasitic inductances. This is done by placing the reference  
decoupling ceramic capacitor close to, ideally right up against,  
the REF and REFGND pins and connecting them with wide,  
low impedance traces.  
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
BVDD  
AVDD  
REF  
REF  
REF  
PADDLE  
1
2
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
3
4
DVDD  
5
6
GND  
GND  
GND  
VIO  
Figure 38. Example Layout of the AD7985 (Top Layer)  
5V  
EXTERNAL  
REFERENCE  
(ADR435 OR ADR445)  
BVDD  
AVDD  
C
AVDD  
C
BVDD  
REF  
REF  
REF  
GND  
C
REF  
GND  
GND  
GND  
C
DVDD  
GND  
DVDD  
GND GND GND  
VIO  
VIO  
C
VIO  
Figure 39. Example Layout of the AD7985 (Bottom Layer)  
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 28  
AD7985  
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS  
0.60 MAX  
4.00  
BSC SQ  
0.60 MAX  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
15  
16  
20  
1
5
0.50  
BSC  
2.65  
2.50 SQ  
2.35  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
3.75  
BSC SQ  
EXPOSED  
PAD  
(BOTTOM VIEW)  
10  
11  
6
0.50  
0.40  
0.30  
0.25 MIN  
TOP VIEW  
0.80 MAX  
0.65 TYP  
12° MAX  
1.00  
0.85  
0.80  
FOR PROPER CONNECTION OF  
THE EXPOSED PAD, REFER TO  
THE PIN CONFIGURATION AND  
FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
0.05 MAX  
0.02 NOM  
COPLANARITY  
0.08  
0.20 REF  
SECTION OF THIS DATA SHEET.  
0.30  
0.23  
0.18  
SEATING  
PLANE  
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VGGD-1  
Figure 40. 20-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ]  
4 mm × 4 mm Body, Very Thin Quad  
(CP-20-4)  
Dimensions shown in millimeters  
ORDERING GUIDE  
Package  
Option  
Ordering  
Quantity  
Model  
Temperature Range  
−40°C to +85°C  
−40°C to +85°C  
Package Description  
AD7985BCPZ1  
AD7985BCPZ-RL71  
EVAL-AD7985EBZ1, 2  
EVAL-CED1Z3  
20-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ], Tray  
20-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP_VQ], Reel  
Evaluation Board  
CP-20-4  
CP-20-4  
490  
1,500  
Converter Evaluation and Development Board  
1 Z = RoHS Compliant Part.  
2 This board can be used as a standalone evaluation board or in conjunction with the EVAL-CED1Z for evaluation/demonstration purposes.  
3 This board allows a PC to control and communicate with all Analog Devices evaluation boards ending in the EB designator.  
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 28  
 
 
AD7985  
NOTES  
©2009 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and  
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
D07947-0-9/09(0)  
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 28  

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