AD9832BRU-REEL [ADI]
IC SPECIALTY TELECOM CIRCUIT, PDSO16, TSSOP-16, Telecom IC:Other;型号: | AD9832BRU-REEL |
厂家: | ADI |
描述: | IC SPECIALTY TELECOM CIRCUIT, PDSO16, TSSOP-16, Telecom IC:Other 电信 光电二极管 电信集成电路 |
文件: | 总16页 (文件大小:145K) |
中文: | 中文翻译 | 下载: | 下载PDF数据表文档文件 |
CMOS
a
Complete DDS
AD9832
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
FEATURES
The AD9832 is a numerically controlled oscillator employing
a phase accumulator, a sine look-up table and a 10-bit D/A
converter integrated on a single CMOS chip. Modulation
capabilities are provided for phase modulation and frequency
modulation.
3 V/5 V Power Supply
25 MHz Speed
On-Chip SINE Look-Up Table
On-Chip 10-Bit DAC
Serial Loading
Power-Down Option
45 mW Power Consumption
16-Lead TSSOP
Clock rates up to 25 MHz are supported. Frequency accuracy
can be controlled to one part in 4 billion. Modulation is effected
by loading registers through the serial interface.
APPLICATIONS
DDS Tuning
Digital Demodulation
A power-down bit allows the user to power down the AD9832
when it is not in use, the power consumption being reduced to
5 mW (5 V) or 3 mW (3 V). The part is available in a 16-lead
TSSOP package.
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
DVDD
DGND
AVDD
REFOUT
AGND
FS ADJUST REFIN
FSELECT
BIT
SELSRC
MCLK
ON-BOARD
REFERENCE
FULL-SCALE
CONTROL
COMP
IOUT
FSELECT
SYNC
FREQ0 REG
FREQ1 REG
12
PHASE
ACCUMULATOR
(32 BIT)
SIN
ROM
MUX
10-BIT DAC
Σ
PHASE0 REG
PHASE1 REG
PHASE2 REG
PHASE3 REG
AD9832
MUX
SYNC
SYNC
16-BIT DATA REGISTER
SYNC
SELSRC
8 MSBs
8 LSBs
DEFER REGISTER
CONTROL REGISTER
PSEL0
BIT
PSEL1
BIT
DECODE LOGIC
SERIAL REGISTER
FSELECT/PSEL REGISTER
PSEL0
PSEL1
FSYNC
SCLK
SDATA
REV. A
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
which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or
otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781/329-4700
Fax: 781/326-8703
World Wide Web Site: http://www.analog.com
© Analog Devices, Inc., 1999
(VDD = +3.3 V ؎ 10%; +5 V ؎ 10%; AGND = DGND = 0 V; TA = TMIN to TMAX; REFIN =
REFOUT; RSET = 3.9 k⍀; RLOAD = 300 ⍀ for IOUT unless otherwise noted)
AD9832–SPECIFICATIONS1
Parameter
AD9832B
Units
Test Conditions/Comments
SIGNAL DAC SPECIFICATIONS
Resolution
10
25
4
4.5
1.35
Bits
Update Rate (fMAX
)
MSPS nom
mA nom
mA max
V max
IOUT Full Scale
Output Compliance
DC Accuracy
3 V Power Supply
Integral Nonlinearity
Differential Nonlinearity
±1
±0.5
LSB typ
LSB typ
DDS SPECIFICATIONS2
Dynamic Specifications
Signal to Noise Ratio
50
–53
dB min
dBc max
fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 1 MHz
fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 1 MHz
fMCLK = 6.25 MHz, fOUT = 2.11 MHz
5 V Power Supply
Total Harmonic Distortion
Spurious Free Dynamic Range (SFDR)3
Narrow Band (±50 kHz)
–72
–70
–50
–60
1
dBc min
dBc min
dBc min
dBc typ
ms typ
3 V Power Supply
Wide Band (±2 MHz)
Clock Feedthrough
Wake-Up Time4
Power-Down Option
Yes
VOLTAGE REFERENCE
Internal Reference @ +25°C
TMIN to TMAX
REFIN Input Impedance
Reference TC
1.21
1.21 ± 7%
10
100
300
Volts typ
Volts min/max
MΩ typ
ppm/°C typ
Ω typ
REFOUT Output Impedance
LOGIC INPUTS
VINH, Input High Voltage
VINL, Input Low Voltage
IINH, Input Current
VDD – 0.9
V min
0.9
10
10
V max
µA max
pF max
CIN, Input Capacitance
POWER SUPPLIES
AVDD
DVDD
IAA
2.97/5.5
2.97/5.5
5
V min/V max
V min/V max
mA max
5 V Power Supply
5 V Power Supply
3 V Power Supply
5 V Power Supply
IDD
IAA + IDD
2.5 + 0.4/MHz
15
24
350
mA typ
mA max
mA max
µA max
5
Low Power Sleep Mode
NOTES
1Operating temperature range is as follows: B Version, –40°C to +85°C.
2100% production tested.
3fMCLK = 6.25 MHz, Frequency Word = 5671C71C HEX, fOUT = 2.11 MHz.
4See Figure 11. To reduce the wake-up time at low power supplies and low temperature, the use of an external reference is suggested.
5Measured with the digital inputs static and equal to 0 V or DVDD.
The AD9832 is tested with a capacitive load of 50 pF. The part can be operated with higher capacitive loads, but the magnitude of the analog output will be attenuated.
For example, a 5 MHz output signal will be attenuated by 3 dB when the load capacitance equals 85 pF.
Specifications subject to change without notice.
R
SET
3.9kΩ
10nF
FS
ADJUST
REFOUT
REFIN
AVDD
10nF
COMP
ON-BOARD
REFERENCE
FULL-SCALE
CONTROL
12
IOUT
SIN
ROM
10-BIT DAC
300Ω
50pF
AD9832
Figure 1. Test Circuit with Which Specifications Are Tested
–2–
REV. A
AD9832
(V = +3.3 V ؎ 10%; +5 V ؎ 10%; AGND = DGND = 0 V, unless otherwise noted)
DD
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
Limit at
TMIN to TMAX
(B Version)
Parameter
Units
Test Conditions/Comments
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
t6
t7
t8
40
16
16
50
20
20
15
20
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns max
ns min
ns min
ns min
ns min
MCLK Period
MCLK High Duration
MCLK Low Duration
SCLK Period
SCLK High Duration
SCLK Low Duration
FSYNC to SCLK Falling Edge Setup Time
FSYNC to SCLK Hold Time
SCLK – 5
15
5
8
8
t9
t10
t11
Data Setup Time
Data Hold Time
FSELECT, PSEL0, PSEL1 Setup Time Before MCLK Rising Edge
FSELECT, PSEL0, PSEL1 Setup Time After MCLK Rising Edge
t11A
*
*See Pin Function Descriptions.
Guaranteed by design but not production tested.
t1
MCLK
t2
t3
Figure 2. Master Clock
t5
t4
SCLK
t7
t8
t6
FSYNC
t10
t9
D15
D14
D2
D1
D0
D15
D14
SDATA
Figure 3. Serial Timing
MCLK
t11A
VALID DATA
t11
FSELECT
PSEL0, PSEL1
VALID DATA
VALID DATA
Figure 4. Control Timing
REV. A
–3–
AD9832
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
PIN CONFIGURATION
(TA = +25°C unless otherwise noted)
AVDD to AGND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –0.3 V to +7 V
DVDD to DGND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –0.3 V to +7 V
AVDD to DVDD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –0.3 V to +0.3 V
AGND to DGND. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –0.3 V to +0.3 V
Digital I/O Voltage to DGND . . . . –0.3 V to DVDD + 0.3 V
Analog I/O Voltage to AGND . . . . . –0.3 V to AVDD + 0.3 V
Operating Temperature Range
Industrial (B Version) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –40°C to +85°C
Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . . –65°C to +150°C
Maximum Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +150°C
TSSOP θJA Thermal Impedance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158°C/W
Lead Temperature, Soldering
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
FS ADJUST
REFIN
16 COMP
15 AVDD
14 IOUT
REFOUT
DVDD
AD9832
13 AGND
12 PSEL0
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
DGND
MCLK
PSEL1
11
10 FSELECT
SCLK
SDATA
9
FSYNC
Vapor Phase (60 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +215°C
Infrared (15 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +220°C
ESD Rating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . > 4500 V
*Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause perma-
nent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of the
device at these or any other conditions above those listed in the operational
sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating
conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
ORDERING GUIDE
Temperature
Range
Package
Description
Package
Option*
Model
AD9832BRU –40°C to +85°C 16-Lead TSSOP RU-16
*RU = Thin Shrink Small Outline Package (TSSOP).
–4–
REV. A
AD9832
PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Pin # Mnemonic
Function
ANALOG SIGNAL AND REFERENCE
1
FS ADJUST
Full-Scale Adjust Control. A resistor (RSET) is connected between this pin and AGND. This determines
the magnitude of the full-scale DAC current. The relationship between RSET and the full-scale current is
as follows:
IOUTFULL-SCALE = 12.5 × VREFIN/RSET
V
REFIN = 1.21 V nominal, RSET = 3.9 kΩ typical
2
3
REFIN
Voltage Reference Input. The AD9832 can be used with either the onboard reference, which is available
from pin REFOUT, or an external reference. The reference to be used is connected to the REFIN pin.
The AD9832 accepts a reference of 1.21 V nominal.
Voltage Reference Output. The AD9832 has an onboard reference of value 1.21 V nominal. The refer-
ence is made available on the REFOUT pin. This reference is used as the reference to the DAC by con-
necting REFOUT to REFIN. REFOUT should be decoupled with a 10 nF capacitor to AGND.
REFOUT
14
16
IOUT
Current Output. This is a high impedance current source. A load resistor should be connected between
IOUT and AGND.
Compensation pin. This is a compensation pin for the internal reference amplifier. A 10 nF decoupling
ceramic capacitor should be connected between COMP and AVDD.
COMP
POWER SUPPLY
4
DVDD
Positive Power Supply for the Digital Section. A 0.1 µF decoupling capacitor should be connected be-
tween DVDD and DGND. DVDD can have a value of +5 V ± 10% or +3.3 V ± 10%.
5
13
15
DGND
AGND
AVDD
Digital Ground.
Analog Ground.
Positive Power Supply for the Analog Section. A 0.1 µF decoupling capacitor should be connected be-
tween AVDD and AGND. AVDD can have a value of +5 V ± 10% or +3.3 V ± 10%.
DIGITAL INTERFACE AND CONTROL
6
MCLK
Digital Clock Input. DDS output frequencies are expressed as a binary fraction of the frequency of MCLK.
The output frequency accuracy and phase noise are determined by this clock.
7
8
9
SCLK
SDATA
FSYNC
Serial Clock, Logic Input. Data is clocked into the AD9832 on each falling SCLK edge.
Serial Data In, Logic Input. The 16-bit serial data word is applied to this input.
Data Synchronization Signal, Logic Input. When this input is taken low, the internal logic is informed
that a new word is being loaded into the device.
10
FSELECT
Frequency Select Input. FSELECT controls which frequency register, FREQ0 or FREQ1, is used in the
phase accumulator. The frequency register to be used can be selected using the pin FSELECT or the bit
FSELECT. FSELECT is sampled on the rising MCLK edge. FSELECT needs to be in steady state
when an MCLK rising edge occurs. If FSELECT changes value when a rising edge occurs, there is an
uncertainty of one MCLK cycle as to when control is transferred to the other frequency register. To avoid
any uncertainty, a change on FSELECT should not coincide with an MCLK rising edge. When the bit is
being used to select the frequency register, the pin FSELECT should be tied to DGND.
11, 12 PSEL0, PSEL1 Phase Select Input. The AD9832 has four phase registers. These registers can be used to alter the value
being input to the SIN ROM. The contents of the phase register are added to the phase accumulator out-
put, the inputs PSEL0 and PSEL1 selecting the phase register to be used. Alternatively, the phase register
to be used can be selected using the bits PSEL0 and PSEL1. Like the FSELECT input, PSEL0 and PSEL1
are sampled on the rising MCLK edge. Therefore, these inputs need to be in steady state when an MCLK
rising edge occurs or there is an uncertainty of one MCLK cycle as to when control is transferred to the
selected phase register. When the phase registers are being controlled by the bits PSEL0 and PSEL1, the
pins should be tied to DGND.
REV. A
–5–
–Typical Performance Characteristics
AD9832
25
–50
–40
–45
–50
–55
–60
–65
T
= +C
f
/f
= 1/3
A
OUT MCLK
f
/f
= 1/3
OUT MCLK
AVDD = DVDD = +3.3V
–55
–60
–65
–70
–75
–80
20
15
10
5
AVDD = DVDD = +3.3V
+5V
+3.3V
0
5
10
15
20
25
10
0
20
25
10
15
20
25
MCLK FREQUENCY – MHz
MCLK FREQUENCY – MHz
MCLK FREQUENCY – MHz
Figure 5. Typical Current Consump-
tion vs. MCLK Frequency
Figure 6. Narrow Band SFDR vs.
MCLK Frequency
Figure 7. Wide Band SFDR vs. MCLK
Frequency
60
–40
60
AVDD = DVDD = +3.3V
–45
AVDD = DVDD = +3.3V
AVDD = DVDD = +3.3V
f
= f /3
OUT
MCLK
55
55
50
45
40
–50
25MHz
10MHz
–55
25MHz
10MHz
50
–60
–65
–70
–75
–80
45
40
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
10
15
20
25
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
f
/f
f
/f
MCLK FREQUENCY – MHz
OUT MCLK
OUT MCLK
Figure 9. SNR vs. MCLK Frequency
Figure 10. SNR vs. fOUT/fMCLK for Vari-
ous MCLK Frequencies
Figure 8. Wide Band SFDR vs. fOUT
/
f
MCLK for Various MCLK Frequencies
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
10
7.5
5.0
2.5
0
AVDD = DVDD = +2.97V
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
–40
–30
–20
–10
0
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
VBW 1kHz
VBW 1kHz
TEMPERATURE – °C
Figure 12. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 1.1 MHz, Figure 13. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 2.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = B439581 Frequency Word = 15810625
Figure 11. Wake-Up Time vs.
Temperature
–6–
REV. A
AD9832
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
ST 277 SEC
VBW 1kHz
VBW 1kHz
VBW 1kHz
Figure 16. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 5.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 34395810
Figure 14. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 3.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 1FBE76C9
Figure 15. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 4.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 29FBE76D
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
VBW 1kHz
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
VBW 1kHz
VBW 1kHz
Figure 19. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 8.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 52F1A9FC
Figure 17. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 6.1 MHz, Figure 18. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 7.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 3E76C8B4
Frequency Word = 48B43958
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–60
–70
–80
–90
–100
START 0Hz
RBW 300Hz
STOP 12.5MHz
ST 277 SEC
VBW 1kHz
Figure 20. fMCLK = 25 MHz, fOUT = 9.1 MHz,
Frequency Word = 5D2F1AA0
REV. A
–7–
AD9832
TERMINOLOGY
Table I. Control Registers
Integral Nonlinearity
Register
Size
Description
This is the maximum deviation of any code from a straight line
passing through the endpoints of the transfer function. The end-
points of the transfer function are zero scale, a point 0.5 LSB be-
low the first code transition (000 . . . 00 to 000 . . . 01) and full
scale, a point 0.5 LSB above the last code transition (111 . . . 10
to 111 . . . 11). The error is expressed in LSBs.
FREQ0 REG
32 Bits
Frequency Register 0. This de-
fines the output frequency, when
FSELECT = 0, as a fraction of
the MCLK frequency.
Frequency Register 1. This de-
fines the output frequency, when
FSELECT = 1, as a fraction of
the MCLK frequency.
FREQ1 REG
32 Bits
Differential Nonlinearity
This is the difference between the measured and ideal 1 LSB
change between two adjacent codes in the DAC.
PHASE0 REG 12 Bits
PHASE1 REG 12 Bits
PHASE2 REG 12 Bits
PHASE3 REG 12 Bits
Phase Offset Register 0. When
PSEL0 = PSEL1 = 0, the contents
of this register are added to the
output of the phase accumulator.
Phase Offset Register 1. When
PSEL0 = 1 and PSEL1 = 0, the
contents of this register are added to
the output of the phase accumulator.
Phase Offset Register 2. When
PSEL0 = 0 and PSEL1 = 1, the con-
tents of this register are added to
the output of the phase accumulator.
Phase Offset Register 3. When
PSEL0 = PSEL1 = 1, the contents
of this register are added to the
output of the phase accumulator.
Signal to (Noise + Distortion)
Signal to (Noise + Distortion) is measured signal to noise at the
output of the DAC. The signal is the rms magnitude of the
fundamental. Noise is the rms sum of all the nonfundamental
signals up to half the sampling frequency (fMCLK/2) but exclud-
ing the dc component. Signal to (Noise + Distortion) is depen-
dent on the number of quantization levels used in the digitization
process; the more levels, the smaller the quantization noise. The
theoretical Signal to (Noise + Distortion) ratio for a sine wave
input is given by
Signal to (Noise + Distortion) = (6.02N + 1.76) dB
where N is the number of bits. Thus, for an ideal 10-bit con-
verter, Signal to (Noise + Distortion) = 61.96 dB.
Total Harmonic Distortion
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) is the ratio of the rms
sum of harmonics to the rms value of the fundamental. For
the AD9832, THD is defined as:
Table II. Addressing the Registers
2
V22 +V32 +V42 +V52 +V6
A3
A2
A1
A0
Destination Register
THD = 20 log
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
FREQ0 REG 8 L LSBs
FREQ0 REG 8 H LSBs
FREQ0 REG 8 L MSBs
FREQ0 REG 8 H MSBs
FREQ1 REG 8 L LSBs
FREQ1 REG 8 H LSBs
FREQ1 REG 8 L MSBs
FREQ1 REG 8 H MSBs
PHASE0 REG 8 LSBs
PHASE0 REG 8 MSBs
PHASE1 REG 8 LSBs
PHASE1 REG 8 MSBs
PHASE2 REG 8 LSBs
PHASE2 REG 8 MSBs
PHASE3 REG 8 LSBs
PHASE3 REG 8 MSBs
V1
where V1 is the rms amplitude of the fundamental and V2, V3,
V4, V5 and V6 are the rms amplitudes of the second through the
sixth harmonic.
Output Compliance
The output compliance refers to the maximum voltage that can
be generated at the output of the DAC to meet the specifica-
tions. When voltages greater than those specified for the output
compliance are generated, the AD9832 may not meet the speci-
fications listed in the data sheet.
Spurious Free Dynamic Range
Along with the frequency of interest, harmonics of the fundamental
frequency and images of the MCLK frequency are present at the
output of a DDS device. The spurious free dynamic range (SFDR)
refers to the largest spur or harmonic present in the band of
interest. The wide band SFDR gives the magnitude of the larg-
est harmonic or spur relative to the magnitude of the fundamental
frequency in the bandwidth ±2 MHz about the fundamental fre-
quency. The narrow band SFDR gives the attenuation of the
largest spur or harmonic in a bandwidth of ±50 kHz about the
fundamental frequency.
Table III. 32-Bit Frequency Word
16 MSBs 16 LSBs
8 H MSBs 8 L MSBs 8 H LSBs 8 L LSBs
Table IV. 12-Bit Frequency Word
Clock Feedthrough
There will be feedthrough from the MCLK input to the analog
output. Clock feedthrough refers to the magnitude of the MCLK
signal relative to the fundamental frequency in the AD9832’s out-
put spectrum.
4 MSBs (The 4 MSBs of the
8-Bit Word Loaded = 0)
8 LSBs
–8–
REV. A
AD9832
Table V. Commands
C3 C2 C1 C0 Command
Table VI. Controlling the AD9832
D15 D14 Command
0
0
0
0
Write 16 phase bits (Present 8 Bits + 8 Bits
in Defer Register) to Selected PHASE REG.
Write 8 phase bits to Defer Register.
Write 16 frequency bits (Present 8 Bits
+ 8 Bits in Defer Register) to Selected
FREQ REG.
Write 8 frequency bits to Defer Register.
Bits D9 (PSEL0) and D10 (PSEL1) are
used to Select the PHASE REG when
SELSRC = 1. When SELSRC = 0, the
PHASE REG is Selected using the pins
PSEL0 and PSEL1.
1
0
Selects source of Control for the PHASE and FREQ
Registers and Enables Synchronization.
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
Bit D13 is the SYNC Bit. When this bit is High,
reading of the FSELECT, PSEL0 and PSEL1 bits/
pins and the loading of the Destination Register with
data is synchronized with the rising edge of MCLK.
The latency is increased by 2 MCLK cycles when
SYNC = 1. When SYNC = 0, the loading of the
data and the sampling of FSELECT/PSEL0/PSEL1
occurs asynchronously.
Bit D12 is the Select Source Bit (SELSRC). When
this bit Equals 1, the PHASE/FREQ REG is
Selected using the bits FSELECT, PSEL0 and
PSEL1. When SELSRC = 0, the PHASE/FREQ
REG is Selected using the pins FSELECT, PSEL0
and PSEL1.
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
Bit D11 is used to Select the FREQ REG
when SELSRC = 1. When SELSRC = 0,
the FREQ REG is Selected using the pin
FSELECT.
To control the PSEL0, PSEL1 and
FSELECT bits using only one write, this
command is used. Bits D9 and D10 are
used to Select the PHASE REG and Bit
11 is used to Select the FREQ REG when
SELSRC = 1. When SELSRC = 0, the
PHASE REG is Selected using the pins
PSEL0 and PSEL1 and the FREQ REG
is Selected using the pin FSELECT.
Reserved. Configures the AD9832 for
Test Purposes.
1
1
Sleep, Reset and Clear.
D13 is the SLEEP bit. When this bit equals 1, the
AD9832 is powered down, internal clocks are
disabled and the DAC’s current sources and
REFOUT are turned off. When SLEEP = 0, the
AD9832 is powered up. When RESET (D12) = 1,
the phase accumulator is set to zero phase which
corresponds to an analog output of midscale. When
CLR (D11) = 1, SYNC and SELSRC are set to
zero. CLR resets to 0 automatically.
0
1
1
1
Table VII. Writing to the AD9832 Data Registers
D15
C3
D14
C2
D13
C1
D12
C0
D11
A3
D10
A2
D9
A1
D8
A0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
MSB
LSB
Table VIII. Setting SYNC and SELSRC
D15
1
D14
0
D13
D12
D11
X
D10
X
D9
X
D8
X
D7
X
D6
X
D5
X
D4
D3
D2
X
D1
X
D0
X
SYNC SELSRC
X
X
Table IX. Power-Down, Resetting and Clearing the AD9832
D15
1
D14
1
D13
D12
D11
D10
X
D9
X
D8
X
D7
X
D6
X
D5
X
D4
X
D3
X
D2
X
D1
X
D0
X
SLEEP RESET CLR
REV. A
–9–
AD9832
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
Numerical Controlled Oscillator + Phase Modulator
The AD9832 provides an exciting new level of integration for
the RF/Communications system designer. The AD9832 com-
bines the Numerical Controlled Oscillator (NCO), SINE Look-
Up Table, Frequency and Phase Modulators, and a Digital-to-
Analog Converter on a single integrated circuit.
This consists of two frequency select registers, a phase accumu-
lator and four phase offset registers. The main component of the
NCO is a 32-bit phase accumulator that assembles the phase
component of the output signal. Continuous time signals have a
phase range of 0 to 2 π. Outside this range of numbers, the
sinusoid functions repeat themselves in a periodic manner. The
digital implementation is no different. The accumulator simply
scales the range of phase numbers into a multibit digital word.
The phase accumulator in the AD9832 is implemented with 32
bits. Therefore, in the AD9832, 2 π = 232. Likewise, the ∆Phase
term is scaled into this range of numbers 0 < ∆Phase < 232 – 1.
Making these substitutions into the equation above
The internal circuitry of the AD9832 consists of three main
sections. They are:
• Numerical Controlled Oscillator (NCO) + Phase Modulator
• SINE Look-Up Table
• Digital-to-Analog Converter
The AD9832 is a fully integrated Direct Digital Synthesis (DDS)
chip. The chip requires one reference clock, one low precision
resistor and eight decoupling capacitors to provide digitally
created sine waves up to 12.5 MHz. In addition to the genera-
tion of this RF signal, the chip is fully capable of a broad range
of simple and complex modulation schemes. These modula-
tion schemes are fully implemented in the digital domain, allow-
ing accurate and simple realization of complex modulation
algorithms using DSP techniques.
f = ∆Phase × fMCLK/232
where 0 < ∆Phase < 232.
The input to the phase accumulator (i.e., the phase step) can be
selected from either the FREQ0 Register or FREQ1 Register
and this is controlled by the FSELECT pin or the FSELECT
bit. NCOs inherently generate continuous phase signals, thus
avoiding any output discontinuity when switching between
frequencies.
Following the NCO, a phase offset can be added to perform
phase modulation using the 12-bit PHASE Registers. The con-
tents of this register are added to the most significant bits of the
NCO. The AD9832 has four PHASE registers, the resolution of
these registers being 2 π/4096.
THEORY OF OPERATION
Sine waves are typically thought of in terms of their magnitude
form a(t) = sin (ωt). However, these are nonlinear and not easy
to generate except through piecewise construction. On the other
hand, the angular information is linear in nature. That is, the
phase angle rotates through a fixed angle for each unit of time.
The angular rate depends on the frequency of the signal by the
traditional rate of ω = 2 πf.
Sine Look-Up Table (LUT)
To make the output useful, the signal must be converted from
phase information into a sinusoidal value. Since phase informa-
tion maps directly into amplitude, a ROM LUT converts the
phase information into amplitude. To do this, the digital phase
information is used to address a sine ROM LUT. Although the
NCO contains a 32-bit phase accumulator, the output of the
NCO is truncated to 12 bits. Using the full resolution of the
phase accumulator is impractical and unnecessary as this would
require a look-up table of 232 entries.
MAGNITUDE
+1
0
–1
PHASE
It is necessary only to have sufficient phase resolution in the
LUTs so the dc error of the output waveform is dominated by
the quantization error in the DAC. This requires the look-up
table to have two more bits of phase resolution than the 10-bit
DAC.
2
0
Figure 21. Sine Wave
Digital-to-Analog Converter
The AD9832 includes a high impedance current source 10-bit
DAC, capable of driving a wide range of loads at different
speeds. Full-scale output current can be adjusted, for optimum
power and external load requirements, through the use of a
single external resistor (RSET).
Knowing that the phase of a sine wave is linear and given a
reference interval (clock period), the phase rotation for that
period can be determined.
∆Phase = ωδt
Solving for ω
The DAC is configured for single-ended operation. The load
resistor can be any value required, as long as the full-scale volt-
age developed across it does not exceed the voltage compliance
range. Since full-scale current is controlled by RSET, adjust-
ments to RSET can balance changes made to the load resistor.
However, if the DAC full-scale output current is significantly
less than 4 mA, the DAC’s linearity may degrade.
ω = ∆Phase/δt = 2 πf
Solving for f and substituting the reference clock frequency for
the reference period (1/fMCLK = δt)
f = ∆Phase × fMCLK/2 π
The AD9832 builds the output based on this simple equation. A
simple DDS chip can implement this equation with three major
subcircuits.
DSP and MPU Interfacing
The AD9832 has a serial interface, with 16 bits being loaded
during each write cycle. SCLK, SDATA and FSYNC are used
to load the word into the AD9832. When FSYNC is taken low,
the AD9832 is informed that a word is being written to the
–10–
REV. A
AD9832
device. The first bit is read into the device on the next SCLK
falling edge with the remaining bits being read into the device
on the subsequent SCLK falling edges. FSYNC frames the
16 bits, therefore, when 16 SCLK falling edges have occurred,
FSYNC should be taken high again. The SCLK can be continu-
ous or, alternatively, the SCLK can idle high or low between
write operations.
generating the DAC output. To avoid such spurious outputs,
the AD9832 contains synchronizing circuitry. When the SYNC
bit is set to 1, the synchronizer is enabled and data transfers
from the serial register (defer register) to the 16-bit data register
and the FSELECT/PSEL registers occur following a two stage
pipeline delay which is triggered on the MCLK falling edge.
The pipeline delay ensures that the data is valid when the trans-
fer occurs. Similarly, selection of the frequency/phase registers
using the FSELECT/PSEL pins is synchronized with the
MCLK rising edge when SYNC = 1. When SYNC = 0, the
synchronizer is bypassed.
When writing to a frequency/phase register, the first four bits
identify whether a frequency or phase register is being written
to, the next four bits contain the address of the destination
register while the 8 LSBs contain the data. Table II lists the
addresses for the phase/frequency registers while Table III lists
the commands.
Selecting the frequency/phase registers using the pins is synchro-
nized with MCLK internally also when SYNC = 1 to ensure
that these inputs are valid at the MCLK rising edge. If times t11
and t11A are met, then the inputs will be at steady state at the
MCLK rising edge. However, if times t11 and t11A are violated,
the internal synchronizing circuitry will delay the instant at
which the pins are sampled, ensuring that the inputs are valid at
the sampling instant.
Within the AD9832, 16-bit transfers are used when loading the
destination frequency/phase register. There are two modes for
loading a register—direct data transfer and a deferred data
transfer. With a deferred data transfer, the 8-bit word is loaded
into the defer register (8 LSBs or 8 MSBs). However, this data
is not loaded into the 16-bit data register so the destination
register is not updated. With a direct data transfer, the 8-bit
word is loaded into the appropriate defer register (8 LSBs or
8 MSBs). Immediately following the loading of the defer regis-
ter, the contents of the complete defer register are loaded into
the 16-bit data register and the destination register is loaded on
the next MCLK rising edge. When a destination register is
addressed, a deferred transfer is needed first followed by a direct
transfer. When all 16 bits of the defer register contain relevant
data, the destination register can then be updated using 8-bit
loading rather than 16-bit loading i.e., direct data transfers can
be used. For example, after a new 16-bit word has been loaded
to a destination register, the defer register will contain this word
also. If the next write instruction is to the same destination
register, the user can use direct data transfers immediately.
Associated with each operation is a latency. When inputs
FSELECT/PSEL change value, there will be a pipeline delay
before control is transferred to the selected register—there will
be a pipeline delay before the analog output is controlled by the
selected register. When times t11 and t11A are met, PSEL0,
PSEL1 and FSELECT have latencies of six MCLK cycles when
SYNC = 0. When SYNC = 1, the latency is increased to 8 MCLK
cycles. When times t11 and t11A are not met, the latency can
increase by one MCLK cycle. Similarly, there is a latency asso-
ciated with each write operation. If a selected frequency/phase
register is loaded with a new word, there is a delay of 6 to 7
MCLK cycles before the analog output will change (there is an
uncertainty of one MCLK cycle regarding the MCLK rising
edge at which the data is loaded into the destination register).
When SYNC = 1, the latency will be 8 or 9 MCLK cycles.
When writing to a phase register, the 4 MSBs of the 16-bit word
loaded into the data register should be zero (the phase registers
are 12 bits wide).
The flow chart in Figure 22 shows the operating routine for the
AD9832. When the AD9832 is powered up, the part should be
reset. This will reset the phase accumulator to zero so that the
analog output is at midscale. To avoid spurious DAC outputs
while the AD9832 is being initialized, the RESET bit should be
set to 1 until the part is ready to begin generating an output.
Taking CLR high will set SYNC and SELSRC to 0 so that
the FSELECT/PSEL pins are used to select the frequency/
phase registers and the synchronization circuitry is bypassed.
A write operation is needed to the SYNC/SELSRC register to
enable the synchronization circuitry or to change control to
the FSELECT/PSEL bits. RESET does not reset the phase
and frequency registers. These registers will contain invalid
data and, therefore, should be set to a known value by the user.
The RESET bit is then set to 0 to begin generating an output. A
signal will appear at the DAC output 6 MCLK cycles after
RESET is set to 0.
To alter the entire contents of a frequency register, four write
operations are needed. However, the 16 MSBs of a frequency
word are contained in a separate register to the 16 LSBs. There-
fore, the 16 MSBs of the frequency word can be altered inde-
pendent of the 16 LSBs.
The phase and frequency registers to be used are selected using
the pins FSELECT, PSEL0 and PSEL1 or the corresponding
bits can be used. Bit SELSRC determines whether the bits or
the pins are used. When SELSRC = 0, the pins are used while
the bits are used when SELSRC = 1. When CLR is taken high,
SELSRC is set to 0 so that the pins are the default source.
Data transfers from the serial (defer) register to the 16-bit data
register, and the FSELECT and PSEL registers, occur following
the 16th falling SCLK edge. Transfer of the data from the
16-bit data register to the destination register or from the
FSELECT/PSEL register to the respective multiplexer occurs
on the next MCLK rising edge. Since the SCLK and the
MCLK are asynchronous, an MCLK rising edge may occur
while the data bits are in transitional state, which will cause a
brief spurious DAC output if the register being written to is
The analog output is fMCLK/232 × FREG where FREG is the
value loaded into the selected frequency register. This signal will
be phase shifted by the amount specified in the selected phase
register (2 π/4096 × PHASEREG where PHASEREG is the
value contained in the selected phase register).
Control of the frequency/phase registers can be interchanged
from the pins to the bits.
REV. A
–11–
AD9832
DATA WRITE**
32
32
FREG<0> = f /f
OUT0 MCLK
*2
*2
FREG<1> = f
/f
OUT1 MCLK
PHASEREG <3:0> = DELTA PHASE<0, 1, 2, 3>
SELECT DATA SOURCES***
SET FSELECT
INITIALIZATION*
SET PSEL0, PSEL1
WAIT 6 MCLK CYCLES (8 MCLK CYCLES IF SYNC = 1)
DAC OUTPUT
32 12
*t/2 + PHASEREG/2 )))
MCLK
V
= V
REFIN
*6.25*R
/R
*(1 + SIN(FREG*f
OUT
OUT SET
YES
CHANGE PHASE?
NO
NO
NO
CHANGE f
?
OUT
YES
NO
CHANGE f
?
CHANGE FSELECT
CHANGE PHASEREG?
YES
CHANGE PSEL0, PSEL1
OUT
YES
Figure 22. Flow Chart for AD9832 Initialization and Operation
INITIALIZATION*
DATA WRITE**
CONTROL REGISTER WRITE
SET SLEEP
DEFERRED TRANSFER WRITE
WRITE 8 BITS TO DEFER REGISTER
RESET = 1
CLR = 1
DIRECT TRANSFER WRITE
WRITE PRESENT 8 BITS AND 8 BITS IN
DEFER REGISTER TO DATA REGISTER
YES
SET SYNC AND/OR SELSRC TO 1
NO
CHANGE 16 BITS
NO
CONTROL REGISTER WRITE
SYNC = 1
YES
YES
AND/OR
SELSRC = 1
WRITE ANOTHER WORD TO THIS
REGISTER?
CHANGE 8 BITS ONLY
NO
WRITE A WORD TO ANOTHER REGISTER
WRITE INITIAL DATA
32
32
FREG<0> = f
/f
*2
OUT0 MCLK
FREG<1> = f
/f
*2
OUT1 MCLK
PHASEREG<3:0> = DELTA PHASE<0, 1, 2, 3>
Figure 24. Data Writes
SET PINS OR FREQUENCY/PHASE REGISTER WRITE
SET FSELECT, PSEL0 AND PSEL1
SELECT DATA SOURCES***
CONTROL REGISTER WRITE
SLEEP = 0
NO
RESET = 0
CLR = 0
FSELECT/PSEL PINS BEING USED?
YES
SELSRC = 0
SELSRC = 1
Figure 23. Initialization
SET PINS
SET FSELECT
SET PSEL0
SET PSEL1
FREQUENCY/PHASE REGISTER WRITE
SET FSELECT
SET PSEL0
SET PSEL1
Figure 25. Selecting Data Sources
–12–
REV. A
AD9832
APPLICATIONS
Good decoupling is important. The analog and digital supplies
to the AD9832 are independent and separately pinned out to
minimize coupling between analog and digital sections of the
device. All analog and digital supplies should be decoupled to
AGND and DGND respectively with 0.1 µF ceramic capacitors
in parallel with 10 µF tantalum capacitors. To achieve the best
from the decoupling capacitors, they should be placed as close
as possible to the device, ideally right up against the device. In
systems where a common supply is used to drive both the
AVDD and DVDD of the AD9832, it is recommended that the
system’s AVDD supply be used. This supply should have the
recommended analog supply decoupling between the AVDD
pins of the AD9832 and AGND and the recommended digital
supply decoupling capacitors between the DVDD pins and
DGND.
The AD9832 contains functions that make it suitable for modu-
lation applications. The part can be used to perform simple
modulation such as FSK, and more complex modulation
schemes such as GMSK and QPSK can also be implemented
using the AD9832. In an FSK application, the two frequency
registers of the AD9832 are loaded with different values; one
frequency will represent the space frequency while the other will
represent the mark frequency. The digital data stream is fed to
the FSELECT pin, which will cause the AD9832 to modulate
the carrier frequency between the two values.
The AD9832 has four phase registers; this enables the part to
perform PSK. With phase shift keying, the carrier frequency is
phase shifted, the phase being altered by an amount which is
related to the bit stream being input to the modulator. The
presence of four shift registers eases the interaction needed
between the DSP and the AD9832.
Interfacing the AD9832 to Microprocessors
The AD9832 has a standard serial interface that allows the part
to interface directly with several microprocessors. The device
uses an external serial clock to write the data/control information
into the device. The serial clock can have a frequency of 20 MHz
maximum. The serial clock can be continuous, or it can idle
high or low between write operations. When data/control infor-
mation is being written to the AD9832, FSYNC is taken low
and held low while the 16 bits of data are being written into the
AD9832. The FSYNC signal frames the 16 bits of information
being loaded into the AD9832.
The AD9832 is also suitable for signal generator applications.
With its low current consumption, the part is suitable for appli-
cations in which it can be used as a local oscillator. In addition,
the part is fully specified for operation with a +3.3 V ± 10%
power supply. Therefore, in portable applications where current
consumption is an important issue, the AD9832 is perfect.
Grounding and Layout
The printed circuit board that houses the AD9832 should be
designed so the analog and digital sections are separated and
confined to certain areas of the board. This facilitates the use of
ground planes that can be easily separated. A minimum etch
technique is generally best for ground planes as it gives the best
shielding. Digital and analog ground planes should only be
joined in one place. If the AD9832 is the only device requiring
an AGND to DGND connection, the ground planes should
be connected at the AGND and DGND pins of the AD9832.
If the AD9832 is in a system where multiple devices require
AGND to DGND connections, the connection should be made
at one point only, a star ground point that should be established
as close as possible to the AD9832.
AD9832 to ADSP-21xx Interface
Figure 26 shows the serial interface between the AD9832 and
the ADSP-21xx. The ADSP-21xx should be set up to operate in
the SPORT Transmit Alternate Framing Mode (TFSW = 1).
The ADSP-21xx is programmed through the SPORT control
register and should be configured as follows: internal clock
operation (ISCLK = 1), active low framing (INVTFS = 1),
16-bit word length (SLEN = 15), internal frame sync signal
(ITFS = 1), generate a frame sync for each write operation
(TFSR = 1). Transmission is initiated by writing a word to the
Tx register after the SPORT has been enabled. The data is
clocked out on each rising edge of the serial clock and clocked
into the AD9832 on the SCLK falling edge.
Avoid running digital lines under the device as these will couple
noise onto the die. The analog ground plane should be allowed
to run under the AD9832 to avoid noise coupling. The power
supply lines to the AD9832 should use as large a track as pos-
sible to provide low impedance paths and reduce the effects of
glitches on the power supply line. Fast switching signals such as
clocks should be shielded with digital ground to avoid radiating
noise to other sections of the board. Avoid crossover of digital
and analog signals. Traces on opposite sides of the board should
run at right angles to each other. This will reduce the effects of
feedthrough through the board. A microstrip technique is by far
the best but is not always possible with a double-sided board. In
this technique, the component side of the board is dedicated to
ground planes while signals are placed on the other side.
ADSP-2101/
ADSP-2103
AD9832
TFS
DT
FSYNC
SDATA
SCLK
SCLK
ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY
Figure 26. ADSP-2101/ADSP-2103 to AD9832 Interface
REV. A
–13–
AD9832
AD9832 to 68HC11/68L11 Interface
80C51/80L51
AD9832
Figure 27 shows the serial interface between the AD9832 and
the 68HC11/68L11 microcontroller. The microcontroller is
configured as the master by setting bit MSTR in the SPCR to 1
and this provides a serial clock on SCK while the MOSI output
drives the serial data line SDATA. Since the microcontroller
does not have a dedicated frame sync pin, the FSYNC signal is
derived from a port line (PC7). The set-up conditions for cor-
rect operation of the interface are as follows: the SCK idles high
between write operations (CPOL = 0), data is valid on the SCK
falling edge (CPHA = 1). When data is being transmitted to the
AD9832, the FSYNC line is taken low (PC7). Serial data
from the 68HC11/68L11 is transmitted in 8-bit bytes with
only 8 falling clock edges occurring in the transmit cycle. Data
is transmitted MSB first. In order to load data into the AD9832,
PC7 is held low after the first 8 bits are transferred and a second
serial write operation is performed to the AD9832. Only after
the second 8 bits have been transferred should FSYNC be taken
high again.
FSYNC
P3.3
RXD
TXD
SDATA
SCLK
ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY
Figure 28. 80C51/80L51 to AD9832 Interface
AD9832 to DSP56002 Interface
Figure 29 shows the interface between the AD9832 and the
DSP56002. The DSP56002 is configured for normal mode
asynchronous operation with a gated internal clock (SYN = 0,
GCK = 1, SCKD = 1). The frame sync pin is generated inter-
nally (SC2 = 1), the transfers are 16-bits wide (WL1 = 1, WL0
= 0) and the frame sync signal will frame the 16 bits (FSL = 0).
The frame sync signal is available on Pin SC2, but it needs to be
inverted before being applied to the AD9832. The interface to
the DSP56000/DSP56001 is similar to that of the DSP56002.
68HC11/68L11
AD9832
FSYNC
SDATA
PC7
DSP56002
AD9832
MOSI
SCK
SCLK
FSYNC
SDATA
SC2
STD
ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY
SCK
SCLK
Figure 27. 68HC11/68L11 to AD9832 Interface
ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY
AD9832 to 80C51/80L51 Interface
Figure 28 shows the serial interface between the AD9832 and
the 80C51/80L51 microcontroller. The microcontroller is oper-
ated in Mode 0 so that TXD of the 80C51/80L51 drives SCLK
of the AD9832 while RXD drives the serial data line SDATA.
The FSYNC signal is again derived from a bit programmable
pin on the port (P3.3 being used in the diagram). When data is
to be transmitted to the AD9832, P3.3 is taken low. The
80C51/80L51 transmits data in 8-bit bytes thus, only 8 falling
SCLK edges occur in each cycle. To load the remaining 8 bits
to the AD9832, P3.3 is held low after the first 8 bits have been
transmitted and a second write operation is initiated to transmit
the second byte of data. P3.3 is taken high following the comple-
tion of the second write operation. SCLK should idle high
between the two write operations. The 80C51/80L51 outputs
the serial data in a format which has the LSB first. The AD9832
accepts the MSB first (the 4 MSBs being the control informa-
tion, the next 4 bits being the address while the 8 LSBs contain
the data when writing to a destination register). Therefore, the
transmit routine of the 80C51/80L51 must take this into ac-
count and rearrange the bits so that the MSB is output first.
Figure 29. AD9832 to DSP56002 Interface
AD9832 Evaluation Board
The AD9832 Evaluation Board allows designers to evaluate the
high performance AD9832 DDS modulator with a minimum of
effort.
To prove that this device will meet the user’s waveform synthe-
sis requirements, the user requires only a 3.3 V or 5 V power
supply, an IBM-compatible PC and a spectrum analyzer along
with the evaluation board. The evaluation board setup is shown
below.
The DDS evaluation kit includes a populated, tested AD9832
printed circuit board, along with the software that controls the
AD9832, in a Windows environment.
IBM-COMPATIBLE PC
PARALLEL PORT
CENTRONICS
PRINTER CABLE
AD9832.EXE
AD9832 EVALUATION
BOARD
Figure 30. AD9832 Evaluation Board Setup
–14–
REV. A
AD9832
Using the AD9832 Evaluation Board
XO vs. External Clock
The AD9832 Evaluation kit is a test system designed to simplify
the evaluation of the AD9832. Provisions to control the AD9832
from the printer port of an IBM-compatible PC are included,
along with the necessary software. An application note is also
available with the evaluation board and gives information on
operating the evaluation board.
The AD9832 can operate with master clocks up to 25 MHz. A
25 MHz oscillator is included on the evaluation board. How-
ever, this oscillator can be removed and, if required, an external
CMOS clock connected to the part.
Power Supply
Power to the AD9832 Evaluation Board must be provided ex-
ternally through the pin connections. The power leads should be
twisted to reduce ground loops.
Prototyping Area
An area is available on the evaluation board for the user to add
additional circuits to the evaluation test set. Users may want to
build custom analog filters for the output or add buffers and
operational amplifiers to be used in the final application.
1
DVDD
AVDD
2
C1
0.1F
C2
0.1F
SCLK
AVDD
3
SDATA
FSYNC
4
15
C3
4
DVDD
10nF
DVDD
AVDD
5
16
2
C6
0.1F
COMP
REFIN
J1
6
REFIN
20
7
4
6
16
14
9
7
8
9
SCLK
SDATA
FSYNC
SCLK
8
LK4
9
3
1
SDATA
FSYNC
REFOUT
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
C4
10nF
J2 J3
11
DVDD
C7
AVDD
C9
1
10 19
C8
C10
FSADJUST
10F
0.1F
0.1F
10F
R5
U2
3.9kΩ
U1
AD9832
R2
R1
R3
10kΩ
PSEL1
10kΩ 10kΩ
IOUT
11
12
10
14
PSEL1
IOUT
LK1
PSEL0
R6
300Ω
PSEL0
LK2
FSELECT
FSELECT
LK3
6
MCLK
DGND
AGND
13
5
DVDD
SW
MCLK
DVDD
R4
50Ω
C5
0.1F
DVDD
U3
OUT
XTAL1
DGND
Figure 31. AD9832 Evaluation Board Layout
Integrated Circuits
XTAL1
U1
Links
LK1–LK3
LK4
OSC XTAL 25 MHz
AD9832 (16-Pin TSSOP)
74HCT244 Buffer
Three-Pin Link
Two-Pin Link
U2
Switch
SW
Capacitors
C1, C2
C3, C4
C5, C6, C7, C9
C8, C10
End Stackable Switch (SDC Double
Throw)
0.1 µF Ceramic Chip Capacitor
10 nF Ceramic Capacitor
0.1 µF Ceramic Capacitor
10 µF Tantalum Capacitor
Sockets
MCLK, PSEL0,
PSEL1, FSELECT,
IOUT, REFIN
Subminiature BNC Connector
Resistors
R1–R3
R4
R5
R6
10 kΩ Resistor
50 Ω Resistor
3.9 kΩ Resistor
300 Ω Resistor
Connectors
J1
J2, J3
36-Pin Edge Connector
PCB Mounting Terminal Block
REV. A
–15–
AD9832
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
Dimensions shown in inches and (mm).
16-Lead Thin Shrink Small Outline Package (TSSOP)
(RU-16)
0.201 (5.10)
0.193 (4.90)
16
9
1
8
PIN 1
0.006 (0.15)
0.002 (0.05)
0.0433
(1.10)
MAX
0.028 (0.70)
0.020 (0.50)
8°
0°
0.0118 (0.30)
0.0075 (0.19)
0.0256
(0.65)
BSC
SEATING
PLANE
0.0079 (0.20)
0.0035 (0.090)
–16–
REV. A
相关型号:
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