AD9864BCPZ [ADI]

IF Digitizing Subsystem; 中频数字化子系统
AD9864BCPZ
型号: AD9864BCPZ
厂家: ADI    ADI
描述:

IF Digitizing Subsystem
中频数字化子系统

电信集成电路 电信电路 PC
文件: 总44页 (文件大小:1734K)
中文:  中文翻译
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IF Digitizing Subsystem  
AD9864*  
PRODUCT OVERVIEW  
FEATURES  
The AD9864 is a general-purpose IF subsystem that digitizes a  
low level 10 MHz to 300 MHz IF input with a signal bandwidth  
ranging from 6.8 kHz to 270 kHz. The signal chain of the  
AD9864 consists of a low noise amplifier (LNA), a mixer, a  
band-pass Σ-∆ analog-to-digital converter (ADC), and a deci-  
mation filter with programmable decimation factor. An auto-  
matic gain control (AGC) circuit gives the AD9864 12 dB of  
continuous gain adjustment. Auxiliary blocks include both  
clock and LO synthesizers.  
10 MHz to 300 MHz input frequency  
6.8 kHz to 270 kHz output signal bandwidth  
7.5 dB SSB NF  
–7.0 dBm IIP3  
AGC free range up to –34 dBm  
12 dB continuous AGC range  
16 dB front end attenuator  
Baseband I/Q 16-bit (or 24-bit) serial digital output  
LO and sampling clock synthesizers  
Programmable decimation factor, output format,  
AGC, and sythesizer settings  
370 input impedance  
The high dynamic range of the AD9864 and inherent antialias-  
ing provided by the band-pass Σ-∆ converter allow the device to  
cope with blocking signals up to 95 dB stronger than the desired  
signal. This attribute often reduces the cost of a radio by reduc-  
ing IF filtering requirements. Also, it enables multimode radios  
of varying channel bandwidths, allowing the IF filter to be  
specified for the largest channel bandwidth.  
2.7 V to 3.6 V supply voltage  
Low current consumption: 17 mA  
48-lead LFCSP package  
APPLICATIONS  
The SPI® port programs numerous parameters of the AD9864,  
allowing the device to be optimized for any given application.  
Programmable parameters include synthesizer divide ratios,  
AGC attenuation and attack/decay time, received signal  
strength level, decimation factor, output data format, 16 dB  
attenuator, and the selected bias currents.  
Multimode narrow-band radio products  
Analog/digital UHF/VHF FDMA receivers  
TETRA, APCO25, GSM/EDGE  
Portable and mobile radio products  
SATCOM terminals  
The AD9864 is available in a 48-lead LFCSP package and  
operates from a single 2.7 V to 3.6 V supply. The total power  
consumption is typically 56 mW and a power-down mode is  
provided via serial interfacing.  
*Protected by U.S. Patent No. 5,969,657; other patents pending.  
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM  
MXOP MXON IF2P IF2N  
GCP GCN  
DAC  
AGC  
AD9864  
–16dB  
LNA  
DECIMATION  
FILTER  
-ADC  
FORMATTING/SSI  
DOUTA  
DOUTB  
IFIN  
FS  
CLKOUT  
FREF  
CONTROL LOGIC  
LO  
VOLTAGE  
CLK SYN  
SYN  
REFERENCE  
SPI  
IOUTL  
LOP LON  
IOUTC CLKP  
LOOP FILTER  
CLKN VREFP VCM VREFN PC PD PE  
SYNCB  
LO VCO AND  
LOOP FILTER  
Figure 1. AD9864 Block Diagram  
Rev. 0  
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable.  
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any  
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use.  
Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication  
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and  
registered trademarks are the property of their respective companies.  
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.  
Tel: 781.329.4700  
Fax: 781.326.8703  
www.analog.com  
© 2003 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.  
AD9864  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
General Description......................................................................... 3  
IF LNA/Mixer ............................................................................. 26  
Band-Pass ∑-∆ ADC .................................................................. 27  
Decimation Filter ....................................................................... 29  
AD9864 Specifications..................................................................... 4  
Digital Specifications........................................................................ 6  
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 7  
Thermal Resistance ...................................................................... 7  
Pin Configuration and Functional Descriptions.......................... 8  
Definition of Specifications/Test Methods ............................... 9  
Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 10  
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)............................................... 15  
Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 17  
Serial Port Interface (SPI).......................................................... 17  
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)........................................... 18  
Syncronization Using SYNCB .................................................. 22  
Interfacing to DSPs..................................................................... 22  
Power Control............................................................................. 23  
LO Synthesizer............................................................................ 23  
Fast Acquire Mode...................................................................... 24  
Clock Synthesizer ....................................................................... 24  
Variable Gain Amplifier Operation With Automatic Gain  
Control......................................................................................... 30  
Variable Gain Control................................................................ 31  
Automatic Gain Control (AGC)............................................... 32  
System Noise Figure (NF) Versus VGA (or AGC) Control .. 34  
Applications Considerations..................................................... 35  
Spurious Responses.................................................................... 37  
External Passive Component Requirements .......................... 37  
Applications ................................................................................ 38  
Layout Example, Evaluation Board, and Software ................. 42  
Outline Dimensions....................................................................... 43  
ESD Caution................................................................................ 43  
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 43  
REVISION HISTORY  
Revision 0: Initial Version  
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 44  
AD9864  
GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
cascaded decimation factor is programmable from 48 to 960.  
The decimation filter data is output via the synchronous serial  
interface (SSI) of the chip.  
The AD9864 is a general-purpose narrow-band IF subsystem that  
digitizes a low level 10 MHz to 300 MHz IF input with a signal  
bandwidth ranging from 6.8 kHz to 270 kHz. The signal chain of  
the AD9864 consists of an LNA, a mixer, a band-pass Σ-∆ ADC,  
and a decimation filter with programmable decimation factor.  
Additional functionality built into the AD9864 includes LO and  
clock synthesizers, programmable AGC, and a flexible synchro-  
nous serial interface for output data.  
The input LNA is a fixed gain block with an input impedance of  
approximately 370 Ω||1.4 pF. The LNA input is single-ended  
and self-biasing, allowing the input IF to be ac-coupled. The  
LNA can be disabled through the serial interface, providing a  
fixed 16 dB attenuation to the input signal.  
The LO synthesizer is a programmable PLL consisting of a low  
noise phase frequency detector (PFD), a variable output current  
charge pump (CP), a 14-bit reference divider, A and B counters,  
and a dual modulus prescaler. The user only needs to add an  
appropriate loop filter and VCO for complete operation.  
The LNA drives the input port of a Gilbert-type active mixer.  
The mixer LO port is driven by the on-chip LO buffer, which  
can be driven externally, single-ended or differential. The LO  
buffer inputs are self-biasing and allow the LO input to be  
ac-coupled. The open-collector outputs of the mixer drive an  
external resonant tank consisting of a differential LC network  
tuned to the IF of the band-pass Σ-∆ ADC.  
The clock synthesizer is equivalent to the LO synthesizer with  
the following differences:  
It does not include the prescaler or A counter.  
It includes a negative resistance core used for VCO  
generation.  
The external differential LC tank forms the resonator for the  
first stage of the band-pass Σ-∆ ADC. The tank LC values must  
be selected for a center frequency of fCLK/8, where fCLK is the  
sample rate of the ADC. The fCLK/8 frequency is the IF digitized  
by the band-pass Σ-∆ ADC. On-chip calibration allows stan-  
dard tolerance inductor and capacitor values. The calibration is  
typically performed once at power-up.  
The AD9864 contains both a variable gain amplifier (VGA) and a  
digital VGA (DVGA). Both of these can operate manually or  
automatically. In manual mode, the gain for each is programmed  
through the SPI. In automatic gain control mode, the gains are  
adjusted automatically to ensure the ADC does not clip and that  
the rms output level of the ADC is equal to a programmable ref-  
erence level.  
The ADC contains a sixth order multibit band-pass Σ-∆ modu-  
lator that achieves very high instantaneous dynamic range over  
a narrow frequency band centered at fCLK/8. The modulator  
output is quadrature mixed to baseband and filtered by three  
cascaded linear phase FIR filters to remove out-of-band noise.  
The VGA has 12 dB of attenuation range and is implemented by  
adjusting the ADC full-scale reference level. The DVGA gain is  
implemented by scaling the output of the decimation filter. The  
DVGA is most useful in extending the dynamic range in nar-  
row-band applications requiring 16-bit I and Q data format.  
The first FIR filter is a fixed decimate by 12 using a fourth order  
comb filter. The second FIR filter also uses a fourth order comb  
filter with programmable decimation from 1 to 16. The third  
FIR stage is programmable for decimation of either 4 or 5. The  
The SSI provides a programmable frame structure, allowing  
24-bit or 16-bit I and Q data and flexibility by including  
attenuation and RSSI data if required.  
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 44  
 
AD9864  
AD9864 SPECIFICATIONS  
Table 1. VDDI = VDDF = VDDA = VDDC = VDDL = VDDH = 2.7 V to 3.6 V, VDDQ = VDDP = 2.7 V to 5.5 V, fCLK = 18 MSPS,  
fIF = 109.65 MHz, fLO = 107.4 MHz, fREF = 16.8 MHz, unless otherwise noted. Standard operating mode: VGA at minimum attenuation  
setting, synthesizers in normal (not fast acquire) mode, decimation factor = 900, 16-bit digital output, and 10 pF load on SSI output pins.  
Parameter  
Temperature  
Test Level  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
SYSTEM DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE1  
SSB Noise Figure @ Minimum VGA Attenuation2, 3  
@ Maximum VGA Attenuation2,3  
Dynamic Range with AGC Enabled2,3  
IF Input Clip Point @ Maximum VGA Attenuation3  
@ Minimum VGA Attenuation3  
Input Third Order Intercept (IIP3)  
Gain Variation over Temperature  
LNA + MIXER  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
7.5  
13  
95  
–19  
–31  
–7.0  
0.7  
9.5  
dB  
dB  
dB  
dBm  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
91  
–20  
–32  
–12  
2
Maximum RF and LO Frequency Range  
LNA Input Impedance  
Full  
25°C  
25°C  
IV  
V
300  
500  
370||1.4  
1
MHz  
||pF  
kΩ  
Mixer LO Input Resistance  
LO SYNTHESIZER  
V
LO Input Frequency  
LO Input Amplitude  
FREF Frequency (for Sinusoidal Input Only)  
FREF Input Amplitude  
FREF Slew Rate  
Minimum Charge Pump Current @ 5 V4  
Maximum Charge Pump Current @ 5 V4  
Charge Pump Output Compliance5  
Synthesizer Resolution  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
VI  
VI  
VI  
IV  
7.75  
0.3  
8
0.3  
7.5  
300  
2.0  
25  
3
MHz  
V p-p  
MHz  
V p-p  
V/µs  
mA  
mA  
V
kHz  
0.67  
5.3  
0.4  
6.25  
VDDP – 0.4  
CLOCK SYNTHESIZER  
CLK Input Frequency  
CLK Input Amplitude  
Minimum Charge Pump Output Current4  
Maximum Charge Pump Output Current4  
Charge Pump Output Compliance5  
Synthesizer Resolution  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
VI  
VI  
VI  
VI  
13  
0.3  
26  
VDDC  
MHz  
V p-p  
mA  
mA  
V
0.67  
5.3  
0.4  
2.2  
VDDQ – 0.4  
kHz  
Σ-∆ ADC  
Resolution  
Clock Frequency (fCLK  
Center Frequency  
Pass-Band Gain Variation  
Alias Attenuation  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
V
IV  
IV  
16  
13  
24  
26  
Bits  
MHz  
MHz  
dB  
)
fCLK/8  
1.0  
80  
50  
dB  
GAIN CONTROL  
Programmable Gain Step  
AGC Gain Range  
Full  
Full  
Full  
V
V
IV  
16  
12  
72.5  
dB  
dB  
kΩ  
GCP Output Resistance  
95  
1 This includes 0.9 dB loss of matching network.  
2 AGC with DVGA enabled.  
3 Measured in 10 kHz bandwidth.  
4 Programmable in 0.67 mA steps.  
5 Voltage span in which LO (or CLK) charge pump output current is maintained within 5% of nominal value of VDDP/2 (or VDDQ/2).  
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 44  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
Parameter  
Temperature  
Test Level  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
OVERALL  
Analog Supply Voltage (VDDA, VDDF, VDDI)  
Digital Supply Voltage (VDDD, VDDC, VDDL)  
Interface Supply Voltage (VDDH)1  
Charge Pump Supply Voltage (VDDP, VDDQ)  
Total Current  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
VI  
VI  
VI  
VI  
2.7  
2.7  
1.8  
2.7  
3.0  
3.0  
3.6  
3.6  
3.6  
5.5  
V
V
V
V
5.0  
Operation Mode2  
Full  
Full  
VI  
VI  
17  
0.01  
mA  
mA  
°C  
Standby  
OPERATING TEMPERATURE RANGE  
–40  
+85  
1 VDDH must be less than VDDD + 0.5 V.  
2 Clock VCO off and additional 0.7 mA with VGA @ maximum attenuation.  
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
DIGITAL SPECIFICATIONS  
Table 2. VDDI = VDDF = VDDA = VDDC = VDDL = VDDH = 2.7 V to 3.6 V, VDDQ = VDDP = 2.7 V to 5.5 V, fCLK = 18 MSPS,  
fIF = 109.65 MHz, fLO = 107.4 MHz, fREF = 16.8 MHz, unless otherwise noted. Standard operating mode: VGA at minimum attenuation  
setting, synthesizers in normal (not fast acquire) mode, decimation factor = 900, 16-bit digital output, and 10 pF load on SSI output pins.  
Parameter  
Temperature  
Test Level Min  
Typ  
Max  
960  
1.2  
Unit  
DECIMATOR  
Decimation Factor1  
Pass-Band Width  
Pass-Band Gain Variation  
Alias Attenuation  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
V
48  
88  
50%  
fCLKOUT  
dB  
dBm  
IV  
IV  
SPI-READ OPERATION (See Figure 30)  
PC Clock Frequency  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
10  
10  
26  
MHz  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
PC Clock Period (tCLK  
PC Clock High (tHI)  
)
100  
45  
45  
2
2
5
PC Clock Low (tLOW  
)
PC to PD Setup Time (tDS)  
PC to PD Hold Time (tDH)  
PE to PC Setup Time (tS)  
PC to PE Hold Time (tH)  
SPI-WRITE OPERATION2 (See Figure 29)  
5
PC Clock Frequency  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
MHz  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
PC Clock Period (tCLK  
PC Clock High (tHI)  
)
100  
45  
45  
2
2
3
PC Clock Low (tLOW  
)
PC to PD Setup Time (tDS)  
PC to PD Hold Time (tDH)  
PC to PD (or DOUTB) Data Valid Time (tDV)  
PE to PD Output Valid to Hi-Z (tEZ)  
SSI2 (See Figure 32)  
8
CLKOUT Frequency  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
0.867  
38.4  
33  
–1  
–1  
MHz  
CLKOUT Period (tCLK  
)
1153 ns  
CLKOUT Duty Cycle (tHI, tLOW  
)
50  
67  
+1  
+1  
ns  
ns  
ns  
CLKOUT to FS Valid Time (tV)  
CLKOUT to DOUT Data Valid Time (tDV)  
CMOS LOGIC INPUTS3  
Logic 1 Voltage (VIH)  
Logic 0 Voltage (VIL)  
Logic 1 Current (IIH)  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
IV  
VDDH – 0.2  
V
V
µA  
µA  
pF  
0.5  
10  
10  
3
Logic 0 Current (IIL)  
Input Capacitance  
CMOS LOGIC OUTPUTS2, 3, 4  
Logic 1 Voltage (VOH)  
Logic 0 Voltage (VOL)  
Full  
Full  
IV  
IV  
VDDH – 0.2  
V
V
0.2  
1 Programmable in steps of 48 or 60.  
2 CMOS output mode with CLOAD = 10 pF and Drive Strength = 7.  
3 Absolute maximum and minimum input/output levels are VDDH + 0.3 V and –0.3 V.  
4 IOL = 1 mA; specification is also dependent on drive strength setting.  
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 44  
 
 
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
Table 3. AD9864 Absolute Maximum Ratings  
Parameter  
With Respect to  
Min  
Max  
Unit  
VDDF, VDDA, VDDC,  
VDDD, VDDH, VDDL, VDDI  
GNDF, GNDA, GNDC, GNDD,  
GNDH, GNDL, GNDI, GNDS  
–0.3  
+4.0  
V
VDDF, VDDA, VDDC,  
VDDR, VDDA, VDDC,  
–4.0  
+4.0  
V
VDDD, VDDH, VDDL, VDDI  
VDDD, VDDH, VDDL, VDDI  
VDDP, VDDQ  
GNDF, GNDA, GNDC, GNDD,  
GNDP, GNDQ  
GNDF, GNDA, GNDC, GNDD,  
–0.3  
–0.3  
+6.0  
+0.3  
V
V
GNDH, GNDL, GNDI, GNDQ, GNDP, GNDS  
GNDH, GNDL, GNDI, GNDQ, GNDP, GNDS  
MXOP, MXON, LOP,  
LON, IFIN, CXIF, CXVL, CXVM  
PC, PD, PE, CLKOUT,  
GNDH  
GNDH  
–0.3  
–0.3  
VDDI + 0.3  
VDDH + 0.3  
V
V
DOUTA, DOUTB, FS, SYNCB  
IF2N, IF2P, GCP, GCN  
VFEFP, VREGN, RREF  
IOUTC  
GNDF  
GNDA  
GNDQ  
GNDP  
GNDC  
GNDL  
–0.3  
–0.3  
–0.3  
–0.3  
–0.3  
–0.3  
VDDF + 0.3  
VDDA + 0.3  
VDDQ + 0.3  
VDDP + 0.3  
VDDC + 0.3  
VDDL + 0.3  
150  
V
V
V
IOUTL  
V
CLKP, CLKN  
V
FREF  
V
Junction Temperature  
Storage Temperature  
Lead Temperature  
°C  
°C  
°C  
–65  
+150  
300  
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.  
THERMAL RESISTANCE  
θJA is specified for the worst-case conditions, i.e., θJA is specified for device soldered in circuit board for surface-mount packages.  
Table 4. Thermal Resistance  
Package Type  
Unit  
θJA  
48-Lead LFCSP  
29.5  
°C/W  
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 44  
 
AD9864  
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTIONS  
48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37  
1
2
3
4
5
6
36  
35  
34  
33  
32  
31  
30  
29  
28  
27  
26  
25  
MXOP  
MXON  
GNDF  
IF2N  
IF2P  
VDDF  
GCP  
GNDL  
FREF  
GNDS  
SYNCB  
GNDH  
FS  
DOUTB  
DOUTA  
CLKOUT  
VDDH  
VDDD  
PE  
PIN 1  
IDENTIFIER  
AD9864  
TOP VIEW  
7
(Not to Scale)  
8
GCN  
9
VDDA  
GNDA  
VREFP  
VREFN  
10  
11  
12  
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24  
Figure 2. 48-Lead LFCSP, Backside Paddle Contact Is Connected to Ground  
Table 5. Pin Function Descriptions—48-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP)  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic Description  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic Description  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MXOP  
MXON  
GNDF  
IF2N  
Mixer Output, Positive  
27  
VDDH  
Positive Supply for Digital Interface  
Mixer Output, Negative  
28  
CLKOUT  
DOUTA  
DOUTB  
Clock Output for SSI Port  
Data Output for SSI Port  
Ground for Front End of ADC  
Second IF Input (to ADC), Negative  
Second IF Input (to ADC), Positive  
Positive Supply for Front End of ADC  
29  
30  
Data Output for SSI Port (Inverted) or  
SPI Port  
IF2P  
31  
32  
33  
FS  
Frame Sync for SSI Port  
VDDF  
GCP  
GNDH  
SYNCB  
Ground for Digital Interface  
Filter Capacitor for ADC Full-Scale  
Control  
Resets SSI and DecimatorCounters;  
Active Low  
8
GCN  
Full-Scale Control Ground  
Positive Supply for ADC Back End  
Ground for ADC Back End  
Voltage Reference, Positive  
Voltage Reference, Negative  
34  
35  
GNDS  
FREF  
Substrate Ground  
9
VDDA  
GNDA  
VREFP  
VREFN  
RREF  
Reference Frequency Input for Both  
Synthesizers  
10  
11  
12  
13  
36  
37  
GNDL  
GNDP  
Ground for LO Synthesizer  
Ground for LO Synthesizer Charge  
Pump  
Reference Resistor: Requires 100 kto  
GNDA  
38  
39  
IOUTL  
VDDP  
LO Synthesizer Charge Pump Out  
Current  
14  
15  
16  
VDDQ  
IOUTC  
GNDQ  
Positive Supply for Clock Synthesizer  
Clock Synth Charge Pump Out Current  
Positive Supply for LO Synthesizer  
Charge Pump  
Ground for Clock Synthesizer Charge  
Pump  
40  
41  
VDDL  
CXVM  
Postive Supply for LO Synthesizer  
17  
18  
19  
VDDC  
GNDC  
CLKP  
Positive Supply for Clock Synthesizer  
Ground for Clock Synthesizer  
External Filter Capacitor; DC Output of  
LNA  
Sampling Clock Input/Clock VCO Tank,  
Positive  
42  
43  
44  
LON  
LOP  
LO Input to Mixer and LO Synthesizer,  
Negative  
20  
CLKN  
Sampling Clock Input/Clock VCO Tank,  
Negative  
LO Input to Mixer and LO Synthesizer,  
Positive  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
GNDS  
GNDD  
PC  
Substrate Ground  
CXVL  
External Bypass Capacitor for LNA  
Power Supply  
Ground for Digital Functions  
Clock Input for SPI Port  
Data I/O for SPI Port  
45  
46  
GNDI  
CXIF  
Ground for Mixer and LNA  
External Capacitor for Mixer V-I  
Converter Bias  
PD  
PE  
Enable Input for SPI Port  
Positive Supply for Internal Digital  
47  
48  
IFIN  
First IF Input (to LNA)  
VDDD  
VDDI  
Positive Supply for LNA and Mixer  
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 44  
 
AD9864  
DEFINITION OF SPECIFICATIONS/TEST METHODS  
Single Sideband Noise Figure (SSB NF)  
Dynamic Range (DR)  
Noise figure (NF) is defined as the degradation in SNR per-  
formance (in dB) of an IF input signal after it passes through a  
component or system. It can be expressed with the equation  
Dynamic range is the measure of a small target input signal  
(PTARGET) in the presence of a large unwanted interferer signal  
(PINTER). Typically, the large signal will cause some unwanted  
characteristic of the component or system to degrade, thus mak-  
ing it unable to detect the smaller target signal correctly. In the  
case of the AD9864, it is often a degradation in noise figure at  
increased VGA attenuation settings that limits its dynamic range.  
Noise Figure =10×log
(
SNRIN /SNROUT
)  
The term SSB is applicable for heterodyne systems containing a  
mixer. It indicates that the desired signal spectrum resides on  
only one side of the LO frequency (i.e., single sideband); thus a  
“noiseless” mixer has a noise figure of 3 dB.  
The test method for the AD9864 is as follows. The small target  
signal (an unmodulated carrier) is input at the center of the IF  
frequency, and its power level (PTARGET) is adjusted to achieve an  
SNRTARGET of 6 dB. The power of the signal is then increased by  
3 dB prior to injecting the interferer signal. The offset frequency  
of the interferer signal is selected so that aliases produced by the  
decimation filter’s response as well as phase noise from the LO  
(due to reciprocal mixing) do not fall back within the measure-  
ment bandwidth. For this reason, an offset of 110 kHz was  
selected. The interferer signal (also an unmodulated carrier) is  
then injected into the input and its power level is increased to the  
point (PINTER) where the target signal SNR is reduced to 6 dB. The  
dynamic range is determined with the equation  
The SSB noise figure of the AD9864 is determined by the equation  
SSB NF = PIN  
– 10 × log(BW) – (174 dBm/Hz) SNR  
[ ]  
where PIN is the input power of an unmodulated carrier, BW is  
the noise measurement bandwidth, –174 dBm/Hz is the ther-  
mal noise floor at 293K, and SNR is the measured signal-to-  
noise ratio in dB of the AD9864.  
Note that PIN is set to –85 dBm to minimize any degradation in  
measured SNR due to phase noise from the RF and LO signal  
generators. The IF frequency, CLK frequency, and decimation  
factors are selected to minimize any spurious components  
falling within the measurement bandwidth. Note also that a  
bandwidth of 10 kHz is used for the data sheet specification. All  
references to noise figures within this data sheet imply single  
sideband noise figure.  
DR = PINTER PTARGET + SNRTARGET  
Note that the AD9864’s AGC is enabled for this test.  
IF Input Clip Point  
The IF input clip point is defined as the input power that  
results in a digital output level 2 dB below full-scale. Unlike  
other linear components that typically exhibit a soft compres-  
sion (characterized by its 1 dB compression point), an ADC  
exhibits a hard compression once its input signal exceeds its  
rated maximum input signal range. In the case of the AD9864,  
which contains a Σ-∆ ADC, hard compression should be  
avoided because it causes severe SNR degradation.  
Input Third Order Intercept (IIP3)  
IIP3 is a figure of merit used to determine a component’s or  
system’s susceptibility to intermodulation distortion (IMD)  
from its third order nonlinearities. Two unmodulated carriers  
at a specified frequency relationship (f1 and f2) are injected into  
a nonlinear system exhibiting third order nonlinearities pro-  
ducing IMD components at 2f1 – f2 and 2f2 – f1. IIP3 graphi-  
cally represents the extrapolated intersection of the carrier’s  
input power with the third order IMD component when plot-  
ted in dB. The difference in power (D in dBc) between the two  
carriers and the resulting third order IMD components can be  
determined from the equation  
D = 2× IIP3PIN  
( )  
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 44  
 
AD9864  
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS  
9.5  
0
–2  
9.0  
+85°C  
8.5  
–4  
+85°C  
+25°C  
8.0  
–6  
+25°C  
7.5  
–8  
7.0  
–40°C  
–40°C  
–10  
–12  
6.5  
6.0  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
VDDx (V)  
VDDx (V)  
Figure 3. SSB Noise Figure vs. Supply  
Figure 6. IIP3 vs. Supply  
98  
97  
96  
95  
94  
93  
92  
–17.5  
–18.0  
–18.5  
–19.0  
–19.5  
–20.0  
–20.5  
+25°C  
–40°C  
+85°C  
+25°C  
+85°C  
–40°C  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
VDDx (V)  
VDDx (V)  
Figure 4. Dynamic Range vs. Supply  
Figure 7. Maximum VGA Attenuation Clip Point vs. Supply  
0.1  
–29.5  
0
–0.1  
–0.2  
–0.3  
–0.4  
–0.5  
–0.6  
–0.7  
–0.8  
–30.0  
–30.5  
–31.0  
–31.5  
–32.0  
+85°C  
+25°C  
–40°C  
–20  
–17  
–14  
–11  
–8  
–5  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
LO DRIVE (dBm)  
VDDx (V)  
Figure 8. Normalized Gain Variation vs. LO Drive (VDDx = 3.0 V)  
Figure 5. Minimum VGA Attenuation Clip Point vs. Supply  
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 44  
 
AD9864  
9.0  
8.8  
8.6  
8.4  
8.2  
8.0  
7.8  
7.6  
7.4  
7.2  
7.0  
0
–12  
–15  
–18  
–21  
–24  
–27  
–30  
–33  
–36  
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
NF  
IMD  
–20  
–15  
–10  
–5  
0
5
–36 –33 –30 –27 –24 –21 –18 –15 –12 –9 –6 –3 –0  
LO DRIVE (dBm)  
IFIN (dBm)  
Figure 9. Noise Figure and IMD vs. LO Drive (VDDx = 3.0 V)  
Figure 12. Gain Compression vs. IFIN with 16 dB LNA Attenuator Enabled  
–55  
–15  
0
ADC DOES NOT GO INTO  
HARD COMPRESSION  
–61  
–67  
–18  
–21  
–24  
–27  
–30  
–33  
–36  
–39  
–42  
–45  
PIN  
–2  
3.6V  
3.3V  
2.7V  
–73  
–4  
–6  
–8  
–79  
3.0V  
–85  
3.3V  
3.0V  
–91  
2.7V  
–97  
–10  
–12  
–14  
3.6V  
–103  
–109  
–115  
–51  
–48  
–45  
–42  
IFIN (dBm)  
–39  
–36  
–33  
–30  
–30  
–28  
–26  
–24  
–22  
–20  
–18  
–16  
–14  
IFIN (dBm)  
Figure 13. IMD vs. IFIN  
Figure 10. Gain Compression vs. IFIN  
10.0  
9.5  
9.0  
8.5  
8.0  
7.5  
10.0  
9.5  
9.0  
8.5  
8.0  
7.5  
16-BIT  
16-BIT  
16-BIT  
DATA  
I/Q DATA  
I/Q DATA WITH  
DVGA ENABLED  
16-BIT DATA  
WITH DVGA ENABLED  
24-BIT  
24-BIT  
DATA  
I/Q DATA  
10  
100  
CHANNEL BANDWIDTH (kHz)  
1000  
10  
100  
CHANNEL BANDWIDTH (kHz)  
1000  
Figure 11. Noise Figure vs. BW (Minimum Attenuation, fCLK = 13 MSPS)  
Figure 14. Noise Figure vs. BW (Minimum Attenuation, fCLK = 18 MSPS)  
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 44  
AD9864  
10.0  
9.5  
9.0  
8.5  
11.5  
11.0  
10.5  
10.0  
9.5  
16-BIT DATA  
WITH DVGA ENABLED  
BW = 27.08kHz  
(K = 0, M = 3)  
24-BIT  
DATA  
16-BIT  
DATA  
BW = 12.04kHz  
(K = 0, M = 8)  
9.0  
BW = 6.78kHz  
(K = 0, M = 15)  
8.5  
8.0  
8.0  
7.5  
7.5  
10  
7.0  
100  
CHANNEL BANDWIDTH (kHz)  
1000  
0
3
6
9
12  
VGA ATTENUATION (dB)  
Figure 15. Noise Figure vs. BW (Minimum Attenuation, fCLK = 26 MSPS)  
Figure 18. Noise Figure vs. VGA Attenuation (fCLK = 13 MSPS)  
14  
14  
13  
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
BW = 75kHz  
BW = 135.42kHz  
(K = 1, M = 1)  
(K = 0, M = 1)  
BW = 90.28kHz  
(K = 1, M = 2)  
12  
BW = 50kHz  
(K = 0, M = 2)  
11  
BW = 15kHz  
(K = 0, M = 9)  
10  
BW = 27.08kHz  
(K = 1, M = 9)  
9
8
7
8
7
0
3
6
9
12  
0
3
6
9
12  
VGA ATTENUATION (dB)  
VGA ATTENUATION (dB)  
Figure 16. Noise Figure vs. VGA Attenuation (fCLK = 18 MSPS)  
Figure 19. Noise Figure vs. VGA Attenuation (fCLK = 26 MSPS)  
–5  
–5  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–10  
–10  
–15  
–15  
–20  
–25  
–30  
–35  
–40  
–45  
PIN  
PIN  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–20  
–25  
–30  
–35  
–40  
–45  
–90  
–100  
–110  
–90  
–100  
–110  
–120  
–130  
–120  
–130  
–45  
–42  
–39  
–36  
–33  
–30  
–27  
–24  
–45  
–42  
–39  
–36  
–33  
–30  
–27  
–24  
IFIN (dB)  
IFIN (dBm)  
Figure 17. IMD vs. IFIN (fCLK = 13 MSPS)  
Figure 20. IMD vs. IFIN (fCLK = 18 MSPS)  
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 44  
AD9864  
–5  
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
–30  
–40  
–50  
–10  
–15  
–20  
–25  
–30  
–35  
–40  
–45  
16-BIT WITH DVGA  
PIN  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
–110  
24-BIT  
8
7
–120  
–130  
6
–45  
–42  
–39  
–36  
–33  
IFIN (dBm)  
–30  
–27  
–24  
0
50  
100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 21. IMD vs. IFIN (fCLK = 26 MSPS)  
Figure 24. Noise Figure vs. Frequency  
(Minimum Attenuation, fCLK = 18 MSPS, BW = 10 kHz)  
0
13  
16-BIT WITH DVGA  
12  
11  
10  
9
–2  
–4  
–6  
24-BIT  
8
–8  
7
–10  
6
0
50  
100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
0
50  
100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 22. Noise Figure vs. Frequency  
(Minimum Attenuation, fCLK = 26 MSPS, BW = 10 kHz)  
Figure 25. Input IIP3 vs. Frequency (fCLK = 18 MSPS)  
20.0  
128  
112  
96  
80  
64  
48  
32  
16  
0
0
–2  
–4  
–6  
–8  
18.5  
17.0  
15.5  
14.0  
12.5  
11.0  
9.5  
AGC  
NOISE FIGURE  
8.0  
–10  
–55 –50 –45 –40 –35 –30 –25 –20 –15 –10  
INTERFERER LEVEL (dBm)  
–5  
0
50  
100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 26. Noise Figure vs. Interferer Level (16-Bit Data,  
BW = 12.5 kHz, AGCR = 1, fINTERFERER = fIF + 110 kHz)  
Figure 23. Input IIP3 vs. Frequency (fCLK = 26 MSPS)  
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 44  
AD9864  
16  
15  
14  
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
256  
224  
192  
160  
128  
96  
16  
15  
14  
13  
12  
11  
10  
128  
96  
AGC ATTN  
AGC ATTN  
64  
32  
NOISE FIGURE  
NOISE FIGURE  
64  
32  
0
9
0
8
8
–50  
–45  
–40  
–35  
–30  
–25  
–20  
–15  
–10  
–65  
–55  
–45  
–35  
–25  
–15  
–5  
INTERFERER LEVEL (dBm)  
INTERFERER LEVEL (dBm)  
Figure 27. Noise Figure vs. Interferer Level (16-Bit Data with DVGA,  
BW = 12.5 kHz, AGCR = 1, fINTERFERER = fIF + 110 kHz)  
Figure 28. Noise Figure vs. Interferer Level (24-Bit Data,  
BW = 12.5 kHz, AGCR = 1, fINTERFERER = fIF + 110 kHz)  
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 44  
AD9864  
SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE (SPI)  
The SPI is a bidirectional serial port. It is used to load the configuration information into the registers listed below as well as to read back  
their contents. Table 6 provides a list of the registers that can be programmed through the SPI port. Addresses and default values are given  
in hexadecimal form.  
Table 6. SPI Address Map  
Bit  
Breakdown Width Value  
POWER CONTROL REGISTERS  
Default  
Address (Hex)  
Name  
Description  
0x00  
(7:0)  
8
0xFF  
STBY  
Standby control bits (REF, LO, CKO, CK, GC, LNAMX, unused, and  
ADC). Default is power-up condition of standby.  
0x01  
(3:2)  
2
0x00  
CKOB  
CK oscillator bias (0 = 0.25 mA, 1 = 0.35 mA, 2 = 0.40 mA,  
3 = 0.65 mA).  
(1:0)  
(7:0)  
2
8
0x00  
0x00  
ADCB  
TEST  
Do not use.  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
0x02  
AGC  
0x03  
(7)  
1
7
8
4
0
ATTEN  
Apply 16 dB attenuation in the front end.  
AGC attenuation setting (7 MSBs of a 15-bit unsigned word).  
AGC attenuation setting (8 LSBs of a 15-bit unsigned word).  
AGC attack bandwidth setting. Default yields 50 Hz loop  
bandwidth.  
(6:0)  
(7:0)  
(7:4)  
0x00  
0x00  
0x00  
AGCG (14:8)  
AGCG (7:0)  
AGCA  
0x04  
0x05  
(3:0)  
(7)  
(6:4)  
(3)  
4
1
3
1
3
0x00  
0
0x00  
0
AGCD  
AGCV  
AGCO  
AGCF  
AGCR  
AGC decay time setting. Default is decay time = attack time.  
Enable digital VGA to increase AGC range by 12 dB.  
AGC overload update setting. Default is slowest update.  
Fast AGC (minimizes resistance seen between GCP and GCN).  
AGC enable/reference level (disabled, 3 dB, 6 dB, 9 dB, 12 dB,  
15 dB below clip).  
0x06  
(2:0)  
0x00  
DECIMATION FACTOR  
0x07  
(7:5)  
(4)  
(3:0)  
3
1
4
Unused  
K
M
0
0x04  
Decimation factor = 60 × (M + 1), if K = 0; 48 × (M + 1), if K = 1.  
Default is decimate-by-300.  
LO SYNTHESIZER  
0x08  
0x09  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
6
8
0x00  
0x38  
LOR (13:8)  
LOR (7:0)  
Reference frequency divider (6 MSBs of a 14-bit word).  
Reference frequency divisor (8 LSBs of a 14-bit word).  
Default (56) yields 300 kHz from fREF = 16.8 MHz.  
A Counter (prescaler control counter).  
0x0A  
(7:5)  
(4:0)  
3
5
0x05  
0x00  
LOA  
LOB (12:8)  
B Counter MSB (5 MSB of a 13-bit word).  
Default LOA and LOB values yield 300 kHz from 73.35 MHz to  
2.25 MHz.  
0x0B  
0x0C  
(7:0)  
(6)  
(5)  
8
1
1
0x1D  
0
0
LOB (7:0)  
LOF  
LOINV  
B Counter LSB (8 LSB of a 13-bit word).  
Enable fast acquire.  
Invert charge pump (0 = source current to increase VCO  
frequency).  
(4:2)  
(1:0)  
3
2
0x00  
0x03  
LOI  
Charge pump current in normal operation.  
IPUMP = (LOI +1) × 0.625 mA.  
Manual control of LO charge pump (0 = Off, 1 = Up, 2 = Down,  
and 3 = Normal).  
LOTM  
0x0D  
0x0E  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
6
8
0x00  
0x04  
LOFA (13:8)  
LOFA (7:0)  
LO fast acquire time unit (6 MSBs of a 14-bit word).  
LO fast acquire time unit (8 LSBs of a 14-bit word).  
CLOCK SYNTHESIZER  
0x10  
0x11  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
6
8
0x00  
0x38  
CKR (13:8)  
CKR (7:0)  
Reference frequency divisor (6 MSBs of a 14-bit word).  
Reference frequency divisor (8 LSBs of a 14-bit word).  
Default yields 300 kHz from fREF = 16.8 MHz; Minimum = 3,  
Maximum = 16383.  
0x12  
(4:0)  
5
0x00  
CKN (12:8)  
Synthesized frequency divisor (5 MSBs of a 13-bit word).  
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
Bit  
Default  
Address (Hex)  
Breakdown Width Value  
Name  
Description  
0x13  
(7:0)  
8
0x3C  
CKN (7:0)  
Synthesized frequency divisor (8 LSBs of a 13-bit word).  
Default yields 300 kHz from 18 MHz; Minimum = 3,  
Maximum = 8191.  
0x14  
(6)  
(5)  
1
1
0
0
CKF  
CKINV  
Enable fast acquire.  
Invert charge pump (0 = source current to increase VCO  
frequency).  
(4:2)  
(1:0)  
3
2
0x00  
0x03  
CKI  
Charge pump current in normal operation.  
IPUMP = (CKI + 1) × 0.625 mA.  
Manual control of CLK charge pump (0 = Off, 1 = Up, 2 = Down,  
and 3 = Normal).  
CKTM  
0x15  
0x16  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
6
8
0x00  
0x04  
CKFA (13:8)  
CKFA (7:0)  
CK fast acquire time unit (6 LSBs of a 14-bit word).  
CK fast acquire time unit (8 LSBs of a 14-bit word).  
SSI CONTROL  
0x18  
(7:0)  
(7:0)  
(3:0)  
8
8
4
0x12  
0x07  
0x01  
SSICRA  
SSICRB  
SSIORD  
SSI Control Register A. See Table 8. Default is FS and CLKOUT  
three-stated.  
SSI Control Register B. See Table 8 (16-Bit Data, maximum drive  
strength).  
0x19  
0x1A  
Output rate divisor. fCLKOUT = fCLK/SSIORD.  
ADC TUNING  
0x1C  
(1)  
(0)  
(3:0)  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
1
1
3
6
8
0
0
0x00  
0x00  
0x00  
TUNE_LC  
TUNE_RC  
CAPL1 (2:0)  
CAPL0 (5:0)  
CAPR  
Perform tuning on LC portion of the ADC (cleared when done).  
Perform tuning on RC portion of the ADC (cleared when done).  
Coarse capacitance setting of LC tank (LSB is 25 pF, differential).  
Fine capacitance setting of LC tank (LSB is 0.4 pF, differential).  
Capacitance setting for RC resonator (64 LSB of fixed  
capacitance).  
0x1D  
0x1E  
0x1F  
TEST REGISTERS AND SPI PORT READ ENABLE  
0x37–0x39  
0x3A  
(7:0)  
(7:4)  
(3)  
(2:0)  
(7:4)  
(3)  
(2:0)  
(7:0)  
(7:0)  
8
4
1
3
4
1
3
8
8
0x00  
0x00  
0
0x00  
0x00  
0
0x00  
0x00  
Subject  
to  
TEST  
TEST  
SPIREN  
TEST  
TEST  
TRI  
TEST  
TEST  
ID  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
Enable read from SPI port.  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
Three-state DOUTB.  
Factory test mode. Do not use.  
Factory Test mode. Do not use.  
Revision ID (read-only); A write of 0x99 to this register is  
equivalent to a power-on reset.  
0x3B  
0x3C–0x3E  
0x3F  
Change  
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 44  
AD9864  
THEORY OF OPERATION  
SERIAL PORT INTERFACE (SPI)  
The serial port of the AD9864 has 3-wire or 4-wire SPI capabil-  
ity, allowing read/write access to all registers that configure the  
device’s internal parameters. The default 3-wire serial commu-  
nication port consists of a clock (PC), peripheral enable (PE),  
and bidirectional data (PD) signal. The inputs to PC, PE, and  
PD contain a Schmitt trigger with a nominal hysteresis of 0.4 V  
centered about the digital interface supply, i.e., VDDH/2.  
A 4-wire SPI interface can be enabled by setting the MSB of the  
SSICRB register (Reg. 0x19, Bit 7) and setting Reg. 0x3A to 00,  
resulting in the output data appearing on the DOUTB pin.  
Note that since the default power-up state sets DOUTB low,  
bus contention is possible for systems sharing the SPI output  
line. To avoid any bus contention, the DOUTB pin can be  
three-stated by setting the fourth control bit in the three-state  
bit (Reg. 0x3B, Bit 3). This bit can then be toggled to gain access  
to the shared SPI output line. An 8-bit instruction header must  
accompany each read and write SPI operation. Only the write  
operation supports an auto-increment mode, which allows the  
entire chip to be configured in a single write operation. The  
instruction header is shown in Table 7. It includes a read/not-  
write indicator bit, six address bits, and a Don’t Care bit. The  
data bits immediately follow the instruction header for both  
read and write operations. Note that the address and data are  
always given MSB first.  
eight clock cycles. PE stays low during the operation and goes  
high at the end of the transfer. If PE rises before the eight clock  
cycles have passed, the operation is aborted. If PE stays low for  
an additional eight clock cycles, the destination address is  
incremented and another eight bits of data are shifted in.  
Again, should PE rise early, the current byte is ignored. By  
using this implicit addressing mode, the chip can be configured  
with a single write operation. Registers identified as being sub-  
ject to frequent updates, namely those associated with power  
control and AGC operation, have been assigned adjacent  
addresses to minimize the time required to update them. Note  
that multibyte registers are big endian (the most significant  
byte has the lower address) and are updated when a write to the  
least significant byte occurs.  
Figure 30 illustrates the timing for a read operation to the SPI  
port. Although the AD9864 does not require read access for  
proper operation, it is often useful in the product development  
phase or for system authentication. Note that the read-back  
enable bit (Register 0x3A, Bit 3) must be set for a read opera-  
tion with a 3-wire SPI interface. After the peripheral enable  
(PE) signal goes low, data (PD) pertaining to the instruction  
header is read on the rising edges of the clock (PC). A read  
operation occurs if the read/not-write indicator is set high.  
After the address bits of the instruction header are read, the  
eight data bits pertaining to the specified register are shifted out  
of the data pin (PD) on the falling edges of the next eight clock  
cycles. If the 4-wire SPI interface is enabled, the eight data bits  
will also appear on the DOUTB pin with the same timing rela-  
tionship as those appearing at PD. After the last data bit is  
shifted out, the user should return PE high, causing PD to  
become three-stated and return to its normal status as an input  
pin. Since the auto-increment mode is not supported for read  
operations, an instruction header is required for each register  
read operation and PE must return high before initiating the  
next read operation.  
Table 7. Instruction Header Information  
MSB  
LSB  
I0  
I7  
I6  
I5  
I4  
I3  
I2  
I1  
R/W  
A5  
A4  
A3  
A2  
A1  
A0  
X
Figure 29 illustrates the timing requirements for a write opera-  
tion to the SPI port. After the peripheral enable (PE) signal goes  
low, data (PD) pertaining to the instruction header is read on  
the rising edges of the clock (PC). To initiate a write operation,  
the read/not-write bit is set low. After the instruction header is  
read, the eight data bits pertaining to the specified register are  
shifted into the data pin (PD) on the rising edges of the next  
tCLK  
tS  
tH  
PE  
tHI tLOW  
PC  
tDS  
tDH  
R/W  
DON'T  
A5  
A4 A0  
D7  
D6 D1  
D0  
PD  
CARE  
Figure 29. SPI Write Operation Timing  
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
tCLK  
tS  
PE  
PC  
tHI tLOW  
tDS  
tDV  
tEZ  
tDH  
DON'T  
R/W  
A5  
A1  
A0  
D7  
D7  
D6  
D6  
D1  
D1  
D0  
D0  
PD  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DON'T  
CARE  
DOUTB  
Figure 30. SPI Read Operation Timing  
fashion. In this alternate AGC data mode, the LSB of the byte  
containing the AGC attenuation is a 0, while the LSB of the  
byte containing reset and RSSI information is always a 1.  
SYNCHRONOUS SERIAL INTERFACE (SSI)  
The AD9864 provides a high degree of programmability of its  
SSI output data format, control signals, and timing parameters  
to accommodate various digital interfaces. In a 3-wire digital  
interface, the AD9864 provides a frame sync signal (FS), a clock  
output (CLKOUT), and a serial data stream (DOUTA) signal to  
the host device. In a 2-wire interface, the frame sync informa-  
tion is embedded into the data stream, thus only CLKOUT and  
DOUTA output signals are provided to the host device. The SSI  
control registers are SSICRA, SSICRB, and SSIORD. Table 8  
shows the different bit fields associated with these registers.  
In a 2-wire interface, the embedded frame sync bit (EFS) within  
the SSICRA register is set to 1. In this mode, the framing  
information is embedded in the data stream, with each eight  
bits of data surrounded by a start bit (low) and a stop bit (high),  
and each frame ends with at least 10 high bits. FS remains  
either low or three-stated (default), depending on the state of  
the SFST bit. Other control bits can be used to invert the frame  
sync (SFSI), to delay the frame sync pulse by one clock period  
(SLFS), to invert the clock (SCKI), or to three-state the clock  
(SCKT). Note that if EFS is set, SLFS is a Don’t Care.  
The primary output of the AD9864 is the converted I and Q  
demodulated signal available from the SSI port as a serial bit  
stream contained within a frame. The output frame rate is equal  
to the modulator clock frequency (fCLK) divided by the digital  
filter’s decimation factor that is programmed in the Decimator  
Register (0x07). The bit stream consists of an I word followed  
by a Q word, where each word is either 24 bits or 16 bits long  
and is given MSB first in twos complement form. Two optional  
bytes may also be included within the SSI frame following the  
Q word. One byte contains the AGC attenuation and the other  
byte contains both a count of modulator reset events and an  
estimate of the received signal amplitude (relative to full scale  
of the AD9864’s ADC). Figure 31 illustrates the structure of the  
SSI data frames in a number of SSI modes.  
24-BIT I AND Q, EAGC = 0, AAGC = X:48 DATA BITS  
I(23:0)  
Q(23:0)  
24-BIT I AND Q, EAGC = 1, AAGC = 0:64 DATA BITS  
I(23:0) Q(23:0)  
ATTN(7:0)  
SSI(5:0)  
RESET COUNT  
16-BIT I AND Q, EAGC = 0, AAGC = X:32 DATA BITS  
I(15:0) Q(15:0)  
16-BIT I AND Q, EAGC = 0, AAGC = 0:32 DATA BITS  
I(15:0) Q(15:0) ATTN(7:0)  
SSI(5:0)  
16-BIT I AND Q, EAGC = 1, AAGC = 1:40 DATA BITS  
I(15:0)  
Q(15:0)  
ATTN(7:1) 0  
I(15:0)  
Q(15:0)  
SSI(5:1)1  
The two optional bytes are output if the EAGC bit of SSICRA is  
set. The first byte contains the 8-bit attenuation setting (0 = no  
attenuation, 255 = 24 dB of attenuation), while the second byte  
contains a 2-bit reset field and 6-bit received signal strength  
field. The reset field contains the number of modulator reset  
events since the last report, saturating at 3. The received signal  
strength (RSSI) field is a linear estimate of the signal strength at  
the output of the first decimation stage; 60 corresponds to a  
full-scale signal.  
RESET COUNT  
Figure 31. SSI Frame Structure  
The SSIORD register controls the output bit rate (fCLKOUT) of the  
serial bit stream. fCLKOUT can be set equal to the modulator clock  
frequency (fCLK) or an integer fraction of it. It is equal to fCLK  
divided by the contents of the SSIORD register. Note that fCLKOUT  
should be chosen such that it does not introduce harmful spurs  
within the pass band of the target signal. Users must verify that  
the output bit rate is sufficient to accommodate the required  
number of bits per frame for a selected word size and decimation  
factor. Idle (high) bits are used to fill out each frame.  
The two optional bytes follow the I and Q data as a 16-bit word  
provided that the AAGC bit of SSICRA is not set. If the AAGC  
bit is set, the two bytes follow the I and Q data in an alternating  
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
Table 8. SSI Control Registers  
Name  
Width  
Default  
Description  
SSICRA (ADDR = 0x18)  
AAGC  
EAGC  
EFS  
SFST  
SFSI  
SLFS  
SCKT  
SCKI  
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
Alternate AGC Data Bytes.  
Embed AGC Data.  
Embed Frame Sync.  
Three-State Frame Sync.  
Invert Frame Sync.  
Late Frame Sync (1 = Late, 0 = Early).  
Three-state CLKOUT.  
Invert CLKOUT.  
SSICRB (ADDR = 0x19)  
4_SPI  
DW  
DS  
1
1
3
0
0
7
Enable 4-Wire SPI Interface for SPI Read Operation via DOUTB.  
I/Q Data-Word Width (0 = 16 Bit, 1 Bit–24 Bit). Automatically 16-Bit when the AGCV = 1).  
FS, CLKOUT, and DOUT Drive Strength.  
SSIORD (ADDR = 0x1A)  
DIV  
4
1
Output Bit Rate Divisor fCLKOUT = fCLK/SSIORD.  
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 44  
AD9864  
CLKOUT  
FS  
DOUT  
I15  
I0  
Q15  
Q14  
Q0  
SCKI = 0, SCKT = 0, SLFS = 0, SFSI = 0, EFS = 0, SFST = 0, EAGC = 0  
CLKOUT  
FS  
DOUT  
I15  
I0  
Q15  
Q14  
Q0  
SCKI = 0, SCKT = 0, SLFS = 1, SFSI = 0, EFS = 0, SFST = 0, EAGC = 0  
CLKOUT  
FS  
DOUT  
I15  
I0  
Q15  
Q14  
Q0  
ATTN7  
ATTEN6  
RSSI0  
SCKI = 0, SCKT = 0, SLFS = 0, SFSI = 0, EFS = 0, SFST = 0, EAGC = 1, AAGC  
CLKOUT  
FS  
HI-Z  
START  
START  
BIT  
DOUT  
I15  
I8  
STOP  
BIT  
BIT  
I7  
I0  
STOP  
BIT  
Q15  
IDLE (HIGH) BITS  
SCKI = 0, SCKT = 0, SLFS = X, SFSI = X, EFS = 1, SFST = 1, EAGC = 0  
SCKI = 0, SCKT = 0, SLFS = X, SFSI = X, EFS = 1, SFST = 0, EAGC = 0; AS ABOVE, BUT FS IS LOW  
Figure 32. SSI Timing for Several SSICRA Settings with 16-Bit I/Q Data  
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 44  
 
AD9864  
tCLK  
Table 9. Number of Bits per Frame for Different SSICR Settings  
tHI  
t
LOW  
Number  
of Bits  
per  
CLKOUT  
FS  
tV  
DW  
EAGC  
EFS  
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
AAGC  
Frame  
0 (16 Bit)  
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
NA  
NA  
0
1
0
32  
49*  
48  
tDV  
DOUT  
I15  
I14  
Figure 33. SSI Timing Parameters for SSI Timing*  
40  
*Timing parameters also apply to inverted CLKOUT or FS modes, with tDV  
relative to the falling edge of the CLK and/or FS.  
69*  
59*  
48  
69*  
64  
56  
89*  
79*  
1
The AD9864 also provides the means for controlling the  
switching characteristics of the digital output signals via the DS  
(drive strength) field of the SSICRB. This feature is useful in  
limiting switching transients and noise from the digital output  
that may ultimately couple back into the analog signal path,  
potentially degrading the AD9864’s sensitivity performance.  
Figure 34 and Figure 35 show how the NF can vary as a func-  
tion of the SSI setting for an IF frequency of 109.65 MHz. The  
following two observations can be made from these figures:  
1 (24 Bit)  
NA  
NA  
0
1
0
1
*The number of bits per frame with embedded frame sync (EFS = 1); assume  
at least 10 idle bits are desired.  
The maximum SSIORD setting can be determined by the  
equation  
1. The NF becomes more sensitive to the SSI output drive  
strength level at higher signal bandwidth settings.  
(1)  
SSIORD TRUNC DecimationFactor / No.of Bits per Frame  
[
( )
 
( )
]  
2. The NF is dependent on the number of bits within an SSI  
frame that become more sensitive to the SSI output drive  
strength level as the number of bits is increased. As a result,  
one should select the lowest possible SSI drive strength set-  
ting that still meets the SSI timing requirements.  
where TRUNC is the truncated integer value.  
Table 9 lists the number of bits within a frame for 16-bit and 24-  
bit output data formats for all of the different SSICR settings. The  
decimation factor is determined by the contents of Register 0x07.  
10.0  
9.8  
An example helps illustrate how the maximum SSIORD setting  
is determined. Suppose a user selects a decimation factor of 600  
(Register 0x07, K = 0, M = 9) and prefers a 3-wire interface with  
a dedicated frame sync (EFS = 0) containing 24-bit data  
(DW = 1) with nonalternating embedded AGC data included  
(EAGC = 1, AAGC = 0). Referring to Table 9, each frame will  
consist of 64 data bits. Using Equation 1, the maximum  
SSIORD setting is 9 (= TRUNC(600/64)). Thus, the user can  
select any SSIORD setting between 1 and 9.  
9.6  
16-BIT I/O DATA  
9.4  
9.2  
9.0  
24-BIT I/O DATA  
8.8  
8.6  
8.4  
8.2  
8.0  
16-BIT I/0 DATA  
w/ DVGA ENABLED  
Figure 32 illustrates the output timing of the SSI port for several  
SSI control register settings with 16-bit I/Q data, while Figure 33  
shows the associated timing parameters. Note that the same  
timing relationship holds for 24-bit I/Q data, with the excep-  
tion that I and Q word lengths now become 24 bits. In the  
default mode of operation, data is shifted out on rising edges of  
CLKOUT after a pulse equal to a clock period is output from  
the frame sync (FS) pin. As described above, the output data  
consists of a 16-bit or 24-bit I sample followed by a 16-bit or  
24-bit Q sample, plus two optional bytes containing AGC and  
status information.  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
SSI OUTPUT DRIVE STRENGTH SETTING  
Figure 34. NF vs. SSI Output Drive Strength  
(VDDx = 3.0 V, FCLK = 18 MSPS, BW = 10 kHz)  
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
14  
13  
12  
11  
Figure 36 shows the timing relationship between SYNCB and  
the SSI port’s CLKOUT and FS signals. SYNCB is an asynchro-  
nous active-low signal that must remain low for at least half an  
input clock period, i.e., 1/(2 × fCLK). CLKOUT remains high  
while FS remains low upon SYNCB going low. CLKOUT will  
become active within one to two output clock periods upon  
SYNCB returning high. FS will reappear several output cycles  
later, depending on the digital filter’s decimation factor and the  
SSIORD setting. Note that for any decimation factor and  
SSIORD setting, this delay is fixed and repeatable. To verify  
proper synchronization, the FS signals of the multiple AD9864  
devices should be monitored.  
24-BIT I/O DATA  
16-BIT I/O DATA  
w/DVGA ENABLED  
10  
9
16-BIT I/O DATA  
8
7
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
SYNCB  
SSI OUTPUT DRIVE STRENGTH SETTING  
CLKOUT  
Figure 35. NF vs. SSI Output Drive Strength  
(VDDx = 3.0 V, FCLK = 18 MSPS, BW = 75 kHz)  
FS  
Table 10 lists the typical output rise/fall times as a function of DS  
for a 10 pF load. Rise/fall times for other capacitor loads can be  
determined by multiplying the typical values presented by a scal-  
ing factor equal to the desired capacitive load divided by 10 pF.  
Figure 36. SYNCB Timing  
INTERFACING TO DSPs  
The AD9864 connects directly to an Analog Devices program-  
mable digital signal processor (DSP). Figure 37 illustrates an  
example with the Blackfin® series of ADSP-2153x processors.  
The Blackfin DSP series of 16-bit products is optimized for  
telecommunications applications with its dynamic power man-  
agement feature, making it well suited for portable radio prod-  
ucts. The code compatible family members share the funda-  
mental core attributes of high performance, low power con-  
sumption, and the ease-of-use advantages of a microcontroller  
instruction set.  
Table 10. Typical Rise/Fall Times ( 25%) with a 10 pF  
Capacitive Load for Each DS Setting  
DS  
Typ (ns)  
13.5  
7.2  
0
1
2
50  
3
3.7  
4
3.2  
5
2.8  
AD9864  
ADSP-2153x  
6
7
2.3  
2.0  
PC  
PE  
PD  
SCK  
SEL  
MOSI  
ISO  
SPI  
SSI  
SPI-PORT  
DOUTBM  
SYNCRONIZATION USING SYNCB  
CLKOUT  
FS  
RSCLK  
RFS  
R
SERIAL  
PORT  
Many applications require the ability to synchronize one or  
more AD9864s in a way that causes the output data to be pre-  
cisely aligned to an external asynchronous signal. For example,  
receiver applications employing diversity often require syn-  
chronization of multiple AD9864s’ digital outputs. Satellite  
communication applications using TDMA methods may  
require synchronization between payload bursts to compensate  
for reference frequency drift and Doppler effects.  
DOUTAD  
Figure 37. Example of AD9864 and ADSP-2153x Interface  
As shown in Figure 37, AD9864’s synchronous serial interface  
(SSI) links the receive data stream to the DSP’s serial port  
(SPORT). For AD9864 setup and register programming, the  
device connects directly to ADSP-2153x’s SPI port. Dedicated  
select lines (SEL) allow the ADSP-2153x to program and read  
back registers of multiple devices using only one SPI port. The  
DSP driver code pertaining to this interface is available on the  
AD9864 Web page.  
SYNCB can be used for this purpose. It is an active-low signal  
that clears the clock counters in both the decimation filter and  
the SSI port. The counters in the clock synthesizers are not reset  
because it is presumed that the CLK signals of multiple chips  
would be connected. SYNCB also resets the modulator, result-  
ing in a large-scale impulse that must propagate through the  
AD9864’s digital filter and SSI data formatting circuitry before  
recovering valid output data. As a result, data samples unaf-  
fected by this SYNCB induced impulse can be recovered 12  
output data samples after SYNCB goes high (independent of  
the decimation factor).  
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 44  
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
input. A complete PLL can be implemented if the synthesizer is used  
with an external loop filter and voltage controlled oscillator (VCO).  
POWER CONTROL  
To allow power consumption to be minimized, the AD9864  
possesses numerous SPI programmable power-down and bias  
control bits. The AD9864 powers up with all of its functional  
blocks placed into a standby state, i.e., STBY register default is  
0xFF. Each major block may then be powered up by writing a 0  
to the appropriate bit of the STBY register. This scheme pro-  
vides the greatest flexibility for configuring the IC to a specific  
application as well as for tailoring the IC’s power-down and  
wake-up characteristics. Table 11 summarizes the function of  
each of the STBY bits. Note that when all the blocks are in  
standby, the master reference circuit is also put into standby,  
and thus the current is reduced further by 0.4 mA.  
The A, B, and R counters can be programmed via the following  
registers: LOA, LOB, and LOR. The charge pump output  
current is programmable via the LOI register from 0.625 mA to  
5.0 mA using the equation  
IPUMP =  
(
LOI +1  
)
×0.625 mA  
(2)  
An on-chip fast acquire function (enabled by the LOF bit)  
automatically increases the output current for faster settling  
during channel changes. The synthesizer may also be disabled  
using the LO standby bit located in the STBY register.  
TO EXTERNAL  
LOOP  
CHARGE  
Table 11. Standby Control Bits  
fREF  
PHASE/  
fREF  
FILTER  
Current  
Reduction  
(mA)1  
Wake-Up  
Time (ms)  
REF  
÷R  
FREQUENCY  
DETECTOR  
BUFFER  
PUMP  
STBY Bit  
7: REF  
Effect  
LOR  
fLO  
FAST  
Voltage reference OFF;  
all biasing shut down.  
0.6  
<0.1 (CREF  
= 4.7 nF)  
ACQUIRE  
LOA, LOB  
6: LO  
LO synthesizer OFF,  
IOUTL three-state.  
Clock oscillator OFF.  
Clock synthesizer OFF,  
IOUTC three-state. Clock  
buffer OFF if ADC is OFF.  
1.2  
Note 2  
fLO  
A. B  
COUNTERS  
LO  
FROM  
VCO  
÷8/9  
BUFFER  
5: CKO  
4: CK  
1.1  
1.3  
Note 2  
Note 2  
Figure 38. LO Synthesizer  
The LO (and CLK) synthesizer works in the following manner.  
The externally supplied reference frequency, fREF, is buffered  
and divided by the value held in the R counter. The internal fREF  
is then compared to a divided version of the VCO frequency,  
fLO. The phase/frequency detector provides UP and DOWN  
pulses whose widths vary, depending upon the difference in  
phase and frequency of the detector’s input signals. The  
UP/DOWN pulses control the charge pump, making current  
available to charge the external low-pass loop filter when there  
is a discrepancy between the inputs of the PFD. The output of  
the low-pass filter feeds an external VCO whose output fre-  
quency, fLO, is driven such that its divided down version, fLO,  
matches that of fREF, thus closing the feedback loop.  
3: GC  
Gain control DAC OFF.  
GCP and GCN three-  
state.  
LNA and Mizer OFF.  
CXVM, CXVL, and CXIF  
three-state.  
0.2  
8.2  
Depends  
on CGC  
2: LNAMX  
<2.2  
1: Unused  
0: ADC  
ADC OFF; Clock buffer  
OFF if CLK synthesizer  
OFF; VCM three-state;  
clock to the digital filter  
halted; digital outputs  
static.  
9.2  
<0.1  
NOTES  
1When all blocks are in standby, the master reference circuit is also put into  
standby, and thus the current is further reduced by 0.4 mA.  
The synthesized frequency is related to the reference frequency  
and the LO register contents as follows:  
2Wake-up time is dependent on programming and/or external components.  
fLO  
=
(
8×LOB + LOA  
)
/LOR× fREF  
(3)  
LO SYNTHESIZER  
The LO synthesizer shown in Figure 38 is a fully programmable  
phase-locked loop (PLL) capable of 6.25 kHz resolution at  
input frequencies up to 300 MHz and reference clocks of up to  
25 MHz. It consists of a low noise digital phase-frequency  
detector (PFD), a variable output current charge pump (CP), a  
14-bit reference divider, programmable A and B counters, and  
a dual-modulus 8/9 prescaler.  
Note that the minimum allowable value in the LOB register is 3  
and its value must always be greater than that loaded into LOA.  
An example may help illustrate how the values of LOA, LOB, and  
LOR can be selected. Consider an application employing a 13  
MHz crystal oscillator, i.e., fREF = 13 MHz, with the requirement  
that fREF = 100 kHz and fLO = 143 MHz, i.e., high side injection  
with fIF = 140.75 MHz and fCLK = 18 MSPS. LOR is selected to be  
130 such that fREF = 100 kHz. The N-divider factor is 1430, which  
can be realized by selecting LOB = 178 and LOA = 6.  
The A (3-bit) and B (13-bit) counters, in conjunction with the  
dual 8/9 modulus prescaler, implement an N divider with N = 8  
× B + A. In addition, the 14-bit reference counter (R Counter)  
allows selectable input reference frequencies, fREF, at the PFD  
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
The stability, phase noise, spur performance, and transient  
response of the AD9864’s LO (and CLK) synthesizers are  
determined by the external loop filter, the VCO, the N-divide  
factor, and the reference frequency, fREF. A good overview of the  
theory and practical implementation of PLL synthesizers (fea-  
tured as a three-part series in Analog Dialogue) can be found  
on the Analog Devices website. Also, a free software copy of the  
Analog Devices’ ADIsimPLL, a PLL synthesizer simulation  
tool, is available at www.analog.com. Note that the ADF4112  
model can be used as a close approximation to the AD9864’s  
LO synthesizer when using this software tool.  
is 3I0, and so forth, up to eight times the minimum output cur-  
rent. If the nominal charge pump current is more than the  
minimum value, i.e., LOI > 0, the preceding rule is only applied  
if it results in an increase in the instantaneous charge pump  
current. If the charge pump current is set to its lowest value  
(LOI = 0) and the fast acquire circuit is enabled, the instantane-  
ous charge pump current will never fall below 2I0 when the  
pulsewidth is less than T. Thus, the charge pump current when  
fast acquire is enabled is given by  
IPUMP–FA = I0 ×  
[
1 = Max  
(
1,LOI,Pulsewidth/T  
)]  
(4)  
The recommended setting for LOFA is LOR/16. Choosing a  
larger value for LOFA will increase T. Thus, for a given phase  
difference between the LO input and the fREF input, the instan-  
taneous charge pump current will be less than that available for  
a LOFA value of LOR/16. Similarly, a smaller value for LOFA  
will decrease T, making more current available for the same  
phase difference. In other words, a smaller value of LOFA will  
enable the synthesizer to settle faster in response to a frequency  
LOP  
LON  
84kΩ  
LO  
BUFFER  
~VDDL/2  
FREF  
TO MIXER  
LO PORT  
500Ω  
500Ω  
1.75V  
BIAS  
hop than will a large LOFA value. Care must be taken to choose  
a value for LOFA that is large enough (values greater than 4  
recommended) to prevent the loop from oscillating back and  
forth in response to a frequency hop.  
NOTES  
1. ESD DIODE STRUCTURES OMITTED FOR CLARITY.  
2. FREF STBY SWITCHES SHOWN WITH LO SYNTHESIZER ON.  
Figure 39. Equivalent Input of LO and REF Buffers  
Table 12. SPI Registers Associated with LO Synthesizer  
Figure 39 shows the equivalent input structures of the synthe-  
sizers’ LO and REF buffers (excluding the ESD structures). The  
LO input is fed to the LO synthesizer’s buffer as well as the LO  
port of the AD9864’s mixer. Both inputs are self-biasing and  
thus tolerate ac-coupled inputs. The LO input can be driven  
with a single-ended or differential signal. Single-ended dc-  
coupled inputs should ensure sufficient signal swing above and  
below the common-mode bias of the LO and REF buffers (i.e.,  
1.75 V and VDDL/2). Note that the fREF input is slew rate  
dependent and must be driven with input signals exceeding  
7.5 V/µs to ensure proper synthesizer operation. If this condi-  
tion cannot be met, an external logic gate can be inserted prior  
to the fREF input to square up the signal, thus allowing an fREF  
input frequency approaching dc.  
Address  
(Hex)  
Bit Break–  
down  
Default  
Width Value  
Name  
0x00  
0x08  
0x09  
0x0A  
(7:0)  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
(7:5)  
(4:0)  
1
6
8
3
5
0xFF  
0x00  
0x38  
0x5  
0x00  
STBY  
LOR (13:8)  
LOR (7:0)  
LOA  
LOB (12:8)  
0x0B  
0x0C  
(7:0)  
(6)  
(5)  
(4:2)  
(1:0)  
8
0xiD  
LOB(7:0)  
LOF  
LOINV  
LOI  
LOTM  
1
1
3
2
0
0
0
0
0x0D  
0x0E  
(3:0)  
(7:0)  
4
8
0x0  
0x04  
LOFA(13:8)  
LOFA(7:0)  
FAST ACQUIRE MODE  
The fast acquire circuit attempts to boost the output current  
when the phase difference between the divided-down LO, i.e.,  
fLO, and the divided-down reference frequency, i.e., fREF, exceeds  
the threshold determined by the LOFA register. The LOFA  
register specifies a divisor for the fREF signal that determines the  
period (T) of this divided-down clock. This period defines the  
time interval used in the fast acquire algorithm to control the  
charge pump current.  
CLOCK SYNTHESIZER  
The clock synthesizer is a fully programmable integer-N PLL  
capable of 2.2 kHz resolution at clock input frequencies up to  
18 MHz and reference frequencies up to 25 MHz. It is similar  
to the LO synthesizer described in Figure 38 with the following  
exceptions:  
It does not include an 8/9 prescaler nor an A counter.  
Assume for the moment that the nominal charge pump current  
is at its lowest setting, i.e., LOI = 0, and denote this minimum  
current by I0. When the output pulse from the phase compara-  
tor exceeds T, the output current for the next pulse is 2I0. When  
the pulse is wider than 2T, the output current for the next pulse  
It includes a negative-resistance core that, when used in  
conjunction with an external LC tank and varactor, serves  
as the VCO.  
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
The 14-bit reference counter and 13-bit N-divider counter can be  
CLK source or VCO is used, the clock oscillator must be  
programmed via registers CKR and CKN. The clock frequency,  
disabled via the CKO standby bit.  
f
CLK, is related to the reference frequency by the equation  
The phase noise performance of the clock synthesizer is  
dependent on several factors, including the CLK oscillator IBIAS  
setting, charge pump setting, loop filter component values, and  
internal fREF setting. Figure 41 and Figure 42 show how the  
measured phase noise attributed to the clock synthesizer varies  
(relative to an external fCLK) as a function of the IBIAS setting and  
charge pump setting for a –31 dBm IFIN signal at 73.35 MHz  
with an external LO signal at 71.1 MHz. Figure 41 shows that  
the optimum phase noise is achieved with the highest IBIAS  
(CKO) setting, while Figure 42 shows that the higher charge  
pump values provide the optimum performance for the given  
loop filter configuration. The AD9864 clock synthesizer and  
oscillator were set up to provide an fCLK of 18 MHz from an  
external fREF of 16.8 MHz. The following external component  
values were selected for the synthesizer: RF = 390 Ω, RD = 2 kΩ,  
CZ = 0.68 µF, CP = 0.1 µF, COSC = 91 pF, LOSC = 1.2 µH, and CVAR  
= Toshiba 1SV228 Varactor.  
fCLK CKN /CKR× fREF  
=
(
)
(5)  
(6)  
The charge pump current is programmable via the CKI register  
from 0.625 mA to 5.0 mA using the equation  
IPUMP  
= CKI +1 ×0.625 mA  
( )  
The fast acquire subcircuit of the charge pump is controlled by  
the CKFA register in the same manner the LO synthesizer is  
controlled by the LOFA register. An on-chip lock detect func-  
tion (enabled by the CKF bit) automatically increases the out-  
put current for faster settling during channel changes. The syn-  
thesizer may also be disabled using the CK standby bit located  
in the STBY register.  
VDDC = 3.0V  
LOOP  
FILTER  
R
BIAS  
C
OSC  
L
OSC  
R
D
0
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
R
0.1µF  
C
F
P
C
VAR  
C
Z
15  
IOUTC  
19  
20  
CLKN  
CLKP  
AD9864  
V
f
= VDDC – R  
> 1/{2π × (L  
× I  
> 1.6V  
CM  
OSC  
BIAS  
OSC  
BIAS  
1/2  
)) }  
CKO = 2  
CKO = 3  
× (C  
||C  
VARACTOR  
OSC  
–90  
CK0 = 0  
CKO = 1  
–100  
–110  
–120  
–130  
–140  
EXT CLK  
CLK OSC. BIAS  
I
= 0.15mA, 0.25mA,  
BIAS  
0.40mA, OR 0.65mA  
2
0
–25 –20 –15 –10 –5  
5
10  
15  
20  
25  
Figure 40. External Loop Filter, Varactor, and LC Tank  
Are Required to Realize a Complete Clock Synthesizer  
FREQUENCY OFFSET (kHz)  
Figure 41. CLK Phase Noise vs. IBIAS Setting (CKO) (IF = 73.35 MHz,  
IF = 71.1 MHz, IFIN = –31 dBm, fCLK = 18 MHz, fREF = 16.8 MHz)  
(CLK SYN Settings: CKI = 7, CLR = 56, and CLN = 60 with fREF = 300 kHz)  
The AD9864 clock synthesizer circuitry includes a negative  
resistance core so that only an external LC tank circuit with a  
varactor is needed to realize a voltage controlled clock oscillator  
(VCO). Figure 40 shows the external components required to  
complete the clock synthesizer along with the equivalent input  
circuitry of the CLK input. The resonant frequency of the VCO  
is approximately determined by LOSC and the series equivalent  
capacitance of COSC and CVAR. As a result, LOSC, COSC, and CVAR  
0
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
should be selected to provide a sufficient tuning range to ensure  
proper locking of the clock synthesizer.  
–80  
–90  
CP = 0  
CP = 2  
CP = 4  
CP = 6  
EXT CLK  
–100  
–110  
–120  
–130  
–140  
The bias, IBIAS, of the negative-resistance core has four pro-  
grammable settings. Lower equivalent Q of the LC tank circuit  
may require a higher bias setting of the negative-resistance core  
to ensure proper oscillation. RBIAS should be selected so the  
common-mode voltage at CLKP and CLKN is approximately  
1.6 V. The synthesizer may be disabled via the CK standby bit  
to allow the user to employ an external synthesizer and/or VCO  
in place of those resident on the IC. Note that if an external  
–25 –20 –15 –10  
5
0
5
10  
15  
20  
25  
FREQUENCY OFFSET (kHz)  
Figure 42. CLK Phase Noise vs. IBIAS Setting (CKO) (IF = 73.35 MHz,  
IF = 71.1 MHz, IFIN = –31 dBm, fCLK = 18 MHz, fREF = 16.8 MHz) (CLK SYN  
Settings: CKO Bias = 3, CKR = 56, and CKN = 60 with fREF = 300 kHz  
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
600  
550  
500  
Table 13. SPI Registers Associated with CLK Synthesizer  
Address  
(Hex)  
Bit  
Default  
Breakdown Width Value  
Name  
0x00  
0x01  
0x10  
0x11  
0x12  
0x13  
0x14  
(7:0)  
(3:2)  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
(4:0)  
(7:0)  
(6)  
(5)  
(4:2)  
(1:0)  
8
2
6
8
5
8
1
1
3
1
0xFF  
0
00  
0x38  
0x00  
0x3C  
0
0
0
0
STBY  
CKOB  
CKR (13:8)  
CKR (7:0)  
CKN (12:8)  
CKN (7:0)  
CKF  
CKINV  
CKI  
450  
400  
350  
300  
CKTM  
0
50  
100  
150  
200  
250  
300  
350  
0x15  
0x16  
(3:0)  
(7:0)  
4
8
0x0  
0x04  
CKFA (13:8)  
CKFA (7:0)  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 44. The Shunt Input Resistance vs.  
the Frequency of the AD9864’s IF1 Input  
2.5  
2.0  
1.5  
1.0  
0.5  
IF LNA/MIXER  
The AD9864 contains a single-ended LNA followed by a Gil-  
bert-type active mixer, shown in Figure 43 with the required  
external components. The LNA uses negative shunt feedback to  
set its input impedance at the IFIN pin, thus making it depend-  
ent on the input frequency. It can be modeled as approximately  
370 Ω||1.4 pF ( 20%) below 100 MHz. Figure 44 and Figure 45  
show the equivalent input impedance versus frequency charac-  
teristics of the AD9864. The increase in shunt resistance versus  
frequency can be attributed to the reduction in bandwidth, thus  
the amount of negative feedback of the LNA. Note that the  
input signal into IFIN should be ac-coupled via a 10 nF capaci-  
tor since the LNA input is self-biasing.  
0
0
50  
100  
150  
200  
250  
300  
350  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 45. The Shunt Capacitance vs. the Frequency of the AD9864’s IF1 Input  
2.7V TO 3.6V  
The mixer’s differential LO port is driven by the LO buffer  
stage shown in Figure 43, which can be driven single-ended or  
differential. Since it is self-biasing, the LO signal level can be  
ac-coupled and range from 0.3 V p-p to 1.0 V p-p with negligi-  
ble effect on performance. The mixer’s open-collector outputs,  
MXOP and MXON, drive an external resonant tank consisting  
of a differential LC network tuned to the IF of the band-pass  
Σ-∆ ADC, i.e., fIF2_ADC = fCLK/8. The two inductors provide a dc  
bias path for the mixer core via a series resistor of 50 Ω, which  
is included to dampen the common-mode response. The  
mixer’s output must be ac-coupled to the input of the band-  
pass Σ-∆ ADC, IF2P, and IF2N via two 100 pF capacitors to  
ensure proper tuning of the LC center frequency.  
50Ω  
L
L
C
VDDI  
MXOP  
MXON  
R
BIAS  
CXVL  
LO INPUT =  
0.3V p-p TO  
1.0V p-p  
R
GAIN  
MULTI-TANH  
V–I STAGE  
CXIF  
R
F
The external differential LC tank forms the resonant element for  
the first resonator of the band-pass Σ-∆ modulator, and so must  
be tuned to the fCLK/8center frequency of the modulator. The  
inductors should be chosen such that their impedance at fCLK/8is  
about 140, i.e., L = 180/fCLK. An accuracy of 20% is considered to  
be adequate. For example, at fCLK = 18 MHz, L = 10 µH is a good  
choice. Once the inductors have been selected, the required tank  
capacitance may be calculated using the relation  
CXVM  
IFIN  
DC SERVO  
LOOP  
Figure 43. Simplified Schematic of AD9864’s LNA/Mixer  
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 44  
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
EXTERNAL  
LC  
fCLK /8 =1/  
[
2×π×  
(
2L×C  
)
]
For example, at fCLK = 18 MHz and L = 10 µH, a capacitance of  
250 pF is needed. However, in order to accommodate an induc-  
tor tolerance of 10%, the tank capacitance must be adjustable  
from 227 pF to 278 pF. Selecting an external capacitor of 180 pF  
ensures that even with a 10% tolerance and stray capacitances  
as high as 30 pF, the total capacitance will be less than the  
minimum value needed by the tank. Extra capacitance is sup-  
plied by the AD9864’s on-chip programmable capacitor array.  
Since the programming range of the capacitor array is at least  
160 pF, the AD9864 has plenty of range to make up for the tol-  
erances of low cost external components. Note that if fCLK is  
increased by a factor of 1.44 MHz to 26 MHz so that fCLK/8  
becomes 3.25 MHz, reducing L and C by approximately the  
same factor (i.e., L = 6.9 µH and C = 120 pF) still satisfies the  
requirements stated above.  
IF2P  
f
= 13 MSPS TO 26 MSPS  
CLK  
RC  
SC  
NINE-  
LEVEL  
FLASH  
RESO-  
NATOR  
RESO-  
NATOR  
IF2N  
MXON  
MXOP  
TO DIGITAL  
FILTER  
ESL  
DAC1  
MIXER  
OUTPUT  
GAIN  
CONTROL  
Figure 46. Equivalent Circuit of Sixth Order Band-Pass Σ-∆ Modulator  
Figure 47 shows the measured power spectral density measured at  
the output of the undecimated band-pass Σ-∆ modulator. Note  
that the wide dynamic range achieved at the center frequency,  
A 16 dB step attenuator is also included within the LNA/mixer  
circuitry to prevent large signals (i.e., > –18 dBm) from over-  
driving the Σ-∆ modulator. In such instances, the Σ-∆ modula-  
tor will become unstable, thus severely desensitizing the  
receiver. The 16 dB step attenuator can be invoked by setting  
the ATTEN bit (Register 0x03, Bit 7), causing the mixer gain to  
be reduced by 16 dB. The 16 dB step attenuator could be used  
in applications in which a potential target or blocker signal  
could exceed the IF input clip point. Although the LNA will be  
driven into compression, it may still be possible to recover the  
desired signal if it is FM. Refer to Table 14 to see the gain com-  
pression characteristics of the LNA and mixer with the 16 dB  
attenuator enabled.  
f
CLK/8, is achieved once the LC and RC resonators of the Σ-∆  
modulator have been successfully tuned. The out-of-band noise is  
removed by the decimation filters following quadrature mixer.  
0
–2dBFS OUTPUT  
fCLK = 18MHz  
–10  
NBW = 3.3kHz  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
Table 14. SPI Registers Associated with LNA/Mixer  
Address  
(Hex)  
Bit  
Default  
Value  
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Breakdown Width  
Name  
STBY  
ATTEN  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
0x00  
0x03  
(7:0)  
(7)  
8
1
0xFF  
0
Figure 47. Measured Undecimated Spectral Output of Σ-∆  
Modulator ADC with fCLK = 18 MSPS and Noise Bandwidth of 3.3 kHz  
The signal transfer function of the AD9864 possesses inherent  
anti-alias filtering by virtue of the continuous-time portions of  
the loop filter in the band-pass Σ-∆ modulator. Figure 48 illus-  
trates this property by plotting the nominal signal transfer  
function of the ADC for frequencies up to 2fCLK. The notches  
that naturally occur for all frequencies that alias to the fCLK/8  
pass band are clearly visible. Even at the widest bandwidth set-  
ting, the notches are deep enough to provide greater than 80 dB  
of alias protection. Thus, the wideband IF filtering require-  
ments preceding the AD9864 will be determined mostly by the  
mixer’s image band, which is offset from the desired IF input  
frequency by fCLK/4 (i.e., 2 × fCLK/8) rather than any aliasing  
associated with the ADC.  
BAND-PASS ∑-∆ ADC  
The ADC of the AD9864 is shown in Figure 46. The ADC con-  
tains a sixth order multibit band-pass Σ-∆ modulator that  
achieves very high instantaneous dynamic range over a narrow  
frequency band. The loop filter of the band-pass Σ-∆ modulator  
consists of two continuous-time resonators followed by a discrete  
time resonator, with each resonator stage contributing a pair of  
complex poles. The first resonator is an external LC tank, while  
the second is an on-chip active RC filter. The output of the LC  
resonator is ac-coupled to the second resonator input via 100 pF  
capacitors. The center frequencies of these two continuous-time  
resonators must be tuned to fCLK/8for the ADC to function prop-  
erly. The center frequency of the discrete-time resonator auto-  
matically scales with fCLK, thus no tuning is required.  
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 44  
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
0
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
When tuning the LC tank, the sampling clock frequency must  
be stable and the LNA/mixer, LO synthesizer, and ADC must  
all be placed in standby. Large LO and IF signals present at the  
inputs of the AD9864 can corrupt the calibration. These signals  
should be minimized or disabled during the calibration  
sequence. Tuning is triggered when the ADC is taken out of  
standby if the TUNE_LC bit of Register 0x1C has been set. This  
bit will clear when the tuning operation is complete (less than  
6 ms). The tuning codes can be read from the 3-bit CAPL1  
(0x1D) and the 6-bit CAPL0 (0x1E) registers.  
NOTCH AT ALL ALIAS FREQUENCIES  
In a similar manner, tuning of the RC resonator is activated if  
the TUNE_RC bit of Register 0x1C is set when the ADC is  
taken out of standby. This bit will clear when tuning is com-  
plete. The tuning code can be read from the CAPR (0x1F)  
register. Setting both the TUNE_LC and TUNE_RC bits tunes  
the LC tank and the active RC resonator in succession. During  
tuning, the ADC is not operational and neither data nor a clock  
is available from the SSI port. Table 15 lists the recommended  
sequence of the SPI commands for tuning the ADC, and  
Table 16 lists all of the SPI registers associated with band-pass  
Σ-∆ ADC.  
–80  
0
0.5  
1.0  
1.5  
2.0  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fOUT  
)
Figure 48. Signal Transfer Function of the Band-Pass Σ-∆  
Modulator from 0 fCLK to 2fCLK  
Figure 49 shows the nominal signal transfer function magni-  
tude for frequencies near the fCLK/8 pass band. The width of the  
pass band determines the transfer function droop, but even at  
the lowest oversampling ratio (48) where the pass band edges  
are at fCLK/192 ( 0.005 fCLK), the gain variation is less than  
0.5 dB. Note that the amount of attenuation offered by the sig-  
nal transfer function near fCLK/8 should also be considered when  
determining the narrow-band IF filtering requirements preced-  
ing the AD9864.  
Table 15. Tuning Sequence  
Address (Hex) Value  
Comments  
0x00  
0x45  
LO synthesizer, LNA/mixer, and  
ADC are placed in standby.*  
0x1C  
0x03  
Set TUNE_LC and TUNE_RC. Wait  
for CLK to stabilize if CLK  
synthesizer used.  
0
0x00  
0x44  
Take the ADC out of standby. Wait  
for 0x1C to clear (<6 ms).  
LNA/mixer can now be taken out  
of standby  
–5  
*If external CLK VCO or source used, the CLK oscillator must also be disabled.  
Large IF or LO signals can corrupt the calibration; these signals should be  
disabled during the calibration sequence.  
–10  
–15  
–20  
Table 16. SPI Registers Associated with Band-Pass Σ-∆ ADC  
Address  
(Hex)  
Default  
Width Value  
Value  
Name  
–0.10  
–0.05  
0
0.05  
0.10  
0x00  
0x1C  
(7:0)  
(1)  
(0)  
8
1
1
0xFF  
0
0
STBY  
TUNE_LC  
TUNE_RC  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fCLK  
)
Figure 49. Magnitude of the ADC’s Signal Transfer Function near fCLK/8  
0x1D  
0x1E  
0x1F  
(2:0)  
(5:0)  
(7:0)  
3
6
8
0
0x00  
0x00  
CAPL1 (2:0)  
CAPL1 (5:0)  
CAPR  
Tuning of the Σ-∆ modulators two continuous-time resonators  
is essential in realizing the ADCs full dynamic range and must  
be performed upon system startup. To facilitate tuning of the  
LC tank, a capacitor array is internally connected to the MXOP  
and MXON pins. The capacitance of this array is programmable  
from 0 pF to 200 pF 20% and can be programmed either  
automatically or manually via the SPI port. The capacitors of  
the active RC resonator are similarly programmable. Note that  
the AD9864 can be placed in and out of its standby mode with-  
out retuning since the tuning codes are stored in the SPI Registers.  
Once the AD9864 has been tuned, the noise figure degradation  
attributed solely to the temperature drift of the LC and RC  
resonators is minimal. Since the drift of the RC resonator is  
actually negligible compared to that of the LC resonator, the  
external L and C components’ temperature drift characteristics  
tend to dominate. Figure 50 shows the degradation in noise  
figure as the product of the LC value is allowed to vary from  
–12.5% to +12.5%. Note that the noise figure remains relatively  
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
constant over a 3.5% range (i.e., 35,000 ppm), suggesting  
that most applications will not be required to retune over the  
operating temperature range.  
Note that signals falling around frequency offsets that are odd  
integer multiples of fOUT/2 (i.e., 10 kHz, 30 kHz, and 50 kHz)  
will fall back into the transition band of the digital filter.  
12  
0
–20  
BW = 75kHz  
11  
±5.0kHz PASS BAND  
FOLD-  
ING  
–40  
–60  
POINT  
–88dB  
–88dB  
10  
–101dB  
BW = 30kHz  
–103dB  
–80  
9
8
BW = 10kHz  
–10  
–100  
–120  
–15  
–5  
0
5
10  
15  
0
10  
20  
30 40  
50  
60  
70  
80  
90  
100  
FREQUENCY (kHz)  
LC ERROR (%)  
Figure 52. Decimation Filter Frequency Response for  
fOUT = 20 kSPS (fCLK = 18 MHz, OSR = 900)  
Figure 50. Typical Noise Figure Degradation from L and C  
Component Drift (fCLK = 18 MSPS, fIF = 73.3501 MHz)  
Figure 53 shows the response of the decimation filter with a  
decimation factor of 48 and a sampling clock rate of 26 MHz.  
The alias attenuation is at least 94 dB and occurs for frequen-  
cies at the edges of the fourth alias band. The difference  
between the alias attenuation characteristics of Figure 52 and  
those of Figure 53 is due to the fact that the third decimation  
stage decimates by a factor of 5 for Figure 52 compared with a  
factor of 4 for Figure 53.  
DECIMATION FILTER  
The decimation filter shown in Figure 51 consists of an fCLK/8  
complex mixer and a cascade of three linear phase FIR filters:  
DEC1, DEC2, and DEC3. DEC1 downsamples by a factor of 12  
using a fourth order comb filter. DEC2 also uses a fourth order  
comb filter, but its decimation factor is set by the M field of  
Register 0x07. DEC3 is either a decimate-by-5 FIR filter or a  
decimate-by-4 FIR filter, depending on the value of the K bit  
within Register 0x07. Thus, the composite decimation factor  
can be set to either 60 × M or 48 × M for K equal to 0 or 1,  
respectively.  
0
–20  
±
135.466kHz PASS BAND  
The output data rate (fOUT) is equal to the modulator clock fre-  
quency (fCLK) divided by the digital filter’s decimation factor.  
Due to the transition region associated with the decimation  
filter’s frequency response, the decimation factor must be  
selected such that fOUT is equal to or greater than twice the sig-  
nal bandwidth. This ensures low amplitude ripple in the pass  
band along with the ability to provide further application-  
specific digital filtering prior to demodulation.  
–40  
–60  
–98dB  
0.5  
–80  
–94dB  
–115dB  
1.0  
–100  
–120  
M
K
COS  
0
1.5  
2.0  
2.5  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
I
DEC1  
4
FILTER  
DEC2  
4
FILTER  
DEC3  
COMPLEX  
DATA  
FROM Σ-∆  
SIN  
Figure 53. Decimation Filter Frequency Response for  
OUT = 541.666 kSPS (fCLK = 26 MHz, OSR = 48)  
4
OR  
5
DATA TO  
SSI PORT  
FIR  
FILTER  
SINC  
SINC  
M + 1  
12  
MODULATOR  
f
Q
Figure 54 and Figure 55 show expanded views of the pass band  
for the two possible configurations of the third decimation fil-  
ter. When decimating by 60n (K = 0), the pass-band gain varia-  
tion is 1.2 dB; when decimating by 48n (K = 1), the pass-band  
gain variation is 0.9 dB. Normalization of full scale at band  
center is accurate to within 0.14 dB across all decimation  
modes. Figure 56 and Figure 57 show the folded frequency  
response of the decimator for K = 0 and K = 1, respectively.  
Figure 51. Decimation Filter Architecture  
Figure 52 shows the response of the decimation filter at a deci-  
mation factor of 900 (K = 0, M = 14) and a sampling clock fre-  
quency of 18 MHz. In this example, the output data rate (fOUT  
is 20 kSPS, with a usable complex signal bandwidth of 10 kHz  
centered around dc. As this figure shows, the first and second  
alias bands (occurring at even integer multiples of fOUT/2) have  
the least attenuation but provide at least 88 dB of attenuation.  
)
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 44  
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
3
0
–20  
2
PASS-BAND GAIN FREQUENCY = 1.2dB  
1
–40  
0
–60  
–1  
–2  
–80  
MIN ALIAS ATTN = 97.2dB  
–100  
–120  
–3  
0
0.250  
0
0.50  
0.125  
0.25  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fOUT  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fOUT  
)
)
Figure 54. Pass-Band Frequency Response of the Decimator for K = 0  
Figure 57. Folded Decimator Frequency Response for K = 1  
3
VARIABLE GAIN AMPLIFIER OPERATION WITH  
AUTOMATIC GAIN CONTROL  
2
The AD9864 contains both a variable gain amplifier (VGA) and a  
digital VGA (DVGA) along with all of the necessary signal estimation  
and control circuitry required to implement automatic gain control  
(AGC), as shown in Figure 58. The AGC control circuitry provides a  
high degree of programmability, allowing users to optimize the AGC  
response as well as the AD9864’s dynamic range for a given applica-  
tion. The VGA is programmable over a 12 dB range and implemented  
within the ADC by adjusting its full-scale reference level. Increasing the  
ADC’s full scale is equivalent to attenuating the signal. An additional  
12 dB of digital gain range is achieved by scaling the output of the  
decimation filter in the DVGA. Note that a slight increase in the supply  
current (i.e., 0.67 mA) is drawn from VDDI and VDDF as the VGA  
changes from 0 dB to 12 dB attenuation.  
PASS-BAND GAIN VARIATION = 0.9dB  
1
0
–1  
–2  
–3  
0.250  
0
0.125  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fOUT  
)
Figure 55. Pass-Band Frequency Response of the Decimator for K = 1  
0
The purpose of the VGA is to extend the usable dynamic range of the  
AD9864 by allowing the ADC to digitize a desired signal over a large  
input power range as well as recover a low level signal in the presence  
of larger unfiltered interferers without saturating or clipping the ADC.  
The DVGA is most useful in extending the dynamic range in narrow-  
band applications requiring a 16-bit I and Q data format. In these  
applications, quantization noise resulting from internal truncation to  
16 bits as well as external 16-bit fixed point post processing can  
degrade the AD9864’s effective noise figure by 1 dB or more.  
–20  
–40  
–60  
–80  
–100  
–120  
MIN ALIAS ATTN = 87.7dB  
The DVGA is enabled by writing a 1 to the AGCV field. The VGA  
(and the DVGA) can operate in either a user controlled variable gain  
mode or automatic gain control (AGC) mode. It is worth noting that  
the VGA imparts negligible phase error upon the desired signal as its  
gain is varied over a 12 dB range. This is due to the bandwidth of the  
VGA being far greater than the down converted desired signal (cen-  
tered about fCLK/8) and remaining relatively independent of gain  
setting. As a result, phase modulated signals should experience mini-  
mal phase error as the AGC varies the VGA gain while tracking an  
interferer or the desired signal under fading conditions. Note that the  
envelope of the signal will still be affected by the AGC settings.  
0.50  
0
0.25  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY (RELATIVE TO fOUT  
)
Figure 56. Folded Decimator Frequency Response for K = 0  
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 44  
 
AD9864  
I/Q DATA  
TO SSI  
DEC2  
AND  
Σ-ADC  
DEC1  
DVGA  
FS  
÷12  
DEC3  
AGCR  
REF LEVEL  
I
I
+
+
Q
Q
SELECT  
LARGER  
1
K
+
–1  
(1 – Z  
)
AGCA/AGCD  
SCALING  
AGCV  
SETTING  
VGA  
DAC  
RSSI DATA  
TO SSI  
GCP  
C
DAC  
Figure 58. Functional Block Diagram of VGA and AGC  
ing at the gain control pin (GCP). For applications implement-  
ing automatic gain control, the DAC’s output resistance can be  
reduced by a factor of 9 to decrease the attack time of the AGC  
response for faster signal acquisition. An external capacitor,  
CDAC, from GCP to analog ground is required to smooth the  
DAC’s output each time it updates as well as to filter wideband  
noise. Note that CDAC, in combination with the DAC’s pro-  
grammable output resistance, sets the –3 dB bandwidth and  
time constant associated with this RC network.  
VARIABLE GAIN CONTROL  
The variable gain control is enabled by setting the AGCR field  
of Register 0x06 to 0. In this mode, the gain of the VGA (and  
the DVGA) can be adjusted by writing to the 16-bit AGCG  
register. The maximum update rate of the AGCG register via  
the SPI port is fCLK/240. The MSB of this register is the bit that  
enables 16 dB of attenuation in the mixer. This feature allows  
the AD9864 to cope with large level signals beyond the VGA’s  
range (i.e., > –18 dBm at LNA input) to prevent overloading of  
the ADC.  
A linear estimate of the received signal strength is performed at  
the output of the first decimation stage (DEC1) and output of  
the DVGA (if enabled), as discussed in the AGC section. This  
data is available as a 6-bit RSSI field within an SSI frame with  
60 corresponding to a full-scale signal for a given AGC attenua-  
tion setting. The RSSI field is updated at fCLK/60 and can be used  
with the 8-bit attenuation field (or AGCG attenuation setting)  
to determine the absolute signal strength.  
The lower 15 bits specify the attenuation in the remainder of  
the signal path. If the DVGA is enabled, the attenuation range  
is from –12 dB to +12 dB since the DVGA provides 12 dB of  
digital gain. In this case, all 15 bits are significant. However,  
with the DVGA disabled, the attenuation range extends from  
0 dB to 12 dB and only the lower 14 bits are useful. Figure 59  
shows the relationship between the amount of attenuation and  
the AGC register setting for both cases.  
The accuracy of the mean RSSI reading (relative to the IF input  
power) depends on the input signal’s frequency offset relative  
to the IF frequency since both DEC1 filter’s response as well as  
the ADC’s signal transfer function attenuate the mixer’s  
downconverted signal level centered at fCLK/8. As a result, the  
estimated signal strength of input signals falling within prox-  
imity to the IF is reported accurately, while those signals at  
increasingly higher frequency offsets incur larger measurement  
errors. Figure 60 shows the normalized error of the RSSI read-  
ing as a function of the frequency offset from the IF frequency.  
Note that the significance of this error becomes apparent when  
determining the maximum input interferer (or blocker) levels  
with the AGC enabled.  
12  
ONLY  
VGA ENABLED  
VGA  
6
0
RANGE  
DVGA AND  
VGA ENABLED  
DVGA  
–6  
RANGE  
–12  
0000  
1FFF  
3FFF  
AGCG SETTING (HEX)  
5FFF  
7FFF  
Figure 59. AGC Gain Range Characteristics vs. AGCG Register  
Setting with and without DVGA Enabled  
Referring to Figure 58, the gain of the VGA is set by an 8-bit  
control DAC that provides a control signal to the VGA appear-  
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
0
Signal estimation after the first decimation stage allows the  
AGC to cope with out-of-band interferers and in-band signals  
that could otherwise overload the ADC. Signal estimation after  
the DVGA allows the AGC to minimize the effects of the 16-bit  
truncation noise.  
–3  
–6  
When the estimated signal level falls within the range of the  
AGC, the AGC loop adjusts the VGA (or DVGA) attenuation  
setting so that the estimated signal level is equal to the pro-  
grammed level specified in the AGCR field. The absolute signal  
strength can be determined from the contents of the ATTN and  
RSSI field that is available in the SSI data frame when properly  
configured. Within this AGC tracking range, the 6-bit value in  
the RSSI field remains constant while the 8-bit ATTN field var-  
ies according to the VGA/DVGA setting. Note that the ATTN  
value is based on the 8 MSB contained in the AGCG field of  
Registers 0x03 and 0x04.  
–9  
–12  
–15  
–18  
0
0.01  
0.02  
0.03  
0.04  
fIF) fCLK)  
0.05  
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY OFFSET ((fIN  
Figure 60. Normalized RSSI Error vs. Normalized IF Frequency Offset  
AUTOMATIC GAIN CONTROL (AGC)  
A description of the AGC control algorithm and the user  
adjustable parameters follows. First, consider the case in which  
the in-band target signal is bigger than all out-of-band interfer-  
ers and the DVGA is disabled. With the DVGA disabled, a  
control loop based only on the target signal power measured  
after DEC1 is used to control the VGA gain, and the target  
signal will be tracked to the programmed reference level. If the  
signal is too large, the attenuation is increased with a propor-  
tionality constant determined by the AGCA setting. Large  
AGCA values result in large gain changes, thus rapid tracking  
of changes in signal strength. If the target signal is too small  
relative to the reference level, the attenuation is reduced; but  
now the proportionality constant is determined by both the  
AGCA and AGCD settings. The AGCD value is effectively  
subtracted from AGCA, so a large AGCD results in smaller  
gain changes and thus slower tracking of fading signals.  
The gain of the VGA (and DVGA) is automatically adjusted  
when the AGC is enabled via the AGCR field of Register 0x06.  
In this mode, the gain of the VGA is continuously updated at  
f
CLK/60 in an attempt to ensure that the maximum analog signal  
level into the ADC does not exceed the ADC clip level and that  
the rms output level of the ADC is equal to a programmable  
reference level. With the DVGA enabled, the AGC control loop  
also attempts to minimize the effects of 16-bit truncation noise  
prior to the SSI output by continuously adjusting the DVGA’s  
gain to ensure maximum digital gain while not exceeding the  
programmable reference level.  
This programmable level can be set at 3 dB, 6 dB, 9 dB, 12 dB,  
and 15 dB below the ADC saturation (clip) level by writing  
values from 1 to 5 to the 3-bit AGCR field. Note that the ADC  
clip level is defined to be 2 dB below its full scale (i.e., –18 dBm  
at the LNA input for a matched input and maximum attenua-  
tion). If AGCR is 0, automatic gain control is disabled. Since  
clipping of the ADC input will degrade the SNR performance,  
the reference level should also take into consideration the peak-  
to-rms characteristics of the target (or interferer) signals.  
The 4-bit code in the AGCA field sets the raw bandwidth of the  
AGC loop. With AGCA = 0, the AGC loop bandwidth is at its  
minimum of 50 Hz, assuming fCLK = 18 MHz. Each increment  
of AGCA increases the loop bandwidth by a factor of 2; thus  
the maximum bandwidth is 9 kHz. A general expression for the  
attack bandwidth is  
Referring again to Figure 58, the majority of the AGC loop  
operates in the discrete time domain. The sample rate of the  
loop is fCLK/60; therefore, registers associated with the AGC  
algorithm are updated at this rate. The number of overload and  
ADC reset occurrences within the final I/Q update rate of the  
AD9864, as well as the AGC value (8 MSB), can be read from  
the SSI data upon proper configuration.  
AGCA /2  
BWA = 50×  
(
fCLK /18 MHz  
)
×2(  
)Hz  
(8)  
and the corresponding attack time is  
AGCA /2  
)
tATTACK = 2.2/  
(
100×π×2(  
)
= 35/BWA  
(9)  
assuming that the loop dynamics are essentially those of a  
single-pole system.  
The AGC performs digital signal estimation at the output of the  
first decimation stage (DEC1) as well as the DVGA output that  
follows the last decimation stage (DEC3). The rms power of the  
I and Q signal is estimated by the equation  
The 4-bit code in the AGCD field sets the ratio of the attack  
time to the decay time in the amplitude estimation circuitry.  
When AGCD is zero, this ratio is one. Incrementing AGCD  
multiplies the decay time constant by 21/2, allowing a 180:1  
Xest  
[n  
]
= Abs  
(
I
[n  
])  
+ Abs  
(Q  
[n  
])  
(7)  
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
128  
112  
range in the decay time relative to the attack time. The decay  
time may be computed from  
AGCD /2  
)
tDECAY = tATTACK ×2(  
(10)  
96  
80  
64  
Figure 61 shows the AGC response to a 30 Hz pulse-modulated  
IF burst for different AGCA and AGCD settings. The 3-bit  
value in the AGCO field determines the amount of attenuation  
added in response to a reset event in the ADC. Each increment  
in AGCO doubles the weighting factor. At the highest AGCO  
setting, the attenuation will change from 0 dB to 12 dB in  
approximately 10 µs, while at the lowest setting the attenuation  
will change from 0 dB to 12 dB in approximately 1.2 ms. Both  
times assume fCLK = 18 MHz. Figure 62 shows the AGC attack  
time response for different AGCO settings.  
AGCO = 4  
48  
32  
16  
0
AGCD = 0  
0
0.1  
0.7  
0.8 0.9  
0.2  
0.3  
0.6  
TIME (ms)  
1.0  
0.5  
0.4  
Figure 62. AGC Response for Different AGCO Settings with fCLK = 18 MSPS,  
CLKOUT = 300 kSPS, Decimate by 60 and AGCA = AGCD = 0  
f
AGCA = 0  
96  
AGCD = 8  
80  
Lastly, the AGCF bit reduces the DAC source resistance by at  
least a factor of 10. This facilitates fast acquisition by lowering  
the RC time constant that is formed with the external capaci-  
tors connected from the GCP pin to ground (GCN pin). For an  
overshoot-free step response in the AGC loop, the capacitor  
connected from the GCP pin to the GCN ground pin should be  
chosen so that the RC time constant is less than one quarter of  
the raw loop. Specifically  
64  
48  
AGCD = 0  
32  
16  
0
96  
AGCA = 4  
80  
AGCD = 8  
64  
48  
RC <1/  
(
8πBW  
)
(11)  
AGCD = 0  
32  
where R is the resistance between the GCP pin and ground  
(72.5 kΩ 30% if AGCF = 0, < 8 kΩ if AGCF = 1) and BW is  
16  
0
the raw loop bandwidth. Note that with C chosen at this upper  
limit, the loop bandwidth increases by approximately 30%.  
Now consider the case described above but with the DVGA  
enabled to minimize the effects of 16-bit truncation. With the  
DVGA enabled, a control loop based on the larger of the two  
estimated signal levels, i.e., output of DEC1 and DVGA, is used  
to control the DVGA gain. The DVGA multiplies the output of  
the decimation filter by a factor of 1 to 4, i.e., 0 dB to 12 dB.  
When signals are small, the DVGA gain is 4 and the 16-bit out-  
put is extracted from the 24-bit data produced by the decima-  
tion filter by dropping 2 MSB and taking the next 16 bits. As  
signals get larger, the DVGA gain decreases to the point where  
the DVGA gain is 1 and the 16-bit output data is simply the  
16 MSB of the internal 24-bit data. As signals get even larger,  
attenuation is accomplished by the normal method of increas-  
ing the ADC’s full scale.  
AGCA = 8  
96  
80  
AGCD = 8  
64  
48  
32  
AGCD = 0  
16  
0
0
30  
TIME (ms)  
40  
50  
10  
20  
Figure 61. AGC Response for Different AGCA and AGCD Settings with  
fCLK = 18 MSPS, fCLKOUT = 20 kSPS, Decimate by 900, and AGCO = 0  
The extra 12 dB of gain range provided by the DVGA reduces  
the input-referred truncation noise by 12 dB and makes the  
data more tolerant of LSB corruption within the DSP. The price  
paid for this extension to the gain range is that the start of AGC  
action is 12 dB lower and that the AGC loop will be unstable if  
its bandwidth is set too wide. The latter difficulty results from  
the large delay of the decimation filters, DEC2 and DEC3, when  
one implements a large decimation factor. As a result, given an  
Rev. 0 | Page 33 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
0
–3  
option, the use of 24-bit data is preferable to using the DVGA.  
Table 17 indicates which AGCA values are reasonable for  
various decimation factors. The white cells indicate that the  
(decimation factor/AGCA) combination works well; the light gray  
cells indicate ringing and an increase in the AGC settling time; and  
the dark gray cells indicate that the combination results in instability  
or near instability in the AGC loop. Setting AGCF = 1 improves the  
time-domain behavior at the expense of increased spectral spreading.  
–6  
–9  
–12  
Table 17. AGCA Limits if the DVGA Is Enabled  
AGCA  
M
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15  
–15  
0
0.01  
0.02  
0.03  
0.04  
fIF)/fCLK  
0.05  
60  
0
1
4
NORMALIZED FREQUENCY OFFSET = (fIN  
120  
300  
Figure 63. Maximum Interferer (or Blocker) Input Level  
vs. Normalized IF Frequency Offset  
540  
900  
8
E
Table 18. SPI Registers Associated with AGC  
Address  
(Hex)  
Bit  
Default  
Breakdown Width Value  
Name  
0x03  
(7)  
(6:0)  
(7:0)  
(7:4)  
(3:0)  
(7)  
(6:4)  
(3)  
1
7
8
4
4
1
3
1
3
0
0x00  
0x00  
0
ATTEN  
AGCG (14:8)  
AGCG (7:0)  
AGCA  
AGCO  
AGCV  
AGCO  
AGCF  
AGCR  
Finally, consider the case of a strong out-of-band interferer  
(i.e., –18 dBm to –32 dBm for matched IF input) that is larger  
than the target signal and large enough to be tracked by the  
control loop based on the output of the DEC1. The ability of  
the control loop to track this interferer and set the VGA  
attenuation to prevent clipping of the ADC is limited by the  
accuracy of the digital signal estimation occurring at the output  
of DEC1. The accuracy of the digital signal estimation is a  
function of the frequency offset of the out-of-band interferer  
relative to the IF frequency as shown in Figure 60. Interferers at  
increasingly higher frequency offsets incur larger measurement  
errors, potentially causing the control loop to inadvertently  
reduce the amount of VGA attenuation that may result in clip-  
ping of the ADC. Figure 63 shows the maximum measured  
interferer signal level versus the normalized IF offset frequency  
(relative to fCLK) tolerated by the AD9864 relative to its maxi-  
mum target input signal level (0 dBFS = –18 dBm). Note that  
the increase in allowable interferer level occurring beyond  
0.04 × fCLK results from the inherent signal attenuation provided  
by the ADC’s signal transfer function.  
0x04  
0x05  
0x00  
0x06  
0
0
0
0
(2:0)  
SYSTEM NOISE FIGURE (NF) VERSUS VGA (OR  
AGC) CONTROL  
The AD9864’s system noise figure is a function of the ACG  
attenuation and output signal bandwidth. Figure 64 plots the  
nominal system NF as a function of the AGC attenuation for  
both narrow-band (20 kHz) and wideband (150 kHz) modes  
with fCLK = 18 MHz. Also shown on the plot is the SNR that  
would be observed at the output for a –2 dBFS input. The high  
dynamic range of the ADC within the AD9864 ensures that the  
system NF increases gradually as the AGC attenuation is  
increased. In narrow-band (BW = 20 kHz) mode, the system  
noise figure increases by less than 3 dB over a 12 dB AGC  
range, while in wideband (BW = 150 kHz) mode, the degrada-  
tion is about 5 dB. As a result, the highest instantaneous  
dynamic range for the AD9864 occurs with 12 dB of AGC  
attenuation, since the AD9864 can accommodate an additional  
12 dB peak signal level with only a moderate increase in its  
noise floor.  
As Figure 64 shows, the AD9864 can achieve an SNR in excess  
of 100 dB in narrow-band applications. To realize the full  
performance of the AD9864 in such applications, it is recom-  
mended that the I/Q data be represented with 24 bits. If 16-bit  
Rev. 0 | Page 34 of 44  
 
 
 
AD9864  
data is used, the effective system NF will increase because of the  
quantization noise present in the 16-bit data after truncation.  
APPLICATIONS CONSIDERATIONS  
Frequency Planning  
The LO frequency (and/or ADC clock frequency) must be chosen  
carefully to prevent known internally generated spurs from mixing  
down along with the desired signal, thus degrading the SNR per-  
formance. The major sources of spurs in the AD9864 are the ADC  
clock and digital circuitry operating at 1/3 of fCLK. Thus, the clock  
frequency (fCLK) is the most important variable in determining  
which LO (and therefore IF) frequencies are viable.  
15  
SNR = 90.1dBFS  
14  
13  
BW = 50kHz  
12  
BW = 150kHz  
11  
Many applications have frequency plans that take advantage of  
industry-standard IF frequencies due to the large selection of  
low cost crystal or SAW filters. If the selected IF frequency and  
ADC clock rate result in a problematic spurious component, an  
alternative ADC clock rate should be selected by slightly modi-  
fying the decimation factor and CLK synthesizer settings (if  
used) such that the output sample rate remains the same. Also,  
applications requiring a certain degree of tuning range should  
take into consideration the location and magnitude of these  
spurs when determining the tuning range as well as optimum  
IF and ADC clock frequency.  
SNR = 103.2dB  
SNR = 82.9dBFS  
10  
BW = 10kHz  
9
SNR = 95.1dBFS  
8
0
3
6
9
12  
VGA ATTENUATION (dB)  
Figure 64. Nominal System Noise Figure and Peak SNR vs. AGCG Setting (fIF  
73.35 MHz, fCLK = 18 MSPS, and 24-bit I/Q Data)  
=
Figure 65 plots the nominal system NF with 16-bit output data  
as a function of AGC in both narrow-band and wideband  
mode. In wideband mode, the NF curve is virtually unchanged  
relative to the 24-bit output data because the output SNR before  
truncation is always less than the 96 dB SNR that 16-bit data  
can support. However, in narrow-band mode, where the output  
SNR approaches or exceeds the SNR that can be supported with  
16-bit data, the degradation in system NF is more severe. Fur-  
thermore, if the signal processing within the DSP adds noise at  
the level of an LSB, the system noise figure can be degraded  
even more than Figure 65 shows. For example, this could occur  
in a fixed 16-bit DSP whose code is not optimized to process  
the AD9864’s 16-bit data with minimal quantization effects. To  
limit the quantization effects within the AD9864, the 24-bit  
data undergoes noise shaping just prior to 16-bit truncation,  
thus reducing the in-band quantization noise by 5 dB (with 2×  
oversampling). This explains why 98.8 dBFS SNR performance  
is still achievable with 16-bit data in a 10 kHz BW.  
Figure 66 plots the measured in-band noise power as a function  
of the LO frequency for fCLK = 18 MHz and an output signal  
bandwidth of 150 kHz when no signal is present. Any LO  
frequency resulting in large spurs should be avoided. As this  
figure shows, large spurs result when the LO is fCLK/8 = 2.25  
MHz away from a harmonic of 18 MHz , i.e., n fCLK  
fCLK/8.  
Also problematic are LO frequencies whose odd order harmon-  
ics, i.e., m fLO, mix with harmonics of fCLK to fCLK/8. This spur  
mechanism is a result of the mixer being internally driven  
by a squared-up version of the LO input consisting of the LO  
frequency and its odd order harmonics. These spur frequencies  
can be calculated from the relation  
m× fLO  
=
(
n ±1/8  
)
× fCLK  
(12)  
where m = 1, 3, 5... and n = 1, 2, 3...  
17  
A second source of spurs is a large block of digital circuitry that  
is clocked at fCLK/3. Problematic LO frequencies associated with  
this spur source are given by  
SNR = 98.8dBFS  
16  
15  
BW = 10kHz  
fLO = fCLK /3 +n× fCLK ± fCLK /8  
where n = 1, 2, 3...  
(13)  
14  
13  
BW = 150kHz  
12  
SNR = 89.9dBFS  
Figure 67 shows that omitting the LO frequencies given by  
Equation 12 for m = 1, 3, and 5 and by Equation 13 accounts  
for most of the spurs. Some of the remaining low level spurs  
can be attributed to coupling from the SSI digital output. As a  
result, users are also advised to optimize the output bit rate  
(fCLKOUT via the SSIORD register) and the digital output driver  
strength to achieve the lowest spurious and noise figure per-  
formance for a particular LO frequency and fCLK setting. This is  
especially the case for particularly narrow-band channels in  
11  
10  
9
SNR = 94.1dBFS  
BW = 50kHz  
SNR = 83dBFS  
3
8
12  
9
0
6
VGA ATTENUATION (dB)  
Figure 65. Nominal System Noise Figure and Peak SNR vs. AGCG  
Setting (fIF = 73.35 MHz, fCLK = 18 MSPS, and 16-bit I/Q Data)  
Rev. 0 | Page 35 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
which low level spurs can degrade the AD9864’s sensitivity  
performance.  
bandwidth of the AD9864. As evidence of this property,  
Figure 68 shows that the in-band noise is quite constant for LO  
frequencies ranging from 70 MHz to 71 MHz.  
Despite the many spurs, sweet spots in the LO frequency are  
generally wide enough to accommodate the maximum signal  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
300  
50  
100  
150  
200  
250  
0
LO FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 66. Total In-Band Noise + Spur Power with No Signal Applied as a Function of the LO Frequency (fCLK = 18 MHz and Output Signal Bandwidth = 150 kHz)  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
300  
50  
100  
150  
200  
250  
0
LO FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 67. Same as Figure 66 Excluding LO Frequencies Known to Produce Large In-Band Spurs  
Rev. 0 | Page 36 of 44  
 
AD9864  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
giving a selectivity of 90 dB for this spurious response. The  
largest spurious response at approximately –70 dBFS occurs  
with input frequencies of 70.35 MHz and 71.85 MHz. These  
spurs result from third order nonlinearity in the signal path  
(i.e., abs [3 × fLO 3 × fIF_INPUT] = fCLK /8).  
EXTERNAL PASSIVE COMPONENT REQUIREMENTS  
Figure 70 shows an example circuit using the AD9864 and  
Table 19 shows the nominal dc bias voltages seen at the differ-  
ent pins. The purpose is to show the various external passive  
components required by the AD9864, along with nominal dc  
voltages for troubleshooting purposes.  
70.0  
70.5  
71.0  
LO FREQUENCY (MHz)  
50Ω  
Figure 68. Expanded View from 70 MHz to 71 MHz  
0
–20  
D = fCLK/4 = 4.5MHz  
48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37  
180pF  
MXOP  
MXON  
GNDF  
IF2N  
IF2P  
VDDF  
GCP  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
DESIRED  
GNDL 36  
RESPONSES  
FREF  
35  
–40  
100  
pF  
100pF  
GNDS  
34  
SYNCB 33  
32  
–60  
GNDH  
2.2nF  
AD9864  
FS 31  
DOUTB 30  
DOUTA 29  
GCN  
VDDA  
–80  
28  
100pF  
CLKOUT  
10 GNDA  
11  
VDDH 27  
VDDD 26  
PE 25  
–100  
VREFP  
10nF  
12 VREFN  
100pF  
–120  
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24  
50  
60  
70  
80  
90  
100  
IF FREQUENCY (MHz)  
100kΩ  
10nF  
10nF  
Figure 69. Response of AD9864 to a –20 dBm IF Input when fLO = 71.1 MHz  
Figure 70. Example Circuit Showing Recommended Component Values  
SPURIOUS RESPONSES  
The spectral purity of the LO (including its phase noise) is an  
important consideration since LO spurs can mix with unde-  
sired signals present at the AD9864’s IFIN input to produce an  
in-band response. To demonstrate the low LO spur level intro-  
duced within the AD9864, Figure 69 plots the demodulated  
output power as a function of the input IF frequency for an LO  
frequency of 71.1 MHz and a clock frequency of 18 MHz.  
Table 19. Nominal DC Bias Voltages  
Pin Number  
Mnemonic  
MXOP  
MXON  
IF2N  
Nominal DC Bias (V)  
VDDI – 0.2  
VDDI – 0.2  
1.3 – 1.7  
1
2
4
5
IF2P  
1.3 – 1.7  
11  
12  
13  
19  
20  
35  
41  
42  
43  
44  
46  
47  
VREFP  
VREFN  
RREF  
CLKP  
CLKN  
FREF  
CXVM  
LON  
LOP  
VDDA/2 + 0.250  
VDDA/2 – 0.250  
1.2  
VDDC – 1.3  
VDDC – 1.3  
VDDC/2  
1.6 – 2.0  
1.65 – 1.9  
1.65 – 1.9  
VDDI – 0.05  
1.6 – 2.0  
The two large –10 dBFS spikes near the center of the plot are  
the desired responses at fLO,  
at 68.85 MHz and 73.35 MHz. LO spurs at fLO  
f
IF2_ADC, where fIF2_ADC = fCLK/8, i.e.,  
SPUR would  
f
result in spurious responses at offsets of fSPUR around the  
desired responses. Close-in spurs of this kind are not visible on  
the plot, but small spurious responses at fLO fIF2_ADC  
fCLK, i.e.,  
at 50.85 MHz, 55.35 MHz, 86.85 MHz, and 91.35 MHz, are  
visible at the –90 dBFS level. This data indicates that the  
AD9864 does an excellent job of preserving the purity of the LO  
signal.  
CXVL  
CXIF  
IFIN  
Figure 69 can also be used to gauge how well the AD9864  
rejects undesired signals. For example, the half-IF response (at  
69.975 MHz and 72.225 MHz) is approximately –100 dBFS,  
0.9 – 1.1  
Rev. 0 | Page 37 of 44  
 
 
 
 
AD9864  
The LO, CLK, and IFIN signals are coupled to their respective  
inputs using 10 nF capacitors. The output of the mixer is cou-  
pled to the input of the ADC using 100 pF. An external 100 kΩ  
resistor from the RREF pin to GND sets up the AD9864’s  
internal bias currents. VREFP and VREFN provide a differen-  
tial reference voltage to the AD9864’s Σ-∆ ADC and must be  
decoupled by a 0.01 µF differential capacitor along with two  
100 pF capacitors to GND. The remaining capacitors are used  
to decouple other sensitive internal nodes to GND.  
clock. For example, if fCLK = 26 MHz, the two inductors should  
be = 6.9 µH and the capacitor should be about 120 pF. A toler-  
ance of 10% is sufficient for these components since tuning of  
the LC tank is performed upon system startup.  
APPLICATIONS  
SuperHeterodyne Receiver Example  
The AD9864 is well suited for analog and/or digital narrow-band  
radio systems based on a superheterodyne receiver architecture. The  
superheterodyne architecture is noted for achieving exceptional  
dynamic range and selectivity by using two or more downconversion  
stages to provide amplification of the target signal while filtering the  
undesired signals. The AD9864 greatly simplifies the design of these  
radio systems by integrating the complete IF strip (excluding the LO  
VCO) while providing an I/Q digital output (along with other sys-  
tem parameters) for the demodulation of both analog and digital  
modulated signals. The AD9864’s exceptional dynamic range often  
simplifies the IF filtering requirements and eliminates the need for an  
external AGC.  
Although power supply decoupling capacitors are not shown, it  
is recommended that a 0.1 µF surface-mount capacitor be  
placed as close as possible to each power supply pin for maxi-  
mum effectiveness. Also not shown is the input impedance  
matching network used to match the AD9864’s IF input to the  
external IF filter. Lastly, the loop filter components associated  
with the LO and CLK synthesizers are not shown.  
LC component values for fCLK = 18 MHz are given Figure 70.  
For other clock frequencies, the two inductors and the capaci-  
tor of the LC tank should be scaled in inverse proportion to the  
VDDA  
IF2 = fCLK/8  
AD9864  
IF CRYSTAL OR  
SAW FILTER  
PRESELECT  
FILTER  
RF  
DAC AGC  
–16dB  
LNA  
TUNER  
LNA  
INPUT  
DOUTA  
IFIN  
DECIMATION  
Σ
- ADC  
FORMATTING/SSI  
FILTER  
DOUTB  
FS  
TO  
DSP  
CLKOUT  
CONTROL LOGIC  
SPI  
VCO  
SAMPLE CLOCK  
SYNTHESIZER  
VOLTAGE  
LO  
REFERENCE  
SYNTH.  
ADF42xx  
PLL SYN  
REFIN  
VCO  
LOOP  
FILTER  
LOOP  
FILTER  
VDDC  
CRYSTAL  
OSCILLATOR  
FROM DSP  
Figure 71. Typical Dual Conversion Superheterodyne Application Using the AD9864  
Rev. 0 | Page 38 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
Figure 71 shows a typical dual conversion superheterodyne  
receiver using the AD9864. An RF tuner is used to select and  
downconvert the target signal to a suitable first IF for the  
AD9864. A preselect filter may precede the tuner to limit the  
RF input to the band of interest. The output of the tuner drives  
an IF filter that provides partial suppression of adjacent chan-  
nels and interferers that could otherwise limit the receiver’s  
dynamic range. The conversion gain of the tuner should be set  
such that the peak IF input signal level into the AD9864 is no  
greater than –18 dBm to prevent clipping. The AD9864 down-  
converts the first IF signal to a second IF that is exactly 1/8 of  
the Σ-∆ ADC’s clock rate, i.e., fCLK/8, to simplify the digital  
quadrature demodulation process.  
between the AD9864’s rated operating range of 13 MHz to  
26 MHz and no significant spurious products related to fCLK fall  
within the desired pass band, resulting in a reduction in sensi-  
tivity performance. If a spurious component is found to limit  
the sensitivity performance, the decimation factor can often be  
modified slightly to find a spurious free pass band. Selecting a  
higher fCLK is typically more desirable given a choice, since the  
first IF’s filtering requirements often depend on the transition  
region between the IF frequency and the image band (i.e.,  
f
CLK/4). Lastly, the output SSI clock rate, fCLKOUT, and digital  
driver strength should be set to their lowest possible settings to  
minimize the potential harmful effects of digital induced noise  
while preserving a reliable data link to the DSP. Note that the  
SSICRA, SSICRB, and SSIORD registers, i.e., 0x18, 0x19, and  
0x1A, provide a large degree of flexibility for optimization of  
the SSI interface.  
This second IF signal is then digitized by the Σ-∆ ADC,  
demodulated into its quadrature I and Q components, filtered  
via matching decimation filters, and reformatted to enable a  
synchronous serial interface to a DSP. In this example, the  
AD9864’s LO and CLK synthesizers are both enabled, requiring  
some additional passive components (for the synthesizer’s loop  
filters and CLK oscillator) and a VCO for the LO synthesizer.  
Note that not all of the required decoupling capacitors are  
shown. Refer to the previous section and Figure 70 for more  
information on required external passive components.  
Syncronization of Multiple AD9864S  
Some applications, such as receiver diversity and beam steering,  
may require two or more AD9864s operating in parallel while  
maintaining synchronization. Figure 71 shows an example of  
how multiple AD9864s can be cascaded, with one device serv-  
ing as the master and the other devices serving as the slaves. In  
this example, all of the devices have the same SPI register con-  
figuration since they share the same SPI interface to the DSP.  
Since the state of each of the AD9864’s internal counters is  
unknown upon initialization, synchronization of the devices is  
required via a SYNCB pulse (see Figure 36) to synchronize their  
digital filters and ensure precise time alignment of the data  
streams.  
The selection of the first IF frequency is often based on the  
availability of low cost standard crystal or SAW filters as well as  
system frequency planning considerations. In general, crystal  
filters are often used for narrow-band radios having channel  
bandwidths below 50 kHz with IFs below 120 MHz, while SAW  
filters are more suited for channel bandwidths greater than  
50 kHz with IFs greater than 70 MHz. The ultimate stop-band  
rejection required by the IF filter will depend on how much  
suppression is required at the AD9864’s image band resulting  
from downconversion to the second IF. This image band is  
offset from the first IF by twice the second IF frequency  
Although all of the devices’ synthesizers are enabled, the LO  
and CLK signals for the slave(s) are derived from the masters’  
synthesizers and are referenced to an external crystal oscillator.  
All of the necessary external components(i.e., loop filters,  
varactor, LC, and VCO) required to ensure proper closed-loop  
operation of these synthesizers are included.  
(i.e.,  
fCLK/4, depending on high- or low-side injection).  
Note that although the VCO output of the LO synthesizer is  
ac-coupled to the slave’s LO input(s), all of the CLK inputs of  
the devices must be dc-coupled if the AD9864’s CLK oscillators  
are enabled. This is because of the dc current required by the  
CLK oscillators in each device. In essence, these negative  
impedance cores are operating in parallel, increasing the  
effective Q of the LC resonator circuit. RBIAS should be sized  
such that the sum of the oscillators’ dc bias currents maintains  
a common-mode voltage of around 1.6 V.  
The selectivity and bandwidth of the IF filter will depend on  
both the magnitude and frequency offset(s) of the adjacent  
channel blocker(s) that could overdrive the AD9864’s input or  
generate in-band intermodulation components. Further sup-  
pression is performed within the AD9864 by its inherent band-  
pass response and digital decimation filters. Note that some  
applications will require additional application-specific filtering  
performed in the DSP that follows the AD9864 to remove the  
adjacent channel and/or implement a matched filter for opti-  
mum signal detection.  
The output data rate of the AD9864, fOUT, should be chosen to  
be at least twice the bandwidth or symbol rate of the desired  
signal to ensure that the decimation filters provide a flat pass-  
band response as well as to allow for postprocessing by a DSP.  
Once fOUT is determined, the decimation factor of the digital  
filters should be set such that the input clock rate, fCLK, falls  
Rev. 0 | Page 39 of 44  
AD9864  
VDDC  
operating in parallel. The RF front end consists of a duplexer  
and preselect filter to pass the GSM RF band of interest. A high  
performance LNA isolates the duplexer from the preselect filter  
while providing sufficient gain to minimize system NF. An RF  
mixer is used to downconvert the entire GSM band to a suitable  
IF, where much of the channel selectivity is accomplished. The  
170.6 MHz IF is chosen to avoid any self-induced spurs from  
the AD9864. The IF stage consists of two SAW filters isolated  
by a 15 dB gain stage.  
LOOP  
FILTER  
R
BIAS  
C
0.1µF  
OSC  
R
D
L
OSC  
R
C
P
F
C
VAR  
C
Z
15  
IOUTC  
FROM  
35  
CRYSTAL  
OSCILLATION  
FREF  
19  
20  
CLKP  
CLKN  
The cascaded SAW filter response must provide sufficient  
blocker rejection in order for the receiver to meet its sensitivity  
requirements under worst-case blocker conditions. A compos-  
ite response having 27 dB, 60 dB, and 100 dB rejection at  
frequency offsets of 0.8 MHz, 1.6 MHz, and 6.5 MHz, re-  
spectively, provides enough blocker suppression to ensure that  
the AD9864 with the lower clip point will not be overdriven by  
any blocker. This configuration results in the best possible re-  
ceiver sensitivity under all blocking conditions.  
47  
IFIN  
FS 31  
DOUTA 29  
TO DSP  
28  
CLKOUT  
43 LOP  
42  
PE 25  
PD 24  
PC 23  
LON  
FROM  
DSP  
AD9864  
MASTER  
SYNCB 33  
IOUTL  
38  
The output of the last SAW filters drives the two AD9864s via a  
direct signal path and an attenuated signal path. The direct path  
corresponds to the AD9864 having the lowest clip point and  
provides the highest receiver sensitivity with a system noise  
figure of 4.7 dB. The VGA of this device is set for maximum  
attenuation, so its clip point is approximately –17 dBm. Since  
conversion gain from the antenna to the AD9864 is 19 dB, the  
digital output of this path will nominally be selected unless the  
target signal’s power exceeds –36 dBm at the antenna. The  
attenuated path corresponds to the AD9864 having the highest  
input-referred clip point, and its digital output point of this  
path is set to 7 dBm by inserting a 30 dB attenuator and setting  
the AD9864’s VGA to the middle of its 12 dB range. This  
setting results in a 6 dB adjustment of the clip point, allowing  
the clip point difference to be calibrated to exactly 24 dB, so  
that a simple 5-bit shift would make up the gain difference. The  
attenuated path can handle signal levels up to –12 dB at the  
antenna before being overdriven. Since the SAW filters provide  
sufficient blocker suppression, the digital data from this path  
need only be selected when the target signal exceeds –36 dBm.  
Although the sensitivity of the receiver with the attenuated path  
is 20 dB lower than the direct path, the strong target signal  
ensures a sufficiently high carrier-to-noise ratio.  
VCO  
LOOP  
FILTER  
15  
IOUTC  
25  
24  
23  
PE  
PD  
PC  
47 IFIN  
43  
42  
LOP  
LON  
SYNCB 33  
AD9864  
SLAVE  
TO OTHER  
AD9864s  
19 CLKP  
20 CLKN  
31  
29  
FS  
DOUTA  
CLKOUT 28  
TO  
DSP  
TO OTHER  
AD9864s  
FREF  
35  
Figure 72. Example of Synchronizing Multiple AD9864s  
Split Path Rx Architecture  
A split path Rx architecture may be attractive for those applica-  
tions whose instantaneous dynamic range requirements exceed  
the capability of a single AD9864 device. To cope with these  
higher dynamic range requirements, two AD9864s can be oper-  
ated in parallel with their respective clip points offset by a fixed  
amount. Adding a fixed amount of attenuation in front of the  
AD9864 and/or programming the attenuation setting of its in-  
ternal VGA can adjust the input-referred clip point. To save  
power and simplify hardware, the LO and CLK circuits of the  
device can also be shared. Connecting the SYNCB pins of the two  
devices and pulsing this line low synchronizes the two devices.  
Since GSM is based on a TDMA scheme, digital data (or path)  
selection can occur on a slot-by-slot basis. The AD9864 would  
be configured to provide Serial I and Q data at a frame rate of  
541.67 kSPS, as well as additional information including a 2-bit  
reset field and a 6-bit RSSI field. These two fields contain the  
information needed to decide whether the direct or attenuated  
path should be used for the current time slot.  
An example of this concept for possible use in a GSM base sta-  
tion is shown in Figure 73. The signal chain consists of a high  
linearity RF front end and IF stage followed by two AD9864s  
Rev. 0 | Page 40 of 44  
AD9864  
VDDC  
LOOP  
R
BIAS  
FILTER  
C
0.1µF  
OSC  
R
D
L
OSC  
R
C
F
P
C
VAR  
C
Z
ATTENUATED PATH WITH  
CLIP POINT = 7.0dBm  
15  
IO  
13MHz  
19  
20  
CLKP  
CLKN  
35  
31  
FREF  
FS  
IFIN  
47  
DOUTA 29  
CLKOUT  
28  
36dB  
PAD  
43 LOP  
42 LON  
PE 25  
AD9864  
MASTER  
24  
PD  
23  
PC  
SYNCB 33  
IOUTL  
38  
VCO  
LOOP  
FILTER  
DSP  
OR  
ASIC  
DUPLEXER  
PRESELECT  
IF SAW 1I  
F SAW 2  
15  
IO  
IF  
25  
24  
23  
33  
PE  
PD  
PC  
47 IFIN  
LNA  
AMP  
MIXER  
43 LOP  
42 LON  
SYNCB  
GAIN = –2dB  
NF = 2dB  
GAIN = 22dB GAIN = –3dB  
NF = 1dB NF = 3dB  
GAIN = 5dB GAIN = 15dB GAIN = –9dB  
NF = 12dB NF = 2dB NF = –9dB  
AD9864  
SLAVE  
DIRECT PATH WITH  
31  
29  
FS  
DOUTA  
CLIP POINT = –17dBm  
CLKP  
CLKN  
19  
20  
CLKOUT 28  
FREF  
35  
Figure 73. Example of Split Path Rx Architecture to Increase Receiver Dynamic Range Capabilities  
Hung Mixer Mode  
The AD9864 can operate in hung mixer mode by tying one of  
the LO’s self-biasing inputs to ground, i.e., GNDI, or the  
positive supply (VDDI). In this mode, the AD9864 acts as a  
narrow-band, band-pass Σ-∆ ADC, since its mixer passes the  
IFIN signal without any frequency translation. The IFIN signal  
must be centered about the resonant frequency of the Σ-∆ ADC  
(i.e., fCLK/8) and the clock rate, fCLK, and decimation factors must  
be selected to accommodate the bandwidth of the desired input  
signal. Note that the LO synthesizer can be disabled because it  
is no longer required.  
Since the mixer does not have any losses associated with the mix-  
ing operation, the conversion gain through the LNA and mixer is  
higher resulting in a nominal input clip point of –24 dBm. The  
SNR performance is dependent on the VGA attenuation setting,  
I/Q data resolution, and output bandwidth as shown in Figure 74.  
Applications requiring the highest instantaneous dynamic range  
should set the VGA for maximum attenuation. Also, several extra  
decibels in SNR performance can be gained at lower signal band-  
widths by using 24-bit I/Q data.  
Rev. 0 | Page 41 of 44  
AD9864  
105  
The evaluation board is designed to interface to a PC via a  
National Instruments NI 6533 digital IO card. An XILINX FPGA  
formats the data between the AD9864 and digital I/O card.  
fCLK = 18MSPS  
100  
95  
MAX ATTEN WITH  
24-BIT I/Q DATA  
IF  
LO  
INPUT INPUT  
VCO  
MAX ATTEN WITH  
16-BIT I/Q DATA  
MODULE  
INTERFACE  
AD9864  
FREF  
INPUT  
90  
MIXER  
INPUT  
MIN ATTEN WITH  
16-BIT I/Q DATA  
DUT  
CRYSTAL  
OSCILLATOR  
(OPTIONAL)  
85  
MIN ATTEN WITH  
24-BIT I/Q DATA  
80  
0
XILINX  
SPARTON  
FPGA  
20  
40  
60  
80  
BW (kHz)  
100  
120  
140  
160  
IDT  
FIFO  
Figure 74. Hung Mixer SNR vs. BW and VGA  
POWER SUPPLY  
DISTRIBUTION  
CLK  
EPROM  
INPUT  
LAYOUT EXAMPLE, EVALUATION BOARD, AND  
SOFTWARE  
Figure 75. Evaluation Board Platform  
The evaluation board and its accompanying software provide a  
simple way to evaluate the AD9864. The block diagram in  
Figure 75 shows the major blocks of the evaluation board,  
which is designed to be flexible, allowing configuration for  
different applications.  
Software developed using National Instruments’ LabVIEW™  
(and provided as Microsoft® Windows® executable programs) is  
supplied for the configuration of the SPI port registers and  
evaluation of the AD9864 output data. These programs have a  
convenient graphical user interface that allows for easy access  
to the various SPI port configuration registers and frequency  
analysis of the output data.  
The power supply distribution block provides filtered, adjust-  
able voltages to the various supply pins of the AD9864. In the  
IF input signal path, component pads are available to implement  
different IF impedance matching networks. The LO and CLK  
signals can be externally applied or internally derived from a  
user-supplied VCO module interface daughter board. The refer-  
ence for the on-chip LO and CLK synthesizers can be applied via  
the external fREF input or an on-board crystal oscillator.  
For more information on the AD9864 evaluation board, includ-  
ing an example layout, please refer to the EVAL-AD9874EB  
Data Sheet  
(www.analog.com/Analog_Root/static/pdf/techSupport/AD987  
4EB_0.pdf).  
Rev. 0 | Page 42 of 44  
 
 
AD9864  
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS  
0.30  
0.23  
0.18  
7.00  
0.60 MAX  
BSC SQ  
0.60 MAX  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
37  
36  
48  
1
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
5.25  
5.10 SQ  
4.95  
TOP  
VIEW  
6.75  
BOTTOM  
BSC SQ  
VIEW  
0.50  
0.40  
0.30  
25  
24  
12  
13  
0.25 MIN  
5.50  
REF  
1.00 MAX  
0.65 NOM  
1.00  
12° MAX  
0.90  
0.05 MAX  
0.02 NOM  
0.80  
0.20  
REF  
0.50 BSC  
COPLANARITY  
0.08  
SEATING  
PLANE  
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VKKD-2  
Figure 76. 48-Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP] (CP-48)—Dimensions shown in millimeters  
ESD CAUTION  
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on the  
human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although this product features  
proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high energy  
electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance  
degradation or loss of functionality.  
ORDERING GUIDE  
AD9864 Products  
AD9864BCPZ*  
AD9864BCPZRL*  
Temperature Package  
–40°C to +85°C  
–40°C to +85°C  
Package Description  
Package Outline  
Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP)  
Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP)  
Evaluation Board  
CP-48  
CP-48  
AD9864-EB  
*This is a lead free product.  
Rev. 0 | Page 43 of 44  
 
AD9864  
NOTES  
© 2003 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and regis-  
tered trademarks are the property of their respective companies.  
C04319-0-8/03(0)  
Rev. 0 | Page 44 of 44  

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VISHAY

SI9130CG-T1-E3

Pin-Programmable Dual Controller - Portable PCs

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SI9130LG-T1-E3

Pin-Programmable Dual Controller - Portable PCs

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VISHAY

SI9130_11

Pin-Programmable Dual Controller - Portable PCs

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VISHAY

SI9137

Multi-Output, Sequence Selectable Power-Supply Controller for Mobile Applications

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SI9137DB

Multi-Output, Sequence Selectable Power-Supply Controller for Mobile Applications

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SI9137LG

Multi-Output, Sequence Selectable Power-Supply Controller for Mobile Applications

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SI9122E

500-kHz Half-Bridge DC/DC Controller with Integrated Secondary Synchronous Rectification Drivers

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