5962F0721401VZC [TI]
耐辐射加固保障 (RHA)、QMLV、300krad、陶瓷、8 位、双通道 1.5GSPS 或单通道 3GSPS ADC | NBC | 128 | -55 to 125;型号: | 5962F0721401VZC |
厂家: | TEXAS INSTRUMENTS |
描述: | 耐辐射加固保障 (RHA)、QMLV、300krad、陶瓷、8 位、双通道 1.5GSPS 或单通道 3GSPS ADC | NBC | 128 | -55 to 125 转换器 |
文件: | 总60页 (文件大小:1280K) |
中文: | 中文翻译 | 下载: | 下载PDF数据表文档文件 |
ADC08D1520QML-SP
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SNAS420O –JANUARY 2008–REVISED MARCH 2013
ADC08D1520QML Low Power, 8-Bit, Dual 1.5 GSPS or Single 3.0 GSPS A/D Converter
1
FEATURES
DESCRIPTION
The ADC08D1520 is an 8–Bit, dual channel, low
power, high performance CMOS analog-to-digital
converter that builds upon the ADC08D1000 platform.
The ADC08D1520 digitizes signals to 8 bits of
resolution at sample rates up to 1.7 GSPS. It has
expanded features compared to the ADC08D1000,
which include a test pattern output for system debug,
clock phase adjust, and selectable output
demultiplexer modes. Consuming a typical 2.0W in
Demultiplex Mode at 1.5 GSPS from a single 1.9 Volt
supply, this device is ensured to have no missing
codes over the full operating temperature range. The
unique folding and interpolating architecture, the fully
differential comparator design, the innovative design
of the internal sample-and-hold amplifier and the self-
calibration scheme enable a very flat response of all
dynamic parameters beyond Nyquist, producing a
high 7.2 Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) with a 748
MHz input signal and a 1.5 GHz sample rate while
providing a 10-18 Code Error Rate (C.E.R.) Output
formatting is offset binary and the Low Voltage
Differential Signaling (LVDS) digital outputs are
compatible with IEEE 1596.3-1996, with the
exception of an adjustable common mode voltage
between 0.8V and 1.2V.
2
•
Total Ionizing Dose 300 krad(Si)
•
•
•
•
•
Single Event Latch-up 120 MeV-cm2/mg
Single +1.9V ±0.1V Operation
Interleave Mode for 2x Sample Rate
Multiple ADC Synchronization Capability
Adjustment of Input Full-Scale Range, Offset
and Clock Phase Adjustment
•
•
•
•
•
•
Choice of SDR or DDR output clocking
1:1 or 1:2 Selectable Output Demux
Second DCLK output
Duty Cycle Corrected Sample Clock
Test pattern
Serial Interface for Extended Control
KEY SPECIFICATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Resolution 8 Bits
Max Conversion Rate 1.5 GSPS (min)
Code Error Rate 10-18 (typ)
ENOB at 748 MHz Input 7.2 Bits (typ)
DNL ±0.15 LSB (typ)
Each converter has a selectable output demultiplexer
which feeds two LVDS buses. If the 1:2
Demultiplexed Mode is selected, the output data rate
is reduced to half the input sample rate on each bus.
When Non-Demultiplexed Mode is selected, the
output data rate on channels DI and DQ are at the
same rate as the input sample clock. The two
converters can be interleaved and used as a single 3
GSPS ADC.
Power Consumption
–
–
Operating in 1:2 Demux Output 2.0 W (typ)
Power Down Mode 2.9 mW (typ)
APPLICATIONS
•
•
•
•
Direct RF Down Conversion
Digital Oscilloscopes
Communications Systems
Test Instrumentation
The converter typically consumes less than 2.9 mW
in the Power Down Mode and is available in a 128-
pin, thermally enhanced, multi-layer ceramic quad
package and operates over the Military (-55°C ≤ TA ≤
+125°C) temperature range.
1
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of
Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
2
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
ADC08D1520QML-SP
SNAS420O –JANUARY 2008–REVISED MARCH 2013
www.ti.com
Block Diagram
V
I+
+
-
IN
S/H
8
8-BIT
ADC1
V
I-
IN
DI
DI
Selectable
DEMUX
Data Bus Output
16 LVDS Pairs
LATCH
d
INPUT
MUX
+
-
V
Q+
IN
S/H
8-BIT
ADC2
V
IN
Q-
8
DQ
DQ
Selectable
DEMUX
Data Bus Output
16 LVDS Pairs
LATCH
VREF
d
V
BG
CLK+
CLK-
Output
Clock
Generator
DCLK+
DCLK-
CLK/2
2
DEMUX
Control
Inputs
OR/DCLK2
CalRun
Control
Logic
Serial
Interface
3
2
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Pin Configuration
DI2+
96
GND
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
V
A
95
94
93
92
91
90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
82
81
80
79
78
77
76
75
74
73
72
71
70
69
68
67
66
65
DI2-
DI3+
DI3-
DI4+
DI4-
DI5+
DI5-
OutV/SCLK
OutEdge/DDR/SDATA
V
A
GND
V
CMO
V
A
V
DR
GND
9
V I-
IN
DR GND
DI6+
DI6-
DI7+
DI7-
DCLK+
DCLK-
OR-/DCLK2-
OR+/DCLK2+
DQ7-
DQ7+
DQ6-
DQ6+
DR GND
10
11
12
V
I+
IN
GND
V
A
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
FSR/ALT_ECE/DCLK_RST-
DCLK_RST/DCLK_RST+
V
A
V
A
ADC08D1520
CLK+
CLK-
V
A
GND 21
Q+
V
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
IN
V
Q-
IN
Exposed pad bottom side.
(See Note below.)
V
DR
GND
V
A
DQ5-
DQ5+
DQ4-
DQ4+
DQ3-
DQ3+
DQ2-
DQ2+
PD
GND
V
A
PDQ
CAL
V
BG
R
EXT
Note: The exposed pad on the bottom of the package must be soldered to a ground plane to ensure rated
performance.
Figure 1. CFP Package
See Package Number NBC0128A
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Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits
Pin Functions
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
Output Voltage Amplitude and Serial Interface Clock. Tie this
pin high for normal differential DCLK and data amplitude.
Ground this pin for a reduced differential output amplitude
and reduced power consumption. See The LVDS Outputs.
When the extended control mode is enabled, this pin
functions as the SCLK input which clocks in the serial data.
See the approriate section for details on the extended control
mode. See THE SERIAL INTERFACE for description of the
serial interface.
V
A
50 kW
3
OutV / SCLK
A logic high on the PDQ pin puts only the Q-Channel ADC
into the Power Down mode.
29
PDQ
GND
VA
DCLK Edge Select, Double Data Rate Enable and Serial Data
Input. This input sets the output edge of DCLK+ at which the
output data transitions. See OutEdge and Demultiplex Control
Setting When this pin is connected to 1/2 the supply
voltage,VA/2, DDR clocking is enabled. When the Extended
Control Mode is enabled, this pin functions as the SDATA
input. See the appropriate section for details on the Extended
Control Mode. See THE SERIAL INTERFACE for description
of the serial interface.
50k
200k
DDR
50k
8pF
OutEdge / DDR /
SDATA
4
GND
SDATA
VA
DCLK Reset. When single-ended DCLK_RST is selected by
setting pin 52 logic high or to VA/2, a positive pulse on this pin
is used to reset and synchronize the DCLK outputs of multiple
converters. See MULTIPLE ADC SYNCHRONIZATION for
detailed description. When differential DCLK_RST is selected
by setting pin 52 logic low, this pin receives the positive
polarity of a differential pulse signal used to reset and
synchronize the DCLK outputs of multiple converters.
V
A
DCLK_RST/DCLK
_RST+
15
Power Down Pins. A logic high on the PD pin puts the entire
device into the Power Down Mode.
26
30
PD
Calibration Cycle Initiate. A minimum tCAL_L input clock cycles
logic low followed by a minimum of tCAL_H input clock cycles
high on this pin initiates the calibration sequence. See
Calibration for an overview of calibration and Initiating
Calibration for a description of calibration.
GND
CAL
Full Scale Range Select, Alternate Extended Control Enable
and DCLK_RST-. This pin has two functions. It can
conditionally control the ADC full-scale voltage, or become
the negative polarity signal of a differential pair in differential
DCLK_RST Mode. If pin 52 and pin 41 are connected at logic
high, this pin can be used to set the full-scale-range. When
used as the FSR pin, a logic low on this pin sets the full-scale
differential input range to a reduced VIN input level. A logic
high on this pin sets the full-scale differential input range to
Higher VIN input level. See Converter Electrical
VA
50k
50k
200k
8pF
14
FSR/DCLK_RST-
Characteristics. When pin 52 is held at logic low, this pin acts
as the DCLK_RST- pin. When in differential DCLK_RST
Mode, there is no pin-controlled FSR and the full-scale-range
is defaulted to the higher VIN input level.
GND
4
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Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits (continued)
Pin Functions
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
V
A
Dual Edge Sampling and Serial Interface Chip Select. With
pin 41 logic low, the device is in Extended Control Mode and
this pin is the enable pin for the Serial Interface . When in
Non-Extended Control Mode and this pin is connected to
VA/2, DES Mode is selected where the I- Channel input is
sampled at twice the input clock rate and the Q- Channel
input is ignored. See Dual-Edge Sampling. When in Non-
Extended Controll Mode and DES is not desired, this pin
should be tied to VA.
50k
50k
127
DES / SCS
GND
V
A
LVDS Clock input pins for the ADC. The differential clock
signal must be a.c. coupled to these pins. The input signal is
sampled on the falling edge of CLK+. See Acquiring the Input
for a description of acquiring the input and THE CLOCK
INPUTS for an overview of the clock inputs.
18
19
CLK+
CLK-
50k
AGND
100
V
BIAS
V
A
50k
AGND
V
A
Analog signal inputs to the ADC. The differential full-scale
input range is programmable using the FSR pin 14 in Non-
Extended Control Mode and the Input Full-Scale Voltage
Adjust register in the Extended Control Mode. Refer to the VIN
specification in the Converter Electrical Characteristics for the
full-scale input range in the Non-Extended Control Mode.
Refer to REGISTER DESCRIPTION for the full-scale input
range in the Extended Control Mode.
50k
AGND
100
V
CMO
10
11
22
23
VINI−
VINI+
VINQ+
VINQ−
Control from V
CMO
V
A
50k
AGND
V
A
V
Common Mode Voltage. This pin is the common mode output
in d.c. coupling mode and also serves as the a.c. coupling
mode select pin. When d.c. coupling is used at the analog
inputs, the voltage output at this pin is required to be the
common mode input voltage at VIN+ and VIN−. When a.c.
coupling is used, this pin should be grounded. This pin is
capable of sourcing or sinking 100 μA. See THE ANALOG
INPUT.
CMO
200k
8 pF
7
VCMO
Enable AC
Coupling
GND
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Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits (continued)
Pin Functions
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
Bandgap output voltage. This pin is capable of sourcing or
sinking 100 μA and can drive a load up to 80 pF.
31
VBG
V
A
Calibration Running indication. This pin is at a logic high
when calibration is running.
126
CalRun
GND
V
A
V
External bias resistor connection. Nominal value is 3.3 kΩ
(±0.1%) to ground. See Calibration.
32
REXT
GND
Tdiode_P
Tdiode_N
Temperature Diode Positive (Anode and Negative (Cathode).
This pin is used for die temperature measurements. See
Thermal Management.
34
35
Tdiode_P
Tdiode_N
V
A
FS (PIN 14)
Extended Control Enable. This pin always enables or disables
Extended Control Mode. When this pin is set logic high, the
Extended Control Mode is inactive and all control of the
device must be through control pins only . When it is set logic
low, the Extended Control Mode is active. This pin overrides
the Extended Control Enable signal set using pin 14.
10k
41
ECE
GND
DCLK_RST select. This pin selects whether the DCLK is
reset using a single-ended or differential signal. When this pin
is connected at logic high, the DCLK_RST operation is single-
ended and pin 14 functions as FSR/ALT_ECE. When this pin
is logic low, the DCLK_RST operation becomes differential
with functionality on pin 15 (DCLK_RST+) and pin 14
(DCLK_RST-). When in differential DCLK_RST Mode, there
is no pin-controlled FSR and the full-scale-range is defaulted
to 870mV. When pin 41 is set logic low, the Extended Control
Mode is active and the Full-Scale Voltage Adjust registers
can be programmed.
V
A
10k
52
DRST_SEL
GND
6
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Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits (continued)
Pin Functions
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
83 / 78
84 / 77
85 / 76
86 / 75
89 / 72
90 / 71
91 / 70
92 / 69
93 / 68
94 / 67
95 / 66
96 / 65
100 / 61
101 / 60
102 / 59
103 / 58
DI7− / DQ7−
DI7+ / DQ7+
DI6− / DQ6−
DI6+ / DQ6+
DI5− / DQ5−
DI5+ / DQ5+
DI4− / DQ4−
DI4+ / DQ4+
DI3− / DQ3−
DI3+ / DQ3+
DI2− / DQ2−
DI2+ / DQ2+
DI1− / DQ1−
DI1+ / DQ1+
DI0− / DQ0−
DI0+ / DQ0+
I- and Q- channel LVDS Data Outputs that are not delayed in
the output demultiplexer. Compared with the DId and DQd
outputs, these outputs represent the later time samples.
These outputs should always be terminated with a 100Ω
differential resistor.
104 / 57
105 / 56
106 / 55
107 / 54
111 / 50
112 / 49
113 / 48
114 / 47
115 / 46
116 / 45
117 / 44
118 / 43
122 / 39
123 / 38
124 / 37
125 / 36
DId7− / DQd7−
DId7+ / DQd7+
DId6− / DQd6−
DId6+ / DQd6+
DId5− / DQd5−
DId5+ / DQd5+
DId4− / DQd4−
DId4+ / DQd4+
DId3− / DQd3−
DId3+ / DQd3+
DId2− / DQd2−
DId2+ / DQd2+
DId1− / DQd1−
DId1+ / DQd1+
DId0− / DQd0−
DId0+ / DQd0+
VDR
I- and Q- channel LVDS Data Outputs that are delayed by
one CLK cycle in the output demultiplexer. Compared with the
DI and DQ outputs, these outputs represent the earlier time
sample. These outputs should always be terminated with a
100Ω differential resistor. In Non Demux Mode, these outputs
are disabled and are high impedance. When disabled, these
outputs must be left floating.
-
+
-
+
Out Of Range output. A differential high at these pins
indicates that the differential input is out of range ±VIN/2 as
programmed by the FSR pin in Non-Extended Control Mode
or the Input Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register setting in the
Extended Control Mode). DCLK2 is the exact mirror of DCLK
and should output the same signal at the same rate.
79
80
OR+/DCLK2+
OR-/DCLK2-
DR GND
Data Clock. Differential Clock outputs used to latch the output
data. Delayed and non-delayed data outputs are supplied
synchronous to this signal. In 1:2 Demultiplexed Mode, this
signal is at 1/2 the input clock rate in SDR Mode and at 1/4
the input clock rate in the DDR Mode. By default, the DCLK
outputs are not active during the termination resistor trim
section of the calibration cycle. If a system requires DCLK to
run continuously during a calibration cycle, the termination
resistor trim portion of the cycle can be disabled by setting
the Resistor Trim Disable (RTD) bit to logic high in the
Extended Configuration Register (address 9h). This disables
all subsequent termination resistor trims after the initial trim
which occurs during the power on calibration. Therefore, this
output is not recommended as a system clock unless the
resistor trim is disabled. When the device is in the Non-
Demultiplexed Mode, DCLK can only be in DDR Mode and
the signal is at 1/2 the input clock rate.
81
82
DCLK-
DCLK+
2, 5, 8, 13,
16, 17, 20,
25, 28, 33,
128
VA
Analog power supply pins. Bypass these pins to ground.
40, 51, 62,
73, 88, 99,
110, 121
Output Driver power supply pins. Bypass these pins to DR
GND.
VDR
1, 6, 9, 12,
21, 24, 27
GND
Ground return for VA.
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Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits (continued)
Pin Functions
Pin No.
Symbol
Equivalent Circuit
Description
42, 53, 64,
74, 87, 97,
108, 119
DR GND
Ground return for VDR.
63, 98, 109,
120
NC
No Connection. Make no connection to these pins.
These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
8
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Absolute Maximum Ratings(1)(2)
Supply Voltage (VA, VDR
)
2.2V
Supply Difference
VDR - VA
0V to 100 mV
−0.15V to (VA +0.15V)
−0.15V to 2.5V
0V to 100 mV
±25 mA
Voltage on Any Input Pin
Voltage on VIN+, VIN-(Maintaining Common Mode)
Ground Difference
Input Current at Any Pin(3)
Package Input Current(3)
Junction Temperature
|GND - DR GND|
±50 mA
≤ 175°C
ESD Susceptibility(4)
Human Body Model
Class 3A (6000V)
−65°C to +175°C
Storage Temperature
(1) All voltages are measured with respect to GND = DR GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
(2) Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. There is no ensured specification of
operation at the Absolute Maximum Ratings. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure
specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications
apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed
test conditions.
(3) When the input voltage at any pin exceeds the power supply limits (that is, less than GND or greater than VA), the current at that pin
should be limited to 25 mA. The 50 mA maximum package input current rating limits the number of pins that can safely exceed the
power supplies with an input current of 25 mA to two. This limit is not placed upon the power, ground and digital output pins.
(4) Human body model is 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5 kΩ resistor.
(1) (2)
Operating Ratings
Ambient Temperature Range
VA/2 Tolerance for supply 1.9V
Supply Voltage (VA)
−55°C ≤ TA ≤ +125°C
650mV ≥ VA/2 ≤ 1.2V
+1.8V to +2.0V
Driver Supply Voltage (VDR
)
+1.8V to VA
VIN+, VIN- Voltage Range (Maintaining Common Mode)
0V to 2.15V
(100% duty cycle)
0V to 2.5V
(10% duty cycle)
Ground Difference
|GND - DR GND|
0V
0V to VA
CLK Pins Voltage Range
Differential CLK Amplitude
0.4VP-P to 2.0VP-P
(1) Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. There is no ensured specification of
operation at the Absolute Maximum Ratings. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure
specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications
apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed
test conditions.
(2) All voltages are measured with respect to GND = DR GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
Package Thermal Resistance
θJC
θJC
Package
θJA
Top of Package
Thermal Pad
128L CFP
11.5°C/ W
3.8°C/ W
2.0°C/ W
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Quality Conformance Inspection
MIL-STD-883, Method 5005 - Group A
Subgroup
Description
Static tests at
Temp ( C)
+25
1
2
Static tests at
+125
-55
3
Static tests at
4
Dynamic tests at
Dynamic tests at
Dynamic tests at
Functional tests at
Functional tests at
Functional tests at
Switching tests at
Switching tests at
Switching tests at
Setting time at
+25
5
+125
-55
6
7
+25
8A
8B
9
+125
-55
+25
10
11
12
13
14
+125
-55
+25
Setting time at
+125
-55
Setting time at
ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters(1)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(2)(3)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(4)
Min
Max
Units
STATIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS
Integral Non-Linearity
(Best fit)
DC Coupled, 1 MHz Sine Wave
Overanged
INL
±0.3
±.9
±.6
LSB
LSB
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
DC Coupled, 1 MHz Sine Wave
Overanged
DNL
Differential Non-Linearity
±0.15
Resolution with No Missing
Codes
8
Bits
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
VOFF
Offset Error
−0.55
−1.5
1.5
LSB
(1) Pre and post irradiation limits are identical to those listed under AC and DC electrical characteristics except as listed in the Post
Radiation Limits Table. Radiation end point limits for the noted parameters are ensured only for the conditions as specified in MIL-STD-
883, Method 1019
(2) The analog inputs are protected as shown below. Input voltage magnitudes beyond the Absolute Maximum Ratings may damage this
device.
V
A
TO INTERNAL
CIRCUITRY
I / O
GND
(3) To ensure accuracy, it is required that VA and VDR be well bypassed. Each supply pin must be decoupled with separate bypass
capacitors. Additionally, achieving rated performance requires that the backside exposed pad be well grounded.
(4) Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to MIL-PRF-38535.
10
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters(1) (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(2)(3)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(4)
Min
Max
Units
VOFF_AD Input Offset Adjustment
Extended Control Mode
±45
mV
J
Range
(5)
PFSE
NFSE
Positive Full-Scale Error
Negative Full-Scale Error
−0.6
±25
±25
mV
mV
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
(5)
−1.31
Full-Scale Adjustment
Range
FS_ADJ
Extended Control Mode
±20
%FS
ANALOG INPUT AND REFERENCE CHARACTERISTICS
530
840
mVP-P
mVP-P
mVP-P
mVP-P
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
FSR pin 14 Low
600
900
650
960
Full Scale Analog
VIN
Differential Input Range
FSR pin 14 High
Common Mode Input
Voltage
VCMO
0.05
−
VCMO
0.05
+
(6)
VCMI
VCMO
V
Differential
0.02
pF
pF
pF
pF
Ω
Analog Input Capacitance,
Normal operation
(7)
Each input pin to ground
Differential
1.6
CIN
0.08
Analog Input Capacitance,
DES Mode
(7)
Each input pin to ground
2.2
94
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
RIN
Differential Input Resistance
100
106
Ω
ANALOG OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Common Mode Output
Voltage
(6)
VCMO
ICMO = ±100 µA
1.26
0.95
1.45
V
Common Mode Output
TC VCMO Voltage Temperature
Coefficient
118
ppm/°C
1.20
V
V
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
Bandgap Reference Output
Voltage
VBG
IBG = ±100 µA
1.26
61
1.33
Bandgap Reference Voltage TA = −55°C to +125°C,
Temperature Coefficient
TC VBG
ppm/°C
IBG = ±100 µA
Maximum Bandgap
Reference load
Capacitance
CLOAD
VBG
80
pF
TEMPERATURE DIODE CHARACTERISTICS
192 µA vs 12 µA, TJ = 25°C
192 µA vs 12 µA, TJ = 125°C
71.23
94.8
mV
mV
ΔVBE
Temperature Diode Voltage
CHANNEL-TO-CHANNEL CHARACTERISTICS
Offset Match
1
1
LSB
LSB
Zero offset selected in Control
Register
Positive Full-Scale Match
Negative Full-Scale Match
Zero offset selected in Control
Register
1
LSB
(5) Calculation of Full-Scale Error for this device assumes that the actual reference voltage is exactly its nominal value. Full-Scale Error for
this device, therefore, is a combination of Full-Scale Error and Reference Voltage Error. See Figure 3. For relationship between Gain
Error and Full-Scale Error, see Specification Definitions for Gain Error.
(6) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
(7) The analog and clock input capacitances are die capacitances only. Additional package capacitances of 0.65 pF differential and 0.95 pF
each pin to ground are isolated from the die capacitances by lead and bond wire inductances.
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters(1) (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(2)(3)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
fIN = 1.0 GHz
Notes Typ(4)
Min
Max
Units
Phase Matching (I,Q)
< 1
Degree
Crosstalk from I- Channel
(Aggressor) to Q- Channel
(Victim)
Aggressor = 1160 MHz F.S.
Victim = 100 MHz F.S.
X-TALK
X-TALK
−66
−66
dB
dB
Crosstalk from Q- Channel Aggressor = 1160 MHz F.S.
(Aggressor) to I- Channel
(Victim)
Victim = 100 MHz F.S.
CLOCK INPUT CHARACTERISTICS
.5
.5
VP-P
VP-P
VP-P
VP-P
µA
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
Sine Wave Clock
0.6
2.0
2.0
Differential Clock Input
Level
VID
Square Wave Clock
0.6
±1
II
Input Current
VIN = 0 or VIN = VA
Differential
0.02
pF
(8)
CIN
Input Capacitance
Each input to ground
1.5
pF
DIGITAL CONTROL PIN CHARACTERISTICS
OutV, DCLK_RST, PD, PDQ, CAL
ECE, DRST_SEL
0.67 x
VA
VIH
VIL
VIH
Logic High Input Voltage
Logic Low Input Voltage
Logic High Input Voltage
V
V
V
V
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
0.33 x
VA
OutV, DCLK_RST, PD, PDQ, CAL
OutEdge, FSR, DES/SCS
0.77 x
VA
0.23 x
VA
OutEdge, FSR, ECE, DRST_SEL
VIL
Logic Low Input Voltage
Input Capacitance
0.23 x
VA
(9)
DES/SCS
V
(10)
CIN
Each input to ground
1.2
pF
DIGITAL OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
580
380
mVP-P
mVP-P
mVP-P
mVP-P
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
Measured differentially,
OutV = VA, VBG = Floating
(11)
780
920
720
LVDS Differential Output
Voltage
VOD
Measured differentially,
OutV = GND, VBG = Floating
(11)
590
Change in LVDS Output
ΔVO DIFF Swing Between Logic
Levels
±1
mV
VOS
VOS
Output Offset Voltage
Output Offset Voltage
VBG = Floating (See Figure 2)
VBG = VA (See Figure 2)
800
mV
mV
(11)
1100
Output Offset Voltage
Change Between Logic
Levels
ΔVOS
±1
mV
(8) The analog and clock input capacitances are die capacitances only. Additional package capacitances of 0.65 pF differential and 0.95 pF
each pin to ground are isolated from the die capacitances by lead and bond wire inductances.
(9) Refer to the Post Radiation Parameter Table
(10) The digital control pin capacitances are die capacitances only. Additional package capacitance of 1.6 pF each pin to ground are isolated
from the die capacitances by lead and bond wire inductances.
(11) Tying VBG to the supply rail will increase the output offset voltage (VOS) by 300mv (typical), as shown in the VOS specification above.
Tying VBG to the supply rail will also affect the differential LVDS output voltage (VOD), causing it to increase by 30mV (typical).
12
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters(1) (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(2)(3)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(4)
Min
Max
Units
mA
Ω
Output+ & Output− connected to
IOS
Output Short Circuit Current 0.8V,
VBG = Floating, OutV = VA
±4
Differential Output
Impedance
ZO
100
(12)
VOH
VOL
CalRun H level output
CalRun L level output
IOH = −400 µA
1.72
V
V
(12)
IOH = 400 µA
0.17
POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS
1:2 Demux Output
PD = PDQ = Low
PD = Low, PDQ = High
PD = PDQ = High
820
565
1.5
875
615
mA (max)
mA (max)
mA
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
IA
Analog Supply Current
1:2 Demux Output
PD = PDQ = Low
PD = Low, PDQ = High
PD = PDQ = High
Output Driver Supply
Current
230
125
0.018
290
170
mA (max)
mA (max)
mA
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
IDR
1:2 Demux Output
PD = PDQ = Low
PD = Low, PDQ = High
PD = PDQ = High
2
1.3
2.9
2.2
1.49
W (max)
W (max)
mW
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 3
PD
Power Consumption
Change in Full Scale Error with
change in
VA from 1.8V to 2.0V
D.C. Power Supply
Rejection Ratio
PSRR1
PSRR2
30
51
dB
dB
A.C. Power Supply
Rejection Ratio
248 MHz, 50 mVP-P injected on VA
(12) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics AC Parameters(1)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(2)
Min
Max
Units
Non-DES MODE DYNAMIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS, 1:2 DEMUX MODE
FPBW
C.E.R.
Full Power Bandwidth
Code Error Rate
Non-DES Mode
2.0
GHz
Error/Sam
ple
10−18
d.c. to 498 MHz
±0.5
±1.0
7.4
dBFS
Gain Flatness
d.c. to 1 GHz
dBFS
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
7
Bits (min)
Bits (min)
dB (min)
dB (min)
dB (min)
dB (min)
dB (max)
dB (max)
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
ENOB
SINAD
SNR
Effective Number of Bits
7.2
46.3
45.4
47
43.9
43.9
Signal-to-Noise Plus
Distortion Ratio
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
45
−53.4
−53
−47.5
THD
Total Harmonic Distortion
(1) Pre and post irradiation limits are identical to those listed under AC and DC electrical characteristics except as listed in the Post
Radiation Limits Table. Radiation end point limits for the noted parameters are ensured only for the conditions as specified in MIL-STD-
883, Method 1019
(2) Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to MIL-PRF-38535.
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics AC Parameters(1) (continued)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(2)
Min
Max
Units
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN1 = 365 MHz, VIN = FSR − 7 dB
fIN2 = 375 MHz, VIN = FSR − 7 dB
(VIN+) − (VIN−) > + Full Scale
−60
−55
−62
−58
55.5
53
dB
dB
2nd
Harm
Second Harmonic Distortion
dB
3rd Harm Third Harmonic Distortion
dB
47.5
dB (min)
dB (min)
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
Spurious-Free dynamic
SFDR
Range
IMD
Intermodulation Distortion
Out of Range Output Code
−50
dB
255
0
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
(VIN+) − (VIN−) < − Full Scale
INTERLEAVE MODE (DES Pin 127=VA/2) - DYNAMIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS, 1:4 DEMUX MODE
FPBW
ENOB
Full Power Bandwidth
Dual Edge Sampling Mode
1.7
7.0
GHz
Bits
Effective Number of Bits
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
6.6
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
Signal to Noise Plus
Distortion Ratio
SINAD
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
44
41.5
41.5
dB
SNR
THD
Signal to Noise Ratio
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
44
dB
dB
4, 5, 6
4, 5, 6
Total Harmonic Distortion
−55
−45.2
2nd
Harm
Second Harmonic Distortion
−60
−65
50
dB
dB
dB
3rd Harm Third Harmonic Distortion
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
Spurious Free Dynamic
SFDR
Range
44.1
4, 5, 6
ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics AC Timing Parameters(1)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes
Typ(2)
Min
Max
Units
AC TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
Non-DES Mode or DES
Mode in 1:2 Output Demux
1.7
1.5
1.0
GHz
GHz
9, 10, 11
9, 10, 11
Maximum Input Clock
Frequency
fCLK(max)
Non-DES Mode or DES
Mode in Non-demux Output
Non-DES Mode
DES Mode
200
500
MHz
MHz
Minimum Input Clock
Frequency
fCLK(min)
200 MHz ≤ fCLK ≤ 1.5 GHz
(Non-DES Mode)
% (min)
% (max)
% (min)
% (max)
ps (min)
ps (min)
%
(3)
(3)
50
50
Input Clock Duty Cycle
500 MHz ≤ fCLK ≤ 1.5 GHz
(DES Mode)
(3)
(3)
tCL
Input Clock Low Time
Input Clock High Time
333
333
tCH
45
9, 10, 11
9, 10, 11
DCLK Duty Cycle
50
55
%
tSR
tHR
Setup Time DCLK_RST±
Hold Time DCLK_RST±
90
30
ps
ps
Synchronizing Edge to DCLK
Output Delay
tOD
tOSK
+
tSD
(1) Pre and post irradiation limits are identical to those listed under AC and DC electrical characteristics except as listed in the Post
Radiation Limits Table. Radiation end point limits for the noted parameters are ensured only for the conditions as specified in MIL-STD-
883, Method 1019
(2) Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to MIL-PRF-38535.
(3) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
14
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics AC Timing Parameters(1) (continued)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes
Typ(2)
Min
Max
Units
CLK±
Cycles
tPWR
tLHT
tHLT
Pulse Width DCLK_RST±
4
9, 10, 11
Differential Low-to-High
Transition Time
10% to 90%, CL = 2.5 pF
10% to 90%, CL = 2.5 pF
150
150
ps
ps
Differential High-to-Low
Transition Time
50% of DCLK transition to
50% of Data transition, SDR
Mode
tOSK
DCLK-to-Data Output Skew
±50
ps (max)
and DDR Mode, 0° DCLK
tSU
tH
Data-to-DCLK Set-Up Time
DCLK-to-Data Hold Time
DDR Mode, 90° DCLK
DDR Mode, 90° DCLK
400
560
ps
ps
Input CLK+ Fall to
Acquisition of Data
tAD
tAJ
Sampling (Aperture) Delay
1.6
0.4
ns
Aperture Jitter
ps rms
Input Clock-to Data Output
Delay (in addition to Pipeline
Delay)
50% of Input Clock transition
to 50% of Data transition
tOD
4
ns
DI Outputs
13
14
DId Outputs
Non-
DES
13
Mode
DQ Outputs
Pipeline Delay (Latency)
1:2 Demux Mode
CLK±
Cycles
DES
Mode
13.5
(3)(4)
Non-
DES
Mode
14
DQd Outputs
DES
14.5
Mode
DI Outputs
13
14
DId Outputs
Non-
DES
Mode
13
DQ Outputs
Pipeline Delay (Latency)
1:1 Demux Mode
CLK±
Cycles
DES
Mode
13.5
(5)(6)
Non-
DES
Mode
14
DQd Outputs
DES
14.5
Mode
Differential VIN step from
±1.2V to 0V to get accurate
conversion
CLK±
Cycle
Over Range Recovery Time
1
PD low to Rated Accuracy
Conversion (Wake-Up Time)
Non-DES Mode
DES Mode
500
1
ns
µs
tWU
fSCLK
Serial Clock Frequency
15
MHz
(4) Each of the two converters of the ADC08D1520 has two LVDS output buses, which each clock data out at one half the sample rate. The
data at each bus is clocked out at one half the sample rate. The second bus (D0 through D7) has a pipeline latency that is one Input
Clock cycle less than the latency of the first bus (Dd0 through Dd7). 1:2 Demux Mode.
(5) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
(6) Each of the two converters of the ADC08D1520 has two LVDS output buses, which each clock data out at one half the sample rate. The
data at each bus is clocked out at one half the sample rate. The second bus (D0 through D7) has a pipeline latency that is one Input
Clock cycle less than the latency of the first bus (Dd0 through Dd7). 1:2 Demux Mode.
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ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics AC Timing Parameters(1) (continued)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes
Typ(2)
2.5
1
Min
Max
Units
ns (min)
ns (min)
ns
Data to Serial Clock Setup
Time
tSSU
tSH
tHCS
tSCS
Data to Serial Clock Hold
Time
CS to Serial Clock Falling
Edge Hold Time
1.5
1.0
CS to Serial Clock Rising
Setup Time
ns
Serial Clock Low Time
Serial Clock High Time
33
33
ns
ns
Non-DES Mode
1.4 x 106
1.6 x 106
CLK±
Cycles
tCAL
Calibration Cycle Time
DES Mode
PDQ Enabled
CLK±
Cycles
tCAL_L
tCAL_H
CAL Pin Low Time
CAL Pin High Time
See Figure 11
See Figure 11
1280
1280
9, 10, 11
9, 10, 11
CLK±
Cycles
ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (d.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(3)
Min
Max
Units
Non-DES MODE DYNAMIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS, 1:2 DEMUX MODE
(4)
FPBW
Full Power Bandwidth
Non-DES Mode
2.0
GHz
Error/Sam
ple
10−18
(4)
C.E.R.
Code Error Rate
(4)
(4)
d.c. to 498 MHz
±0.5
±1.0
7.4
dBFS
dBFS
Gain Flatness
d.c. to 1 GHz
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
7
Bits (min)
Bits (min)
dB (min)
dB (min)
(4)
(4)
ENOB
SINAD
Effective Number of Bits
7.2
46.3
45.4
43.9
Signal-to-Noise Plus
Distortion Ratio
(1) The analog inputs are protected as shown below. Input voltage magnitudes beyond the Absolute Maximum Ratings may damage this
device.
V
A
TO INTERNAL
CIRCUITRY
I / O
GND
(2) To ensure accuracy, it is required that VA and VDR be well bypassed. Each supply pin must be decoupled with separate bypass
capacitors. Additionally, achieving rated performance requires that the backside exposed pad be well grounded.
(3) Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to MIL-PRF-38535.
(4) This parameter is ensured by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production.
16
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SNAS420O –JANUARY 2008–REVISED MARCH 2013
ADC08D1520 Converter Electrical Characteristics DC Parameters (continued)
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (d.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
=
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX. All other limits TA =
25°C, unless otherwise noted.(1)(2)
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
Notes Typ(3)
Min
Max
Units
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 373 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN = 748 MHz, VIN = FSR − 0.5 dB
fIN1 = 365 MHz, VIN = FSR − 7 dB
fIN2 = 375 MHz, VIN = FSR − 7 dB
(VIN+) − (VIN−) > + Full Scale
47
43.9
dB (min)
dB (min)
dB (max)
dB (max)
dB
(4)
SNR
THD
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
45
−53.4
−47.5
(4)
Total Harmonic Distortion
−53
−60
2nd
Harm
(4)
Second Harmonic Distortion
−55
dB
−62
dB
(4)
3rd Harm Third Harmonic Distortion
−58
dB
55.5
47.5
dB (min)
dB (min)
Spurious-Free dynamic
(4)
SFDR
Range
53
(4)
IMD
Intermodulation Distortion
Out of Range Output Code
−50
dB
(4)
(4)
255
0
(VIN+) − (VIN−) < − Full Scale
Post Radiation Parameters(1) DC Parameters
The following specifications apply after calibration for VA = VDR = +1.9V; OutV = 1.9V; VIN FSR (a.c. coupled) = differential
870 mVP-P; CL = 10 pF; Differential, a.c. coupled Sine Wave Input Clock, fCLK = 1.5 GHz at 0.5 VP-P with 50% duty cycle; VBG
Floating; Non-Extended Control Mode; SDR Mode; REXT = 3300 Ω ±0.1%; Analog Signal Source Impedance = 100 Ω
Differential; 1:2 Output Demultiplex, duty cycle stabilizer on.
=
Sub-
groups
Parameter
Test Conditions
DES/SCS up to 100 krad(Si)
DES/SCS @ 300 krad(Si)
Notes Typ(2)
Min
Max
Units
0.23 x
VA
V
V
1
VIL
Logic Low Input Voltage
0.15 x
VA
1
(1) Pre and post irradiation limits are identical to those listed under AC and DC electrical characteristics except as listed in the Post
Radiation Limits Table. Radiation end point limits for the noted parameters are ensured only for the conditions as specified in MIL-STD-
883, Method 1019
(2) Typical figures are at TA = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to MIL-PRF-38535.
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Specification Definitions
APERTURE (SAMPLING) DELAYis the amount of delay, measured from the sampling edge of the Clock input,
after which the signal present at the input pin is sampled inside the device.
APERTURE JITTER (tAJ) is the variation in aperture delay from sample to sample. Aperture jitter shows up as
input noise.
CODE ERROR RATE (C.E.R.) is the probability of error and is defined as the probable number of word errors on
the ADC output per unit of time divided by the number of words seen in that amount of time.. A C.E.R. of 10-18
corresponds to a statistical error in one word about every four (4) years.
CLOCK DUTY CYCLE is the ratio of the time that the clock waveform is at a logic high to the total time of one
clock period.
DIFFERENTIAL NON-LINEARITY (DNL) is the measure of the maximum deviation from the ideal step size of 1
LSB. Measured at sample rate = 500 MSPS with a 1MHz input sinewave.
EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB, or EFFECTIVE BITS) is another method of specifying Signal-to-Noise
and Distortion Ratio, or SINAD. ENOB is defined as (SINAD − 1.76) / 6.02 and says that the converter is
equivalent to a perfect ADC of this (ENOB) number of bits.
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH (FPBW) is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output
fundamental drops 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full-scale input.
GAIN ERROR is the deviation from the ideal slope of the transfer function. It can be calculated from Offset and
Full-Scale Errors:
Positive Gain Error = Offset Error − Positive Full-Scale Error
Negative Gain Error = −(Offset Error − Negative Full-Scale Error)
Gain Error = Negative Full-Scale Error − Positive Full-Scale Error = Positive Gain Error + Negative Gain
Error
INTEGRAL NON-LINEARITY (INL) is a measure of worst case deviation of the ADC transfer function from an
ideal straight line drawn through the ADC transfer function. The deviation of any given code from this straight line
is measured from the center of that code value. The best fit method is used.
INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD) is the creation of additional spectral components as a result of two
sinusoidal frequencies being applied to the ADC input at the same time. It is defined as the ratio of the power in
the second and third order intermodulation products to the power in one of the original frequencies. IMD is
usually expressed in dBFS.
LSB (LEAST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight of all bits. This value is
VFS / 2N
(1)
where VFS is the differential full-scale amplitude VIN as set by the FSR input and "N" is the ADC resolution in bits,
which is 8, for the ADC08D1520.
LOW VOLTAGE DIFFERENTIAL SIGNALING (LVDS) DIFFERENTIAL OUTPUT VOLTAGE (VOD) is the
absolute value of the difference between the VD+ and VD- outputs; each measured with respect to Ground.
VD+
VD-
VOD
VD+
VOS
VD-
GND
VOD = | VD+ - VD- |
Figure 2.
LVDS OUTPUT OFFSET VOLTAGE (VOS) is the midpoint between the D+ and D- pins output voltage with
respect to ground; ie., [(VD+) +( VD-)]/2.
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MISSING CODES are those output codes that are skipped and will never appear at the ADC outputs. These
codes cannot be reached with any input value.
MSB (MOST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the largest value or weight. Its value is one half of full scale.
NEGATIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (NFSE) is a measure of how far the first code transition is from the ideal 1/2
LSB above a differential −VIN/2 with the FSR pin low. For the ADC08D1520 the reference voltage is assumed to
be ideal, so this error is a combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
OFFSET ERROR (VOFF) is a measure of how far the mid-scale point is from the ideal zero voltage differential
input.
Offset Error = Actual Input causing average of 8k samples to result in an average code of 127.5.
OUTPUT DELAY (tOD) is the time delay (in addition to Pipeline Delay) after the falling edge of CLK+ before the
data update is present at the output pins.
OVER-RANGE RECOVERY TIME is the time required after the differential input voltages goes from ±1.2V to 0V
for the converter to recover and make a conversion with its rated accuracy.
PIPELINE DELAY (LATENCY) is the number of input clock cycles between initiation of conversion and when
that data is presented to the output driver stage. New data is available at every clock cycle, but the data lags the
conversion by the Pipeline Delay plus the tOD
.
POSITIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (PFSE) is a measure of how far the last code transition is from the ideal 1-1/2
LSB below a differential +VIN/2. For the ADC08D1520 the reference voltage is assumed to be ideal, so this error
is a combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION RATIO (PSRR) can be one of two specifications. PSRR1 (DC PSRR) is the ratio
of the change in full-scale error that results from a power supply voltage change from 1.8V to 2.0V. PSRR2 (AC
PSRR) is a measure of how well an a.c. signal riding upon the power supply is rejected from the output and is
measured with a 248 MHz, 50 mVP-P signal riding upon the power supply. It is the ratio of the output amplitude of
that signal at the output to its amplitude on the power supply pin. PSRR is expressed in dB.
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO (SNR) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of the input signal at the output
to the rms value of the sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, not
including harmonics or d.c.
SIGNAL TO NOISE PLUS DISTORTION (S/(N+D) or SINAD) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of
the input signal at the output to the rms value of all of the other spectral components below half the input clock
frequency, including harmonics but excluding d.c.
SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the rms values of the
input signal at the output and the peak spurious signal, where a spurious signal is any signal present in the
output spectrum that is not present at the input, excluding d.c.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD) is the ratio expressed in dB, of the rms total of the first nine harmonic
levels at the output to the level of the fundamental at the output. THD is calculated as
2
2
f10
A
+ . . . + A
f2
THD = 20 x log
2
A
f1
(2)
where Af1 is the RMS power of the fundamental (output) frequency and Af2 through Af10 are the RMS power of
the first 9 harmonic frequencies in the output spectrum.
– Second Harmonic Distortion (2nd Harm) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the RMS power in the
input frequency seen at the output and the power in its 2nd harmonic level at the output.
– Third Harmonic Distortion (3rd Harm) is the difference expressed in dB between the RMS power in the input
frequency seen at the output and the power in its 3rd harmonic level at the output.
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Transfer Characteristic
IDEAL
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
TRANSITION
Output
Code
ACTUAL
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
TRANSITION
1111 1111 (255)
1111 1110 (254)
1111 1101 (253)
POSITIVE
FULL-SCALE
ERROR
MID-SCALE
TRANSITION
1000 0000 (128)
0111 1111 (127)
OFFSET
ERROR
IDEAL NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE TRANSITION
ACTUAL NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE TRANSITION
NEGATIVE
FULL-SCALE
ERROR
0000 0010 (2)
0000 0001 (1)
0000 0000 (0)
(V +) < (V -)
IN IN
(V +) > (V -)
IN
IN
0.0V
Differential Analog Input Voltage (+V /2) - (-V /2)
-V /2
+V /2
IN
IN
IN
IN
Figure 3. Input / Output Transfer Characteristic
Test Circuit Diagrams
Timing Diagrams
Sample N
D
Sample N-1
Dd
V
IN
Sample N+1
t
AD
CLK, CLK
t
OD
Sample N-18 and
Sample N-17
DId, DI
DQd, DQ
Sample N-16 and Sample N-15
Sample N-14 and Sample N-13
t
OSK
DCLK+, DCLK-
(OutEdge = 0)
DCLK+, DCLK-
(OutEdge = 1)
Figure 4. SDR Clocking in 1:2 Demultiplexed Mode
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Sample N
D
Sample N-1
Dd
V
IN
Sample N+1
t
AD
CLK, CLK
t
OD
DId, DI
DQd, DQ
Sample N-18 and
Sample N-17
Sample N-16 and Sample N-15
Sample N-14 and Sample N-13
t
OSK
DCLK+, DCLK-
(0°Phase)
t
t
H
SU
DCLK+, DCLK-
(90°Phase)
Figure 5. DDR Clocking in 1:2 Demultiplexed and Non-DES Mode
Sample N
Sample N-1
Dd
D
V
IN
Sample N+1
t
AD
CLK, CLK
t
OD
DId, DI
DQd, DQ
Sample N-13
Sample N-12
Sample N-11
Sample N-14
Sample N-15
t
OSK
DCLK+, DCLK-
(0°Phase)
t
t
H
SU
DCLK+, DCLK-
(90°Phase)
Figure 6. DDR Clocking in Non-Demultiplexed and Non-DES Mode
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Single Register Access
SCS
t
SCS
t
HCS
t
HCS
13
16
17
12
32
1
SCLK
SDATA
Fixed Header Pattern
Register Address
Register Write Data
LSB
MSB
t
SH
t
SSU
Figure 7. Serial Interface Timing
Synchronizing Edge
CLK
t
HR
t
SR
DCLK_RST-
DCLK_RST+
t
SD
t
PWR
DCLK+
Figure 8. Clock Reset Timing in DDR Mode
Synchronizing Edge
CLK
t
HR
t
SR
DCLK_RST-
DCLK_RST+
t
SD
t
PWR
DCLK+
OUTEDGE
Figure 9. Clock Reset Timing in SDR Mode with OUTEDGE Low
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Synchronizing Edge
CLK
t
HR
t
SR
DCLK_RST-
DCLK_RST+
t
SD
t
PWR
DCLK+
OUTEDGE
Figure 10. Clock Reset Timing in SDR Mode with OUTEDGE High
t
CAL
t
CAL
CalRun
t
CAL_H
CAL
t
CAL_L
POWER
SUPPLY
Figure 11. On-Command Calibration Timing
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Typical Performance Characteristics
VA = VDR = 1.9V, fCLK = 1500 MHz, TA= 25°C, 1:2 Demux mode, Non-DES Mode unless otherwise stated.
INL
vs
CODE
INL
vs
TEMPERATURE
Figure 12.
Figure 13.
DNL
vs.
CODE
DNL
vs.
TEMPERATURE
Figure 14.
Figure 15.
POWER DISSIPATION
vs.
ENOB
vs.
TEMPERATURE
SAMPLE RATE
Figure 16.
Figure 17.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA = VDR = 1.9V, fCLK = 1500 MHz, TA= 25°C, 1:2 Demux mode, Non-DES Mode unless otherwise stated.
ENOB
ENOB
vs.
vs.
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
SAMPLE RATE
Figure 18.
Figure 19.
ENOB
vs.
INPUT FREQUENCY
SNR
vs.
TEMPERATURE
Figure 20.
Figure 21.
SNR
vs.
SNR
vs.
SAMPLE RATE
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
Figure 22.
Figure 23.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA = VDR = 1.9V, fCLK = 1500 MHz, TA= 25°C, 1:2 Demux mode, Non-DES Mode unless otherwise stated.
SNR
THD
vs.
vs.
INPUT FREQUENCY
TEMPERATURE
Figure 24.
Figure 25.
THD
vs.
THD
vs.
SAMPLE RATE
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
Figure 26.
Figure 27.
THD
vs.
SFDR
vs.
TEMPERATURE
INPUT FREQUENCY
Figure 28.
Figure 29.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA = VDR = 1.9V, fCLK = 1500 MHz, TA= 25°C, 1:2 Demux mode, Non-DES Mode unless otherwise stated.
SFDR
SFDR
vs.
vs.
SUPPLY VOLTAGE
SAMPLE RATE
Figure 30.
Figure 31.
SFDR
vs.
INPUT FREQUENCY
Spectral Response at FIN = 373 MHz
Figure 32.
Figure .
CROSSTALK
vs
SOURCE FREQUENCY
Spectral Response at FIN = 745 MHz
Figure 33.
Figure 34.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA = VDR = 1.9V, fCLK = 1500 MHz, TA= 25°C, 1:2 Demux mode, Non-DES Mode unless otherwise stated.
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH
Figure 35.
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FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The ADC08D1520 is a versatile A/D Converter with an innovative architecture permitting very high speed
operation. The controls available ease the application of the device to circuit solutions. Optimum performance
requires adherence to the provisions discussed here and in the Applications Information Section.
While it is not recommended in radiation environments to allow an active pin to float, pins 4, 14, 52 and 127 of
the ADC08D1520 are designed to be left floating without jeopardy in non radiation environments. In all
discussions throughout this data sheet, whenever a function is called by allowing a control pin to float, connecting
that pin to a potential of one half the VA supply voltage is recommended for radiation environments.
OVERVIEW
The ADC08D1520 uses a calibrated folding and interpolating architecture that achieves over 7.25 effective bits.
The use of folding amplifiers greatly reduces the number of comparators and power consumption. Interpolation
reduces the number of front-end amplifiers required, minimizing the load on the input signal and further reducing
power requirements. In addition to other things, on-chip calibration reduces the INL bow often seen with folding
architectures. The result is an extremely fast, high performance, low power converter.
The analog input signal that is within the converter's input voltage range is digitized to eight bits at speeds of 200
MSPS to 1.7 GSPS, typical. Differential input voltages below negative full-scale will cause the output word to
consist of all zeroes. Differential input voltages above positive full-scale will cause the output word to consist of
all ones. Either of these conditions at either the I- or Q- Channel input will cause the OR (Out of Range) output to
be activated. This single OR output indicates when the output code from one or both of the channels is below
negative full scale or above positive full scale.
Each converter has a selectable output demultiplexer which feeds two LVDS buses. If the 1:2 Demultiplexed
Mode is selected, the output data rate is reduced to half the input sample rate on each bus. When Non-
Demultiplexed Mode is selected, that output data rate on channels DI and DQ are at the same rate as the input
sample clock.
The output levels may be selected to be normal or reduced. Using reduced levels saves power but could result in
erroneous data capture of some or all of the bits, especially at higher sample rates and in marginally designed
systems.
Calibration
The ADC08D1520 has a calibration feature which must be invoked by the user. If the device is powered-up in the
Extended Control Mode, the registers will be in an unknown state and no calibration is performed. For the initial
calibration after power-up, we recommend that the registers first be programmed to a known state before
performing a calibration or the part be calibrated in the pin control mode. All subsequent calibrations can be run
in either the Non-Extended Control Mode or the Extended Control Mode.
The calibration algorithm consists of two portions. The first portion is calibrating the analog input. This calibration
trims the 100 Ω analog input differential termination resistor and minimizes full-scale error, offset error, DNL and
INL, resulting in maximizing SNR, THD, SINAD (SNDR) and ENOB. This portion of the calibration can be
disabled by programming the Resistor Trim Disable (RTD) bit in the Extended Configuration register in the
Extended Control Mode. Disabling the input termination resistor is not recommended for the initial calibration
after power-up. The second portion of the calibration cycle is the ADC calibration in which internal bias currents
are set. The ADC calibration is performed regardless of the RTD bit setting. Running the calibration is an
important part of this chip’s functionality and is required in order to obtain specified performance. In addition to
the requirement that a calibration be run at power-up, a calibration must be run whenever the FSR pin is
changed. For best performance, we recommend that a calibration be run after application of power once the
power supplies have settled and the part temperature has stabilized. Further calibrations should be run whenever
the operating temperature changes significantly relative to the specific system performance requirements. See
Initiating Calibration for more information. Calibration can not be initiated or run while the device is in the Power-
Down Mode. SeePower Down for information on the interaction between Power down and calibration.
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In normal operation, calibration should be performed just after application of power and whenever a valid
calibration command is given. A calibration command can be issued using two methods. The first method is to
hold the CAL pin low for at least tCAL_L input clock cycles, then hold it high for at least another tCAL_H input clock
cycles as defined in the Converter Electrical Characteristics. The second method is to program the CAL bit in the
Calibration register. The functionality of the CAL bit is exactly the same as using the CAL pin. The CAL bit must
be programmed to 0b for tCAL_L input clock cycles and then programmed to 1b for at least tCAL_H input clock
cycles to initiate a calibration cycle. The time taken by the calibration procedure is specified as tCAL in the
Converter Electrical Characteristics.
The CAL bit does not reset itself to zero automatically, but must be manually reset before another calibration
event is desired, the CAL bit may be left high indefinitely, with no negative consequences.
The RTD bit setting is critical for running a calibration event with the Clock Phase Adjust enabled. If initiating a
calibration event while the Clock Phase Adjust is enabled, the RTD bit must be set to high, or no calibration will
occur. If initiating a calibration event while the Clock Phase Adjust is not enabled, a normal calibration will occur,
regardless of the setting of the RTD bit.
Calibration Operation Notes:
•
•
During the calibration cycle, the OR output may be active as a result of the calibration algorithm. All data on
the output pins and the OR output are invalid during the calibration cycle.
During the calibration, all clocks are halted on chip, including internal clocks and DCLK, while the input
termination resistor is trimmed to a value that is equal to REXT / 33. This is to reduce noise during the input
resistor calibration portion of the calibration cycle. See the appropriate section for information on maintaining
DCLK operation during on-command calibration.
–
This external resistor is located between pin 32 and ground. REXT must be 3300 Ω ±0.1%. With this value,
the input termination resistor is trimmed to be 100 Ω. Because REXT is also used to set the proper current
for the Track and Hold amplifier, for the preamplifiers and for the comparators, other values of REXT should
not be used.
•
•
The CalRun output is high whenever the calibration procedure is running. This is true whether the calibration
is done at power-up or on-command.
It is important that no digital activity take place on any of the digital input lines during the calibration process,
except that there must be a stable, constant frequency CLK signal present and that SCLK may be active if the
Enhanced Mode is selected. Actions that are not allowed include but are not limited to:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Changing OUTV
Changing OutEdge or SDATA sense
Changing between SDR and DDR
Changing FSE or ECE
Changing DCLK_RST
Changing SCS
Raising PD high
Raising CAL high
•
Doing any of these actions can cause faulty calibration.
Acquiring the Input
Data is acquired at the falling edge of CLK+ (pin 18) and the digital equivalent of that data is available at the
digital outputs 13 input clock cycles later for the DI and DQ output buses and 14 input clock cycles later for the
DId and DQd output buses. There is an additional internal delay called tOD before the data is available at the
outputs. See the Timing Diagram. The ADC08D1520 will convert as long as the input clock signal is present. The
fully differential comparator design and the innovative design of the sample-and-hold amplifier, together with self
calibration, enables a very flat SINAD/ENOB response beyond 1.5 GHz. The ADC08D1520 output data signaling
is LVDS and the output format is offset binary.
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Control Modes
Much of the user control can be accomplished with several control pins that are provided. Examples include
initiation of the calibration cycle, Power Down Mode and full scale range setting. However, the ADC08D1520 also
provides an Extended Control mode whereby a serial interface is used to access register-based control of
several advanced features. The Extended Control mode is not intended to be enabled and disabled dynamically.
Rather, the user is expected to employ either the Non-Extended Control Mode or the Extended Control Mode at
all times. When the device is in the Extended Control Mode, pin-based control of several features is replaced
with register-based control and those pin-based controls are disabled. These pins are OutV (pin 3),
OutEdge/DDR (pin 4), FSR (pin 14) and DES (pin 127). See the appropriate section for details on the Extended
Control Mode.
The Analog Inputs
The ADC08D1520 must be driven with a differential input signal. Operation with a single-ended signal is not
recommended. It is important that the inputs either be a.c. coupled to the inputs with the VCMO (pin 7) grouned, or
d.c. coupled with the VCMO pin left floating.
Two full-scale range settings are provided with pin 14 (FSR). A high on pin 14 causes an input full-scale range
setting of a higher VIN input level, while grounding pin 14 causes an input full-scale range setting of a reduced
VIN input level. The full-scale range setting operates equally on both ADCs.
In the Extended Control Mode, the Input Full-Scale Voltage Adjust register allows the input full-scale range to be
adjusted as described in REGISTER DESCRIPTION and THE ANALOG INPUT.
Clocking
The ADC08D1520 must be driven with an a.c. coupled, differential clock signal. THE CLOCK INPUTS describes
the use of the clock input pins. A differential LVDS output clock is available for use in latching the ADC output
data into whatever device is used to receive the data.
The ADC08D1520 offers input and output clocking options. These options include a choice of Dual Edge
Sampling (DES) or "interleaved mode" where the ADC08D1520 performs as a single device converting at twice
the input clock rate, a choice of which DCLK edge the output data transitions on, and a choice of Single Data
Rate (SDR) or Double Data Rate (DDR) outputs.
The ADC08D1520 also has the option to use a duty cycle corrected clock receiver as part of the input clock
circuit. This feature is enabled by default and provides improved ADC clocking especially in the Dual-
Edge Sampling Mode (DES). This circuitry allows the ADC to be clocked with a signal source having a
duty cycle ratio of 20%/80% (worst case) for both the Non-DES and the Dual Edge Sampling Modes.
Dual-Edge Sampling
The DES Mode allows one of the ADC08D1520's inputs (I- or Q- Channel) to be sampled by both ADCs. One
ADC samples the input on the positive edge of the input clock and the other ADC samples the same input on the
other edge of the input clock. A single input is thus sampled twice per input clock cycle, resulting in an overall
sample rate of twice the input clock frequency, or 3 GSPS with a 1.5 GHz input clock.
In this mode, the outputs must be carefully interleaved to reconstruct the sampled signal. If the device is
programmed into the 1:2 Demultiplex Mode while in DES Mode, the data is effectively Demultiplexed 1:4. If the
input clock is 1.5 GHz, the effective sampling rate is doubled to 3 GSPS and each of the 4 output buses have a
750 MHz output rate. All data is available in parallel. To properly reconstruct the sampled waveform, the four
bytes of parallel data that are output with each clock are in the following sampling order from the earliest to the
latest and must be interleaved as such: DQd, DId, DQ, DI. Table 1 indicates what the outputs represent for the
various sampling possibilities. If the device is programmed into the Non-Demultiplex Mode, two bytes of parallel
data are output with each edge of the clock in the following sampling order, from the earliest to the latest: DQ, DI.
See Table 2.
In the Non-Extended Control Mode of operation only the I- channel input can be sampled in the DES Mode. In
the Extended Control Mode of operation, the user can select which input is sampled.
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The ADC08D1520 also includes an automatic clock phase background calibration feature which can be used in
DES Mode to automatically and continuously adjust the clock phase of the I- and Q- channel. This feature
removes the need to adjust the clock phase setting manually and provides optimal Dual-Edge Sampling ENOB
performance.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The background calibration feature in DES Mode does not replace the requirement for
calibration if a large swing in ambient temperature is experienced by the device.
Table 1. Input Channel Samples Produced at Data Outputs in 1:2 Demultiplexed Mode**
Data Outputs
Dual-Edge Sampling Mode (DES)
(Always sourced with
respect to fall of DCLK+)
Non DES Sampling Mode
I- Channel Selected
Q- Channel Selected *
I- Channel Input Sampled with Fall I- Channel Input Sampled with
of CLK 13 cycles earlier. Fall of CLK 13 cycles earlier.
Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Fall of CLK 13 cycles earlier.
DI
DId
DQ
I- Channel Input Sampled with Fall I- Channel Input Sampled with
Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Fall of CLK 14 cycles earlier.
of CLK 14 cycles earlier.
Fall of CLK 14 cycles earlier.
Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Fall of CLK 13 cycles earlier.
I- Channel Input Sampled with
Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Rise of CLK 13.5 cycles earlier. Rise of CLK 13.5 cycles earlier.
I- Channel Input Sampled with Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Rise of CLK 14.5 cycles earlier. Rise of CLK 14.5 cycles earlier.
Q- Channel Input Sampled with
Fall of CLK 14 cycles earlier.
DQd
* Note that, in DES + Non-DES Mode, only the I- Channel is sampled. In DES + Extended Control Mode, I- Channel or Q- Channel can be
sampled.
** Note that, in the Non-Demultiplexed Mode, the DId and DQd outputs are disabled and are high impedance.
Table 2. Input Channel Samples Produced at Data Outputs in 1:1 Demultiplexed Mode
Data Outputs
(Sourced with respect to fall of DCLK+)
Non-DES Mode
DES Mode
I- Channel Input Sampled with Fall of CLK
13 cycles earlier.
I- Channel Input Sampled with Fall of CLK
13 cycles earlier.
DI
Dld
DQ
DQd
No output.
No output.
Q- Channel Input Sampled with Fall of CLK
13 cycles earlier.
Q- Channel Input Sampled with Fall of CLK
13.5 cycles earlier.
No output.
No output.
OutEdge and Demultiplex Control Setting
To help ease data capture in the SDR Mode, the output data may be caused to transition on either the positive or
the negative edge of the output data clock (DCLK). In the Non-Extended Control Mode, this is chosen with the
OutEdge input (pin 4). A high on the OutEdge input pin causes the output data to transition on the rising edge of
DCLK+, while grounding this input causes the output to transition on the falling edge of DCLK. See Output Edge
Synchronization. When in the Extended Control Mode, the OutEdge is selected using the OED bit in the
Configuration Register. This bit has two functions. In the single data rate (SDR) Mode, the bit functions as
OutEdge and selects the DCLK edge with which the data transitions. In the Double Data Rate (DDR) Mode, this
bit selects whether the device is in Non-Demultiplex or 1:2 Demultiplex Mode. In the DDR case, the DCLK has a
0° phase relationship with the output data independent of the demultiplexer selection.
For 1:2 Demux DDR 0 deg Mode, there are five, as opposed to four cycles of CLK delay from the deassertion of
DCLK_RST to the Synchronizing Edge. See MULTIPLE ADC SYNCHRONIZATION
Double Data Rate
A choice of single data rate (SDR) or double data rate (DDR) output is offered. With single data rate the output
clock (DCLK) frequency is the same as the data rate of the two output buses. With double data rate the DCLK
frequency is half the data rate and data is sent to the outputs on both edges of DCLK. DDR clocking is enabled
in Non-Extended Control Mode by tying pin 4 to VA/2.
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Clocking Summary
The chip may be in one of four modes, depending on the Dual- Edge Sampling (DES) selection and the
demultiplex selection. For the DES selection, there are two possibilities: Non- DES Mode and DES Mode. In
Non-DES Mode, each of the channels (I-channel and Q-channel) functions independently, i.e. the chip is a dual
1.5 GSPS A/D converter. In DES Mode, the I- and Q-channels are interleaved and function together as one 3.0
GSPS A/D converter. For the demultiplex selection, there are also two possibilities: Demux Mode and Non-
Demux Mode. The I-channel has two 8-bit output busses associated with it: DI and DId. The Q-channel also has
two 8- bit output busses associated with it: DQ and DQd. In Demux Mode, the channel is demultiplexed by 1:2.
In Non-Demux Mode, the channel is not demultiplexed. Note that Non-Demux Mode is also sometimes referred
to as 1:1 Demux Mode. For example, if the I-channel was in Non-Demux Mode, the corresponding digital output
data would be available on only the DI bus. If the I-channel was in Demux Mode, the corresponding digital output
data would be available on both the DI and DId busses, but at half the rate of Non-Demux Mode.
Given that there are two DES Mode selections (DES Mode and Non-DES Mode) and two demultiplex selections
(Demux Mode and Non-Demux Mode), this yields a total of four possible modes: (1) Non-Demux Mode, (2) Non-
Demux DES Mode, (3) 1:2 Demux Non-DES Mode, and (4) 1:4 Demux DES Mode. The following is a brief
explanation of the terms and modes:
1. Non-Demux Mode: This mode is when the chip is in Non- Demux Mode and Non-DES Mode, but it is
shortened to simply "Non-Demux Mode." The I- and Q- channels function independently of one another. The
digital output data is available for the I- channel on DI, and for the Q- channel on DQ.
2. Non-Demux DES Mode: This mode is when the chip is in Non-Demux Mode and DES Mode. The I- and Q-
channels are interleaved and function together as one channel. The digital output data is available on the DI
and DQ busses because although the chip is in Non-Demux Mode, both I- and Q- channels are functioning
and passing data.
3. 1:2 Demux Non-DES Mode: This mode is when the chip is in Demux Mode and Non-DES Mode. The I- and
Q- channels function independently of one another. The digital output data is available for the I- channel on
DI and DId, and for the Q- channel on DQ and DQd. This is because each channel (I- channel and Q-
channel) is providing digital data in a demultiplexed manner.
4. 1:4 Demux DES Mode: This mode is when the chip is in Demux Mode and DES Mode. The I- and Q-
channels are interleaved and function together as one channel. The digital output data is available on the DI,
DId, DQ and DQd busses because although the chip is in Demux Mode, both I- and Q- channels are
functioning and passing data. To avoid confusion, this mode is labeled 1:4 because the analog input signal is
provided on one channel and the digital output data is provided on four busses.
The choice of Dual Data Rate (DDR) and Single Data Rate (SDR) will only affect the speed of the output Data
Clock (DCLK). Once the DES Modes and Demux Modes have been chosen, the data output rate is also fixed. In
the case of SDR, the DCLK runs at the same rate as the output data; output data may transition with either the
rising or falling edge of DCLK. In the case of DDR, the DCLK runs at half the rate of the output data; the output
data transitions on both rising and falling edges of the DCLK.
The LVDS Outputs
The data outputs, the Out Of Range (OR) and DCLK, are LVDS. Output current sources provide 3 mA of output
current to a differential 100 Ohm load when the OutV input (pin 14) is high or 2.2 mA when the OutV input is low.
For short LVDS lines and low noise systems, satisfactory performance may be realized with the OutV input low,
which results in lower power consumption. If the LVDS lines are long and/or the system in which the
ADC08D1520 is used is noisy, it may be necessary to tie the OutV pin high.
The LVDS data output have a typical common mode voltage of 800 mV when the VBG pin is left floating. This
common mode voltage can be increased to 1.1V by tying the VBG pin to VA if a higher common mode is required.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Tying the VBG pin to VA will also increase the differential LVDS output voltage by up to
40mV.
Power Down
The ADC08D1520 is in the active state when the Power Down pin (PD) is low. When the PD pin is high, the
device is in the Power Down Mode. In this Power Down Mode the data output pins (positive and negative) are
put into a high impedance state and the devices power consumption is reduced to a minimal level. The DCLK+/-
and OR +/- are not tri-stated, they are weakly pulled down to ground internally. Therefore when both I- Channel
and Q- Channel are powered down the DCLK +/- and OR +/- should not be terminated to a DC voltage.
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A high on the PDQ pin will power down the Q- Channel and leave the I- channel active. There is no provision to
power down the I- Channel independently of the Q- Channel. Upon return to normal operation, the pipeline will
contain meaningless information.
If the PD input is brought high while a calibration is running, the device will not go into power down until the
calibration sequence is complete. However, if power is applied and PD is simultaneously ramped, the device will
not calibrate until the PD input goes low. If a calibration is requested while the device is powered down, the
calibration request will be completely ignored. Calibration will function with the Q- Channel powered down, but
that channel will not be calibrated if PDQ is high. If the Q- Channel is subsequently to be used, it is necessary to
perform a calibration after PDQ is brought low.
NON-EXTENDED CONTROL/EXTENDED CONTROL
The ADC08D1520 may be operated in one of two modes. In the simpler Non-Extended Control Mode, the user
affects available configuration and control of the device through several control pins. The "Extended Control
Mode" provides additional configuration and control options through a serial interface and a set of 9 registers.
Table 3 shows how several of the device features are affected by the control mode chosen.
The choice of control modes is required to be a fixed selection and is not intended to be switched dynamically
while the device is operational.
Powering up in Non-Extended Control Mode
Non-Extended Control Mode is selected by setting pin 41 to logic high. After the part has stabilized, it should be
put through a calibration routine. See Calibration
Powering up in Extended Control Mode
Extended Control Mode is selected by setting pin 41 to logic low. When the device is powered up in the
Extended Control Mode, the Registers are loaded with invalid data and the Registers come up in an unknown
state. Before initiating a calibration all nine registers must be written to and programmed into a known state. After
the part has stabilized, it should be put through a calibration routine. See Calibration
Powering up in Non-Extended Control Mode and then switching to Extended-Control Mode
If the device is powered up in the Non-Extended Control Mode and the user switches to the Extended Control
Mode after the part has stabilized, the registers will load with the register default states described in Table 4.
Before writing to single registers, an initial write must be performed. This initial write can be done either while the
part is still in Non-Extended Control Mode or after the part has been switched to Extended Control Mode.
Initial write in Non-Extended Control Mode
The initial write may be done by writing to any one or more of the registers. The part’s configuration will not
change and the registers will load to the default states described in Table 4 when the part is switched to
Extended Control Mode, after which writing to single registers is allowed.
Initial write in Extended Control Mode
If an initial write is not done in Non-Extended Control Mode, then all nine registers must be written to during the
initial write in Extended Control Mode. After that, writing to single registers is allowed.
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Table 3. Features and Modes
Feature
Non-Extended Control Mode
Selected with pin 4
Extended Control Mode
SDR or DDR Clocking
DDR Clock Phase
Selected with bit 10 nDE in the Configuration Register (Addr-1h; bit-10)
Selected with DCP in the Configuration Register (Addr-1h; bit-11)
Not Selectable (0° Phase Only)
SDR Data transitions with rising edge
of DCLK+ when pin 4 is high and on Selected with OED in the Configuration Register (Addr-1h; bit-8)
falling edge when low.
SDR Data transitions
with rising or falling
DCLK edge
Normal differential data and DCLK
amplitude selected when pin 3 is high
LVDS output level
Selected with OV in the Configuration Register (Addr-1h; bit-9)
and reduced amplitude selected
when low.
Normal input full-scale range selected Up to 512 step adjustments over a nominal range specified in
when pin 14 is high and reduced
range when low. Selected range
applies to both channels.
REGISTER DESCRIPTION. Separate range selected for I- Channel and
Q- Channels. Selected using Full Range Registers (Addr-3h and Bh; bit-
7 thru 15)
Full-Scale Range
Input Offset Adjust
512 steps of adjustment using the input Offset register specified in
REGISTER DESCRIPTION for each channel using Input Offset registers
(Addr-2h and Ah; bit-7 thru 15)
Not possible
Dual Edge Sampling
Selection
Enabled by programming DEN in the Extended Configuration Register
(Addr-9h; bit-13 )
Enabled with pin 127 set to VA/2
Only I-Channel Input can be used
Not possible
Dual Edge Sampling
Input Channel Selection
Either I- Channel or Q- Channel input may be sampled by both ADCs.
A test pattern can be made present at the data outputs by setting TPO to
1b in Extented Configuration Register (Addr-9h; bit-15)
Test Pattern
The DCLK outputs will continuously be present when RTD is set to 1b in
Extented Configuration Register (Addr-9h; bit-14)
Resistor Trim Disable
Not possible
If the device is set in DDR, the output can be programmed to be non-
demultiplex. When OED in Configuration Register is set 1b (Addr-1h; 8-
bit), this selects non-demultiplex. If OED is set 0b, this selects 1:2
demultiplex.
Selectable Output
Demultiplexer
Not possible
The OR outputs can be programmed to become a second DCLK output
when nSD is set 0b in Configuration Register (Addr-1h; bit-13).
Second DCLK Output
Not possible
Not possible
The sampling clock phase can be manually adjusted through the Coarse
and Intermediate Register (Addr-Fh; bit-14 to 7) and Fine register (Addr-
Dh; bit-15 to 8)
Sampling Clock Phase
Adjust
Table 4. Extended Control Mode Operation
(Pin 41 Logic Low)
Feature
Extended Control Mode Default State
DDR Clocking
SDR or DDR Clocking
DDR Clock Phase
Data changes with DCLK edge (0° phase)
Normal amplitude
LVDS Output Amplitude
(VOD
)
Full-Scale Range
Input Offset Adjust
700 mV nominal for both channels
No adjustment for either channel
Not enabled
Dual Edge Sampling (DES)
Test Pattern
Not present at output
Resistor Trim Disable
Selectable Output Demultiplexer
Second DCLK Output
Sampling Clock Phase Adjust
Trim enabled, DCLK not continuously present at output
1:2 demultiplex
Not present, pin 79 and 80 function as OR+ and OR-.
No adjustment for fine, intermediate or coarse
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THE SERIAL INTERFACE
IMPORTANT NOTE: During the initial write using the serial interface, all nine registers must be written with
desired or default values. Subsequent writes to single registers are allowed.
The 3-pin serial interface is enabled only when the device is in the Extended Control mode. The pins of this
interface are Serial Clock (SCLK), Serial Data (SDATA) and Serial Interface Chip Select (SCS). Nine write only
registers are accessible through this serial interface.
SCS: This signal should be asserted low while accessing a register through the serial interface. Setup and hold
times with respect to the SCLK must be observed.
SCLK: Serial data input is accepted at the rising edge of this signal.
SDATA: Each register access requires a specific 32-bit pattern at this input. This pattern consists of a header,
register address and register value. The data is shifted in MSB first. Setup and hold times with respect to the
SCLK must be observed. See the Timing Diagram.
Each Register access consists of 32 bits, as shown in Figure 7 of the Timing Diagrams. The fixed header pattern
is 0000 0000 0001 (eleven zeros followed by a 1). The loading sequence is such that a "0" is loaded first. These
12 bits form the header. The next 4 bits are the address of the register that is to be written to and the last 16 bits
are the data written to the addressed register. The addresses of the various registers are indicated in Table 5.
Refer to the Register Description (REGISTER DESCRIPTION) for information on the data to be written to the
registers.
Subsequent register accesses may be performed immediately, starting with the 33rd SCLK. This means that the
SCS input does not have to be de-asserted and asserted again between register addresses. It is possible,
although not recommended, to keep the SCS input permanently enabled (at a logic low) when using extended
control.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Do not write to the Serial Interface when calibrating the ADC. Doing so will impair the
performance of the device until it is re-calibrated correctly. Programming the serial registers will also reduce
dynamic performance of the ADC for the duration of the register access time.
Table 5. Register Addresses
4-Bit Address
Loading Sequence:
A3 loaded after H0, A0 loaded last
A3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
A2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
A1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
A0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
Hex
0h
1h
2h
3h
4h
5h
6h
7h
8h
9h
Ah
Bh
Ch
Dh
Eh
Register Addressed
Calibration
Configuration
I- Ch Offset
I- Ch Full-Scale Voltage Adjust
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Extended Configuration
Q- Ch Offset
Q- Ch Full-Scale Voltage Adjust
Reserved
Reserved
Sampling Clock Phase Fine Adjust
Sample Clock Phase Intermediate and
Coarse Adjust
1
1
1
1
Fh
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REGISTER DESCRIPTION
Nine write-only registers provide several control and configuration options in the Extended Control Mode. These
registers have no effect when the device is in the Non-Extended Control Mode. Each register description below
also shows the Register Default State.
Table 6. Calibration Register
Addr: 0h (0000b)
Write only (0x7FFF)
D15
CAL
D14
1
D13
1
D12
1
D11
1
D10
1
D9
1
D8
1
D7
1
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Bit 15
CAL: Calibration Enable. When this bit is set 1b, a command calibration cycle is initiated. This function is
exactly the same as issuing a calibration using the CAL pin. See Initiating Calibration for details for usage.
Default State: 0b
Must be set to 1b
Bits 14:0
Table 7. Configuration Register
Addr: 1h (0001b)
Write only (0xB2FF)
D15
1
D14
0
D13
nSD
D12
D11
D10
nDE
D9
D8
DCS
DCP
OV
OED
D7
1
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Must be set to 1b
Must be set to 0b
nSD: Second DCLK Output. When this bit is 1b, the device only has one DCLK output and one OR output.
When this output is 0b, the device has two identical DCLK outputs and no OR output.
Default State: 1b
Bit 12
Bit 11
DCS: Duty Cycle Stabilizer. When this bit is set to 1b, a duty cycle stabilization circuit is applied to the clock
input. When this bit is set to 0b the stabilization circuit is disabled.
Default State: 1b
DCP: DDR Clock Phase. This bit only has an effect in the DDR Mode. When this bit is set to 0b, the DCLK
edges are time-aligned with the data bus edges ("0° Phase"). When this bit is set to 1b, the DCLK edges are
placed in the middle of the data bit-cells ("90° Phase"), using the one-half speed DCLK shown in Figure 5 as
the phase reference.
Default State: 0b
Bit 10
Bit 9
nDE: DDR Enable. When this bit is set to 0b, data bus clocking follows the DDR (Double Data Rate) Mode
whereby a data word is output with each rising and falling edge of DCLK. When this bit is set to a 1b, data bus
clocking follows the SDR (single data rate) Mode whereby each data word is output with either the rising or
falling edge of DCLK , as determined by the OutEdge bit.
Default State: 0b
OV: Output Voltage. This bit determines the LVDS outputs' voltage amplitude and has the same function as the
OutV pin that is used in the Non-Extended Control Mode. When this bit is set to 1b, the standard output
amplitude of 780 mVP-P is used. When this bit is set to 0b, the reduced output amplitude of 590 mVP-P is used.
Default State: 1b
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Bit 8
OED: Output Edge and Demultiplex Control. This bit has two functions. When the device is in SDR Mode, this
bit selects the DCLK edge with which the data words transition in the SDR Mode and has the same effect as
the OutEdge pin in the Non-Extended Control Mode. When this bit is set to 1b, the data outputs change with
the rising edge of DCLK+. When this bit is set to 0b, the data output changes with the falling edge of DCLK+.
When the device is in DDR Mode, this bit selects the Non-Demultiplexed Mode when set to 1b. When the bit
set to 0b, the device is programmed into the 1:2 Demultiplexed Mode. The 1:2 Demultiplexed Mode is the
default mode. In DDR Mode, DCLK has a 0° phase relationship with the data.
Default State: 0b
Must be set to 1b
Bits 7:0
IMPORTANT NOTE: It is recommended that this register should only be written upon power-up initialization as
writing it may cause disturbance on the DCLK output as this signals basic configuration is changed.
Table 8. I-Channel Offset
Addr: 2h (0010b)
Write only (0x007F)
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB)
Offset Value
(LSB)
D7
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Sign
Bits 15:8
Offset Value. The input offset of the I-Channel ADC is adjusted linearly and monotonically by the value in this
field. 00h provides a nominal zero offset, while FFh provides a nominal 45 mV of offset. Thus, each code step
provides 0.176 mV of offset.
Default State: 0000 0000 b
Bit 7
Sign bit. 0b gives positive offset, 1b gives negative offset.
Default State: 0b
Bit 6:0
Must be set to 1b
Table 9. I-Channel Full-Scale Voltage Adjust
Addr: 3h (0011b)
Write only (0x807F)
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB)
Adjust Value
D7
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
(LSB)
Bit 15:7
Full Scale Voltage Adjust Value. The input full-scale voltage or gain of the I-Channel ADC is adjusted linearly
and monotonically with a 9 bit data value. The adjustment range is ±20% of the nominal 700 mVP-P differential
value.
0000 0000 0
560mVP-P
700mVP-P
840mVP-P
1000 0000 0 Default Value
1111 1111 1
For best performance, it is recommended that the value in this field be limited to the range of 00100 000 0b to
1110 0000 0b. i.e., limit the amount of adjustment to ±15%. The remaining ±5% headroom allows for the ADC's
own full scale variation. A gain adjustment does not require ADC re-calibration.
Default State: 1000 0000 0b (no adjustment)
Must be set to 1b
Bits 6:0
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Table 10. Extended Configuration Register
Addr: 9h (1001b)
Write only (0x03FF)
D15
D14
D13
D12
IS
D11
0
D10
DLF
D9
1
D8
1
TPO
RTD
DEN
D7
1
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
TPO: Test Pattern Output. When this bit is set 1b, the ADC is disengaged and a test pattern generator is
connected to the outputs including OR. This test pattern will work with the device in the SDR, DDR and the
Non-Demultiplex output modes.
Default State: 0b
RTD: Resistor Trim Disable. When this bit is set to 1b, the input termination resistor is not trimmed during the
calibration cycle and the DCLK output remains enabled. Note that the ADC is calibrated regardless of this
setting.
Default State: 0b
DES: DES Enable. Setting this bit to 1b enables the Dual Edge Sampling Mode. In this mode the ADCs in this
device are used to sample and convert the same analog input in a time-interleaved manner, accomplishing a
sample rate of twice the input clock rate. When this bit is set to 0b, the device operates in the Non-DES Mode.
Default State: 0b
IS: Input Select. When this bit is set to 0b the I- Channel input is operated upon by both ADCs. When this bit is
set to 1b the Q- Channel input is operated on by both ADCs.
Default State: 0b
Must be set to 0b
Bit 11
Bit 10
DLF: DES Low Frequency. When this bit is set 1b, the dynamic performance of the device is improved when
the input clock is less than 900 MHz.
Default State: 0b
Must be set to 1b
Bits 9:0
Table 11. Q- Channel Offset
Addr: Ah (1010b)
Write only (0x007F)
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB)
Offset Value
(LSB)
D7
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Sign
Bit 15:8
Offset Value. The input offset of the Q- Channel ADC is adjusted linearly and monotonically by the value in this
field. 00h provides a nominal zero offset, while FFh provides a nominal 45 mV of offset. Thus, each code step
provides about 0.176 mV of offset.
Default State: 0000 0000 b
Bit 7
Sign bit. 0b gives positive offset, 1b gives negative offset.
Default State: 0b
Bit 6:0
Must be set to 1b
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Table 12. Q- Channel Full-Scale Voltage Adjust
Addr: Bh (1011b)
Write only (0x807F)
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB)
Adjust Value
D7
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
(LSB)
Bit 15:7
Full Scale Voltage Adjust Value. The input full-scale voltage or gain of the I- Channel ADC is adjusted linearly
and monotonically with a 9 bit data value. The adjustment range is ±20% of the nominal 700 mVP-P differential
value.
0000 0000 0
1000 0000 0
1111 1111 1
560 mVP-P
700 mVP-P
840 mVP-P
For best performance, it is recommended that the value in this field be limited to the range of 00100 000 0b to
1110 0000 0b. i.e., limit the amount of adjustment to ±15%. The remaining ±5% headroom allows for the ADC's
own full scale variation. A gain adjustment does not require ADC re-calibration.
Default State: 1000 0000 0b (no adjustment)
Must be set to 1b
Bits 6:0
Table 13. Sample Clock Phase Fine Adjust
Addr: Eh (1110b)
Write only (0x00FF)
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB)
Fine Phase Adjust
(LSB)
D7
1
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
Bits 15:8
Fine Phase Adjust. The phase of the ADC sampling clock is adjusted linearly and monotonically by the value in
this field. 00h provides a nominal zero phase adjustment, while FFh provides a nominal 50 ps of delay. Thus,
each code step provides about 0.2 ps of delay.
Default State: 0000 0000b
Must be set to 1b
Bits 7:0
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Table 14. Sample Clock Phase Intermediate/Coarse Adjust
Addr: Fh (1111b)
Write only (0x007F)
D15
POL
D14
D13
D12
D11
D10
D9
D8
(MSB) Coarse Phase Adjust
IPA
D7
D6
1
D5
1
D4
1
D3
1
D2
1
D1
1
D0
1
(LSB)
Bit 15
Polarity Select. When this bit is selected, the polarity of the ADC sampling clock is inverted.
Default State: 0b
Bits 14:10
Coarse Phase Adjust. Each code value in this field delays the sample clock by approximately 65 ps. A value of
00000b in this field causes zero adjustment.
Default State: 00000b
Bits 9:7
Bits 6:0
Intermediate Phase Adjust. Each code value in this field delays the sample clock by approximately 11 ps. A
value of 000b in this field causes zero adjustment. Maximum combined adjustment using Coarse Phase Adjust
and Intermediate Phase adjust is approximately 2.1ns.
Default State: 000b
Must be set to 1b
Note Regarding Extended Mode Offset Correction
When using the I- Channel or Q- Channel Offset Adjust registers, the following information should be noted.
For offset values of +0000 0000 and -0000 0000, the actual offset is not the same. By changing only the sign bit
in this case, an offset step in the digital output code of about 1/10th of an LSB is experienced. This is shown
more clearly in the Figure below.
Note Regarding Clock Phase Adjust
This is a feature intended to help the system designer remove small imbalances in clock distribution traces at the
board level when multiple ADCs are used. Please note, however, that enabling this feature will reduce the
dynamic performance (ENOB, SNR SFDR) some finite amount. The amount of degradation increases with the
amount of adjustment applied. The user is strongly advised to (a) use the minimal amount of adjustment: and (b)
verify the net benefit of this feature in his system before relying on it.
Figure 36. Extended Mode Offset Behavior
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MULTIPLE ADC SYNCHRONIZATION
The ADC08D1520 has the capability to precisely reset its sampling clock input to DCLK output relationship as
determined by the user-supplied DCLK_RST pulse. This allows multiple ADCs in a system to have their DCLK
(and data) outputs transition at the same time with respect to the shared CLK input that they all the ADCs use for
sampling.
The DCLK_RST signal must observe some timing requirements that are shown in Figure 8, Figure 9 and
Figure 10 of the Timing Diagrams. The DCLK_RST pulse must be of a minimum width and its deassertion edge
must observe setup and hold times with respect to the CLK input rising edge. These timing specifications are
listed as tRH, tRS, and tRPW in the Converter Electrical Characteristics.
The DCLK_RST signal can be asserted asynchronous to the input clock. If DCLK_RST is asserted, the DCLK
output is held in a designated state. The state in which DCLK is held during the reset period is determined by the
mode of operation (SDR/DDR) and the setting of the Output Edge configuration pin or bit. (Refer to Figure 8,
Figure 9 and Figure 10 for the DCLK reset state conditions). Therefore, depending upon when the DCLK_RST
signal is asserted, there may be a narrow pulse on the DCLK line during this reset event. When the DCLK_RST
signal is de-asserted in synchronization with the CLK rising edge, the 4th or 5th CLK falling edge synchronizes
the DCLK output with those of other ADC08D1520's in the system. The DCLK output is enabled again after a
constant delay (relative to the input clock frequency) which is equal to the CLK input to DCLK output delay (tSD).
The device always exhibits this delay characteristic in normal operation.
As shown in Figure 8, Figure 9 and Figure 10of the Timing Diagrams, there is a delay from the deassertion of
DCLK_RST to the reappearance of DCLK, which is equal to several CLK cycles of delay plus tSD. Note that the
deassertion of DCLK_RST is not latched in until the next falling edge of CLK. For 1:2 Demux DDR 0 deg Mode,
there are five CLK cycles of delay; for all other modes, there are four CLK cycles of delay.
If the device is not programmed to allow DCLK to run continuously, DCLK will become inactive during a
calibration cycle. Therefore, it is strongly recommended that DCLK only be used as a data capture clock and not
as a system clock.
The DCLK_RST pin should NOT be brought high while the calibration process is running (while CalRun is high).
Doing so could cause a digital glitch in the digital circuitry, resulting in corruption and invalidation of the
calibration. (See Application Information Section 2.4.3)
ADC TEST PATTERN
To aid in system debug, the ADC08D1520 has the capability of providing a test pattern at the four output ports
completely independent of the input signal. The ADC is disengaged and a test pattern generator is connected to
the outputs including OR. The test pattern output is the same in DES Mode and Non-DES Mode. Each port is
given a unique 8-bit word, alternating between 1's and 0's as described in the Table 15.
Table 15. Test Pattern by Output Port
in 1:2 Demultiplex Mode
Time
T0
Qd
01h
FEh
01h
FEh
01h
01h
FEh
01h
FEh
01h
01h
...
Id
Q
I
OR
0
Comments
02h
FDh
02h
FDh
02h
02h
FDh
02h
FDh
02h
02h
...
03h
FCh
03h
FCh
03h
03h
FCh
03h
FCh
03h
03h
...
04h
FBh
04h
FBh
04h
04h
FBh
04h
FBh
04h
04h
...
T1
1
Pattern Sequence
n
T2
0
T3
1
T4
0
T5
0
T6
1
Pattern Sequence
n+1
T7
0
T8
1
T9
0
T10
T11
0
Pattern Sequence n+2
...
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With the part programmed into the Non-Demultiplex Mode, the test pattern’s order will be as described in
Table 16.
Table 16. Test Pattern by Output Port in
Non-Demultiplex Mode
Time
T0
Q
I
OR
0
Comments
01h
FEh
01h
01h
FEh
FEh
01h
01h
FEh
01h
01h
FEh
01h
01h
FEh
...
02h
FDh
02h
02h
FDh
FDh
02h
02h
FDh
02h
02h
FDh
02h
02h
FDh
...
T1
1
T2
0
T3
0
T4
1
Pattern Sequence
n
T5
1
T6
0
T7
0
T8
1
T9
0
T10
T11
T12
T13
T14
T15
0
1
0
Pattern Sequence
n+1
0
1
...
To ensure that the test pattern starts synchronously in each port, set DCLK_RST while writing the Test Pattern
Output bit in the Extended Configuration Register. The pattern appears at the data output ports when
DCLK_RST is cleared low. The test pattern will work at speed and will work with the device in the SDR, DDR
and the Non-Demultiplex output modes.
Applications Information
APPLICATIONS IN RADIATION ENVIRONMENTS
Applying the ADC08D1520 in a radiation environment should be done with careful consideration to that
environment. The QMLV version of this part has been rated to tolerate a high total dose of ionizing radiation by
test method 1019 of MIL-STD-883. The part is also immune to SEE (Single Event Effects) hard errors such as
Single Event Latch-up and Functional Interrupts. However, there are still some recommendations and cautions.
Total Ionizing Dose
Radiation hardness assured (RHA) products are those part numbers with a total ionizing dose (TID) level
specified in the Ordering Information table on the front page. Testing and qualification of these products is done
on a wafer level according to MIL-STD-883, Test Method 1019. Wafer level TID data is available with lot
shipments.
Single Event Effects
One time single event latch-up testing (SEL) was preformed according to EIA/JEDEC Standard, EIA/JEDEC57.
The linear energy transfer threshold (LETth) shown in the Key Specifications table on the front page is the
maximum LET tested. No evidence of Single Event Latch-up (SEL) or Single Event Functional Interrupt was
seen. A test report is available upon request.
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Floating pins
There are four tri-level pins which activate the following modes when left floating: FSR/DCLK_RST-,
OutEdge/DDR/SDATA, DRST_SEL and DES/SCS. If modes requiring a floating pin are needed to be used, then
it is strongly recommended that the floating method of establishing Va/2 on these pins not be employed. Due to
the potential of increased leakage of the input protection diodes after large ionizing doses, the midpoint voltage
(Va/2 or 0.95V) should be voltage forced or formed with a resistor divider from the analog supply to ground with
two 2K ohm resistors. The tolerance for this mid point voltage is 650mV ≥ VA/2 ≤ 1.2V. The internal voltage
divider resistors provide too little current to set the midpoint voltage reliably in radiation environments.
THE REFERENCE VOLTAGE
The voltage reference for the ADC08D1520 is derived from a 1.254V bandgap reference, a buffered version of
which is made available at pin 31, VBG, for user convenience. This output has an output current capability of
±100 μA and should be buffered if more current is required.
The internal bandgap-derived reference voltage has a nominal value VIN, as determined by the FSR pin and
described in The Analog Inputs.
There is no provision for the use of an external reference voltage, but the full-scale input voltage can be adjusted
through a Full Scale Register in the Extended Control Mode.
Differential input signals up to the chosen full-scale level will be digitized to 8 bits. Signal excursions beyond the
full-scale range will be clipped at the output. These large signal excursions will also activate the OR output for
the time that the signal is out of range. See Out Of Range (OR) Indication.
One extra feature of the VBG pin is that it can be used to raise the common mode voltage level of the LVDS
outputs. The output offset voltage (VOS) is typically 800 mV when the VBG pin is used as an output or left
unconnected. To raise the LVDS offset voltage to a typical value of 1100 mV the VBG pin can be connected
directly to the supply rails.
THE ANALOG INPUT
The analog input is differential and the signal source may be a.c. or d.c.coupled. In the Non-Extended Control
Mode, the full-scale input range is selected with the FSR pin as specified in the Converter Electrical
Characteristics. In the Extended Control Mode, the full-scale input range is selected by programming the Full-
Scale Voltage Adjust register through the Serial Interface. For best performance, when adjusting the input full-
scale range in the Extended Control, refer to REGISTER DESCRIPTION for guidelines on limiting the amount of
adjustment.
Table 17 gives the input to output relationship with the FSR pin high when the normal (Non-Extended) Mode is
used. With the FSR pin grounded, the millivolt values in Table 17 are reduced to 75% of the values indicated. In
the Extended Control Mode, these values will be determined by the full scale range and offset settings in the
Control Registers.
Table 17. Differential Input To Output Relationship
(Non-Extended Control Mode, FSR High)
VIN
+
VIN
−
Output Code
0000 0000
0100 0000
V
CM − 225 mV
CM − 113 mV
VCM + 225 mV
VCM + 113 mV
V
0111 1111 /
1000 0000
VCM
VCM
VCM + 109 mV
V
CM −109 mV
1100 0000
1111 1111
VCM + 217.5 mV
VCM − 217.5 mV
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The buffered analog inputs simplify the task of driving these inputs and the RC pole that is generally used at
sampling ADC inputs is not required. If it is desired to use an amplifier circuit before the ADC, use care in
choosing an amplifier with adequate noise and distortion performance and adequate gain at the frequencies used
for the application.
Note that a precise d.c. common mode voltage must be present at the ADC inputs. This common mode voltage,
VCMO, is provided on-chip when a.c. input coupling is used and the input signal is a.c. coupled to the ADC. When
the inputs are a.c. coupled, the VCMO output must be grounded, as shown in Figure 37. This causes the on-chip
VCMO voltage to be connected to the inputs through on-chip 50 kΩ resistors.
IMPORTANT NOTE: An Analog input channel that is not used (e.g. in DES Mode) should be left floating when
the inputs are a.c. coupled. Do not connect an unused analog input to ground.
C
C
couple
V
+
IN
couple
V
-
IN
V
CMO
ADC08D1520
Figure 37. VCMO Drive for A.C. Coupled Differential Input
When the d.c. coupled mode is used, a common mode voltage must be provided at the differential inputs. This
common mode voltage should track the VCMO output pin. Note that the VCMO output potential will change with
temperature. The common mode output of the driving device should track this change. IMPORTANT NOTE: An
analog input channel that is not used (e.g. in DES Mode) should be tied to the VCMO voltage when the inputs are
d.c. coupled. Do not connect unused analog inputs to ground. Full-scale distortion performance falls off rapidly as
the input common mode voltage deviates from VCMO. This is a direct result of using a very low supply voltage to
minimize power. Keep the input common voltage within 50 mV of VCMO. Performance is as good in the d.c.
coupled mode as it is in the a.c. coupled mode, provided the input common mode voltage at both analog inputs
remains within 50 mV of VCMO
.
Handling Single-Ended Input Signals
There is no provision for the ADC08D1520 to adequately process single-ended input signals. The best way to
handle single-ended signals is to convert them to differential signals before presenting them to the ADC. The
easiest way to accomplish single-ended to differential signal conversion is with an appropriate balun-connected
transformer, as shown in Figure 38.
a.c. Coupled Input
The easiest way to accomplish single-ended a.c. Input to differential a.c. signal is with an appropriate balun, as
shown in Figure 38.
C
couple
V
IN
+
50W
Source
100W
1:2 Balun
V
IN
-
C
couple
ADC08D1520
Figure 38. Single-Ended to Differential Signal Conversion using a Balun
Figure 38 is a generic depiction of a single-ended to differential signal conversion using a balun. The circuitry
specific to the balun will depend upon the type of balun selected and the overall board layout. It is recommended
that the system designer contact the manufacturer of the balun they have selected to aid in designing the best
performing single-ended to differential conversion circuit using that particular balun.
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When selecting a balun, it is important to understand the input architecture of the ADC. There are specific balun
parameters of which the system designer should be mindful. A designer should match the impedance of the
analog source to the ADC08D1520’s on-chip 100Ω differential input termination resistor. The range of this input
termination resistor is described in the Converter Electrical Characteristics as the specification RIN.
Also, the phase and amplitude balance are important. The lowest possible phase and amplitude imbalance is
desired when selecting a balun. The phase imbalance should be no more than ±2.5° and the amplitude
imbalance should be limited to less than 1dB at the desired input frequency range.
Finally, when selecting a balun, the VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio), bandwidth and insertion loss of the
balun should also be considered. The VSWR aids in determining the overall transmission line termination
capability of the balun when interfacing to the ADC input. The insertion loss should be considered so that the
signal at the balun output is within the specified input range of the ADC as described in the Converter Electrical
Characteristics as the specification VIN.
d.c. Coupled Input
When d.c. coupling to the ADC08D1520 analog inputs, single-ended to differential conversion can be
accomplished with a high speed differential amplifier (LMH6555). Connecting the ADC08D1520 VCMO pin to the
VCM_REF pin of the LMH6555, via an appropriate buffer, will ensure that the common mode input voltage meets
the requirements for optimum performance of the ADC08D1520. The LMV321 was chosen to buffer VCMO for its
low voltage operation and reasonable offset voltage. The output current from the ADC08D1520 VCMO pin should
be limited to 100 μA.
Out Of Range (OR) Indication
When the conversion result is clipped the Out of Range output is activated such that OR+ goes high and OR-
goes low. This output is active as long as accurate data on either or both of the buses would be outside the
range of 00h to FFh. Note that when the device is programmed to provide a second DCLK output, the OR
signals become DCLK2. Refer to REGISTER DESCRIPTION.
Full-Scale Input Range
As with all A/D Converters, the input range is determined by the value of the ADC's reference voltage. The
reference voltage of the ADC08D1520 is derived from an internal band-gap reference. The FSR pin controls the
effective reference voltage of the ADC08D1520 such that the differential full-scale input range at the analog
inputs is a normal amplitude with the FSR pin high, or a reduced amplitude with FSR pin low as defined by the
specification VIN in the Converter Electrical Characteristics. Best SNR is obtained with FSR high.
THE CLOCK INPUTS
The ADC08D1520 has differential LVDS clock inputs, CLK+ and CLK-, which must be driven with an a.c.
coupled, differential clock signal. Although the ADC08D1520 is tested and its performance is ensured with a
differential 1.5 GHz clock, it typically will function well with input clock frequencies indicated in the Converter
Electrical Characteristics. The clock inputs are internally terminated and biased. The input clock signal must be
capacitive coupled to the clock pins as indicated in Figure 39.
Operation up to the sample rates indicated in the Converter Electrical Characteristics is typically possible if the
maximum ambient temperatures indicated are not exceeded. Operating at higher sample rates than indicated for
the given ambient temperature may result in reduced device reliability and product lifetime. This is because of the
higher power consumption and die temperatures at high sample rates. Important also for reliability is proper
thermal management. See Thermal Management.
C
C
couple
couple
CLK+
CLK-
ADC08D1520
Figure 39. Differential (LVDS) Input Clock Connection
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The differential input clock line pair should have a characteristic impedance of 100Ω and (when using a balun),
be terminated at the clock source in that (100 Ω) characteristic impedance. The input clock line should be as
short and as direct as possible. The ADC08D1520 clock input is internally terminated with an untrimmed 100Ω
resistor.
Insufficient input clock levels will result in poor dynamic performance. Excessively high input clock levels could
cause a change in the analog input offset voltage. To avoid these problems, keep the input clock level within the
range specified in the Converter Electrical Characteristics.
The low and high times of the input clock signal can affect the performance of any A/D Converter. The
ADC08D1520 features a duty cycle clock correction circuit which can maintain performance over temperature
even in DES Mode. The ADC will meet its performance specification if the input clock high and low times
are maintained within the range (20/80% ratio).
High speed, high performance ADCs such as the ADC08D1520 require a very stable input clock signal with
minimum phase noise or jitter. ADC jitter requirements are defined by the ADC resolution (number of bits),
maximum ADC input frequency and the input signal amplitude relative to the ADC input full scale range. The
maximum jitter (the sum of the jitter from all sources) allowed to prevent a jitter-induced reduction in SNR is
found to be
tJ(MAX) = (VIN(P-P)/VINFSR) x (1/(2(N+1) x π x fIN))
(3)
where tJ(MAX) is the rms total of all jitter sources in seconds, VIN(P-P) is the peak-to-peak analog input signal, VINFSR
is the full-scale range of the ADC, "N" is the ADC resolution in bits and fIN is the maximum input frequency, in
Hertz, at the ADC analog input.
Note that the maximum jitter described above is the RSS sum of the jitter from all sources, including that in the
ADC input clock, that added by the system to the ADC input clock and input signals and that added by the ADC
itself. Since the effective jitter added by the ADC is beyond user control, the best the user can do is to keep the
sum of the externally added input clock jitter and the jitter added by the analog circuitry to the analog signal to a
minimum.
Input clock amplitudes above those specified in the Converter Electrical Characteristics may result in increased
input offset voltage. This would cause the converter to produce an output code other than the expected 127/128
when both input pins are at the same potential.
CONTROL PINS
Six control pins (without the use of the serial interface) provide a wide range of possibilities in the operation of
the ADC08D1520 and facilitate its use. These control pins provide Full-Scale Input Range setting, Self
Calibration, Output Edge Synchronization choice, LVDS Output Level choice and a Power Down feature.
Full-Scale Input Range Setting
The input full-scale range can be selected with the FSR control input (pin 14) in the Normal Mode of operation.
The input full-scale range is specified as VIN in the Converter Electrical Characteristics. In the Extended Control
Mode, the input full-scale range may be programmed using the Full-Scale Adjust Voltage register. See THE
ANALOG INPUT for more information.
Calibration
The ADC08D1520 calibration must be run to achieve specified performance. The calibration must be initiated by
the user. The calibration procedure is exactly the same whether there is an input clock present upon power up or
if the clock begins some time after application of power. The CalRun output indicator is high while a calibration is
in progress. Note that the DCLK outputs are not active during a calibration cycle by default, therefore it is not
recommended for use as a system clock. The DCLK outputs are continuously present at the output only when
the Resistor Trim Disable is activated.
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Initiating Calibration
A calibration may be run at any time in both the Non-DES and DES Modes. After power-up, we recommend that
the part be calibrated with the Resistor Trim Disable inactive once the power supplies have stabilized and the
temperature of the chip has stabilized. When a calibration is run with the Resistor Trim Disable inactive, both the
ADC and the input termination resistor are calibrated. However, since the input termination resistance changes
only marginally with temperature, the user has the option to disable the input termination resistor calibration for
subsequent calibrations, which will ensure that the DCLK is continuously present at the output. The Resistor Trim
Disable can be programmed in the Extended Configuration register (Addr: 9h) when in the Extended Control
Mode. Refer to Table 10 for register programming information.
As dynamic performance changes slightly with junction temperature, a calibration may be executed to bring the
performance of the ADC in line. Two methods can be used initiate a calibration. The first method is to hold the
CAL pin low for at least tCAL_L input clock cycles, then hold it high for at least another tCAL_H input clock cycles.
The second method is to program the CAL bit in the Calibration register while in Extended Control Mode. The
functionality of the CAL bit is exactly the same as using the CAL pin. The CAL bit must be programmed to 0b for
a minimum of tCAL_Linput clock cycles and then programmed to 1b for a minimum of tCAL_H input clock cycles to
initiate a calibration cycle. The CalRun signal should be monitored to determine when the calibration cycle has
completed. The CalRun pin will become a logic high indicating an active calibration cycle regardless of which
method was used to initiate the calibration cycle. Note that the DCLK outputs are not active during a calibration
cycle; therefore, it is not recommended for use as a system clock.
The minimum number of tCAL_L and tCAL_H input clock cycle sequences are required to ensure that random noise
does not cause a calibration to begin when it is not desired. As mentioned in OVERVIEW, for best performance,
a calibration should be performed 20 seconds or more after power up and repeated when the operating
temperature changes significantly relative to the specific system design performance requirements. Dynamic
performance changes slightly with increasing junction temperature and can be easily corrected by performing a
calibration.
Output Edge Synchronization
DCLK signals are available to help latch the converter output data into external circuitry. The output data can be
synchronized with either edge of these DCLK signals. That is, the output data transition can be set to occur with
either the rising edge or the falling edge of the DCLK signal, so that either edge of that DCLK signal can be used
to latch the output data into the receiving circuit.
When OutEdge (pin 4) is high, the output data is synchronized with (changes with) the rising edge of the DCLK+
(pin 82). When OutEdge is low, the output data is synchronized with the falling edge of DCLK+.
At the very high speeds of which the ADC08D1520 is capable, slight differences in the lengths of the DCLK and
data lines can mean the difference between successful and erroneous data capture. The OutEdge pin is used to
capture data on the DCLK edge that best suits the application circuit and layout.
LVDS Output Level Control
The output level can be set to one of two levels with OutV (pin3). The strength of the output drivers is greater
with OutV high. With OutV low there is less power consumption in the output drivers, but the lower output level
means decreased noise immunity.
For short LVDS lines and low noise systems, satisfactory performance may be realized with the OutV input low.
If the LVDS lines are long and/or the system in which the ADC08D1520 is used is noisy, it may be necessary to
tie the OutV pin high.
Dual Edge Sampling
The Dual Edge Sampling (DES) feature causes one of the two input pairs to be routed to both ADCs. The other
input pair is deactivated. One of the ADCs samples the input signal on the rising input clock edge (duty cycle
corrected), the other samples the input signal on the falling input clock edge (duty cycle corrected). If the device
is in the 1:4 Demux DES Mode, the result is an output data rate 1/4 that of the interleaved sample rate which is
twice the input clock frequency. Data is presented in parallel on all four output buses in the following order: DQd,
DId, DQ, DI. If the device is the Non-Demultiplex output mode, the result is an output data rate 1/2 that of the
interleaved sample rate. Data is presented in parallel on two output buses in the following order: DQ, DI.
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To use this feature in the Non-Extended Control Mode, tie pin 127 to VA/2 and the signal at the I- channel input
will be sampled by both converters.
In the Extended Control Mode, either input may be used for dual edge sampling. See Dual-Edge Sampling.
Power Down Feature
The Power Down pins (PD and PDQ) allow the ADC08D1520 to be entirely powered down (PD) or the Q-
Channel channel to be powered down and the I- Channel to remain active. See Power Down for details on the
power down feature.
The digital data (+/-) output pins are put into a high impedance state when the PD pin for the respective channel
is high. Upon return to normal operation, the pipeline will contain meaningless information and must be flushed.
If the PD input is brought high while a calibration is running, the device will not go into power down until the
calibration sequence is complete. However, if power is applied and PD is simultaneously ramped, the device will
not calibrate until the PD input goes low. When PD is high and a calibration is initiated, the request for calibration
is completely ignored. Refer to Power Down
THE DIGITAL OUTPUTS
The ADC08D1520 demultiplexes the output data of each of the two ADCs on the die onto two LVDS output
buses (total of four buses, two for each ADC). For each of the two converters, the results of successive
conversions started on the odd falling edges of the CLK+ pin are available on one of the two LVDS buses, while
the results of conversions started on the even falling edges of the CLK+ pin are available on the other LVDS bus.
This means that, the word rate at each LVDS bus is 1/2 the ADC08D1520 input clock rate and the two buses
must be multiplexed to obtain the entire 1.5 GSPS conversion result.
Since the minimum recommended input clock rate for this device is 200 MSPS (Non DES Mode), the effective
rate can be reduced to as low as 100 MSPS by using the results available on just one of the two LVDS buses
and a 200 MHz input clock, decimating the 200 MSPS data by two.
There is one LVDS output clock pair (DCLK+/-) available for use to latch the LVDS outputs on all buses. Whether
the data is sent at the rising or falling edge of DCLK is determined by the sense of the OutEdge pin, as described
in Output Edge Synchronization.
DDR (Double Data Rate) clocking can also be used. In this mode a word of data is presented with each edge of
DCLK, reducing the DCLK frequency to 1/4 the input clock frequency. See the Timing Diagrams section for
details.
The OutV pin is used to set the LVDS differential output levels. See LVDS Output Level Control.
The output format is Offset Binary. Accordingly, a full-scale input level with VIN+ positive with respect to VIN− will
produce an output code of all ones, a full-scale input level with VIN− positive with respect to VIN+ will produce an
output code of all zeros and when VIN+ and VIN− are equal, the output code will vary between codes 127 and
128.
POWER CONSIDERATIONS
A/D converters draw sufficient transient current to corrupt their own power supplies if not adequately bypassed. A
33 µF capacitor should be placed within an inch (2.5 cm) of the A/D converter power pins. A 0.1 µF capacitor
should be placed as close as possible to each VA pin, preferably within one-half centimeter. Leadless chip
capacitors are preferred because they have low lead inductance.
The VA and VDR supply pins should be isolated from each other to prevent any digital noise from being coupled
into the analog portions of the ADC. A ferrite choke, such as the JW Miller FB20009-3B, is recommended
between these supply lines when a common source is used for them.
As is the case with all high speed converters, the ADC08D1520 should be assumed to have little power supply
noise rejection. Any power supply used for digital circuitry in a system where a lot of digital power is being
consumed should not be used to supply power to the ADC08D1520. The ADC supplies should be the same
supply used for other analog circuitry, if not a dedicated supply.
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Supply Voltage
The ADC08D1520 is specified to operate with a supply voltage of 1.9V ±0.1V. It is very important to note that,
while this device will function with slightly higher supply voltages, these higher supply voltages may reduce
product lifetime.
No pin should ever have a voltage on it that is in excess of the supply voltage or below ground by more than 150
mV, not even on a transient basis. This can be a problem upon application of power and power shut-down. Be
sure that the supplies to circuits driving any of the input pins, analog or digital, do not come up any faster than
does the voltage at the ADC08D1520 power pins.
The Absolute Maximum Ratings should be strictly observed, even during power up and power down. A power
supply that produces a voltage spike at turn-on and/or turn-off of power can destroy the ADC08D1520. The
circuit of Figure 40 will provide supply overshoot protection.
Many linear regulators will produce output spiking at power-on unless there is a minimum load provided. Active
devices draw very little current until their supply voltages reach a few hundred millivolts. The result can be a turn-
on spike that can destroy the ADC08D1520, unless a minimum load is provided for the supply. The 100Ω resistor
at the regulator output provides a minimum output current during power-up to ensure there is no turn-on spiking.
In the circuit of Figure 40, an LM317 linear regulator is satisfactory if its input supply voltage is 4V to 5V . If a
3.3V supply is used, an LM1086 linear regulator is recommended.
Linear
Regulator
1.9V
to ADC
V
IN
+
10 mF
210
110
+
33 mF
100
+
10 mF
Figure 40. Non-Spiking Power Supply
The output drivers should have a supply voltage, VDR, that is within the range specified in the Operating Ratings
table. This voltage should not exceed the VA supply voltage.
If the power is applied to the device without an input clock signal present, the current drawn by the device might
be below 200 mA. This is because the ADC08D1520 gets reset through clocked logic and its initial state is
unknown. If the reset logic comes up in the "on" state, it will cause most of the analog circuitry to be powered
down, resulting in less than 100 mA of current draw. This current is greater than the power down current
because not all of the ADC is powered down. The device current will be normal after the input clock is
established.
Thermal Management
The ADC08D1520 is capable of impressive speeds and performance at very low power levels for its speed.
However, the power consumption is still high enough to require attention to thermal management. For reliability
reasons, the die temperature should be kept to a maximum of 150°C. That is, TA (ambient temperature) plus
ADC power consumption times θJA (junction to ambient thermal resistance) should not exceed 150°C.
Please note that the following are recommendations for mounting this device onto a PCB. This should be
considered the starting point in PCB and assembly process development. It is recommended that the process be
developed based upon past experience in package mounting.
The bottom of the package of the ADC08D1520 provides the primary heat removal path as well as excellent
electrical grounding to the printed circuit board. The land pattern design for lead attachment to the PCB should
be the same as for a conventional LQFP, but the bottom of the package must be attached to the board to
remove the maximum amount of heat from the package, as well as to ensure best product parametric
performance.
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To maximize the removal of heat from the package, a thermal land pattern must be incorporated on the PC
board within the footprint of the package. The bottom of the device must be soldered down to ensure adequate
heat conduction out of the package. The land pattern for this exposed pad should be as large as the 600 x 600
mil bottom of the package and be located such that the bottom of the device is entirely over that thermal land
pattern. This thermal land pattern should be electrically connected to ground.
600 Mil
10X
51 Mil, typ
10 Mil, typ
15 Mil, typ
10X
61 Mil, typ
10X
10X
Figure 41. Recommended Package Land Pattern
Since a large aperture opening may result in poor release, the aperture opening should be subdivided into an
array of smaller openings, similar to the land pattern of Figure 41.
To minimize junction temperature, it is recommended that a simple heat sink be built into the PCB. This is done
by including a copper area of about 2.25 square inches (14.52 square cm) on the opposite side of the PCB. This
copper area may be plated or solder coated to prevent corrosion, but should not have a conformal coating, which
could provide some thermal insulation. Thermal vias should be used to connect these top and bottom copper
areas. These thermal vias act as "heat pipes" to carry the thermal energy from the device side of the board to the
opposite side of the board where it can be more effectively dissipated. The use of approximately 100 thermal
vias is recommended. Use of a higher weight copper on the internal ground plane is recommended, (i.e. 2OZ
instead of 1OZ, for thermal considerations only.
The thermal vias should be placed on a 61mil grid spacing and have a diameter of 15 mil typically. These vias
should be barrel plated to avoid solder wicking into the vias during the soldering process as this wicking could
cause voids in the solder between the package exposed pad and the thermal land on the PCB. Such voids could
increase the thermal resistance between the device and the thermal land on the board, which would cause the
device to run hotter.
If it is desired to monitor die temperature, a temperature sensor may be mounted on the heat sink area of the
board near the thermal vias. Allow for a thermal gradient between the temperature sensor and the ADC08D1520
die of θJ-PAD times typical power consumption.
TEMPERATURE SENSOR DIODE
The ADC08D1520 has an on-die temperature diode connected to pins Tdiode+/- which may be used to monitor
the die temperature. TI also provides a family of temperature sensors for this application which monitor different
numbers of external devices, See Table 18
Table 18. Temperature Sensor Recommendation
Number of External Devices Monitored
Recommended Temperature Sensor
1
LM95235
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Table 18. Temperature Sensor Recommendation (continued)
Number of External Devices Monitored
Recommended Temperature Sensor
2
4
LM95213
LM95214
The LM95235/13/14 is an 11-bit digital temperature sensor with a 2-wire System Management Bus (SMBus)
interface that can monitor the temperature of one/two/four remote diodes as well as its own temperature. The
LM95235/13/14 can be used to accurately monitor the temperature of up to one/two/four external devices such
as the ADC08D1520, a FPGA, other system components, and the ambient temperature.
The LM95235/13/14 reports temperature in two different formats for +127.875°C range and 0°/255°C range. The
LM95235/13/14 has a Sigma-Delta ADC core which provides the first level of noise immunity. For improved
performance in a noise environment, the LM9535/13/14 includes programmable digital filters for Remote Diode
temperature readings. When the digital filters are invoked, the resolution for the Remote Diode readings
increases to 0.03125°C. For maximum flexibility and best accuracy, the LM95235/13/14 includes offset registers
that allow calibration of other diode types.
Diode fault detection circuitry in the LM95235/13/14 can detect the absence or fault state of a remote diode:
whether D+ is shorted to the power supply, D- or ground, or floating.
In the following typical application, the LM95213 is used to monitor the temperature of an ADC08D1520 as well
as a FPGA. See Figure 42
7
D1+
I
= I
F
E
100 pF
ADC08D1520
I
R
5
6
D-
I
E
= I
F
100 pF
FPGA
D2+
I
R
LM95213
Figure 42. Typical Temperature Sensor Application
LAYOUT AND GROUNDING
Proper grounding and proper routing of all signals are essential to ensure accurate conversion. A single ground
plane should be used, instead of splitting the ground plane into analog and digital areas.
Since digital switching transients are composed largely of high frequency components, the skin effect tells us that
total ground plane copper weight will have little effect upon the logic-generated noise. Total surface area is more
important than is total ground plane volume. Coupling between the typically noisy digital circuitry and the
sensitive analog circuitry can lead to poor performance that may seem impossible to isolate and remedy. The
solution is to keep the analog circuitry well separated from the digital circuitry.
High power digital components should not be located on or near any linear component or power supply trace or
plane that services analog or mixed signal components as the resulting common return current path could cause
fluctuation in the analog input “ground” return of the ADC, causing excessive noise in the conversion result.
Generally, we assume that analog and digital lines should cross each other at 90° to avoid getting digital noise
into the analog path. In high frequency systems, however, avoid crossing analog and digital lines altogether. The
input clock lines should be isolated from ALL other lines, analog AND digital. The generally accepted 90°
crossing should be avoided as even a little coupling can cause problems at high frequencies. Best performance
at high frequencies is obtained with a straight signal path.
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The analog input should be isolated from noisy signal traces to avoid coupling of spurious signals into the input.
This is especially important with the low level drive required of the ADC08D1520. Any external component (e.g.,
a filter capacitor) connected between the converter's input and ground should be connected to a very clean point
in the analog ground plane. All analog circuitry (input amplifiers, filters, etc.) should be separated from any digital
components.
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
The ADC08D1520 is a.c. tested and its dynamic performance is ensured. To meet the published specifications
and avoid jitter-induced noise, the clock source driving the CLK input must exhibit low rms jitter. The allowable
jitter is a function of the input frequency and the input signal level, as described in THE CLOCK INPUTS.
It is good practice to keep the ADC input clock line as short as possible, to keep it well away from any other
signals and to treat it as a transmission line. Other signals can introduce jitter into the input clock signal. The
clock signal can also introduce noise into the analog path if not isolated from that path.
Best dynamic performance is obtained when the exposed pad at the back of the package has a good connection
to ground. This is because this path from the die to ground is a lower impedance than offered by the package
pins.
USING THE SERIAL INTERFACE
The ADC08D1520 may be operated in the Non-Extended Control (non-Serial Interface) Mode or in the extended
control mode. Table 19 and Table 20 describe the functions of pins 3, 4, 14 and 127 in the Non-Extended
Control Mode and the Extended Control Mode, respectively.
Non-Extended Control Mode Operation
Non-extended Control Mode operation means that the Serial Interface is not active and all controllable functions
are controlled with various pin settings. Pin 41 is the primary control of the extended control enable function.
When pin 41 is logic high, the device is in the Non-Extended Control Mode. If pin 41 is tied to VA/2 and pin 52
connected to VA/2 or logic high, the extended control enable function is controlled by pin 14. The device has
functions which are pin programmable when in the Non-Extended Control Mode. An example is the full-scale
range is controlled in the Non-Extended Control Mode by setting pin 14 high or low. Table 19 indicates the pin
functions of the ADC08D1520 in the Non-Extended Control Mode.
Table 19. Non-Extended Control Mode Operation
(Pin 41 VA/2 and Pin 52 VA/2 or Logic High)
Pin
3
Low
High
Normal VOD
OutEdge = Pos
N/A
VA/2
Reduced VOD
OutEdge = Neg
N/A
n/a
4
DDR
DES
127
14
Reduced VIN
Normal VIN
Extended Control Mode
Pin 3 can be either high or low in the Non-Extended Control Mode. See the appropriate section for more
information.
Pin 4 can be high or low in the Non-Extended Control Mode. In the Non-Extended Control Mode, pin 4 high or
low defines the edge at which the output data transitions. See Output Edge Synchronization for more information.
If this pin is tied to VA/2, the output clock (DCLK) is a DDR (Double Data Rate) clock (see Double Data Rate) and
the output edge synchronization is irrelevant since data is clocked out on both DCLK edges.
When in Normal Mode, Pin 127 must be tied high. If pin 127 is tied to VA/2, the converter performs dual edge
sampling (DES).
Table 20. Extended Control Mode Operation (Pin 41 Logic Low and Pin 52 VA/2 or Logic High)
Pin
3
Function
SCLK (Serial Clock)
4
SDATA (Serial Data)
127
SCS (Serial Interface Chip Select)
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COMMON APPLICATION PITFALLS
Driving the inputs (analog or digital) beyond the power supply rails. For device reliability, no input should go
more than 150 mV below the ground pins or 150 mV above the supply pins. Exceeding these limits on even a
transient basis may not only cause faulty or erratic operation, but may impair device reliability. It is not
uncommon for high speed digital circuits to exhibit undershoot that goes more than a volt below ground.
Controlling the impedance of high speed lines and terminating these lines in their characteristic impedance
should control overshoot.
Care should be taken not to overdrive the inputs of the ADC08D1520. Such practice may lead to conversion
inaccuracies and even to device damage.
Driving the VBG pin to change the reference voltage. As mentioned in THE REFERENCE VOLTAGE, the
reference voltage is intended to be fixed to provide one of two different full-scale values (650 mVP-P and 870
mVP-P). Over driving this pin will not change the full scale value, but can be used to change the LVDS common
mode voltage from 0.8V to 1.2V by tying the VBG pin to VA.
Driving the clock input with an excessively high level signal. The ADC input clock level should not exceed
the level described in the Operating Ratings Table or the input offset could change.
Inadequate input clock levels. As described in THE CLOCK INPUTS, insufficient input clock levels can result in
poor performance. Excessive input clock levels could result in the introduction of an input offset.
Using a clock source with excessive jitter, using an excessively long input clock signal trace, or having
other signals coupled to the input clock signal trace. This will cause the sampling interval to vary, causing
excessive output noise and a reduction in SNR performance.
Failure to provide adequate heat removal. As described in Thermal Management, it is important to provide
adequate heat removal to ensure device reliability. This can be done either with adequate air flow or the use of a
simple heat sink built into the board. The backside pad should be grounded for best performance.
Revision History
Date Released
01/09/08
Revision
Section
Changes
A
B
C
Initial Release, New Product
Whole data sheet
New Product Data Sheet, Released at Edit 16
Edit clarification Updates, Revision A will be Archived.
03/05/08
04/21/09
Features and Key Specifications, Electrical
Section, Table 3, Paragraph 1.3 The Serial
Interface, Table 5, Paragraph 1.4
Moved Radiation reference from Key Specifications to
Features. Combined typical table into main electrical
table. Correction to paragraph under Table 3, Table 5
Header. Added New paragraph to 1.3, 1.4
Configuration Register and 2.7.3 paragraph. Revision
B will be Archived.
Configuration Register, Paragraph 2.7.3.
+
05/28/09
06/08/09
D
E
Absolute Maximum Ratings and Operating
Ratings
Absolute Maximum Ratings added Voltage on VIN
,
VIN-. Operating Ratings changed VIN+, VIN Voltage
-
Range. Revision C will be Archived.
Ordering Information, Electrical Section, Note Removed Non Rad NSID, Added parameters to DC:
Section.
Digital Control Pin Characteristics, VIH and VIL tighten
the limits. AC Section, Radiation Table and Note 15.
Revision D will be Archived.
11/09/09
F
Section 1.4 REGISTER DESCRIPTION (I-
Channel Full-Scale Voltage Adjust and Q-
Channel Full-Scale Voltage Adjust)
I-Channel Full-Scale Voltage Adjust and Q-Channel
Full-Scale Voltage Adjust Bit 15:7 correction to binary
values From 0110 0000 to 00100 000 Revision E will
be archived.
01/18/2010
G
Pin Configuration, Pin Descriptions Table,
Electrical Section: DC Parameters, Added
New DC Table after AC Timing Parameters
Table. Section 1.0, 2.0
Changed Pin 7 from GND to VCMO, Description Edit to
Pin's 10, 11, 22, 23. Added Pin 7 to table, Removed
pin 7 from GND. Added VCMI to ANALOG INPUT AND
REFERENCE Section and VCMO, TC VCMO to
ANALOG OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS Section.
Edit to paragraphs 1.1.4, 2.3 Revision F will be
archived.
01/22/2010
H
Section AC Timing Parameters
Added typical limits to tCAL parameter. Revision G will
be archived.
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Date Released
Revision
Section
Pin Descriptions and Equivalent Circuits, DC Corrected typo description for pins 70, 80. Added
Electrical for Digital Control pin ECE, DRST_SEL to VIH and VIL Conditions for Digital
Changes
11/30/2010
I
Characteristics. Updated 1.2 section, Table 3. Control pin Characteristics. 1.2 section Updated and
Added new paragraphs. Removed note below table 3.
Revision H will be archived.
03/19/2013
O
All
Changed layout of National Data Sheet to TI format
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
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10-Jun-2022
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status Package Type Package Pins Package
Eco Plan
Lead finish/
Ball material
MSL Peak Temp
Op Temp (°C)
Device Marking
Samples
Drawing
Qty
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4/5)
(6)
5962F0721401VZC
ADC08D1520WGFQV
ADC08D1520WGMPR
ACTIVE
CFP
CFP
CFP
NBC
128
128
128
12
RoHS-Exempt
& Green
NIAU
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
-55 to 125
-55 to 125
25 to 25
ADC08D1520WGFQV
5962F0721401VZC Q
Samples
Samples
Samples
ACTIVE
ACTIVE
NBC
12
RoHS-Exempt
& Green
NIAU
NIAU
ADC08D1520WGFQV
5962F0721401VZC Q
NBC
12
RoHS-Exempt
& Green
ADC08D1520WGMPR
ES
(1) The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2) RoHS: TI defines "RoHS" to mean semiconductor products that are compliant with the current EU RoHS requirements for all 10 RoHS substances, including the requirement that RoHS substance
do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, "RoHS" products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. TI may
reference these types of products as "Pb-Free".
RoHS Exempt: TI defines "RoHS Exempt" to mean products that contain lead but are compliant with EU RoHS pursuant to a specific EU RoHS exemption.
Green: TI defines "Green" to mean the content of Chlorine (Cl) and Bromine (Br) based flame retardants meet JS709B low halogen requirements of <=1000ppm threshold. Antimony trioxide based
flame retardants must also meet the <=1000ppm threshold requirement.
(3) MSL, Peak Temp. - The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4) There may be additional marking, which relates to the logo, the lot trace code information, or the environmental category on the device.
(5) Multiple Device Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Device Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a continuation
of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Device Marking for that device.
(6)
Lead finish/Ball material - Orderable Devices may have multiple material finish options. Finish options are separated by a vertical ruled line. Lead finish/Ball material values may wrap to two
lines if the finish value exceeds the maximum column width.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
10-Jun-2022
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 2
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
23-Jun-2023
TRAY
L - Outer tray length without tabs
KO -
Outer
tray
height
W -
Outer
tray
width
Text
P1 - Tray unit pocket pitch
CW - Measurement for tray edge (Y direction) to corner pocket center
CL - Measurement for tray edge (X direction) to corner pocket center
Chamfer on Tray corner indicates Pin 1 orientation of packed units.
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Package Pins SPQ Unit array
Max
matrix temperature
(°C)
L (mm)
W
K0
P1
CL
CW
Name
Type
(mm) (µm) (mm) (mm) (mm)
5962F0721401VZC
ADC08D1520WGFQV
ADC08D1520WGMPR
NBC
NBC
NBC
CFP
CFP
CFP
128
128
128
12
12
12
3 X 4
3 X 4
3 X 4
NA
NA
NA
280
280
280
230 19000 60.6
230 19000 60.6
230 19000 60.6
79.4
79.4
79.4
54.5
54.5
54.5
Pack Materials-Page 1
MECHANICAL DATA
NBC0128A
EM128A (Rev B)
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