ZHCS114E march   2011  – february 2023 ADS4222 , ADS4225 , ADS4226 , ADS4242 , ADS4245 , ADS4246

PRODUCTION DATA  

  1. 特性
  2. 应用
  3. 说明
  4. Revision History
  5. 说明(续)
  6. Pin Configuration and Functions
    1.     Pin Functions – LVDS Mode
    2.     Pin Functions – CMOS Mode
  7. Specifications
    1. 7.1  Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2  ESD Ratings
    3. 7.3  Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 7.4  Thermal Information
    5. 7.5  Electrical Characteristics: ADS4246, ADS4245, ADS4242
    6. 7.6  Electrical Characteristics: ADS4226, ADS4225, ADS4222
    7. 7.7  Electrical Characteristics: General
    8. 7.8  Digital Characteristics
    9. 7.9  Timing Requirements: LVDS and CMOS Modes #GUID-C6C0701B-A11B-492F-BD6B-B774F5FE4665/SLAS6895399
    10. 7.10 Serial Interface Timing Characteristics #GUID-3852E7CE-C5B6-42F5-A56A-70AB1B981302/SBAS5097810
    11. 7.11 Reset Timing (Only When Serial Interface Is Used)
    12. 7.12 Typical Characteristics
      1. 7.12.1 ADS4246
      2. 7.12.2 ADS4245
      3. 7.12.3 ADS4242
      4. 7.12.4 ADS4226
      5. 7.12.5 ADS4225
      6. 7.12.6 ADS4222
      7. 7.12.7 General
      8. 7.12.8 Contour
  8. Detailed Description
    1. 8.1 Overview
    2. 8.2 Functional Block Diagrams
    3. 8.3 Feature Description
      1. 8.3.1 Analog Input
        1. 8.3.1.1 Drive Circuit Requirements
        2. 8.3.1.2 Driving Circuit
      2. 8.3.2 Clock Input
      3. 8.3.3 Digital Functions
      4. 8.3.4 Gain for SFDR/SNR Trade-off
      5. 8.3.5 Offset Correction
    4. 8.4 Device Functional Modes
      1. 8.4.1 Power-Down
        1. 8.4.1.1 Global Power-Down
        2. 8.4.1.2 Channel Standby
        3. 8.4.1.3 Input Clock Stop
    5. 8.5 Programming
      1. 8.5.1 47
      2. 8.5.2 Parallel Configuration Only
      3. 8.5.3 Serial Interface Configuration Only
      4. 8.5.4 Using Both Serial Interface and Parallel Controls
      5. 8.5.5 Parallel Configuration Details
      6. 8.5.6 Serial Interface Details
        1. 8.5.6.1 Register Initialization
        2. 8.5.6.2 Serial Register Readout
      7. 8.5.7 Digital Output Information
        1. 8.5.7.1 Output Interface
        2. 8.5.7.2 DDR LVDS Outputs
        3. 8.5.7.3 LVDS Buffer
        4. 8.5.7.4 Parallel CMOS Interface
        5. 8.5.7.5 CMOS Interface Power Dissipation
        6. 8.5.7.6 Multiplexed Mode of Operation
        7. 8.5.7.7 Output Data Format
    6. 8.6 Register Maps
      1. 8.6.1 64
      2. 8.6.2 Description Of Serial Registers
  9. Application and Implementation
    1. 9.1 Application Information
    2. 9.2 Typical Application
      1. 9.2.1 Design Requirements
      2. 9.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
        1. 9.2.2.1 Analog Input
        2. 9.2.2.2 Clock Driver
        3. 9.2.2.3 Digital Interface
        4. 9.2.2.4 SNR and Clock Jitter
      3. 9.2.3 Application Curves
    3. 9.3 Power Supply Recommendations
      1. 9.3.1 Sharing DRVDD and AVDD Supplies
      2. 9.3.2 Using DC/DC Power Supplies
      3. 9.3.3 Power Supply Bypassing
    4. 9.4 Layout
      1. 9.4.1 Layout Guidelines
        1. 9.4.1.1 Grounding
        2. 9.4.1.2 Supply Decoupling
        3. 9.4.1.3 Exposed Pad
        4. 9.4.1.4 Routing Analog Inputs
      2. 9.4.2 Layout Example
  10. 10Device and Documentation Support
    1. 10.1 Device Support
      1. 10.1.1 Device Nomenclature
    2. 10.2 Documentation Support
      1. 10.2.1 Related Documentation
    3. 10.3 支持资源
    4. 10.4 商标
    5. 10.5 静电放电警告
    6. 10.6 术语表
  11. 11Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

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Device Nomenclature

Analog Bandwidth – The analog input frequency at which the power of the fundamental is reduced by 3 dB with respect to the low-frequency value.

Aperture Delay – The delay in time between the rising edge of the input sampling clock and the actual time at which the sampling occurs. This delay is different across channels. The maximum variation is specified as aperture delay variation (channel-to-channel).

Aperture Uncertainty (Jitter) – The sample-to-sample variation in aperture delay.

Clock Pulse Width/Duty Cycle – The duty cycle of a clock signal is the ratio of the time the clock signal remains at a logic high (clock pulse width) to the period of the clock signal. Duty cycle is typically expressed as a percentage. A perfect differential sine-wave clock results in a 50% duty cycle.

Maximum Conversion Rate – The maximum sampling rate at which specified operation is given. All parametric testing is performed at this sampling rate unless otherwise noted.

Minimum Conversion Rate – The minimum sampling rate at which the ADC functions.

Differential Nonlinearity (DNL) – An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions at analog input values spaced exactly 1LSB apart. The DNL is the deviation of any single step from this ideal value, measured in units of LSBs.

Integral Nonlinearity (INL) – The INL is the deviation of the ADC transfer function from a best fit line determined by a least squares curve fit of that transfer function, measured in units of LSBs.

Gain Error – Gain error is the deviation of the ADC actual input full-scale range from its ideal value. The gain error is given as a percentage of the ideal input full-scale range. Gain error has two components: error as a result of reference inaccuracy (EGREF) and error as a result of the channel (EGCHAN). Both errors are specified independently as EGREF and EGCHAN.

To a first-order approximation, the total gain error is ETOTAL ~ EGREF + EGCHAN.

For example, if ETOTAL = ±0.5%, the full-scale input varies from (1 – 0.5/100) x FSideal to (1 + 0.5/100) x FSideal.

Offset Error – The offset error is the difference, given in number of LSBs, between the ADC actual average idle channel output code and the ideal average idle channel output code. This quantity is often mapped into millivolts.

Temperature Drift – The temperature drift coefficient (with respect to gain error and offset error) specifies the change per degree Celsius of the parameter from TMIN to TMAX. It is calculated by dividing the maximum deviation of the parameter across the TMIN to TMAX range by the difference TMAX – TMIN.

Signal-to-Noise Ratio – SNR is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the noise floor power (PN), excluding the power at dc and the first nine harmonics.

Equation 4. GUID-8FACCC1E-A03A-4C52-992D-D7DCF5680872-low.gif

SNR is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter full-scale range.

Signal-to-Noise and Distortion (SINAD) – SINAD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the power of all the other spectral components including noise (PN) and distortion (PD), but excluding dc.

Equation 5. GUID-A698E3FA-3D7E-4DA3-A81B-013278F75914-low.gif

SINAD is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter full-scale range.

Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) – ENOB is a measure of the converter performance as compared to the theoretical limit based on quantization noise.

Equation 6. GUID-39692C08-6ACE-4D71-A6BD-2038B89D5229-low.gif

Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) – THD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS) to the power of the first nine harmonics (PD).

Equation 7. GUID-DDF58304-1AC6-4871-A130-5DA6723F9ABE-low.gif

THD is typically given in units of dBc (dB to carrier).

Spurious-Free Dynamic Range (SFDR) – The ratio of the power of the fundamental to the highest other spectral component (either spur or harmonic). SFDR is typically given in units of dBc (dB to carrier).

Two-Tone Intermodulation Distortion – IMD3 is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (at frequencies f1 and f2) to the power of the worst spectral component at either frequency 2f1 – f2 or 2f2 – f1. IMD3 is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier) when the absolute power of the fundamental is used as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the converter full-scale range.

DC Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (DC PSRR) – DC PSSR is the ratio of the change in offset error to a change in analog supply voltage. The dc PSRR is typically given in units of mV/V.

AC Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (AC PSRR) – AC PSRR is the measure of rejection of variations in the supply voltage by the ADC. If ΔVSUP is the change in supply voltage and ΔVOUT is the resultant change of the ADC output code (referred to the input), then:

Equation 8. GUID-E6787BD2-7C8E-4371-850F-9FAD3EFD1FA3-low.gif

Voltage Overload Recovery – The number of clock cycles taken to recover to less than 1% error after an overload on the analog inputs. This is tested by separately applying a sine wave signal with 6 dB positive and negative overload. The deviation of the first few samples after the overload (from the expected values) is noted.

Common-Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR) – CMRR is the measure of rejection of variation in the analog input common-mode by the ADC. If ΔVCM_IN is the change in the common-mode voltage of the input pins and ΔVOUT is the resulting change of the ADC output code (referred to the input), then:

Equation 9. GUID-99215B62-C362-41C9-A8D9-EE6549AF26C6-low.gif

Crosstalk (only for multi-channel ADCs) – This is a measure of the internal coupling of a signal from an adjacent channel into the channel of interest. It is specified separately for coupling from the immediate neighboring channel (near-channel) and for coupling from channel across the package (far-channel). It is usually measured by applying a full-scale signal in the adjacent channel. Crosstalk is the ratio of the power of the coupling signal (as measured at the output of the channel of interest) to the power of the signal applied at the adjacent channel input. It is typically expressed in dBc.