ADL5390ACPZ-REEL71 [ADI]

RF/IF Vector Multiplier; RF / IF矢量乘法器
ADL5390ACPZ-REEL71
型号: ADL5390ACPZ-REEL71
厂家: ADI    ADI
描述:

RF/IF Vector Multiplier
RF / IF矢量乘法器

文件: 总24页 (文件大小:846K)
中文:  中文翻译
下载:  下载PDF数据表文档文件
RF/IF Vector Multiplier  
ADL5390  
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM  
FEATURES  
VPRF QBBP OBBM  
VPS2  
Matched pair of multiplying VGAs  
Broad frequency range 20 MHz to 2.4 GHz  
Continuous magnitude control from +5 dB to −30 dB  
Output third-order intercept 24 dBm  
Output 1 dB compression point 11 dBm  
Output noise floor −148 dBm/Hz  
INMQ  
INPQ  
CMRF  
INPI  
RFOP  
RFOM  
INMI  
Adjustable modulation bandwidth up to 230 MHz  
Fast output power disable  
CMOP  
IBBP IBBM  
DSOP  
Single-supply voltage 4.75 V to 5.25 V  
Figure 1.  
APPLICATIONS  
PA linearization and predistortion  
Amplitude and phase modulation  
Variable matched attenuator and/or phase shifter  
Cellular base stations  
Radio links  
Fixed wireless access  
Broadband/CATV  
RF/IF analog multiplexer  
The gain control inputs are dc-coupled with a +/−500 mV dif-  
ferential full-scale range centered about a 500 mV common  
mode. The maximum modulation bandwidth is 230 MHz,  
which can be reduced by adding external capacitors to limit the  
noise bandwidth on the control lines.  
GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The ADL5390 vector multiplier consists of a matched pair of  
broadband variable gain amplifiers whose outputs are summed.  
The separate gain controls for each amplifier are linear-in-  
magnitude. If the two input RF signals are in quadrature, the  
vector multiplier can be configured as a vector modulator or as  
a variable attenuator/phase shifter by using the gain control pins  
as Cartesian variables. In this case, the output amplitude can be  
controlled from a maximum of +5 dB to less than –30 dB, and  
the phase can be shifted continuously over the entire 360°  
range. Since the signal paths are linear, the original modulation  
on the inputs is preserved. If the two signals are independent,  
then the vector multiplier can function as a 2:1 multiplexer or  
can provide fading from one channel to another.  
Both the RF inputs and outputs can be used differentially or  
single-ended and must be ac-coupled. The impedance of each  
VGA RF input is 250 Ω to ground, and the differential output  
impedance is nominally 50 Ω over the operating frequency  
range. The DSOP pin allows the output stage to be disabled  
quickly to protect subsequent stages from overdrive. The  
ADL5390 operates off supply voltages from 4.75 V to 5.25 V  
while consuming 135 mA.  
The ADL5390 is fabricated on Analog Devices’ proprietary,  
high performance 25 GHz SOI complementary bipolar IC  
process. It is available in a 24-lead, Pb-free CSP package and  
operates over a −40°C to +85°C temperature range. Evaluation  
boards are available.  
The ADL5390 operates over a wide frequency range of 20 MHz  
to 2400 MHz. For a maximum gain setting on one channel at  
380 MHz, the ADL5390 delivers an OP1dB of 11 dBm, an OIP3  
of 24 dBm, and an output noise floor of −148 dBm/Hz. The gain  
and phase matching between the two VGAs is better than 0.5 dB  
and 1°, respectively, over most of the operating range.  
Rev. 0  
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable.  
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any  
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use.  
Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication  
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and  
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.  
Tel: 781.329.4700  
Fax: 781.326.8703  
www.analog.com  
© 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.  
ADL5390  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Specifications..................................................................................... 3  
RF Output and Matching .......................................................... 13  
Driving the I-Q Baseband Gain Controls............................... 13  
Interfacing to High Speed DACs.............................................. 14  
Generalized Modulator ............................................................. 15  
Vector Modulator ....................................................................... 15  
Vector Modulator Example—CDMA2000 ............................. 15  
Quadrature Modulator .............................................................. 17  
RF Multiplexer............................................................................ 18  
Evaluation Board ............................................................................ 19  
Outline Dimensions....................................................................... 23  
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 23  
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 5  
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 5  
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 6  
Typical Performance Characteristics ............................................. 7  
General Structure ........................................................................... 11  
Theory of Operation .................................................................. 11  
Noise and Distortion.................................................................. 11  
Applications..................................................................................... 12  
Using the ADL5390.................................................................... 12  
RF Input and Matching.............................................................. 12  
REVISION HISTORY  
10/04—Revision 0: Initial Version  
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 24  
ADL5390  
SPECIFICATIONS  
VS = 5 V, TA = 25°C, ZO = 50 , FRF = 380 MHz, single-ended source drive to INPI and INPQ, and INMI and INMQ are ac-coupled to  
common, unless otherwise noted. 66.5 termination resistors before ac-coupling capacitors on INPI and INPQ. The specifications refer  
to one active channel with the other channel input terminated in 50 . The common-mode level for the gain control inputs is 0.5 V. A  
maximum gain setpoint of 1.0 refers to a differential gain control voltage of 0.5 V.  
Table 1.  
Parameter  
Conditions  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
OVERALL FUNCTION  
Frequency Range  
Gain Control Range  
GAIN CONTROL INTERFACE (I and Q)  
Gain Scaling  
20  
2400  
MHz  
dB  
Relative to maximum gain  
35  
QBBP, QBBM, IBBM, IBBP (Pins 4, 5, 14, 15)  
3.5  
1/V  
Modulation Bandwidth  
500 mV p-p, sinusoidal baseband input single-  
ended  
230  
MHz  
Second Harmonic Distortion  
Third Harmonic Distortion  
Step Response  
500 mV p-p, 1 MHz, sinusoidal baseband input  
differential  
500 mV p-p, 1 MHz, sinusoidal baseband input  
differential  
For gain from −15 dB to +5 dB  
For gain from +5 dB to −15 dB  
45  
55  
dBc  
dBc  
45  
47  
ns  
ns  
FRF = 70 MHz  
Maximum Gain  
Gain Conformance  
Output Noise Floor  
Maximum gain setpoint  
4.6  
dB  
dB  
dBm/Hz  
dBm/Hz  
dBm  
Over gain setpoint of 0.2 to 1.0  
Maximum gain setpoint, no RF input  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, frequency offset = 20 MHz  
FRF1 = 70 MHz, FRF2 = 72.5 MHz, maximum gain  
setpoint  
0.25  
−149  
−146  
23  
Output IP3  
Output 1 dB Compression Point  
Input 1 dB Compression Point  
Gain Flatness  
Gain Matching  
Phase Matching  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Gain setpoint = 0.1  
Over any 60 MHz bandwidth  
At maximum gain setpoint  
At maximum gain setpoint  
INPI, INMI, INMQ, INMP (Pins 20, 21, 22, 23)  
10.7  
6.7  
0.25  
0.5  
0.25  
250||1  
9.7  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
dB  
Degrees  
Ohms||pF  
dB  
Input Impedance  
Output Return Loss  
RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10) measured through  
balun  
FRF = 140 MHz  
Maximum Gain  
Gain Conformance  
Output Noise Floor  
Maximum gain setpoint  
4.5  
dB  
dB  
dBm/Hz  
dBm/Hz  
dBm  
Over gain setpoint of 0.2 to 1.0  
Maximum gain setpoint, no RF input  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, frequency offset = 20 MHz  
FRF1 = 140 MHz, FRF2 = 142.5 MHz, maximum  
gain setpoint  
0.25  
−144  
−145  
24.4  
Output IP3  
Output 1 dB Compression Point  
Input 1 dB Compression Point  
Gain Flatness  
Gain Matching  
Phase Matching  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Gain setpoint = 0.1  
Over any 60 MHz bandwidth  
At maximum gain setpoint  
At maximum gain setpoint  
INPI, INMI, INMQ, INMP (Pins 20, 21, 22, 23)  
11  
7.1  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
0.25  
0.5  
0.25  
250||1  
9.6  
dB  
Degrees  
Ohms||pF  
dB  
Input Impedance  
Output Return Loss  
RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10) measured through  
balun  
FRF = 380 MHz  
Maximum Gain  
Gain Conformance  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Over gain setpoint of 0.2 to 1.0  
4.1  
0.25  
dB  
dB  
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
Parameter  
Conditions  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
Output Noise Floor  
Maximum gain setpoint, no RF input  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, frequency offset = 20 MHz  
FRF1 = 380 MHz, FRF2 = 382.5 MHz, maximum  
gain setpoint  
−147.5  
−146  
24.2  
dBm/Hz  
dBm/Hz  
dBm  
Output IP3  
Output 1 dB Compression Point  
Input 1 dB Compression Point  
Gain Flatness  
Gain Matching  
Phase Matching  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Gain setpoint = 0.1  
Over any 60 MHz bandwidth  
At maximum gain setpoint  
At maximum gain setpoint  
INPI, INMI, INMQ, INMP (Pins 20, 21, 22, 23)  
11.3  
8.3  
0.25  
0.5  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
dB  
0.5  
Degrees  
Ohms||pF  
dB  
Input Impedance  
200||1  
8.5  
Output Return Loss  
RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10) measured through  
balun  
FRF = 900 MHz  
Maximum Gain  
Gain Conformance  
Output Noise Floor  
Maximum gain setpoint  
4.5  
0.4  
−149.5  
−148  
23.3  
dB  
dB  
dBm/Hz  
dBm/Hz  
dBm  
Over gain setpoint of 0.2 to 1.0  
Maximum gain setpoint, no RF input  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, frequency offset = 20 MHz  
FRF1 = 900 MHz, FRF2 = 902.5 MHz, maximum  
gain setpoint  
Output IP3  
Output 1 dB Compression Point  
Input 1 dB Compression Point  
Gain Flatness  
Gain Matching  
Phase Matching  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Gain setpoint = 0.1  
Over any 60 MHz bandwidth  
At maximum gain setpoint  
At maximum gain setpoint  
INPI, INMI, INMQ, INMP (Pins 20, 21, 22, 23)  
11.5  
8.5  
0.25  
0.6  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
dB  
1
Degrees  
Ohms||pF  
dB  
Input Impedance  
180||0.6  
6.8  
Output Return Loss  
RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10) measured through  
balun  
FRF = 2400 MHz  
Maximum Gain  
Maximum gain setpoint  
7.0  
dB  
Gain Conformance  
Output Noise Floor  
Over gain setpoint of 0.2 to 1.0  
Maximum gain setpoint, no RF input  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, frequency offset = 20 MHz  
FRF1 = 2400 MHz, FRF2 = 2402.5 MHz, maximum  
gain setpoint  
0.5  
dB  
−147  
−144  
18.7  
dBm/Hz  
dBm/Hz  
dBm  
Output IP3  
Output 1 dB Compression Point  
Input 1 dB Compression Point  
Gain Flatness  
Gain Matching  
Phase Matching  
Maximum gain setpoint  
Gain setpoint = 0.1  
Over any 60 MHz bandwidth  
At maximum gain setpoint  
At maximum gain setpoint  
INPI, INMI, INMQ, INMP (Pins 20, 21, 22, 23)  
9.6  
4.3  
0.25  
0.8  
2.5  
dBm  
dBm  
dB  
dB  
Degrees  
Ohms||pF  
dB  
Input Impedance  
140||0.5  
13.5  
Output Return Loss  
RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10) measured through  
balun  
POWER SUPPLY  
VPRF, VPS2 (Pin 1, 18, 6); RFOP, RFOM (Pins 9, 10)  
Positive Supply Voltage  
Total Supply Current  
OUTPUT DISABLE  
4.75  
5
135  
5.25  
V
mA  
Includes load current  
DSOP (Pin 13)  
Disable Threshold  
Maximum Attenuation  
Enable Response Time  
2.5  
40  
15  
V
dB  
ns  
DSOP = 5 V  
Delay following high-to-low transition until  
device meets full specifications  
Disable Response Time  
Delay following low-to-high transition until  
device produces full attenuation  
10  
ns  
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 24  
ADL5390  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
Table 2.  
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings  
may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress  
rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any  
other conditions above those indicated in the operational sec-  
tion of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute  
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect  
device reliability.  
Parameters  
Rating  
Supply Voltage VPRF, VPS2  
DSOP  
5.5 V  
5.5 V  
IBBP, IBBM, QBBP, QBBM  
RFOP, RFOM  
2.5 V  
5.5 V  
RF Input Power at Maximum Gain  
(INPI or INPQ, Single-Ended Drive)  
Equivalent Voltage  
10 dBm for 50 Ω  
2.0 V p-p  
Internal Power Dissipation  
θJA (With Pad Soldered to Board)  
Maximum Junction Temperature  
Operating Temperature Range  
Storage Temperature Range  
825 mW  
59°C/W  
125°C  
−40°C to +85°C  
−65°C to +150°C  
ESD CAUTION  
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on the  
human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although this product features  
proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high energy  
electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance  
degradation or loss of functionality.  
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
24  
23  
22  
21  
20  
19  
1
2
3
4
5
6
18  
17  
16  
15  
14  
13  
VPRF  
QFLP  
QFLM  
QBBP  
QBBM  
VPS2  
VPRF  
IFLP  
ADL5390  
TOP VIEW  
(Not to Scale)  
IFLM  
IBBP  
IBBM  
DSOP  
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
Figure 2. LFCSP Pin Configuration  
Table 3. Pin Function Descriptions  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic  
Description  
2, 3  
QFLP, QFLM  
Q Baseband Input Filter Pins. Connect optional capacitor to reduce Q baseband gain control channel low-  
pass corner frequency.  
4, 5  
QBBP, QBBM  
VPS2, VPRF  
CMOP, CMRF  
Q Channel Differential Baseband Gain Control Inputs. Typical common-mode bias level of 0.5 V.  
Positive Supply Voltage. VP of 4.75 V to 5.25 V.  
Device Common. Connect via lowest possible impedance to external circuit common.  
6, 1, 18  
7, 8, 11, 12,  
19, 24  
9, 10  
RFOP, RFOM  
DSOP  
IBBM, IBBP  
IFLM, IFLP  
Differential RF Outputs. Must be ac-coupled. Differential impedance 50 nominal.  
Output Disable. Pull high to disable output stage. Connect to common for normal operation.  
I Channel Differential Baseband Gain Control Inputs. Typical common-mode bias level of 0.5 V.  
I Baseband Input Filter Pins. Connect optional capacitor to reduce I baseband gain control channel low-  
pass corner frequency.  
13  
14, 15  
16, 17  
20, 21  
22, 23  
INPI, INMI  
INMQ, INPQ  
GND  
I Channel Differential RF Inputs. Must be ac-coupled. 250 impedance to common on each pin. These  
inputs can be driven single-ended without any performance degradation.  
Q Channel Differential RF Inputs. Must be ac-coupled. 250 impedance to common on each pin. These  
inputs can be driven single-ended without any performance degradation.  
The exposed paddle on the underside of the package should be soldered to a low thermal and electrical  
impedance ground plane.  
Exposed  
Paddle  
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS  
10  
5
4
3
2
1
5
0
+3  
σ
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
–5  
–10  
–15  
–20  
–25  
–30  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
0
–1  
–2  
–3  
σ
–3  
–4  
–5  
0
0.25  
0.50  
0.75  
1.00  
0
300  
600  
900  
1200  
1500 1800  
2100 2400  
GAIN SETPOINT  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 3. Gain Magnitude vs. Gain Setpoint, RF Frequency = 70 MHz,  
140 MHz, 380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz (Channel I or Channel Q)  
Figure 6. Channel Gain Matching (I to Q) vs. RF Frequency,  
Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
9
10  
TEMP = –40°C  
TEMP = –40°C  
TEMP = +25°C  
TEMP = +25°C  
8
7
6
5
TEMP = +85°C  
0
–5  
5
4
3
2
1
0
–10  
–15  
–20  
–25  
–30  
TEMP = +85°C  
0
300  
600  
900  
1200  
1500 1800  
2100  
2400  
0
0.1  
0.2 0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9  
1.0  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
GAIN SETPOINT  
Figure 7. Channel Gain vs. RF Frequency, Temp = +85°C, +25°C, −40°C,  
Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
Figure 4. Gain Magnitude vs. Gain Setpoint, Temp = +85°C, +25°C, −40°C,  
RF Frequency = 380 MHz (Channel I or Channel Q)  
5
4
+3  
–3  
σ
σ
= DASH LINE  
= SOLID LINE  
+3  
–3  
σ
σ
= DASH LINE  
= SOLID LINE  
F
F
= 70MHz  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
3
2
RF  
RF  
0
F
F
RF  
RF  
F
= 2400MHz  
RF  
1
–5  
–10  
–15  
–20  
0
–1  
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
–2  
–3  
–4  
0
0.25  
0.50  
GAIN SETPOINT  
0.75  
1.0  
0
0.25  
0.50  
GAIN SETPOINT  
0.75  
1.0  
Figure 8. Single-Channel Phase Deviation vs. Gain Setpoint, Normalized to  
Gain Setpoint = 1.0, RF Frequency = 70 MHz, 140 MHz, 380 MHz,  
900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
Figure 5. Gain Conformance Error vs. Gain Setpoint, RF Frequency = 70 MHz,  
140 MHz, 380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
–142  
–143  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
+3  
–3  
σ
σ
= DASH LINE  
= SOLID LINE  
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
–144  
–145  
P
= –5dBm  
IN  
–146  
–147  
–148  
–149  
–150  
–151  
P
= –10dBm  
IN  
0
–5  
–10  
–15  
NO CARRIER  
P
= –15dBm  
IN  
–20  
0
–152  
0.2  
0.4  
0.6  
0.8  
1.0  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9  
1.0  
GAIN SETPOINT  
GAIN SETPOINT  
Figure 9. Channel-to-Channel Phase Matching vs. Gain Setpoint,  
RF Frequency = 70 MHz, 140 MHz, 380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
Figure 12. Output Noise Floor vs. Gain Setpoint, No Carrier, with Carrier  
(20 MHz Offset), RF PIN = −5, −10, −15, No Carrier, RF Frequency = 380 MHz  
10  
–142  
–143  
+3  
–3  
σ
σ
= DASH LINE  
= SOLID LINE  
TEMP = –40°C  
TEMP = +25°C  
TEMP = +85°C  
8
6
–144  
–145  
4
2
–146  
–147  
0
–2  
–148  
GAIN SETPOINT = 1.0  
–4  
–6  
–149  
–150  
–151  
–152  
–8  
–10  
0
600  
1200  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
1800  
2400  
0
400  
800  
1200  
1600  
2000  
2400  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 13. Output Noise Floor vs. RF Frequency, Gain Setpoint = 1.0,  
No RF Carrier  
Figure 10. Channel-to-Channel Phase Matching vs. RF Frequency, Temp =  
+85°C, +25°C, −40°C, Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
10  
–142  
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
GAIN SETPOINT = 1.0  
5
–143  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
–144  
–145  
GAIN SETPOINT = 0.5  
0
–146  
–147  
–148  
–149  
–150  
–151  
–5  
–10  
GAIN SETPOINT = 0.1  
–15  
–20  
–152  
0
400  
800  
1200  
1600  
2000  
2400  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9  
1.0  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
GAIN SETPOINT  
Figure 14. Gain vs. RF Frequency, Gain Setpoint = 1.0, 0.5, 0.1  
Figure 11. Output Noise Floor vs. Gain Setpoint, No RF Carrier,  
RF Frequency = 70 MHz, 140 MHz, 380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 24  
ADL5390  
0
–5  
0
FUNDAMENTAL  
–10  
1V p-p BASEBAND INPUT  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–10  
–15  
–20  
–50  
–60  
2ND HARMONIC  
3RD HARMONIC  
500mV p-p BASEBAND INPUT  
–70  
–25  
–30  
–35  
–80  
250mV p-p BASEBAND INPUT  
–90  
–100  
0
50  
100  
150  
200  
250  
300  
350  
400  
0
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000  
DIFF. BASEBAND INPUT LEVEL (mV p-p)  
BB FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 15. Baseband Harmonic Distortion, (Channel I and Channel Q),  
RF PIN = −5 dBm, (Balun and Cable Losses Not Included)  
Figure 18. IQ Modulation Bandwidth vs. Baseband Magnitude  
12  
15  
10  
5
TEMP = –40°C  
TEMP = +25°C  
11  
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
10  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
0
–5  
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
TEMP = +85°C  
9
–10  
–15  
8
7
6
–20  
–25  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9 1.0  
0
400  
800  
1200  
1600  
2000  
2400  
GAIN SETPOINT  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 16. Output 1 dB Compression Point vs. RF Frequency,  
Temp = +85°C, +25°C, −40°C, Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
Figure 19. Output 1 dB Compression vs. Gain Setpoint, RF Frequency =  
70 MHz, 140 MHz, 380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
30  
30  
28  
25  
20  
15  
TEMP = –40°C  
26  
24  
22  
TEMP = +25°C  
F
F
F
F
F
= 70MHz  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
RF  
10  
5
= 140MHz  
= 380MHz  
= 900MHz  
= 2400MHz  
20  
18  
16  
14  
12  
TEMP = +85°C  
0
–5  
–10  
10  
–15  
0
400  
800  
1200  
1600  
2000  
2400  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9 1.0  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
GAIN SETPOINT  
Figure 17. Output IP3 vs. RF Frequency, Temp = +85°C, +25°C, −40°C,  
Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
Figure 20. Output IP3 vs. Gain Setpoint, RF Frequency = 70 MHz, 140 MHz,  
380 MHz, 900 MHz, 2400 MHz  
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 24  
ADL5390  
1.25  
1.00  
0.75  
300  
250  
200  
0
–5  
–10  
–15  
–20  
–25  
–30  
–35  
–40  
–45  
–50  
–55  
–60  
–65  
–70  
–75  
SHUNT CAPACITANCE (pF)  
SHUNT RESISTANCE ()  
150  
100  
50  
0.50  
0.25  
0
20 220 420 620 820 1020 1220 1420 1620 1820 2020 2220  
(MHz)  
0
0.5  
1.0  
1.5  
2.0  
2.5  
3.0  
3.5  
4.0  
4.5  
5.0  
F
RF  
DSOP VOLTAGE (V)  
Figure 24. Power Shutdown Attenuation, RF = 380 MHz  
Figure 21. S11 of RF Input (Shunt R/C Representation)  
TEK RUN ENVELOPE  
12 AUG 04 16:48:01  
ADL5390 SDD22  
90  
1
60  
120  
150  
30  
|GRIDZ|  
2.7GHz  
0
S
11TERMANG  
I
3GHz  
180  
0
1
10MHz  
210  
330  
CH1 500mV  
M 10.0ns 5.0GS/s ET 200ps/pt  
A CH3 760mV  
10MHz  
CH3 2.0V D  
S
240  
300  
IMPEDANCE CIRCLE  
SDD22 NOM WFR DUT 1  
S22 NOM WFR  
270  
ARG(GRIDZ), RADS(S  
)
11TERMANG  
I
Figure 25. Power Shutdown Response Time, RF = 380 MHz  
Figure 22. S22 of RF Output (Differential and Single-Ended through Balun)  
139  
Vp = 5.25  
138  
137  
136  
135  
134  
Vp = 5  
Vp = 4.75  
133  
132  
–40  
–25  
–10  
5
20  
35  
50  
65  
80  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
Figure 23. Supply Current vs. Temperature  
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 24  
ADL5390  
GENERAL STRUCTURE  
THEORY OF OPERATION  
I CHANNEL  
BASEBAND INPUT  
V
IBB  
The simplified block diagram given in Figure 26 shows a  
matched pair of variable gain channels whose outputs are  
summed and presented to the final output. The RF/IF signals  
propagate from the left to the right, while the baseband gain  
controls are placed above and below. The proprietary linear-  
responding variable attenuators offer excellent linearity, low  
noise, and greater immunity from mismatches than other  
commonly used methods.  
V
,
IRF  
I CHANNEL  
SINGLE-ENDED  
OR DIFFERENTIAL  
LINEAR  
ATTENUATOR  
V-I  
V-I  
SINGLE-ENDED  
OR DIFFERENTIAL  
50OUTPUT  
I-V  
V
,
QRF  
LINEAR  
ATTENUATOR  
Q CHANNEL  
SINGLE-ENDED  
OR DIFFERENTIAL  
OUTPUT  
DISABLE  
V
QBB  
Q CHANNEL  
BASEBAND INPUT  
Since the two independent RF/IF inputs can be combined in  
arbitrary proportions, the overall function can be termed  
“vector multiplication” as expressed by  
Figure 26. Simplified Architecture of the ADL5390  
NOISE AND DISTORTION  
V
OUT = VIRF × (VIBB/VO) + VQRF × (VQBB/VO)  
The signal path for a particular channel of the ADL5390 con-  
sists basically of a preamplifier followed by a variable attenuator  
and then an output driver. Each subblock contributes some level  
of noise and distortion to the desired signal. As the channel gain  
is varied, these relative contributions change. The overall effect  
is a dependence of output noise floor and output distortion  
levels on the gain setpoint.  
where:  
V
V
IRF and VQRF are the RF/IF input vectors.  
IBB and VQBB are the baseband input scalars.  
VO is the built-in normalization factor, which is designed to be  
0.285 V (1/3.5 V).  
The overall voltage gain, in linear terms, of the I and Q channels  
is proportional to its control voltage and scaled by the normali-  
zation factor, i.e., a full-scale gain of 1.75 (5 dB) for VI (Q)BB of  
500 mV. A full-scale voltage gain of 1.75 defines a gain setpoint  
of 1.0.  
For the ADL5390, the distortion is always determined by the  
preamplifier. At the highest gain setpoint, the signal capacity, as  
described by the 1 dB compression point (P1dB) and the third-  
order intercept (OIP3), are at the highest levels. As the gain is  
reduced, the P1dB and OIP3 are reduced in exact proportion.  
At the higher gain setpoints, the output noise is dominated by  
the preamplifier as well. At lower gains, the contribution from  
the preamplifier is correspondingly reduced and eventually a  
noise floor, set by the output driver, is reached. As Figure 27  
illustrates, the overall dynamic range defined as a ratio of OIP3  
to output noise floor remains constant for the higher gain  
setpoints. At some gain level, the noise floor levels off and the  
dynamic range degrades commensurate with the gain reduction.  
Due to its versatile functional form and wide signal dynamic  
range, the ADL5390 can form the core of a variety of useful  
functions such as quadrature modulators, gain and phase ad-  
justers, and multiplexers. At maximum gain on one channel, the  
output 1 dB compression point and noise floor referenced to  
50 Ω are 11 dBm and −148 dBm/Hz, respectively. The broad  
frequency response of the RF/IF and gain control ports allows  
the ADL5390 to be used in a variety of applications at different  
frequencies. The bandwidth for the RF/IF signal path extends  
from approximately 20 MHz to beyond 2.4 GHz, while the gain  
controls signals allow for modulation rates greater than 200 MHz.  
175  
DYNAMIC RANGE = OIP3 – (OUTPUT NOISE  
FLOOR (NO CARRIER))  
170  
165  
160  
155  
150  
145  
140  
Matching between the two gain channels is ensured by careful  
layout and design. Since they are monolithic and arranged  
symmetrically on the die, thermal and process gradients are  
minimized. Typical gain and phase mismatch at maximum gain  
are <0.5 dB and <0.5°.  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0.6  
0.7  
0.8  
0.9  
1.0  
GAIN SETPOINT  
Figure 27. Dynamic Range Variation with Gain Setpoint  
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 24  
 
 
 
ADL5390  
APPLICATIONS  
level of the ADL5390 inputs is not affected, as shown in Figure  
29. Capacitive reactance at the RF inputs can be compensated  
for with series inductance. In fact, the customer evaluation  
board has high impedance line traces between the shunt termi-  
nation pads and the device input pins, which provides series in-  
ductance and improves the return loss at 1.9 GHz to better than  
−15 dB with the shunt termination removed, as shown in Figure  
28.  
USING THE ADL5390  
The ADL5390 is designed to operate in a 50 Ω impedance system.  
Figure 29 illustrates an example where the RF/IF inputs are  
driven in a single-ended fashion, while the differential RF out-  
put is converted to a single-ended output with a RF balun. The  
baseband gain controls for the I and Q channels are typically  
driven from differential DAC outputs. The power supplies,  
VPRF and VPS2, should be bypassed appropriately with 0.1 µF  
and 100 pF capacitors. Low inductance grounding of the CMOP  
and CMRF common pins is essential to prevent unintentional  
peaking of the gain. The exposed paddle on the underside of the  
package should be soldered to a low thermal and electrical  
impedance ground plane.  
0
S11 MATCH WITHOUT  
66.5TERMINATION  
–5  
–10  
–15  
–20  
RF INPUT AND MATCHING  
The RF/IF inputs present 250 resistive terminations to  
ground. In general, the input signals should be ac-coupled  
through dc-blocking capacitors. The inputs may be driven dif-  
ferentially or single-ended, in which case the unused inputs are  
connected to common via the dc-blocking capacitors. The  
ADL5390s performance is not degraded by driving these inputs  
single-ended. The input impedance can be reduced by placing  
external shunt termination resistors to common on the source  
side of the dc-blocking capacitors so that the quiescent dc-bias  
S11 MATCH WITH  
TERMINATION  
–25  
–30  
–35  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
Figure 28. ADL5390 Customer Evaluation Board RF Input Return Loss.  
IBBP IBBM  
VP  
C7  
0.1µF  
C8  
100pF  
C12  
(SEE TEXT)  
B
SW1  
VP  
R8  
A
10kΩ  
VPRF  
DSOP  
CMOP  
CMRF  
L1  
0Ω  
RFIN_I  
INPI  
CMOP  
RFOM  
RFOP  
CMOP  
C18  
10nF  
C1  
10nF  
R2  
66.5Ω  
C2  
10nF  
1
3
5
4
INMI  
C6  
10nF  
ADL5390  
IPMQ  
RFOP  
L2  
0Ω  
T1  
C17  
10nF  
L4  
120nH  
L3  
120nH  
ETC1-1-13  
(M/A-COM)  
RFIN_Q  
INPQ  
R22  
66.5Ω  
C5  
10nF  
CMOP  
VPS2  
CMRF  
C14  
0.1µF  
VPRF  
VP  
C10  
C9  
VP  
C11  
(SEE TEXT)  
100pF  
0.1µF  
C4  
0.1µF  
C3  
100pF  
QBBP QBBM  
Figure 29. Basic Connections  
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 24  
 
 
 
ADL5390  
RF OUTPUT AND MATCHING  
10  
8
R
= OPEN  
L2  
The RF/IF outputs of the ADL5390, RFOP and RFOM, are open  
collectors of a transimpedance amplifier that need to be pulled  
up to the positive supply, preferably with RF chokes, as shown  
in Figure 30. The nominal output impedance looking into each  
individual output pin is 25 Ω. Consequently, the differential  
output impedance is 50 Ω.  
6
R
= 50  
L2  
4
2
0
R
= SHORT  
L2  
V
P
–2  
–4  
–10  
0.1µF  
R
= 50Ω  
L
120nH  
R
T
10  
100  
1000  
10000  
10pF  
10pF  
RFOM  
RFOP  
FREQUENCY (MHz)  
1:1  
RF  
OUTPUT  
±I  
G
SIG  
M
Figure 31. Gain of the ADL5390 Using a Single-Ended Output with Different  
Dummy Loads, RL2 on the Unused Output, Gain Setpoint = 1.0  
50  
DIFFERENTIAL  
R
The RF output signal can be disabled by raising the DSOP pin  
to the positive supply. The output disable function provides  
>40 dB attenuation of the input signal, even at full gain. The  
interface to DSOP is high impedance and the output disable  
and output enable response times are <100 ns. If the output  
disable function is not needed, the DSOP should be tied to  
ground.  
T
Figure 30. RF Output Interface to the ADL5390 Showing  
Coupling Capacitors, Pull-Up RF Chokes, and Balun  
Since the output dc levels are at the positive supply, ac-coupling  
capacitors are usually needed between the ADL5390 outputs  
and the next stage in the system.  
DRIVING THE I-Q BASEBAND GAIN CONTROLS  
A 1:1 RF broadband output balun, such as the ETC1-1-13 (M/A-  
COM), converts the differential output of the ADL5390 into a  
single-ended signal. Note that the loss and balance of the balun  
directly impact the apparent output power, noise floor, and gain/  
phase errors of the ADL5390. In critical applications, narrow-band  
baluns with low loss and superior balance are recommended.  
The I and Q gain control inputs to the ADL5390 set the gain for  
each channel. These inputs are differential and should normally  
have a common-mode level of 0.5 V. However, when differen-  
tially driven, the common mode can vary from 250 mV to  
750 mV while still allowing full gain control. Each input pair  
has a nominal input swing of 0.5 V differential around the  
common-mode level. The maximum gain is achieved if the  
differential voltage is equal to +500 mV or −500 mV. So with a  
common-mode level of 500 mV, IBBP and IBBM will each  
swing between 250 mV and 750 mV.  
If the output is taken in a single-ended fashion directly into a 50 Ω  
load through a coupling capacitor, there will be an impedance  
mismatch. This can be resolved with a 1:2 balun to convert the  
single-ended 25 Ω output impedance to 50 Ω. If loss of signal  
swing is not critical, a 25 Ω back termination in series with the  
output pin can also be used. The unused output pin must still be  
pulled up to the positive supply. The user may load it through a  
coupling capacitor with a dummy load to preserve balance. The  
mismatched gain of the ADL5390 when the output is single-  
ended varies slightly with dummy load value, as shown in Figure  
31.  
The I and Q gain control inputs can also be driven with a single-  
ended signal. In this case, one side of each input should be tied  
to a low noise 0.5 V voltage source (a 0.1 µF decoupling capaci-  
tor located close to the pin is recommended), while the other  
input swings from 0 V to 1 V. Low speed, single-ended drive can  
easily be achieved using 12-bit voltage output DACs such as  
AD8303 (serial SPI® interface) or AD8582 (parallel interface)  
DACs. A reference voltage should also be supplied. Differential  
drive generally offers superior even-order distortion and lower  
noise than single-ended drive.  
The bandwidth of the baseband controls exceeds 200 MHz even  
at full-scale baseband drive. This allows for very fast gain modu-  
lation of the RF input signal. In cases where lower modulation  
bandwidths are acceptable or desired, external filter capacitors  
can be connected across Pins IFLP to IFLM and Pins QFLP to  
QFLM to reduce the ingress of baseband noise and spurious  
signal into the control path.  
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 24  
 
 
ADL5390  
The 3 dB bandwidth is set by choosing CFLT according to the  
following equation:  
AD9777  
ADL5390  
IBBP  
I
OUTA1  
OPTIONAL  
LOW-PASS  
FILTER  
45 kHz ×10 nF  
R1  
R2  
f3 dB  
R3  
Cexternal + 0.5 pF  
I
IBBM  
OUTB1  
This equation has been verified for values of CFLT from 10 pF to  
0.1 µF (bandwidth settings of approximately 4.5 kHz to 43 MHz).  
I
QBBP  
QBBM  
OUTA2  
R1  
R2  
INTERFACING TO HIGH SPEED DACs  
OPTIONAL  
LOW-PASS  
FILTER  
R3  
The AD977x family of dual DACs is well suited to driving the I  
and Q gain controls of the ADL5390 with fast modulating sig-  
nals. While these inputs can in general be driven by any DAC,  
the differential outputs and bias level of the ADI TxDAC® fam-  
ily allows for a direct connection between DAC and modulator.  
I
OUTB2  
Figure 32. Basic AD9777-to-ADL5390 Interface  
The AD977x family of dual DACs has differential current out-  
puts. The full-scale current is user programmable and is usually  
set to 20 mA, that is each output swings from 0 mA to 20 mA.  
1.15  
1.13  
1.10  
1.08  
1.05  
1.02  
1.00  
0.97  
0.95  
0.92  
0.90  
0.88  
0.85  
0.82  
0.80  
0.77  
0.75  
0.72  
0.70  
The basic interface between the AD9777 DAC outputs and the  
ADL5390 I and Q gain control inputs is shown in Figure 32.  
Resistors R1 and R2 (R1 = R2) set the dc bias level according to  
the following equation:  
Bias Level = Average Output Current × R1  
For example, if the full-scale current from each output is 20 mA,  
each output will have an average current of 10 mA. Therefore,  
to set the bias level to the recommended 0.5 V, R1 and R2  
should be set to 50 Ω each. R1 and R2 should always be equal.  
50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130  
R3 ()  
If R3 is omitted, this will result in an available swing from the  
DAC of 2 V p-p differential, which is twice the maximum voltage  
range required by the ADL5390. DAC resolution can be maxi-  
mized by adding R3, which scales down this voltage according  
to the following equation:  
Figure 33. Peak-Peak DAC Output Swing vs.  
Swing Scaling Resistor R3 (R1 = R2 = 50 Ω)  
Figure 33 shows the relationship between the value of R3 and  
the peak baseband voltage with R1 and R2 equal to 50 Ω. As  
shown in Figure 33, a value of 100 Ω for R3 will provide a  
peak-peak swing of 1 V p-p differential into the ADL5390s  
I and Q inputs.  
Full Scale Swing =  
R2  
R2 + R3  
When using a DAC, low-pass image reject filters are typically  
used to eliminate the Nyquist images produced by the DAC.  
They also provide the added benefit of eliminating broadband  
noise that might feed into the modulator from the DAC.  
2× IMAX  
(
R1||  
(
R2 + R3))× 1 −  
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 24  
 
 
 
ADL5390  
inputs VIBB and VQBB. The resultant of their vector sum represents  
the vector gain, which can also be expressed as a magnitude and  
phase. By applying different combinations of baseband inputs,  
any vector gain within the unit circle can be programmed. The  
magnitude and phase (with respect to 90o) accuracy of the 90o  
power splitter will directly affect this representation and could  
be seen as an offset and skew of the circle.  
GENERALIZED MODULATOR  
The ADL5390 can be configured as a traditional IQ quadrature  
modulator or as a linear vector modulator by applying signals  
that are in quadrature to the RF/IF input channels. Since the  
quadrature generation is performed externally, its accuracy and  
bandwidth are determined by the user. The user-defined band-  
width is attractive for multioctave or lower IF applications  
where on-chip, high accuracy quadrature generation is tradi-  
tionally difficult or impractical. The gain control pins (IBBP/M  
and QBBP/M) become the in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) base-  
band inputs for the quadrature modulator and the gain/phase  
control for the vector modulator. The wide modulation band-  
widths of the gain control interface allow for high fidelity base-  
band signals to be generated for the quadrature modulator and  
for high speed gain and phase adjustments to be generated for  
the vector modulator.  
A change in sign of VIBB or VQBB can be viewed as a change in  
sign of the gain or as a 180° phase change. The outermost circle  
represents the maximum gain magnitude. The circle origin  
implies, in theory, a gain of 0. In practice, circuit mismatches  
and unavoidable signal feedthrough limit the minimum gain to  
approximately −30 dB. The phase angle between the resultant  
gain vector and the positive x-axis is defined as the phase shift.  
Note that there is a nominal, systematic insertion phase through  
the ADL5390 to which the phase shift is added. In the following  
discussions, the systematic insertion phase is normalized to 0°.  
RF/IF signals can be introduce to the ADL5390 in quadrature  
by using a two-way 90o power splitter such as the Mini-Circuits  
QCN-12. Each output of an ideal 90o power splitter is 3 dB  
smaller than the input and has a 90o phase difference from the  
other output. In reality, the 90o power splitter will have its own  
insertion loss, which can be different for each output, causing a  
magnitude imbalance. Furthermore, quadrature output will not  
be maintained over a large frequency range, introducing a phase  
imbalance. The type of 90o power splitter that should be used  
for a particular application will be determined by the frequency,  
bandwidth, and accuracy needed. In some applications minor  
magnitude and phase imbalances can be adjusted for in the  
I/Q gain control inputs.  
The correspondence between the desired gain and phase and  
the Cartesian inputs VIBB and VQBB is given by simple trigono-  
metric identities  
2
2
Gain =  
[
(
V
IBB /VO  
)
+
(
VQBB /VO  
)
]
Phase = arctan  
where:  
VO is the baseband scaling constant (285 mV).  
(
V
QBB /VIBB  
)
V
IBB and VQBB are the differential I and Q baseband voltages  
centered around 500 mV, respectively (VIBB = VIBBP VIBBM  
QBB = VQBBP VQBBM).  
;
VECTOR MODULATOR  
V
V
q
Note that when evaluating the arctangent function, the proper  
phase quadrant must be selected. For example, if the principal  
value of the arctangent (known as arctangent(x)) is used, quad-  
rants 2 and 3 would be interpreted mistakenly as quadrants 4  
and 1, respectively. In general, both VIBB and VQBB are needed in  
concert to modulate the gain and the phase.  
+0.5  
MAX GAIN = 5dB  
A
|A|  
θ
V
i
–0.5  
+0.5  
Pure amplitude modulation is represented by radial movement  
of the gain vector tip at a fixed angle, while pure phase modula-  
tion is represented by rotation of the tip around the circle at a  
fixed radius. Unlike traditional I-Q modulators, the ADL5390 is  
designed to have a linear RF signal path from input to output.  
Traditional I-Q modulators provide a limited LO carrier path  
through which any amplitude information is removed.  
MIN GAIN < –30dB  
–0.5  
Figure 34. Vector Gain Representation  
The ADL5390 can be used as a vector modulator by driving the  
RF I and Q inputs single-ended through a 90o power splitter. By  
controlling the relative amounts of I and Q components that are  
summed, continuous magnitude and phase control of the gain  
is possible. Consider the vector gain representation of the  
ADL5390 expressed in polar form in Figure 34. The attenuation  
factors for the RF I and Q signal components are represented on  
the x-axis and y-axis, respectively, by the baseband gain control  
VECTOR MODULATOR EXAMPLE—CDMA2000  
The ADL5390 can be used as a vector modulator by driving the  
RF I and Q inputs (INPI and INPQ) single-ended through a 90o  
power splitter and controlling the magnitude and phase using  
the gain control inputs. To demonstrate operation as a vector  
modulator, an 880 MHz single-carrier CDMA2000 test model  
signal (forward pilot, sync, paging, and six traffic as per  
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 24  
 
 
ADL5390  
3GPP2 C.S0010-B, Table 6.5.2.1) was applied to the ADL5390.  
A cavity-tuned filter was used to reduce noise from the signal  
source being applied to the device. The 4.6 MHz pass band of  
this filter is apparent in the subsequent spectral plots.  
ACP is still in compliance with the standard (<−45 dBc @  
750 kHz and <−60 dBc @ 1.98 MHz) even with output powers  
greater than +3 dBm. At low output power levels, ACP at  
1.98 MHz carrier offset degrades as the noise floor of the  
ADL5390 becomes the dominant contributor to measured ACP.  
Measured noise at 4 MHz carrier offset begins to increase  
sharply above 2 dBm output power. This increase is not due to  
noise, but results from increased carrier-induced distortion. As  
output power drops below 2 dBm, the noise floor drops towards  
−90 dBm.  
Figure 35 shows the output signal spectrum for a programmed  
gain and phase of 5 dB and 45o. POUT is equal to 0 dBm and  
V
IBB = VQBB = 0.353 V (centered around 500 mV), i.e., VIBBP −  
VIBBM = VQBBP − VQBBM = 0.353 V. Adjacent channel power is  
measured in 30 kHz resolution bandwidth at 750 kHz and  
1.98 MHz carrier offset. Noise floor is measured at 4 MHz  
carrier offset in a 1 MHz resolution bandwidth.  
With a fixed input power of 2.16 dBm, the output power was  
again swept by changing VIBB and VQBB from 0 V to 500 mV.  
The resulting output power, ACP, and noise floor are shown in  
Figure 37.  
REF LVL  
MARKER 1 [T1]  
–14.38dBm  
880.00755511MHz  
RBW 30kHz  
VWB 300kHz  
SWT 2s  
RF ATT 20dB  
5dBm  
MIXER  
UNIT  
–10dBm  
dB  
0.7dB OFFSET  
0
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
1 [T1] –14.38dBm  
880.00755511MHz  
CH PWR  
A
1 [T1]  
–14.38dBm  
1
5
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
880.00755511MHz  
CH PWR  
ACP UP  
0.13dBm  
–62.00dB  
V
vs. V /V  
OUT IBB QBB  
ACP LOW –61.98dB  
–2  
ALT1 UP  
–87.02dB  
1RM  
EXT  
1AVG  
ALT1 LOW –87.04dB  
–9  
ACP: 750kHz OFFSET, 30kHz RBW  
–16  
–23  
–30  
–37  
–44  
C0  
C0  
Cl2  
Cl2  
Cl1  
Cl1  
ACP: 1.98MHz OFFSET, 30kHz RBW  
NOISE: 4MHz OFFSET, 1MHz RBW  
CU1  
CU1  
CU2  
CU2  
CENTER 880MHz  
500kHz/  
SPAN 5MHz  
Figure 35. Output Spectrum, Single-Carrier CDMA2000 Test Model at −5 dBm,  
VI = VQ = 0.353 V, ACP Measured at 750 kHz and 1.98 MHz Carrier Offset,  
Input Signal–Filtered Using a Cavity-Tuned Filter (Pass Band = 4.6 MHz)  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
V
I(Q)BB  
Figure 37. Output Power, Noise, and ACP vs. I and Q Control Voltages,  
CDMA2000 Test Model, VI = VQ, ACP Measured in 30 kHz RBW at 750 MHz  
and 1.98 MHz Carrier Offset, Noise Measured at 4 MHz Carrier Offset  
Holding the I and Q gain control voltages steady at 0.353 V,  
input power was swept. Figure 36 shows the resulting output  
power, noise floor, and adjacent channel power ratio. The noise  
floor is presented as noise in a 1 MHz bandwidth as defined by  
the 3GPP2 specification.  
In contrast to Figure 36, Figure 37 shows that for a fixed input  
power, ACP remains fairly constant as gain and phase are  
changed (this is not true for very high RF input powers) until  
the noise floor of the ADL5390 becomes the dominant con-  
tributor to the measured ACP.  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
–100  
ACP: 750kHz OFFSET, 30kHz RBW  
ACP: 1.98MHz OFFSET, 30kHz RBW  
NOISE: 4MHz OFFSET, 1MHz RBW  
–30  
–25  
–20  
–15  
–10  
–5  
0
5
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)  
Figure 36. Noise and ACP vs. Output Power, Single-Carrier CDMA2000 Test  
Model, VI = VQ = 0.353, ACP Measured in 30 kHz RBW at 750 kHz and  
1.98 MHz Carrier Offset, Noise Measured at 4 MHz Carrier Offset  
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 24  
 
 
ADL5390  
*RBW 3kHz  
VWB 10kHz  
SWT 780ms  
QUADRATURE MODULATOR  
REF 7dBm  
ATT 35dB  
DESIRED SIDEBAND  
–16.20dBm  
900.998397436MHz  
The ADL5390 can be used as a quadrature modulator by driving  
the RF I and Q inputs (INPI and INPQ) single-ended through a  
90o phase splitter to serve as the LO input. I/Q modulation is  
applied to the baseband I and Q gain control inputs (IBBP/IBBM  
and QBBP/QBBM). A simplified schematic is shown in Figure  
38.  
0
–10  
–20  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
A
1 AP  
CLRWR  
UNDESIRED SIDEBAND  
–23.27dB  
–1.996794872MHz  
1
THIRD BASEBAND HARMONIC  
–37.38dB  
–4.004807692MHz  
2
LO FEEDTHROUGH  
–41.27dB  
–998.397435897kHz  
3
I DATA  
4
-80  
10nF  
SUM  
LO IN  
PORT 1  
INPI  
PORT  
10nF  
10nF  
-90  
1
3
5
4
66.5  
RFOM  
RFOP  
CENTER 900MHz  
700kHz/  
SPAN 7MHz  
QCN-12  
ADL5390  
ROFP  
10nF  
Figure 39. SSB Quadrature Modulator Result Using External 90° Phase Splitter,  
RF PIN = −15 dBm, VIBB = VQBB = 0.5 V  
ETC1-1-13  
(M/A-COM)  
TERM  
PORT  
INPQ  
PORT 2  
66.5Ω  
50Ω  
(With Reference to a Common-Mode Voltage of 0.5 V)  
90° PHASE  
SPLITTER  
*RBW 3kHz  
VWB 10kHz  
SWT 780ms  
REF 7dBm  
ATT 35dB  
DESIRED SIDEBAND  
–16.78dBm  
Q DATA  
0
A
900.998397436MHz  
1 AP  
CLRWR  
–10 UNDESIRED SIDEBAND  
–51.81dB  
1
Figure 38. Quadrature Modulator Application  
–1.996794872MHz  
–20  
THIRD BASEBAND HARMONIC  
–38.45dB  
–4.004807692MHz  
Single sideband performance of a quadrature modulator is  
–30  
–40  
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
determined by the magnitude and phase balance (compared to  
a 90o offset) at the summation point of the I and Q signals.  
Because the ADL5390 has matched amplifiers and mixers in  
the I and Q channel, most of the single sideband performance  
will be determined by the external 90o phase splitter. Good  
single sideband performance can be achieved by choosing a  
well-balanced 90o phase splitter. However, phase and magnitude  
differences in the 90o phase splitter can be corrected by adjusting  
the magnitude and phase of the I and Q data. Figure 39 shows  
the performance of the ADL5390 used in conjunction with Mini-  
Circuits QCN-12 90o power splitter. Figure 40 shows the single  
sideband improvement as the I and Q data is adjusted in magnitude  
and phase to achieve better single sideband performance.  
LO FEEDTHROUGH  
–41.49dB  
–998.397435897kHz  
3
4
2
CENTER 900MHz  
700kHz/  
SPAN 7MHz  
Figure 40. SSB Modulator Applications with Gain and Phase Errors Corrected,  
RF Pin = −15 dBm, VIBB = VQBB = 0.5 V (With Reference to a Common-Mode  
Voltage of 0.5 V), I/Q Phase Offset by 3o, and Magnitude Offset by 0.5 V  
For maximum dynamic range, the ADL5390 should be driven  
as close to the output 1 dB compression point as possible. The  
output power of the ADL5390 increases linearly with the RF  
(LO) input power and baseband gain control input voltage until  
the ADL5390 reaches compression. At the 1 dB compression  
point, the lower sideband starts to increase. Figure 41 demon-  
strates the output spectrum of a 3-carrier CDMA2000 signal  
applied to the I/Q baseband gain control inputs. As the RF (LO)  
power is increased, the relative amount of noise is reduced until  
the ADL5390 goes into compression. At this point, the relative  
noise increases, as shown in Figure 42.  
Analog Devices has several quadrature/vector modulators that  
have highly accurate integrated 90o phase splitters—AD8340,  
AD8341, AD8345, AD8346, AD8349—that cover a variety of  
frequency bands.  
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 24  
 
 
ADL5390  
RBW 10kHz  
VBW 300kHz  
SWT 4s  
*
*
*
RF MULTIPLEXER  
ATT 5dB  
REF –26.6dBm  
*
The ADL5390 may also be used as an RF multiplexer. In this  
application, two RF signals are applied to the INPI and INPQ  
inputs, and the baseband voltages control which of the two RF  
signals appears at the output. Figure 43 illustrates this applica-  
tion and shows that with VIBB = 0.5 and VQBB = 0.0 (with refer-  
ence to a common-mode voltage of 0.5 V). The INPI signal is  
–30  
–40  
POS –26.623dBm  
A
–50  
–60  
–70  
–80  
–90  
1 RM  
AVG  
*
presented to the output. Then, when VIBB transitions to VIBB  
0.0 and VQBB remains equal to zero, there is no RF output.  
=
Lastly, as VQBB transitions to 0.5 V, the INPQ signal appears at  
the output. With VIBB = 0.0 and VQBB = 0.0, the isolation to the  
output is typically >40 dB at 380 MHz.  
NOR  
–100  
–110  
–120  
TEK STOPPED  
200 Acqs  
24 AUG 04 11:08:40  
CENTER 880MHz  
1.29MHz/  
SPAN 12.9MHz  
STANDARD: CDMA IS95C CLASS 0 FWD  
Tx CHANNELS  
ADJACENT CHANNEL  
LOWER –59.25dB  
UPPER  
–59.43dB  
CH1 (REF)  
CH2  
–22.93dBm  
–22.83dBm  
–22.95dBm  
CH2  
ALTERNATE CHANNEL  
LOWER –62.79dB  
CH3  
V
IBB  
UPPER  
–63.11dB  
TOTAL  
–18.13dBm  
2ND ALTERNATE CHANNEL  
LOWER –60.71dB  
UPPER  
–60.32dB  
2
V
QBB  
CH3  
CH1  
Figure 41. ADL5390 as a Quadrature Modulator with the Use of an External  
90° Phase Splitter, RF/LO Power = −1 dBm and Gain Control Inputs Driven  
Differentially with 0.353 VP-P, 3-Carrier CDMA2000 I/Q Data  
RF OUTPUT  
3
1
–69  
NOISE (dBc) - 8MHz OFFSET - 1MHz RBW  
–70  
–71  
–72  
CH1 200mV CH2 500mV D M 40.0ns 1.25GS/s 800ps/pt  
S
CH3 500mV D  
A CH2 780mV  
S
Figure 43. ADL5390 in RF Multiplexer Application  
–73  
–74  
–75  
–76  
–77  
–78  
–25  
–20  
–15  
–10  
–5  
0
OUTPUT POWER (dBm)  
Figure 42. Noise vs. Output Power  
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
EVALUATION BOARD  
The evaluation board circuit schematic for the ADL5390 is  
shown in Figure 44.  
The baseband input of the ADL5390 requires a differential volt-  
age drive. The evaluation board is set up to allow such a drive  
by connecting the differential voltage source to QBBP and  
QBBM. The common-mode voltage should be maintained at  
approximately 0.5 V. For this configuration, Jumpers W1 to W4  
should be removed.  
The evaluation board is configured to be driven from a  
single-ended 50 Ω source. Although the input of the ADL5390  
is differential, it may be driven single-ended with no loss of  
performance.  
The baseband input of the evaluation board may also be driven  
with a single-ended voltage. In this case, a bias level is provided  
to the unused input from Potentiometer R10 by installing either  
W1 or W2.  
The low-pass corner frequency of the baseband I and Q chan-  
nels can be reduced by installing capacitors in the C11 and C12  
positions. The low-pass corner frequency for either channel is  
approximated by  
Setting SW1 in Position B disables the ADL5390 output amplifier.  
With SW1 set to Position A, the output amplifier is enabled. With  
SW1 set to Position A, an external voltage signal, such as a pulse,  
can be applied to the DSOP SMA connector to exercise the  
output amplifier enable/disable function.  
45 kHz ×10 nF  
f3 dB  
Cexternal + 0.5 pF  
On this evaluation board, the I and Q baseband circuits are  
identical to each other, so the following description applies to  
each. The connections and circuit configuration for the I/Q  
baseband inputs are described in Table 4.  
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 24  
 
 
ADL5390  
Table 4. Evaluation Board Configuration Options  
Component  
Function  
Default Conditions  
R7, R9, R11, R14,  
R15, R19, R20,  
R21, C15, C19,  
W3, W4  
I Channel Baseband Interface. Resistors R7 and R9 may be installed to  
accommodate a baseband source that requires a specific terminating  
impedance. Capacitors C15 and C19 are bypass capacitors. For single-ended  
baseband drive, the Potentiometer R11 can be used to provide a bias level to  
the unused input (install either W3 or W4).  
R7, R9 = not installed  
R11 = potentiometer, 2 kΩ, 10 turn  
(Bourns)  
R14 = 4 kΩ (size 0603)  
R15 = 44 kΩ (size 0603)  
R19, R20, R21 = 0 Ω (size 0603)  
C15, C19 = 0.1 µF  
(Size 0603)  
W3 = jumper (installed)  
W4 = jumper (open)  
R1, R3, R10, R12,  
R13, R16, R17,  
R18, C16, C20,  
W1, W2  
Q Channel Baseband Interface. See the I Channel Baseband Interface section.  
R1, R3 = not installed  
R10 = potentiometer, 2 kΩ, 10 turn  
(Bourns)  
R12 = 4 kΩ (size 0603)  
R13 = 44 kΩ (size 0603)  
R16, R17, R18 = 0 Ω  
(size 0603)  
C16, C20 = 0.1 µF (size 0603)  
W1 = jumper (installed)  
W2 = jumper (open)  
C11, C12  
Baseband Low-Pass Filtering. By adding capacitor C11 between QFLP and  
QFLM, and capacitor C12 between IFLP and IFLM, the 3 dB low-pass corner  
frequency of the baseband interface can be reduced from 230 MHz (nominal)  
as given by the equation in the Evaluation Board section.  
C11, C12 = not installed  
T1, C17, C18, L3,  
L4  
Output Interface. The 1:1 balun transformer, T1, converts the 50 Ω differential  
output to 50 Ω single-ended. C17 and C18 are dc blocks. L3 and L4 provide dc  
bias for the output.  
C17, C18 = 10 nF (size 0603)  
T1 = ETC1-1-13 (M/A-COM)  
L3, L4 = 120 nH (size 0603)  
C2, C1, R2  
C5, C6, R22  
I and Q Channel RF Input Interface. The single-ended impedance to the  
ADL5390 RF inputs is 200 Ω. Shunt terminations R2 and R22 of 66.5 Ω bring the  
impedances to 50 Ω. C2 and C5 are dc blocks. C1 and C6 are used to ac-couple  
the unused side of the differential inputs to common.  
C2 = C1 = 10 nF (size 0603)  
R2 = 66.5 10 (size 0603)  
C5 = C6 = 10 nF (size 0603)  
R22 = 66.5 10 (size 0603)  
R4, R6, R5, C4, C7  
C9, C3, C8, C10  
Power Supply Decoupling.  
R4, R6, R5 = 0 (size 0603)  
C4, C7 C9 = 0.1uF (size 0603)  
C3, C8, C10 = 100 pF (size 0603)  
R8, SW1  
Output Disable Interface. The output stage of the ADL5390 is disabled by  
applying a high voltage to the DSOP pin by moving SW1 to Position B. The  
output stage is enabled moving SW1 to Position A. The output disable  
function can also be exercised by applying an external high or low voltage to  
the DSOP SMA connector with SW1 in Position A.  
R8 = 10 kΩ (size 0603)  
SW1 = SPDT (Position A, output  
enabled)  
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 24  
 
ADL5390  
VP  
GND  
TEST POINT  
IBBP  
IBBM  
TEST POINT  
C19  
0.1µF  
R9  
(OPEN)  
R7  
(OPEN)  
R19  
0Ω  
R21  
R20  
W4  
W3  
0Ω  
0Ω  
C15  
0.1µF  
VP  
R14 R11 R15  
4k2k44kΩ  
C7  
0.1µF  
C8  
100pF  
C12  
(OPEN)  
R5  
0Ω  
B
SW1  
VP  
R8  
A
10kΩ  
DSOP  
VPRF  
DSOP  
CMOP  
CMRF  
L1  
0Ω  
RFIN_I  
INPI  
CMOP  
RFOM  
RFOP  
CMOP  
C18  
10nF  
C1  
10nF  
R2  
66.5Ω  
C2  
10nF  
1
3
5
INMI  
C6  
10nF  
ADL5390  
IPMQ  
RFOP  
L2  
0Ω  
4
T1  
C17  
10nF  
L4  
120nH  
L3  
120nH  
ETC1-1-13  
(M/A-COM)  
RFIN_Q  
INPQ  
R22  
66.5Ω  
C5  
10nF  
CMOP  
VPS2  
CMRF  
VPRF  
C14  
0.1µF  
R6  
0Ω  
R4  
0Ω  
VP  
C10  
100pF  
C9  
0.1µF  
VP  
C11  
(OPEN)  
C4  
0.1µF  
C3  
100pF  
R12 R10 R13  
4k2k44kΩ  
VP  
C16  
0.1µF  
W1  
W2  
R17  
0Ω  
R18  
0Ω  
R16  
0Ω  
R1  
(OPEN)  
R3  
(OPEN)  
C20  
0.1µF  
QBBP  
QBBM  
Figure 44. Evaluation Board Schematic  
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 24  
ADL5390  
Figure 45. Component Side Layout  
Figure 46. Component Side Silkscreen  
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 24  
ADL5390  
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS  
0.60 MAX  
4.00  
BSC SQ  
0.60 MAX  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
1
24  
19  
18  
0.50  
BSC  
PIN 1  
INDICATOR  
2.45  
2.30 SQ  
2.15  
TOP  
VIEW  
3.75  
BSC SQ  
EXPOSED  
*
PA D  
(BOTTOMVIEW)  
0.50  
0.40  
0.30  
6
13  
7
12  
0.23 MIN  
0.80 MAX  
0.65 TYP  
2.50 REF  
1.00  
0.85  
0.80  
12° MAX  
0.05 MAX  
0.02 NOM  
0.30  
0.23  
0.18  
COPLANARITY  
0.08  
0.20 REF  
SEATING  
PLANE  
*
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-220-VGGD-2  
EXCEPT FOR EXPOSED PAD DIMENSION  
Figure 47. 24-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package [LFCSP]  
4 × 4 mm Body  
(CP-24-2)  
Dimensions shown in millimeters  
ORDERING GUIDE  
Models  
Temperature Range Package Description  
−40°C to +85°C 24-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP)  
Package Option  
CP-24-2  
CP-24-2  
Order Multiple  
ADL5390ACPZ-WP1, 2  
64  
1,500  
1
ADL5390ACPZ-REEL71 −40°C to +85°C  
ADL5390-EVAL  
24-Lead Lead Frame Chip Scale Package (LFCSP)  
Evaluation Board  
1 Z = Pb-free part.  
2 WP = waffle pack.  
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 24  
 
 
 
 
ADL5390  
NOTES  
© 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and regis-  
tered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
D04954–0–10/04(0)  
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 24  

相关型号:

ADL5390ACPZ-WP

RF Vector Multiplier
ADI

ADL5390ACPZ-WP

SPECIALTY TELECOM CIRCUIT, QCC24, 4 X 4 MM, LEAD FREE, MO-220-VGGD-2, LFCSP-24
ROCHESTER

ADL5390ACPZ-WP1

RF/IF Vector Multiplier
ADI

ADL5391

DC to 2.0 GHz Multiplier
ADI

ADL5391-EVALZ

DC to 2.0 GHz Multiplier
ADI

ADL5391ACPZ-R2

DC to 2.0 GHz Multiplier
ADI

ADL5391ACPZ-R7

DC to 2.0 GHz Multiplier
ADI

ADL5391ACPZ-WP

DC to 2.0 GHz Multiplier
ADI

ADL5500

100 MHz to 6 GHz TruPwr Detector
ADI

ADL5500-EVALZ

100 MHz to 6 GHz TruPwr Detector
ADI

ADL5500ACBZ-P2

100 MHz to 6 GHz TruPwr Detector
ADI

ADL5500ACBZ-P3

100 <span class="noTransform">MHz TO 6 GHz TruPwr&trade;</span> Detector Package: 4 Ball WLCSP; No of Pins: 4; Temperature Range: COMMERCIAL; Container: 10000/Reel
ADI