CS5102A-BLZR [CIRRUS]

ADC, Successive Approximation, 16-Bit, 1 Func, 2 Channel, Serial Access, CMOS, PQCC28, MS-047, LCC-28;
CS5102A-BLZR
型号: CS5102A-BLZR
厂家: CIRRUS LOGIC    CIRRUS LOGIC
描述:

ADC, Successive Approximation, 16-Bit, 1 Func, 2 Channel, Serial Access, CMOS, PQCC28, MS-047, LCC-28

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CS5101A  
CS5102A  
16-bit, 100 kSps / 20 kSps A/D Converters  
Features  
Description  
The CS5101A and CS5102A are 16-bit monolithic  
CMOS analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) capable of  
100 kSps (5101A) and 20 kSps (5102A) throughput. The  
CS5102A’s low power consumption of 44mW, coupled  
with a power-down mode, makes it particularly suitable  
for battery-powered operation.  
z Monolithic CMOS A/D Converters  
– Inherent Sampling Architecture  
– 2-channel Input Multiplexer  
– Flexible Serial Output Port  
On-chip self-calibration circuitry achieves nonlinearity of  
±0.001% of FS and guarantees 16-bit, no missing codes  
over the entire specified temperature range. Superior lin-  
earity also leads to 92 dB S/(N+D) with harmonics below  
-100 dB. Offset and full-scale errors are minimized dur-  
ing the calibration cycle, eliminating the need for external  
trimming.  
z Ultra-low Distortion  
– S/(N+D): 92 dB  
– TDH: 0.001%  
z Conversion Time  
– CS5101A: 8µs  
The CS5101A and CS5102A each consist of a 2-chan-  
nel input multiplexer, DAC, conversion and calibration  
microcontroller, clock generator, comparator, and serial  
communications port. The inherent sampling architec-  
ture of the device eliminates the need for an external  
track-and-hold amplifier.  
– CS5102A: 40 µs  
z Linearity Error: ±0.001% FS  
– Guaranteed No Missing Codes  
z Self-calibration Maintains Accuracy  
The converters’ 16-bit data is output in serial form with  
either binary or two’s complement coding. Three output  
timing modes are available for easy interfacing to micro-  
controllers and shift registers. Unipolar and bipolar input  
ranges are digitally selectable  
– Accurate Over Time & Temperature  
z Low Power Consumption  
– CS5101A: 320 mW  
– CS5102A: 44 mW  
ORDERING INFORMATION  
See “Ordering Information” on page 38.  
I
TRK1  
8
SSH/SDL  
11  
HOLD SLEEPRST STBYCODEBP/UP CRS/FIN  
12 28 16 17 10  
TRK2  
9
SDATA  
15  
2
5
3
4
14  
CLKIN  
XOUT  
Clock  
Generator  
SCLK  
Control  
21  
20  
19  
REFBUF  
Calibration  
SRAM  
Microcontroller  
-
+
VREF  
26  
27  
TEST  
AIN1  
16-Bit Charge  
Redistribution  
DAC  
-
+
SCKMOD  
-
+
24  
13  
AIN2  
18  
Comparator  
OUTMOD  
-
CH1/2  
+
22  
AGND  
25  
23  
VA-  
6
1
7
VA+  
DGND  
VD-  
VD+  
Copyright © Cirrus Logic, Inc. 2006  
JAN ‘06  
DS45F6  
http://www.cirrus.com  
(All Rights Reserved)  
CS5101A CS5102A  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
1. CHARACTERISTICS & SPECIFICATIONS ............................................................................. 4  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5101A............................................................................... 4  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, CS5101A......................................................................... 6  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5102A............................................................................... 7  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, CS5102A......................................................................... 9  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, ALL DEVICES ............................................................... 11  
DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS, ALL DEVICES...................................................................... 13  
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS ..................................................................... 13  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS ......................................................................................... 14  
2. OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................. 15  
3. THEORY OF OPERATION ..................................................................................................... 15  
3.1 Calibration ........................................................................................................................ 16  
4. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION ............................................................................................... 17  
4.1 Initiating Conversions ....................................................................................................... 17  
4.2 Tracking the Input ............................................................................................................ 17  
4.3 Master Clock .................................................................................................................... 18  
4.4 Asynchronous Sampling Considerations ......................................................................... 18  
4.5 Analog Input Range/Coding Format ................................................................................ 19  
4.6 Output Mode Control ........................................................................................................ 19  
4.6.1 Pipelined Data Transmission .............................................................................. 19  
4.6.2 Register Burst Transmission (RBT) .................................................................... 20  
4.6.3 Synchronous Self-clocking (SSC) ....................................................................... 20  
4.6.4 Free Run (FRN) .................................................................................................. 20  
5. SYSTEM DESIGN USING THE CS5101A & CS5102A ......................................................... 22  
5.1 System Initialization ......................................................................................................... 22  
5.2 Single-channel Operation ................................................................................................ 23  
6. ANALOG CIRCUIT CONNECTIONS ...................................................................................... 23  
6.1 Reference Considerations ............................................................................................... 23  
6.2 Analog Input Connection ................................................................................................. 24  
6.3 Sleep Mode Operation ..................................................................................................... 24  
6.4 Grounding & Power Supply Decoupling ........................................................................... 25  
7. CS5101A & CS5102A PERFORMANCE ............................................................................... 26  
7.1 Differential Nonlinearity .................................................................................................... 26  
7.2 FFT Tests and Windowing ............................................................................................... 28  
7.3 Sampling Distortion .......................................................................................................... 30  
7.4 Noise ................................................................................................................................ 31  
7.5 Aperture Jitter .................................................................................................................. 31  
7.6 Power Supply Rejection ................................................................................................... 32  
8. PIN DESCRIPTIONS .............................................................................................................. 33  
8.1 Power Supply Connections .............................................................................................. 33  
8.2 Oscillator .......................................................................................................................... 34  
8.3 Digital Inputs .................................................................................................................... 34  
8.4 Analog Inputs ................................................................................................................... 35  
8.5 Digital Outputs ................................................................................................................. 35  
8.6 Analog Outputs ................................................................................................................ 35  
8.7 Miscellaneous .................................................................................................................. 35  
9. PARAMETER DEFINITIONS .................................................................................................. 36  
10. PACKAGE DIMENSIONS ..................................................................................................... 37  
11. ORDERING INFORMATION ................................................................................................ 38  
12. ENVIRONMENTAL, MANUFACTURING, & HANDLING INFORMATION .......................... 38  
13. REVISIONS .......................................................................................................................... 39  
2
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
LIST OF FIGURES  
Figure 1. Reset, Calibration, and Control Timing .......................................................................... 10  
Figure 2. Serial Communication Timing ........................................................................................ 12  
Figure 3. Coarse Charge Input Buffers & Charge Redistribution DAC.......................................... 15  
Figure 4. Coarse/Fine Charge Control .......................................................................................... 18  
Figure 5. Pipelined Data Transmission (PDT) Mode Timing......................................................... 20  
Figure 6. Register Burst Transmission (RBT) Mode Timing.......................................................... 21  
Figure 7. Synchronous Self-clocking (SSC) Mode Timing ............................................................ 21  
Figure 8. Free Run (FRN) Mode Timing........................................................................................ 21  
Figure 9. CS5101A/CS5102A System Connection Diagram......................................................... 22  
Figure 10. Power-up Reset Circuit ................................................................................................ 23  
Figure 11. Reference Connections................................................................................................ 24  
Figure 12. Charge Settling Time ................................................................................................... 24  
Figure 13. CS5101A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 25 °C .................................................. 27  
Figure 14. CS5101A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 138 °C ................................................ 27  
Figure 15. CS5102A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 25 °C .................................................. 27  
Figure 16. CS5102A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 138 °C ................................................ 27  
Figure 17. CS5101A DNL Error Distribution.................................................................................. 28  
Figure 18. CS5102A DNL Error Distribution.................................................................................. 28  
Figure 19. CS5101A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)....................................................................... 29  
Figure 20. CS5101A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)....................................................................... 29  
Figure 21. CS5102A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)....................................................................... 29  
Figure 22. CS5102A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channle)....................................................................... 29  
Figure 23. CS5101A Histogram Plot of 8192 Conversion Inputs .................................................. 31  
Figure 24. CS5102A Histogram Plot of 8192 Conversion Inputs .................................................. 31  
Figure 25. Power Supply Rejection............................................................................................... 32  
Figure 26. CS5101A & CS5102A 28-pin PLCC Pinout ................................................................. 33  
Figure 27. 28-Pin PLCC Mechanical Drawing............................................................................... 37  
LIST OF TABLES  
Table 1. Output Coding ................................................................................................................. 19  
Table 2. Output Mode Control....................................................................................................... 19  
DS45F6  
3
CS5101A CS5102A  
1. CHARACTERISTICS & SPECIFICATIONS  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5101A  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V; VA-, VD- = -5V; VREF = 4.5V; Full-scale Input sine wave, 1 kHz; CLKIN = 8 MHz; fs =  
100 kSps; Bipolar Mode; FRN Mode; AIN1 and AIN2 tied together, each channel tested separately; Analog Source Impedance  
= 50 with 1000 pF to AGND unless otherwise specified)  
CS5101A-J  
CS5101A-B  
Parameter*  
Specified Temperature Range  
Min Typ Max Min Typ Max  
Unit  
0 to +70  
-40 to +85  
ºC  
Accuracy  
Linearity Error  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
0.002 0.003  
0.001 0.002  
-
-
-
0.002 0.003 %FS  
0.001 0.002 %FS  
Drift (Note 2)  
±¼  
-
±¼  
-
LSB  
Differential Linearity  
Full-scale Error  
(Note 3) 16  
-
-
16  
-
-
Bits  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Unipolar Offset  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±5  
±4  
-
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±5  
±4  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Bipolar Offset  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±5  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±2  
±5  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Bipolar Negative Full-scale Error  
Dynamic Performance (Bipolar Mode)  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Peak Harmonic or Spurious Noise  
1-kHz Input  
(Note 1)  
-J  
-B  
-J  
96  
98  
85  
85  
100  
102  
88  
-
-
-
-
96  
98  
85  
85  
100  
102  
88  
-
-
-
-
dB  
dB  
dB  
dB  
12-kHz Input  
-B  
91  
91  
Total Harmonic Distortion  
-J  
-B  
-
-
0.002  
0.001  
-
-
-
-
0.002  
0.001  
-
-
%
%
Signal-to-Noise Ratio  
0 dB Input  
(Note 1)  
-J  
-B  
-J  
87  
90  
-
90  
92  
30  
32  
-
-
-
-
87  
90  
-
90  
92  
30  
32  
-
-
-
-
dB  
dB  
dB  
dB  
-60 dB Input  
Noise  
-B  
-
-
(Note 4)  
Unipolar Mode  
Bipolar Mode  
-
-
35  
70  
-
-
-
-
35  
70  
-
-
µVrms  
µVrms  
Notes: 1. Applies after calibration at any temperature within the specified temperature range.  
2. Total drift over specified temperature range after calibration at power-up, at 25º C.  
3. Minimum resolution for which no missing codes is guaranteed over the specified temperature range.  
4. Wideband noise aliased into the baseband, referred to the input.  
* Refer to Parameter Definitions (immediately following the pin descriptions at the end of this data sheet.  
4
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5101A (Continued)  
CS5101A-J  
CS5101A-B  
Parameter*  
Specified Temperature Range  
Analog Input  
Symbol Min Typ Max Min Typ Max  
Unit  
-
0 to +70  
-40 to +85  
ºC  
Aperture Time  
-
-
-
-
25  
-
-
-
-
25  
-
-
ns  
ps  
Aperture Jitter  
100  
100  
Input Capacitance  
(Note 5)  
Unipolar Mode  
Bipolar Mode  
Conversion and Throughput  
-
-
-
-
320  
200  
425  
265  
-
-
320  
200  
425  
265  
pF  
pF  
Conversion Time  
Acquisition Time  
Throughput  
(Note 6)  
(Note 7)  
(Note 8)  
t
-
-
-
-
-
8.12  
1.88  
-
-
-
-
-
-
8.12  
1.88  
-
µs  
µs  
c
t
a
f
100  
100  
kSps  
tp  
Power Supplies  
Power Supply Current  
(Note 9)  
Positive Analog  
Negative Analog  
Positive Digital  
Negative Digital  
I +  
-
-
-
-
21  
-21  
11  
28  
-28  
15  
-
-
-
-
21  
-21  
11  
28  
-28  
15  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
A
I -  
A
(SLEEP High)  
I +  
D
I -  
-11  
-15  
-11  
-15  
D
Power Consumption  
(Note 9, Note 10)  
(SLEEP High)  
P
P
-
-
320  
1
430  
-
-
-
320  
1
430  
-
mW  
mW  
do  
ds  
(SLEEP Low)  
Power Supply Rejection  
(Note 11)  
Positive Supplies  
Negative Supplies  
PSR  
PSR  
-
-
84  
84  
-
-
-
-
84  
84  
-
-
dB  
dB  
Notes: 5. Applies only in the track mode. When converting or calibrating, input capacitance will not exceed 30 pF.  
6. Conversion time scales directly to the master clock speed. The times shown are for synchronous, internal loopback  
(FRN) mode) with 8.0 MHz CLKIN. In PDT, RBT, and SSC modes, asynchronous delay between the falling edge  
of HOLD and the start of conversion may add to the apparent conversion time. This delay will not exceed 1.5  
master clock cycles + 10 ns. In PDT, RBT, and SSC modes, CLKIN can be increased as long as the HOLD sample  
rate is 100 kHz max.  
7. The CS5101A requires 6 clock cycles of coarse charge, followed by a minimum of 1.125 µs of fine charge. FRN  
mode allows 9 cycles for fine charge which provides for the minimum 1.125 µs with an 8MHz clock, however; in  
PDT, RBT, or SSC modes and at clock frequencies of 8 MHz or less, fine charge may be less than 9 clock cycles.  
This reflects the typical specification (6 clock cycles + 1.125 µs).  
8. Throughput is the sum of the acquisition and conversion times. It will vary in accordance with conditions affecting  
acquisition and conversion times, as described above.  
9. All outputs unloaded. All inputs at VD+ or DGND.  
10. Power consumption in the sleep mode applies with no master clock applied (CLKIN held high or low).  
11. With 300 mV p-p, 1-kHz ripple applied to each supply separately in the bipolar mode. Rejection improves by 6 dB  
in the unipolar mode to 90 dB. Figure 25 shows a plot of typical power supply rejection versus frequency.  
DS45F6  
5
CS5101A CS5102A  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, CS5101A  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V ±10%; VA-, VD- = -5V ±10%; Inputs: Logic 0 = 0V, Logic 1 = VD+; CL = 50 pF).  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
CLKIN Period  
t
108  
-
-
10,000  
-
ns  
ns  
clk  
CLKIN Low Time  
CLKIN High Time  
Crystal Frequency  
t
37.5  
clkl  
t
37.5  
-
-
ns  
clkh  
(Note 12)  
(Note 13)  
f
2.0  
-
9.216  
MHz  
ms  
ns  
xtal  
SLEEP Rising to Oscillator Stable  
RST Pulse Width  
-
-
2
-
-
-
-
-
t
150  
-
rst  
RST to STBY falling  
t
-
-
-
-
-
100  
ns  
drrs  
RST Rising to STBY Rising  
CH1/2 Edge to TRK1, TRK2 Rising  
CH1/2 Edge to TRK1, TRK2 Falling  
HOLD to SSH Falling  
t
11,528,160  
t
clk  
cal  
(Note 14)  
(Note 14)  
(Note 15)  
(Note 15)  
(Note 15)  
(Note 16)  
(Note 15)  
(Note 16)  
t
80  
ns  
drsh1  
t
-
68t +260 ns  
clk  
dfsh4  
dfsh2  
t
60  
-
ns  
HOLD to TRK1, TRK2 Falling  
HOLD to TRK1, TRK2, SSH Rising  
HOLD Pulse Width  
t
66t  
-
-
68t +260 ns  
dfsh1  
clk  
clk  
t
120  
-
63t  
64t  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
drsh  
t
t
1t +20  
-
-
-
hold  
clk  
clk  
clk  
HOLD to CH1/2 Edge  
15  
95  
dhlri  
HOLD Falling to CLKIN Falling  
t
1t +10  
clk  
hcf  
Notes: 12. External loading capacitors are required to allow the crystal to oscillate. Maximum crystal frequency is 8.0 MHz in  
FRN mode (100 kSps).  
13. With an 8.0 MHz crystal, two 10 pF loading capacitors and a 10 Mparallel resistor (see Figure 9).  
14. These timings are for FRN mode.  
15. SSH only works correctly if HOLD falling edge is within +15 to +30 ns of CH1/2 edge or if CH1/2 edge occurs after  
HOLD rises to 64tclk after HOLD has fallen. These timings are for PDT and RBT modes.  
16. When HOLD goes low, the analog sample is captured immediately. To start conversion, HOLD must be latched  
by a falling edge of CLLKIN. Conversion will begin on the next rising edge of CLKIN after HOLD is latched. If HOLD  
is operated synchronous to CLKIN, the HOLD pulse width may be as narrow as 150 ns for all CLKIN frequencies  
if CLKIN falls 95 ns after HOLD falls. This ensures that the HOLD pulse will meet the minimum specification for thcf  
.
6
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5102A  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V; VA-, VD- = -5V; VREF = 4.5V; Full-scale Input Sine Wave, 200 Hz; CLKIN = 1.6 MHz;  
fs = 20 kSps; Bipolar Mode; FRN Mode; AIN1 and AIN2 tied together, each channel tested separately; Analog Source  
Impedance = 50 with 1000 pF to AGND unless otherwise specified)  
CS5102A-J  
CS5102A-B  
Max  
-40 to +85  
Parameter*  
Specified Temperature Range  
Min Typ Max Min Typ  
Unit  
0 to +70  
ºC  
Accuracy  
Linearity Error  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
0.002 0.003  
0.001 0.0015  
-
-
-
0.002 0.003 %FS  
0.001 0.0015 %FS  
Drift (Note 2)  
±¼  
-
±¼  
-
LSB  
Differential Linearity  
Full-scale Error  
(Note 3) 16  
-
-
16  
-
-
Bits  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Unipolar Offset  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Bipolar Offset  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±1  
±1  
±2  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Bipolar Negative Full-scale Error  
-J  
-B  
(Note 1)  
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±1  
±4  
±3  
-
-
-
-
±2  
±2  
±2  
±4  
±3  
-
LSB  
LSB  
LSB  
Drift (Note 2)  
Dynamic Performance (Bipolar Mode)  
Peak Harmonic or Spurious Noise  
(Note 1)  
-J  
-B  
96  
98  
100  
102  
-
-
96  
98  
100  
102  
-
-
dB  
dB  
Total Harmonic Distortion  
-J  
-B  
-
-
0.002  
0.001  
-
-
-
-
0.002  
0.001  
-
-
%
%
Signal-to-Noise Ratio  
0 dB Input  
(Note 1)  
-J  
-B  
-J  
87  
90  
-
90  
92  
30  
32  
-
-
-
-
87  
90  
-
90  
92  
30  
32  
-
-
-
-
dB  
dB  
dB  
dB  
-60 dB Input  
Noise  
-B  
-
-
(Note 4)  
Unipolar Mode  
Bipolar Mode  
-
-
35  
70  
-
-
-
-
35  
70  
-
-
µVrms  
µVrms  
* Refer to Parameter Definitions (immediately following the pin descriptions at the end of this data sheet.  
DS45F6  
7
CS5101A CS5102A  
ANALOG CHARACTERISTICS, CS5102A (Continued)  
CS5102A-J  
CS5102-B  
Parameter*  
Specified Temperature Range  
Analog Input  
Symbol Min Typ Max Min Typ  
Max  
Unit  
-
0 to +70  
-40 to +85  
ºC  
Aperture Time  
-
-
-
-
30  
-
-
-
-
30  
-
-
ns  
ps  
Aperture Jitter  
100  
100  
Input Capacitance  
(Note 5)  
Unipolar Mode  
Bipolar Mode  
-
-
-
-
320  
200  
425  
265  
-
-
320  
200  
425  
265  
pF  
pF  
Conversion and Throughput  
Conversion Time  
Acquisition Time  
Throughput  
(Note 17)  
(Note 18)  
(Note 19)  
t
-
-
-
-
-
40.625  
9.375  
-
-
-
-
-
-
40.625  
9.375  
-
µs  
µs  
c
t
a
f
20  
20  
kSps  
tp  
Power Supplies  
Power Supply Current  
(Note 20)  
Positive Analog  
Negative Analog  
Positive Digital  
Negative Digital  
I +  
-
-
-
-
2.4  
-2.4  
2.5  
3.5  
-3.5  
3.5  
-
-
-
-
2.4  
-2.4  
2.5  
3.5  
-3.5  
3.5  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
A
I -  
A
(SLEEP High)  
I +  
D
I -  
-1.5  
-2.5  
-1.5  
-2.5  
D
Power Consumption  
(Note 10, Note 20)  
(SLEEP High)  
P
P
-
-
44  
1
65  
-
-
-
44  
1
65  
-
mW  
mW  
do  
ds  
(SLEEP Low)  
Power Supply Rejection  
(Note 21)  
Positive Supplies  
Negative Supplies  
PSR  
PSR  
-
-
84  
84  
-
-
-
-
84  
84  
-
-
dB  
dB  
Notes: 17. Conversion time scales directly to the master clock speed. The times shown are for synchronous, internal loopback  
(FRN) mode. In PDT, RBT, and SSC modes, asynchronous delay between the falling edge of HOLD and the start  
of conversion may add to the apparent conversion time. This delay will not exceed 1 master clock cycle + 140 ns.  
18. The CS5102A requires 6 clock cycles of coarse charge, followed by a minimum of 5.625 µs of fine charge. FRN  
mode allows 9 cycles for fine charge which provides for the minimum 5.625 µs with a 1.6 MHz clock, however; in  
PDT, RBT, or SSC modes and at clock frequencies of less than 1.6 MHz, fine charge may be less than 9 clock  
cycles.  
19. Throughput is the sum of the acquisition and conversion times. It will vary in accordance with conditions affecting  
acquisition and conversion times, as described above.  
20. All outputs unloaded. All inputs at VD+ or DGND. See table below for power dissipation versus clock frequency.  
21. With 300 mV p-p, 1-kHz ripple applied to each supply separately in the bipolar mode. Rejection improves by 6 dB  
in the unipolar mode to 90 dB. Figure 25 shows a plot of typical power supply rejection versus frequency.  
Typical Power (mW)  
CLKIN (MHz)  
34  
37  
39  
41  
44  
0.8  
1.0  
1.2  
1.4  
1.6  
8
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, CS5102A  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V ±10%; VA-, VD- = -5V ±10%; Inputs: Logic 0 = 0V, Logic 1 = VD+; CL = 50 pF).  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Min  
0.5  
Typ  
Max  
10  
-
Unit  
µs  
CLKIN Period  
(Note 22)  
t
-
-
clk  
CLKIN Low Time  
t
200  
ns  
clkl  
CLKIN High Time  
Crystal Frequency  
t
200  
-
-
ns  
MHz  
ms  
ns  
clkh  
(Note 22, Note 23)  
(Note 24)  
f
0.9  
1.6  
2.0  
xtal  
SLEEP Rising to Oscillator Stable  
RST Pulse Width  
-
-
20  
-
-
-
-
-
t
150  
-
rst  
RST to STBY falling  
t
-
-
-
-
-
100  
ns  
drrs  
RST Rising to STBY Rising  
CH1/2 Edge to TRK1, TRK2 Rising  
CH1/2 Edge to TRK1, TRK2 Falling  
HOLD to SSH Falling  
t
2,882,040  
t
clk  
cal  
(Note 25)  
(Note 25)  
(Note 26)  
(Note 26)  
(Note 26)  
(Note 27)  
(Note 26)  
(Note 27)  
t
80  
ns  
drsh1  
t
-
68t +260 ns  
clk  
dfsh4  
dfsh2  
t
60  
-
ns  
HOLD to TRK1, TRK2 Falling  
HOLD to TRK1, TRK2, SSH Rising  
HOLD Pulse Width  
t
66t  
-
-
68t +260 ns  
dfsh1  
clk  
clk  
t
120  
-
63t  
64t  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
drsh  
t
t
1t +20  
-
-
-
hold  
clk  
clk  
clk  
HOLD to CH1/2 Edge  
15  
55  
dhlri  
HOLD Falling to CLKIN Falling  
t
1t +10  
clk  
hcf  
Notes: 22. Minimum CLKIN period is 0.625 ms in FRN mode (20 kSps).  
23. External loading capacitors are required to allow the crystal to oscillate. Maximum crystal frequency is 1.6 MHz in  
FRN mode (20 kSps).  
24. With a 2.0 MHz crystal, two 33 pF loading capacitors and a 10 Mparallel resistor (see Figure 9).  
25. These timings are for FRN mode.  
26. SSH only works correctly if HOLD falling edge is within +15 to +30 ns of CH1/2 edge or if CH1/2 edge occurs after  
HOLD rises to 64tclk after HOLD has fallen. These timings are for PDT and RBT modes.  
27. When HOLD goes low, the analog sample is captured immediately. To start conversion, HOLD must be latched  
by a falling edge of CLLKIN. Conversion will begin on the next rising edge of CLKIN after HOLD is latched. If HOLD  
is operated synchronous to CLKIN, the HOLD pulse width may be as narrow as 150 ns for all CLKIN frequencies  
if CLKIN falls 55 ns after HOLD falls. This ensures that the HOLD pulse will meet the minimum specification for thcf  
.
DS45F6  
9
CS5101A CS5102A  
t
rst  
RST  
t
cal  
STBY  
t
drrs  
Reset and Calibration Timing  
HOLD  
CH1/2  
SSH/SDL  
t
t
dfsh2  
drsh1  
TRK1,TRK2  
TRK1,TRK2  
t
drsh  
SSH,TRK1,TRK2  
TRK1,TRK2  
t
dfsh4  
t
dfsh1  
a. FRN Mode  
b. PDT, RBT Mode  
Control Output Timing  
t
hcf  
CH1/2  
HOLD  
CLKIN  
HOLD  
t
dhlri  
t
hold  
Channel Selection Timing  
Start Conversion Timing  
Figure 1. Reset, Calibration, and Control Timing  
10  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS, ALL DEVICES  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V ±10%; VA-, VD- = -5V ±10%; Inputs: Logic 0 = 0V, Logic 1 = VD+; CL = 50 pF).  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
PDT & RBT Modes  
SCLK Input Pulse Period  
t
200  
50  
-
-
-
-
ns  
ns  
sclk  
SCLK Input Pulse Width Low  
SCLK Input Pulse Width High  
SCLK Input Falling to SDATA Valid  
HOLD Falling to SDATA Valid  
TRK1, TRK2 Falling to SDATA Valid  
t
sclkl  
t
50  
-
-
-
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
sclkh  
t
100  
140  
65  
150  
230  
125  
dss  
PDT Mode  
(Note 28)  
t
-
dhs  
t
-
dts  
FRN & SSC Modes  
SCLK Output Pulse Width Low  
t
-
-
2t  
2t  
-
-
-
-
t
t
slkl  
clk  
clk  
SCLK Output Pulse Width High  
SDATA Valid Before Rising SCLK  
SDATA Valid After RIsing SCLK  
t
slkh  
clk  
clk  
t
2t -100  
-
ns  
ns  
ss  
sh  
clk  
t
2t -100  
-
clk  
st  
t
66t  
2t  
68t +260 ns  
clk  
rsclk  
clk  
clk  
SDL Falling to 1 Rising SCLK  
Last Rising SCLK to SDL Rising  
CS5101A  
CS5102A  
t
-
-
2t  
2t  
2t +165 ns  
clk  
rsdl  
clk  
t
2t +200  
clk  
rsdl  
clk  
st  
t
6t  
6t  
-
-
8t +165 ns  
hfs  
clk  
clk  
HOLD Falling to 1 Falling SCLK  
CS5101A  
CS5102A  
t
8t +200  
hfs  
clk  
clk  
st  
t
-
7t  
64t  
t
clk  
CH1/2 Edge to 1 Falling SCLK  
dhlri  
clk  
clk  
Notes: 28. Only valid for TRK1, TRK2 falling when SCLK is low. If SCLK is high when TRK1, TRK2 falls, then SDATA is  
valid tdss time after the next falling SCLK.  
DS45F6  
11  
CS5101A CS5102A  
t
hfs  
HOLD  
CH1/2  
t
chfs  
SSH/SDL  
SCLK  
t
rsclk  
t
t
sclkh  
t
t
t
t
dss  
slkl  
slkh  
sclkl  
rsdl  
t
sclk  
SCLK  
t
dss  
t
t
ss  
sh  
SDATA  
M SB  
LSB  
SDATA  
a. SCLK Input (PDT & RBT Modes)  
b. SCLK Output (FRN & SSC Modes)  
Serial Data Timing  
H OLD  
TRK1, TRK2  
t
dts  
t
dhs  
M SB  
SDATA  
SCLK  
M SB  
t
M SB-1  
SDATA  
SCLK  
dss  
a. Pipelined Data Transmission (PDT)  
Data Transmission Timing  
Figure 2. Serial Communication Timing  
b. Register Burst Transmission (RBT)  
12  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS, ALL DEVICES  
(TA = TMIN to TMAX; VA+, VD+ = 5V ±10%; VA-, VD- = -5V ±10%  
Parameter  
Calibration Memory Retention  
Symbol  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
(Note 29)  
V
2.0  
-
-
V
MR  
Power Supply Voltage VA+ and VD+  
High-level Input Voltage  
V
2.0  
-
-
-
-
V
V
IH  
Low-level Input Voltage  
V
0.8  
IL  
High-level Output Voltage  
(Note 30)  
= 1.6 mA  
V
(VD+) -1.0  
-
-
-
-
V
V
OH  
Low-level Output Voltage (except XOUT)  
I
V
0.4  
out  
OL  
Input Leakage Current  
I
-
-
-
10  
-
µA  
pF  
in  
Digital Output Pin Capacitance  
C
9
out  
29. VA- and VD- can be any value from 0 to +5V for memory retention. Neither VA- nor VD- should be allowed to go  
positive. AIN1, AIN2, or VREF must not be greater than VA+ or VD+. This parameter is guaranteed by  
characterization.  
30. IOUT = -100 µA. This specification guarantees TTL compatibility (VOH = 2.4V @ IOUT = -40 µA).  
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS  
(AGND, DGND = 0V, see Note 31)  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
DC Power Supplies:  
Positive Digital  
VD+  
VD-  
VA+  
VA-  
4.5  
-4.5  
4.5  
5.0  
-5.0  
5.0  
VA+  
-5.5  
5.5  
V
V
V
V
Negative Digital  
Positive Analog  
Negative Analog  
-4.5  
-5.0  
-5.5  
Analog Reference Voltage  
DC Power Supplies:  
VREF  
2.5  
4.5  
(VA+)-0.5  
V
(Note 32)  
Unipolar  
Bipolar  
V
AGND  
-VREF  
-
-
VREF  
VREF  
V
V
AIN  
V
AIN  
31. All voltages with respect to ground.  
32. The CS5101A and CS5102A can accept input voltages up to the analog supplies (VA+ and VA-). They will produce  
an output of all 1s for input above VREF and all 0s for inputs below AGND in unipolar mode, and -VREF in bipolar  
mode, with binary coding (CODE = low).  
DS45F6  
13  
CS5101A CS5102A  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
(AGND, DGND = 0V, all voltages with respect to ground.)  
Parameter  
Symbol  
Min  
Typ  
Max  
Unit  
DC Power Supplies:  
(Note 33)  
Positive Digital  
Negative Digital  
Positive Analog  
Negative Analog  
VD+  
VD-  
VA+  
VA-  
-0.3  
0.3  
-0.3  
0.3  
-
-
-
6.0  
-6.0  
6.0  
V
V
V
V
-6.0  
Input Current, Any Pin Except Supplies  
Analog Input Voltage  
(Note 34)  
I
-
(VA-) - 0.3  
-0.3  
-
-
-
-
-
±10  
(VA+) + 0.3  
(VA+) + 0.3  
125  
mA  
V
IN  
(AIN and VREF pins)  
V
V
INA  
IND  
Digital Input Voltage  
V
Ambient Operating Temperature  
Storage Temperature  
T
-55  
°C  
°C  
A
T
-65  
150  
stg  
Notes: 33. In addition, VD+ must not be greater than (VA+) + 0.3 V.  
34. Transient currents of up to 100 mA will not cause SCR latch-up  
WARNING: Operation beyond these limits may result in permanent damage to the device.  
14  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
2. OVERVIEW  
The CS5101A and CS5102A are 2-channel, 16-bit  
A/D converters. The devices include an inherent  
sample/hold and an on-chip analog switch for 2-  
channel operation. Both channels can thus be  
sampled and converted at rates up to 50 kSps  
each (CS5101A) or 10 kSps each (CS5102A). Al-  
ternatively, each of the devices can be operated as  
a single channel ADC operating at 100 kSps  
(CS5101A) or 20 kSps (CS5102A).  
As shown in Figure 3, their other terminals are ca-  
pable of being connected to AGND, VREF, or AIN  
(1 or 2). When the device is not calibrating or con-  
verting, all capacitors are tied to AIN. Switch S1 is  
closed and the charge on the array, tracks the in-  
put signal.  
When the conversion command is issued, switch  
S1 opens. This traps the charge on the comparator  
side of the capacitor array and creates a floating  
node at the comparator's input. The conversion al-  
gorithm operates on this fixed charge, and the sig-  
nal at the analog input pin is ignored. In effect, the  
entire DAC capacitor array serves as analog mem-  
ory during conversion much like the hold capacitor  
in a sample/hold amplifier.  
Both the CS5101A and CS5102A can be config-  
ured to accept either unipolar or bipolar input rang-  
es, and data is output serially in either binary or 2's  
complement coding. The devices can be config-  
ured in 3 different output modes, as well as an in-  
ternal, synchronous loopback mode. The  
CS5101A and CS5102A provide coarse  
charge/fine charge control, to allow accurate track-  
ing of high-slew signals.  
The conversion consists of manipulating the free  
plates of the capacitor array to VREF and AGND to  
form a capacitive divider. Since the charge at the  
floating node remains fixed, the voltage at that  
point depends on the proportion of capacitance  
tied to VREF versus AGND. The successive ap-  
proximation algorithm is used to find the proportion  
of capacitance, which when connected to the refer-  
ence will drive the voltage at the floating node to  
zero. That binary fraction of capacitance repre-  
sents the converter's digital output.  
3. THEORY OF OPERATION  
The CS5101A and CS5102A implement the suc-  
cessive approximation algorithm using a charge  
redistribution architecture. Instead of the traditional  
resistor network, the DAC is an array of binary-  
weighted capacitors. All capacitors in the array  
share a common node at the comparator's input.  
Fine  
AIN  
+
-
Coarse  
Fine  
S1  
VREF  
AGND  
C
C/2  
C/4  
C/32,768  
C/32,768  
+
-
-
+
Bit 15  
M SB  
Bit 14  
Bit 13  
Bit 0  
LSB  
Dum m y  
Coarse  
Fine  
C
= C + C/2 + C/4 + C/8 + ... C/32,768  
tot  
+
-
Coarse  
Figure 3. Coarse Charge Input Buffers & Charge Redistribution DAC  
DS45F6  
15  
CS5101A CS5102A  
tion scheme. Each bit capacitor shown in Figure 3  
actually consists of several capacitors in parallel  
which can be manipulated to adjust the overall bit  
weight. An on-chip microcontroller precisely ad-  
justs each capacitor with a resolution of 18 bits.  
3.1  
Calibration  
The ability of the CS5101A or the CS5102A to con-  
vert accurately to 16-bits clearly depends on the  
accuracy of its comparator and DAC. Each device  
utilizes an “auto-zeroing” scheme to null errors in-  
troduced by the comparator. All offsets are stored  
on the capacitor array while in the track mode and  
are effectively subtracted from the input signal  
when a conversion is initiated. Auto-zeroing en-  
hances power supply rejection at frequencies well  
below the conversion rate.  
The CS5101A and CS5102A should be reset upon  
power-up, thus initiating a calibration cycle. The  
device then stores its calibration coefficients in on-  
chip SRAM. When the CS5101A and CS5102A are  
in power-down mode (SLEEP low), they retain the  
calibration coefficients in memory, and need not be  
recalibrated when normal operation is resumed.  
To achieve 16-bit accuracy from the DAC, the  
CS5101A and CS5102A use a novel self-calibra-  
16  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
4. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION  
Monolithic design and inherent sampling architec-  
ture make the CS5101A and CS5102A extremely  
easy to use.  
to provide the bulk of the charge on the capacitor  
array (coarse-charge), thereby reducing the cur-  
rent load on the external analog circuitry. Coarse-  
charge is internally initiated for 6 clock cycles at the  
end of every conversion. The buffer amplifier is  
then bypassed, and the capacitor array is directly  
connected to the input. This is referred to as fine-  
charge, during which the charge on the array is al-  
lowed to accurately settle to the input voltage (see  
Figure 12).  
4.1  
Initiating Conversions  
A falling transition on the HOLD pin places the in-  
put in the hold mode and initiates a conversion cy-  
cle. The charge is trapped on the capacitor array  
the instant HOLD goes low. The device will com-  
plete conversion of the sample within 66 master  
clock cycles, then automatically return to the track  
mode. After allowing a short time for acquisition,  
the device will be ready for another conversion.  
With a full-scale input step, the coarse-charge in-  
put buffer of the CS5101A will charge the capacitor  
array within 1% in 650 ns. The converter timing al-  
lows 6 clock cycles for coarse charge settling time.  
When the CS5101A switches to fine-charge mode,  
its slew rate is somewhat reduced. In fine-charge,  
the CS5101A can slew at 2 V/µs in unipolar mode.  
In bipolar mode, only half the capacitor array is  
connected to the analog input, so the CS5101A  
can slew at 4V/µs.  
With a full-scale input step, the coarse-charge in-  
put buffer of the CS5102A will charge the capacitor  
array within 1% in 3.75 µs. The converter timing al-  
lows 6 clock cycles for coarse charge settling time.  
When in fine-charge mode, the CS5102A can slew  
at 0.4 V/µs in unipolar mode; and at 0.8 V/µs in bi-  
polar mode.  
In contrast to systems with separate track-and-  
holds and A/D converters, a sampling clock can  
simply be connected to the HOLD input. The duty  
cycle of this clock is not critical. The HOLD input is  
latched internally by the master clock, so it need  
only remain low for 1/fclk + 20 ns, but no longer  
than the minimum conversion time minus two mas-  
ter clocks or an additional conversion cycle will be  
initiated with inadequate time for acquisition. In  
Free Run mode, SCKMOD = OUTMOD = 0, the  
device will convert at a rate of CLKIN/80, and the  
HOLD input is ignored.  
As with any high-resolution A-to-D system, it is rec-  
ommended that sampling is synchronized to the  
master system clock in order to minimize the ef-  
fects of clock feed through. However, the  
CS5101A and CS5102A may be operated entirely  
asynchronous to the master clock if necessary.  
Acquisition of fast slewing signals can be hastened  
if the voltage change occurs during or immediately  
following the conversion cycle. For instance, in  
multiple channel applications (using either the de-  
vice's internal channel selector or an external  
MUX), channel selection should occur while the  
CS5101A or the CS5102A is converting. Multiplex-  
er switching and settling time is thereby removed  
from the overall throughput equation.  
4.2  
Tracking the Input  
Upon completing a conversion cycle the CS5101A  
and CS5102A immediately return to the track  
mode. The CH1/2 pin directly controls the input  
switch, and therefore directly determines which  
channel will be tracked. Ideally, the CH1/2 pin  
should be switched during the conversion cycle,  
thereby nullifying the input mux switching time, and  
guaranteeing a stable input at the start of acquisi-  
tion. If, however, the CH1/2 control is changed dur-  
ing the acquisition phase, adequate coarse charge  
and fine charge time must be allowed before initi-  
ating conversion.  
If the input signal changes drastically during the  
acquisition period (such as changing the signal  
source), the device should be in coarse-charge for  
an adequate period following the change. The  
CS5101A and CS5102A can be forced into coarse-  
charge by bringing CRS/FIN high. The buffer am-  
plifier is engaged when CRS/FIN is high, and may  
be switched in any number of times during track-  
ing. If CRS/FIN is held low, the CS5101A and  
CS5102A will only coarse-charge for the first 6  
clock cycles following a conversion, and will stay in  
When the CS5101A or the CS5102A enters track-  
ing mode, it uses an internal input buffer amplifier  
DS45F6  
17  
CS5101A CS5102A  
fine-charge until HOLD goes low. To get an accu-  
rate sample using the CS5101A, at least 750 ns of  
coarse-charge, followed by 1.125 µs of fine-charge  
is required before initiating a conversion. If coarse  
charge is not invoked, then up to 25 µs should be  
allowed after a step change input for proper acqui-  
sition. To get an accurate sample using the  
CS5102A, at least 3.75 µs of coarse-charge, fol-  
lowed by 5.625 µs of fine-charge is required before  
initiating a conversion (see Figure 4). If coarse  
charge is not invoked, then up to 125 µs should be  
allowed after a step change input for proper acqui-  
sition. The CRS/FIN pin must be low prior to HOLD  
becoming active and be held low during conver-  
sion.  
CLKIN  
M in: 750 ns*  
3.75  
µ
s**  
CR S/FIN  
M in: 1.125  
5.625  
µ
µ
s*  
6 clk  
s**  
Internal  
Status  
Conv.  
Coarse  
2 clk  
Fine Chg.  
Coarse  
Fine Chg.  
Conv.  
TRK1 or  
TR K2  
HOLD  
* Applies to 5101A  
** Applies to 5102A  
Figure 4. Coarse/Fine Charge Control  
4.3  
Master Clock  
4.4  
Asynchronous Sampling  
Considerations  
The CS5101A and CS5102A can operate either  
from an externally-supplied master clock, or from  
their own crystal oscillator (with a crystal). To en-  
able the internal crystal oscillator, simply tie a crys-  
tal across the XOUT and CLKIN pins and add 2  
capacitors and a resistor, as shown on the system  
connection diagram in Figure 9.  
When HOLD goes low, the analog sample is cap-  
tured immediately. The HOLD signal is latched by  
the next falling edge of CLKIN, and conversion  
then starts on the subsequent rising edge. If HOLD  
is asynchronous to CLKIN, then there will be a 1.5-  
CLKIN-cycle uncertainty as to when conversion  
starts. Considering the CS5101A with an 8 MHz  
CLKIN, with a 100 kHz HOLD signal, then this 1.5-  
CLKIN uncertainty will result in a 1.5-CLKIN-period  
possible reduction in fine charge time for the next  
conversion.  
Calibration and conversion times directly scale to  
the master clock frequency. The CS5101A can op-  
erate with clock or crystal frequencies up to 9.216  
MHz (8.0 MHz in FRN mode). This allows maxi-  
mum throughput of up to 50 kSps per channel in  
dual-channel operation, or 100 kSps in a single-  
channel configuration. The CS5102A can operate  
with clock or crystal frequencies up to 2.0 MHz (1.6  
MHz in FRN mode). This allows maximum  
throughput of up to 10 kSps per channel in dual-  
channel operation, or 20 kSps in a single channel  
configuration. For 16-bit performance a 1.6 MHz  
clock is recommended. This 1.6 MHz clock yields  
a maximum throughput of 20 kSps in a single-  
channel configuration.  
This reduced fine charge time will be less than the  
minimum specification. If the CLKIN frequency is  
increased slightly (for example, to 8.192 MHz) then  
sufficient fine charge time will always occur. The  
maximum frequency for CLKIN is specified at  
9.216 MHz. It is recommended that for asynchro-  
nous operation at 100 kSps, CLKIN should be be-  
tween 8.192 MHz and 9.216 MHz.  
18  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
curs 0.5 LSB above -VREF and the last transition  
occurs 1.5 LSBs below +VREF. The CS5101A and  
CS5102A can output data in either 2's comple-  
ment, or binary format. If the CODE pin is high, the  
output is in 2's complement format with a range of  
-32,768 to +32,767. If the CODE pin is low, the out-  
put is in binary format with a range of 0 to +65,535.  
See Table 1 for output coding.  
4.5  
Analog Input Range/Coding Format  
The reference voltage directly defines the input  
voltage range in both the unipolar and bipolar con-  
figurations. In the unipolar configuration  
(BP/UP low), the first code transition occurs  
0.5 LSB above AGND, and the final code transition  
occurs 1.5 LSBs below VREF. In the bipolar con-  
figuration (BP/UP high), the first code transition oc-  
Table 1. Output Coding  
Offset  
Unipolar Input Voltage  
Binary  
Two’s  
Complement  
Bipolar Input Voltage  
>(VREF-1.5 LSB)  
VREF-1.5 LSB  
>(VREF-1.5 LSB)  
FFFF  
7FFF  
FFFF  
FFFE  
7FFF  
7FFE  
VREF-1.5 LSB  
8000  
7FFF  
0000  
FFFF  
(VREF/2)-0.5 LSB  
-0.5 LSB  
0001  
0000  
8001  
8000  
+0.5 LSB  
-VREF+0.5 LSB  
<(+0.5 LSB)  
0000  
8000  
<(-VREF+0.5 LSB)  
4.6  
Output Mode Control  
The CS5101A and CS5102A can be configured in  
three different output modes, as well as an internal,  
synchronous loop-back mode. This allows great  
flexibility for design into a wide variety of systems.  
The operating mode is selected by setting the  
states of the SCKMOD and OUTMOD pins. In all  
modes, data is output on SDATA, starting with the  
MSB. Each subsequent data bit is updated on the  
falling edge of SCLK.  
Table 2. Output Mode Control  
MODE  
PDT  
SCKMOD  
OUTMOD SCLK  
CH1/2  
Input  
HOLD  
Input  
Input  
Input  
X
1
1
0
0
1
Input  
RBT  
0
1
0
Input  
Output  
Output  
Input  
SSC  
Input  
FRN  
Output  
When SCKMOD is high, SCLK is an input, allowing  
the data to be clocked out with an external serial  
clock at rates up to 5 MHz. Additional clock edges  
after #16 will clock out logic 1s on SDATA. Tying  
SCKMOD low reconfigures SCLK as an output,  
and the converter clocks out each bit as it is deter-  
mined during the conversion process, at a rate of  
1/4 the master clock speed. Table 2 shows an  
overview of the different states of SCKMOD and  
OUTMOD, and the corresponding output modes.  
4.6.1  
Pipelined Data Transmission  
PDT mode is selected by tying both SCKMOD and  
OUTMOD high. In PDT mode, the SCLK pin is an  
input. Data is registered during conversion, and  
output during the following conversion cycle.  
HOLD must be brought low, initiating another con-  
version, before data from the previous conversion  
is available on SDATA. If all the data has not been  
clocked out before the next falling edge of HOLD,  
the old data will be lost (Figure 5).  
DS45F6  
19  
CS5101A CS5102A  
to shift registers (e.g. 74HC595) or to DSP serial  
ports.  
4.6.2 Register Burst Transmission (RBT)  
RBT mode is selected by tying SCKMOD high, and  
OUTMOD low. As in PDT mode, SCLK is an input,  
however data is available immediately following  
conversion, and may be clocked out the moment  
TRK1 or TRK2 falls. The falling edge of HOLD  
clears the output buffer, so any unread data will be  
lost. A new conversion may be initiated before all  
the data has been clocked out if the unread data  
bits are not important (Figure 6).  
4.6.4  
Free Run (FRN)  
Free Run is the internal, synchronous loopback  
mode. FRN mode is selected by tying SCKMOD  
and OUTMOD low. SCLK is an output, and oper-  
ates exactly the same as in the SSC mode. In Free  
Run mode, the converter initiates a new conver-  
sion every 80 master clock cycles, and alternates  
between channel 1 and channel 2. HOLD is dis-  
abled, and should be tied to either VD+ or DGND.  
CH1/2 is an output, and will change at the start of  
each new conversion cycle, indicating which chan-  
nel will be tracked after the current conversion is  
finished (Figure 8).  
4.6.3  
Synchronous Self-clocking (SSC)  
SSC mode is selected by tying SCKMOD low, and  
OUTMOD high. In SSC mode, SCLK is an output,  
and will clock out each bit of the data as it's being  
converted. SCLK will remain high between conver-  
sions, and run at a rate of 1/4 the master clock  
speed for 16 low pulses during conversion  
(Figure 7).  
The SSH/SDL goes low coincident with the first  
falling edge of SCLK, and returns high 2 CLKIN cy-  
cles after the last rising edge of SCLK. This signal  
frames the 16 data bits and is useful for interfacing  
to shift registers (e.g. 74HC595) or to DSP serial  
ports.  
The SSH/SDL goes low coincident with the first  
falling edge of SCLK, and returns high 2 CLKIN cy-  
cles after the last rising edge of SCLK. This signal  
frames the 16 data bits and is useful for interfacing  
0
4
8
60  
64  
68  
72  
76  
0
4
8
60  
64  
68  
72  
76  
0
CLKIN (i)  
HOLD (i)  
CH1/2 (i)  
Internal  
Status  
Converting Ch. 2  
Tracking Ch. 1  
Converting Ch. 1  
Tracking Ch. 2  
SCLK (i)  
SDATA (o)  
SSH /SD L (o)  
TRK1 (o)  
D15  
D14  
D1 D0 (Ch. 1)  
D15  
D14  
D1  
D0 (Ch. 2)  
D15  
TRK2 (o)  
Figure 5. Pipelined Data Transmission (PDT) Mode Timing  
20  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
0
4
64  
68  
72  
0
4
64  
68  
72  
0
CLKIN (i)  
H O LD (i)  
CH1/2 (i)  
Internal  
Status  
Converting Ch. 2  
Tracking Ch. 1  
Channel 2 Data  
Converting Ch. 1  
Tracking Ch. 2  
Channel 1 Data  
SCLK (i)  
SDATA (o)  
SSH/SDL (o)  
TRK1 (o)  
D0  
D0  
TRK2 (o)  
Figure 6. Register Burst Transmission (RBT) Mode Timing  
0
4
6
8
64  
68  
72  
76  
0
4
6
8
64  
68  
72  
76  
0
CLKIN (i)  
H O LD (i)  
CH1/2 (i)  
Internal  
Status  
Converting Ch. 2  
Tracking Ch. 1  
Converting Ch. 1  
Tracking Ch. 2  
SCLK (o)  
SDATA (o)  
SSH/SDL (o)  
TRK1 (o)  
D15 D14  
D1  
D0 (Ch. 2)  
D15 D14  
D1  
D0 (Ch. 1)  
TRK2 (o)  
Figure 7. Synchronous Self-clocking (SSC) Mode Timing  
0
4
7 8  
64  
68 69  
72  
76  
0
4
7 8  
64  
68 69  
72  
76  
0
CLKIN (i)  
CH1/2 (o)  
Internal  
Status  
Converting Ch. 2  
Tracking Ch. 1  
Converting Ch. 1  
Tracking Ch. 2  
SCLK (o)  
SDATA (o)  
SSH/SDL (o)  
TRK1 (o)  
D15  
D1  
D0 (Ch. 2)  
D15  
D1  
D0 (Ch. 1)  
TRK2 (o)  
Figure 8. Free Run (FRN) Mode Timing  
DS45F6  
21  
CS5101A CS5102A  
5. SYSTEM DESIGN USING THE CS5101A & CS5102A  
Figure 9 shows a general system connection diagram for the CS5101A and CS5102A.  
10  
+5VA  
+
+
4.7  
µ
F
0.1  
µ
F
0.1  
µ
F
µ
1 F  
25  
VA+  
26  
TST VD +  
XOUT  
7
4
C 1  
XTAL  
V D +  
10 M  
3
CLKIN  
C2 = C 1  
18  
O UTM O D  
SC KM O D  
27  
17  
16  
M ode Control  
2
BP/UP  
COD E  
RST  
SLEEP  
STBY  
EXT  
CLO CK  
28  
5
CS5101A  
Control  
Logic  
XTAL & C1 Table  
OR  
13  
10  
12  
CH1/2  
CR S/FIN  
HOLD  
XTAL  
C1, C2  
10 pF  
20  
22  
CS5102A  
VREF  
AGND  
CS5101A  
FR N  
Voltage Reference  
8.0 M Hz  
PDT, RBT,  
SSC  
8.192 M Hz  
1.6 M Hz  
10 pF  
30 pF  
30 pF  
8
9
TRK1  
CS5102A  
FR N  
50  
*
19  
TRK2  
AIN 1  
AIN 2  
11  
C0G  
1.6 M Hz  
or  
2.0 M Hz  
SSH/SDL  
PDT, RBT,  
SSC  
Analog  
Sources  
1 nF  
50  
24  
*
14  
15  
SCLK  
SDATA  
DGN D  
C0G  
Data  
1 nF  
Interface  
* For best dynamic  
S/(N+D ) perform ance.  
6
21  
REFBUF  
VA-  
23  
VD -  
1
Unused Logic inputs should  
be tied to VD+ or DGND.  
0.1  
µ
F
10  
-5VA  
4.7  
µ
F
0.1  
µ
F
0.1  
µ
F
µ
1 F  
+
+
Figure 9. CS5101A/CS5102A System Connection Diagram  
5.1  
System Initialization  
Upon power up, the CS5101A and CS5102A must  
be reset to guarantee a consistent starting condi-  
tion and to initially calibrate the device. Due to  
each device's low power dissipation and low tem-  
perature drift, no warm-up time is required before  
reset to accommodate any self-heating effects.  
However, the voltage reference input should have  
stabilized to within 0.25% of its final value before  
RST rises to guarantee an accurate calibration.  
Later, the CS5101A and CS5102A may be reset at  
any time to initiate a single full calibration.  
1.4 seconds with an 8 MHz master clock). The cal-  
ibration cycle on the CS5102A takes 2,882,040  
master clock cycles to complete (approximately  
1.8 seconds with a 1.6 MHz master clock). The  
CS5101A's and CS5102A's STBY output remains  
low throughout the calibration sequence, and a ris-  
ing transition indicates the device is ready for nor-  
mal operation. While calibrating, the CS5101A and  
CS5102A will ignore changes on the HOLD input.  
To perform the reset function, a simple power-on  
reset circuit can be built using a resistor and ca-  
pacitor as shown in Figure 10. The resistor should  
be less than or equal to 10 k. The system power  
supplies, voltage reference, and clock should all be  
established prior RST rising.  
When RST is brought low all internal logic clears.  
When RST returns high on the CS5101A, a cali-  
bration cycle begins which takes 11,528,160 mas-  
ter clock cycles to complete (approximately  
22  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
clude an internal buffer amplifier to minimize the  
external reference circuit's drive requirement and  
preserve the reference's integrity. Whenever the  
array is switched during conversion, the buffer is  
used to coarse-charge the array thereby providing  
the bulk of the necessary charge. The appropriate  
array capacitors are then switched to the unbuf-  
fered VREF pin to avoid any errors due to offsets  
and/or noise in the buffer.  
+5V  
VD+  
RST  
CS5101A  
OR  
CS5102A  
R
1N4148  
C
The external reference circuitry need only provide  
the residual charge required to fully charge the ar-  
ray after coarse-charging from the buffer. This cre-  
ates an ac current load as the CS5101A and  
CS5102A sequence through conversions. The ref-  
erence circuitry must have a low enough output im-  
pedance to drive the requisite current without  
changing its output voltage significantly. As the an-  
alog input signal varies, the switching sequence of  
the internal capacitor array changes. The current  
load on the external reference circuitry thus varies  
in response with the analog input. Therefore, the  
external reference must not exhibit significant  
peaking in its output impedance characteristic at  
signal frequencies or their harmonics.  
Figure 10. Power-up Reset Circuit  
5.2  
Single-channel Operation  
The CS5101A and CS5102A can alternatively be  
used to sample one channel by tying the CH1/2 in-  
put high or low. The unused AIN pin should be tied  
to the analog input signal or to AGND. (If operating  
in free run mode, AIN1 and AIN2 must be tied to  
the same source, as CH1/2 is reconfigured as an  
output.)  
6. ANALOG CIRCUIT CONNECTIONS  
Most popular successive approximation A/D con-  
verters generate dynamic loads at their analog  
connections. The CS5101A and CS5102A inter-  
nally buffer all analog inputs (AIN1, AIN2, VREF,  
and AGND) to ease the demands placed on exter-  
nal circuitry. However, accurate system operation  
still requires careful attention to details at the de-  
sign stage regarding source impedances as well  
as grounding and decoupling schemes.  
A large capacitor connected between VREF and  
AGND can provide sufficiently low output imped-  
ance at the high end of the frequency spectrum,  
while almost all precision references exhibit ex-  
tremely low output impedance at DC. The pres-  
ence of large capacitors on the output of some  
voltage references, however, may cause peaking  
in the output impedance at intermediate frequen-  
cies. Care should be exercised to ensure that sig-  
nificant peaking does not exist or that some form of  
compensation is provided to eliminate the effect.  
6.1  
Reference Considerations  
An application note titled AN004, Voltage  
References for the CS5012A / CS5014 /CS5016 /  
CS5101A/ CS5102A / CS5126 Series of A/D Con  
verters is available for the CS5101A and  
CS5102A. In addition to working through a refer-  
ence circuit design example, it offers several built-  
and-tested reference circuits.  
The magnitude of the current load on the external  
reference circuitry will scale to the master clock fre-  
quency. At the full-rated 9.216 MHz clock  
(CS5101A), the reference must supply a maximum  
load current of 20 µA peak-to-peak (2 µA typical).  
An output impedance of 2 will therefore yield a  
maximum error of 40 µV. At the full-rated 2.0 MHz  
clock (CS5102A), the reference must supply a  
maximum load current of 5 µA peak-to-peak  
(0.5µA typical). An output impedance of 2 will  
therefore yield a maximum error of 10.0 µV. With a  
4.5 V reference and LSB size of 138 µV this would  
ensure approximately 1/14 LSB accuracy. A 10 µF  
During conversion, each capacitor of the calibrated  
capacitor array is switched between VREF and  
AGND in a manner determined by the successive-  
approximation algorithm. The charging and dis-  
charging of the array results in a current load at the  
reference. The CS5101A and CS5102A each in-  
DS45F6  
23  
CS5101A CS5102A  
capacitor exhibits an impedance of less than 2 at  
frequencies greater than 16 kHz. A high-quality  
tantalum capacitor in parallel with a smaller ceram-  
ic capacitor is recommended.  
6.2  
Analog Input Connection  
The analog input terminal functions similarly to the  
VREF input after each conversion when switching  
into the track mode. During the first six master  
clock cycles in the track mode, the buffered version  
of the analog input is used for coarse-charging the  
capacitor array. An additional period is required for  
fine-charging directly from AIN to obtain the speci-  
fied accuracy. Figure 12 shows this operation. Dur-  
ing coarse-charge the charge on the capacitor  
array first settles to the buffered version of the an-  
alog input. This voltage may be offset from the ac-  
tual input voltage. During fine-charge, the charge  
then settles to the accurate unbuffered version.  
Peaking in the reference's output impedance can  
occur because of capacitive loading at its output.  
Any peaking that might occur can be reduced by  
placing a small resistor in series with the capaci-  
tors. The equation in Figure 11 can be used to help  
calculate the optimum value of R for a particular  
reference. The term “fpeak” is the frequency of the  
peak in the output impedance of the reference be-  
fore the resistor is added.  
Fine-charge settling is specified as a maximum of  
1.125 µs (CS5101A) or 5.625 µs (CS5102A) for an  
analog source impedance of less than 50 . In ad-  
dition, the comparator requires a source imped-  
ance of less than 400 around 2 MHz for stability.  
The source impedance can be effectively reduced  
at high frequencies by adding capacitance from  
AIN to ground (typically 200 pF). However, high  
DC source resistances will increase the input's RC  
time constant and extend the necessary acquisi-  
tion time. For more information on input amplifiers,  
consult the application note,  
+V ee  
20 VREF  
V
ref  
21 REFBUF  
10  
µ
F
µ
0.01 F  
0.1  
µ
F
23  
CS5101A  
OR  
VA-  
R*  
CS5102A  
-5V  
1
---------------------------------------------------------------  
R =  
(2π ⋅ (C1 + C2) ⋅ fpeak)  
AN006, Buffer Amplifiers for CS5012A / 14 / 16 / CS5101A /  
CS5102A / CS5126 Series of A/D Converters.  
Figure 11. Reference Connections  
+200  
+100  
0
The CS5101A and CS5102A can operate with a  
wide range of reference voltages, but signal-to-  
noise performance is maximized by using as wide a  
signal range as possible. The recommended refer-  
ence voltage is 4.5 volts. The CS5101A and  
CS5102A can actually accept reference voltages up  
to the positive analog supply. However, the buffer's  
offset may increase as the reference voltage ap-  
proaches VA+ thereby increasing external drive re-  
quirements at VREF. A 4.5V reference is the  
maximum reference voltage recommended. This al-  
lows 0.5V headroom for the internal reference buff-  
er. Also, the buffer enlists the aid of an external  
0.1 µF ceramic capacitor which must be tied be-  
tween its output, REFBUF, and the negative analog  
supply, VA-. For more information on references,  
consult application note  
-100  
-200  
Coarse-Charge  
Fine-Charge  
-300  
-400  
0.5  
2.0  
0.75  
3.0  
1.0  
4.0  
8 M Hz Clock 0.25  
2.0 M Hz Clock 1.0  
Acquisition Time (us)  
Figure 12. Charge Settling Time  
6.3  
Sleep Mode Operation  
The CS5101A and CS5102A include a SLEEP pin.  
When SLEEP is active (low) each device will dissi-  
pate very low power to retain its calibration memo-  
AN004, Voltage References for CS5012A / CS5014 /CS5016 /  
CS5101A / CS5102A / CS5126 Series of A/D Converters.  
24  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
ry when the device is not sampling. It does not  
require calibration after SLEEP is made inactive  
(high). When coming out of Sleep mode, sampling  
can begin as soon as the oscillator starts (time will  
depend on the particular oscillator components)  
and the REFBUF capacitor is charged (which  
takes about 3 ms for the CS5101A, 50 ms for the  
CS5102A). To achieve minimum start-up time, use  
an external clock and leave the voltage reference  
powered-up. Connect a resistor (2 k) between  
pins 20 and 21 to keep the REFBUF capacitor  
charged. Conversion can then begin as soon as  
the A/D circuitry has stabilized and performed a  
track cycle.  
The digital and analog supplies are isolated within  
the CS5101A and CS5102A and are pinned out  
separately to minimize coupling between the ana-  
log and digital sections of the chip. All four supplies  
should be decoupled to their respective grounds  
using 0.1 µF ceramic capacitors. If significant low-  
frequency noise is present on the supplies, tanta-  
lum capacitors are recommended in parallel with  
the 0.1 µF capacitors.  
The positive digital power supply of the CS5101A  
and CS5102A must never exceed the positive an-  
alog supply by more than a diode drop or the  
CS5101A and CS5102A could experience perma-  
nent damage. If the two supplies are derived from  
separate sources, care must be taken that the an-  
alog supply comes up first at power-up. The sys-  
tem connection diagram (Figure 9) shows a  
decoupling scheme which allows the CS5101A  
and CS5102A to be powered from a single set of  
5V rails. The positive digital supply is derived from  
the analog supply through a 10 resistor to avoid  
the analog supply dropping below the digital sup-  
ply. If this scheme is utilized, care must be taken to  
ensure that any digital load currents (which flow  
through the 10 resistors) do not cause the mag-  
nitude of digital supplies to drop below the analog  
supplies by more than 0.5 volts. Digital supplies  
must always remain above the minimum specifica-  
tion.  
To retain calibration memory while SLEEP is active  
(low) VA+ and VD+ must be maintained at greater  
than 2.0V. VA- and VD- can be allowed to go to 0  
volts. The voltages into VA- and VD- cannot just be  
“shut-off” as these pins cannot be allowed to float  
to potentials greater than AGND/DGND. If the sup-  
ply voltages to VA- and VD- are removed, use a  
transistor switch to short these to the power supply  
ground while in Sleep mode.  
6.4  
Grounding & Power Supply  
Decoupling  
The CS5101A and CS5102A use the analog  
ground connection, AGND, only as a reference  
voltage. No DC power currents flow through the  
AGND connection, and it is completely indepen-  
dent of DGND. However, any noise riding on the  
AGND input relative to the system's analog ground  
will induce conversion errors. Therefore, both the  
analog input and reference voltage should be re-  
ferred to the AGND pin, which should be used as  
the entire system's analog ground reference.  
As with any high-precision A/D converter, the  
CS5101A and CS5102A require careful attention  
to grounding and layout arrangements. However,  
no unique layout issues must be addressed to  
properly apply the devices.  
DS45F6  
25  
CS5101A CS5102A  
7. CS5101A & CS5102A PERFORMANCE  
7.1 Differential Nonlinearity  
The self-calibration scheme utilized in the  
CS5101A and CS5102A features a calibration res-  
olution of 1/4 LSB, or 18-bits. This ideally yields  
DNL of 1/4 LSB, with code widths ranging from 3/4  
to 5/4 LSBs.  
ical with low-level signals, the codes around mid-  
scale (1/2 FS) are most important. Yet those codes  
are worst-case for dynamic DNL errors!  
With all linearity calibration performed on-chip to  
18-bits, the CS5101A and CS5102A maintain ac-  
curate bit weights. DNL errors are dominated by  
residual calibration errors of 1/4 LSB rather than  
dynamic errors in the comparator. Furthermore, all  
DNL effects on S/(N+D) are buried by white broad-  
band noise. (See Figures 19 and 21).  
Traditional laser-trimmed ADCs have significant  
differential nonlinearities. Appearing as wide and  
narrow codes, DNL often causes entire sections of  
the transfer function to be missing. Although their  
affect is minor on S/(N+D) with high amplitude sig-  
nals, DNL errors dominate performance with low-  
level signals. For instance, a signal 80 dB below  
full-scale will slew past only 6 or 7 codes. Half of  
those codes could be missing with a conventional  
16-bit ADC which achieves only 14-bit DNL.  
Figure 13 illustrates the DNL histogram plot of a  
typical CS5101A at 25 °C. Figure 14 illustrates the  
DNL of the CS5101A at 138 °C ambient after cali-  
bration at 25 °C ambient. Figure 15 and Figure 16  
illustrate the DNL of the CS5102A at 25 °C and  
138 °C ambient, respectively. A histogram test is a  
statistical method of deriving an A/D converter's  
differential nonlinearity. A ramp is input to the A/D  
and a large number of samples are taken to ensure  
a high confidence level in the test's result. The  
number of occurrences for each code is monitored  
and stored. A perfect A/D converter would have all  
codes of equal size and therefore equal numbers  
of occurrences. In the histogram test a code with  
the average number of occurrences will be consid-  
ered ideal (DNL = 0). A code with more or less oc-  
currences than average will appear as a DNL of  
greater or less than zero LSB. A missing code has  
zero occurrences, and will appear as a DNL of -1  
LSB.  
The most common source of DNL errors in con-  
ventional ADCs is bit weight errors. These can  
arise due to accuracy limitations in factory trim sta-  
tions, thermal or physical stresses after calibration,  
and/or drifts due to aging or temperature variations  
in the field. Bit-weight errors have a drastic effect  
on a converter's AC performance. They can be an-  
alyzed as step functions superimposed on the in-  
put signal. Since bits (and their errors) switch in  
and out throughout the transfer curve, their effect  
is signal dependent. That is, harmonic and inter-  
modulation distortion, as well as noise, can vary  
with different input conditions.  
Differential nonlinearities in successive-approxi-  
mation ADCs also arise due to dynamic errors in  
the comparator. Such errors can dominate if the  
converter's throughput/sampling rate is too high.  
The comparator will not be allowed sufficient time  
to settle during each bit decision in the successive-  
approximation algorithm. The worst-case codes for  
dynamic errors are the major transitions (1/2 FS;  
1/4, 3/4 FS; etc.). Since DNL effects are most crit-  
Figures 17 and 18 illustrate the code width distribu-  
tion of the DNL plots shown in Figure 13 and  
Figure 15 respectively. The DNL error distribution  
plots indicate that the CS5101A and CS5102A cal-  
ibrate the majority of their codes to tighter toler-  
ance than the DNL plots in Figures 13 and 15  
appear to indicate.  
26  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
+1  
T = 25°C  
A
+1/2  
0
-1/2  
-1  
0
32,768  
65,535  
Codes  
Figure 13. CS5101A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 25 °C  
+1  
T = 138 °C, CAL @ 25 °C  
A
+1/2  
0
-1/2  
-1  
0
32,768  
65,535  
Codes  
Figure 14. CS5101A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 138 °C  
+1  
T = 25°C  
A
+1/2  
0
-1/2  
-1  
0
32,768  
65,535  
Codes  
Figure 15. CS5102A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 25 °C  
+1  
T = 138 °C, CAL @ 25 °C  
A
+1/2  
0
-1/2  
-1  
0
32,768  
65,535  
Codes  
Figure 16. CS5102A DNL Plot - Ambient Temperature at 138 °C  
DS45F6  
27  
CS5101A CS5102A  
Figure 17. CS5101A DNL Error Distribution  
Figure 18. CS5102A DNL Error Distribution  
7.2  
FFT Tests and Windowing  
In the factory, the CS5101A and CS5102A are  
tested using Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) tech-  
niques to analyze the converters' dynamic perfor-  
mance. A pure sine wave is applied to the device,  
and a “time record” of 1024 samples is captured  
and processed. The FFT algorithm analyzes the  
spectral content of the digital waveform and distrib-  
utes its energy among 512 “frequency bins.” As-  
suming an ideal sine wave, distribution of energy in  
bins outside of the fundamental and DC can only  
be due to quantization effects and errors in the  
CS5101A and CS5102A.  
28  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
Figure 19. CS5101A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)  
Figure 20. CS5101A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)  
Figure 21. CS5102A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)  
Figure 22. CS5102A FFT (SSC Mode, 1-Channel)  
If sampling is not synchronized to the input sine  
wave, it is highly unlikely that the time record will  
contain an integer number of periods of the input  
signal. However, the FFT assumes that the signal  
is periodic, and will calculate the spectrum of a sig-  
nal that appears to have large discontinuities,  
thereby yielding a severely distorted spectrum. To  
avoid this problem, the time record is multiplied by  
a window function prior to performing the FFT. The  
window function smoothly forces the endpoints of  
the time record to zero, thereby removing the dis-  
continuities.  
rithm attenuates the side-lobes to below the noise  
floor. Artifacts of windowing are discarded from the  
signal-to-noise calculation using the assumption  
that quantization noise is white. Averaging the FFT  
results from ten time records filters the spectral  
variability that can arise from capturing finite time  
records without disturbing the total energy outside  
the fundamental. All harmonics are visible in the  
plots.  
As illustrated in Figure 19, the CS5101A typically  
provides about 92 dB S/(N+D) and 0.001% THD at  
25 °C. Figure 20 illustrates only minor degradation  
in performance when the ambient temperature is  
raised to 138 °C. Figures 21 and 22 illustrate that  
the CS5102A typically yields 92 dB S/(N+D) and  
0.001% THD even with a large change in ambient  
temperature. Unlike conventional successive-ap-  
proximation ADC's, the signal-to-noise and dy-  
namic range of the CS5101A and CS5102A are  
The effect of the window in the frequency-domain  
is to convolute the spectrum of the window with  
that of the actual input.  
The quality of the window used for harmonic anal-  
ysis is typically judged by its highest side-lobe lev-  
el. A five term window is used in FFT testing of the  
CS5101A and CS5102A. This windowing algo-  
DS45F6  
29  
CS5101A CS5102A  
not limited by differential nonlinearities (DNL)  
caused by calibration errors. Rather, the dominant  
noise source is broadband thermal noise which  
aliases into the baseband. This white broadband  
noise also appears as an idle channel noise of  
1/2 LSB (rms).  
version errors even if the conversion process  
proceeds flawlessly.  
At DC, the DAC capacitor array's voltage coeffi-  
cient dictates the converter's linearity. This varia-  
tion in capacitance with respect to applied signal  
voltage yields a nonlinear relationship between the  
charge on the array and the analog input voltage  
and places a bow or wave in the transfer function.  
This is the dominant source of distortion at low in-  
put frequencies (Figures 19, 20, 21, and 22).  
7.3  
Sampling Distortion  
Like most discrete sample/hold amplifier designs,  
the inherent sample/hold of the CS5101A and  
CS5102A exhibits a frequency-dependent distor-  
tion due to non-ideal sampling of the analog input  
voltage. The calibrated capacitor array used during  
conversions is also used to track and hold the an-  
alog input signal. The conversion is not performed  
on the analog input voltage per se, but is actually  
performed on the charge trapped on the capacitor  
array at the moment the HOLD command is given.  
The charge on the array ideally assumes a linear  
relationship to the analog input voltage. Any devia-  
tion from this linear relationship will result in con-  
The ideal relationship between the charge on the  
array and the input voltage can also be distorted at  
high signal frequencies due to nonlinearities in the  
internal MOS switches. Dynamic signals cause ac  
current to flow through the switches connecting the  
capacitor array to the analog input pin in the track  
mode. Nonlinear on-resistance in the switches  
causes a nonlinear voltage drop. This effect wors-  
ens with increased signal frequency and slew rate.  
This distortion is negligible at signal levels below -  
10 dB of full scale.  
30  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
Count  
8192  
Count  
8192  
6144  
4096  
2048  
6144  
4096  
2048  
Noiseless  
Converter  
Noiseless  
Converter  
C S5101A  
CS5102A  
7FFB  
0
7FFC 7FFD  
Code (Hexadecimal)  
989 6359 844  
7FFE  
7FFF  
8000  
0
8001  
0
7FFD 7FFE 7FFF 8000(H) 8001  
Code (Hexadecim al)  
8002  
5
8003  
0
Counts:  
0
Counts:  
0
5
1727 4988  
1467  
Figure 23. CS5101A Histogram Plot of 8192  
Conversion Inputs  
Figure 24. CS5102A Histogram Plot of 8192  
Conversion Inputs  
7.4  
Noise  
An A/D converter's noise can be described like that  
of any other analog component. However, the con-  
verter's output is in digital form so any filtering of its  
noise must be performed in the digital domain. Dig-  
itized samples of analog inputs are often consid-  
ered individual, static snap-shots in time with no  
uncertainty or noise. In reality, the result of each  
conversion depends on the analog input level and  
the instantaneous value of noise sources in the  
ADC. If sequential samples from the ADC are  
treated as a “waveform”, simple filtering can be im-  
plemented in software to improve noise perfor-  
mance with minimal processing overhead.  
In a sampled data system all information about the  
analog input applied to the sample/hold appears in  
the baseband from DC to one-half the sampling  
rate. This includes high-frequency components  
which alias into the baseband. Low-pass (anti-  
alias) filters are therefore used to remove frequen-  
cy components in the input signal which are above  
one-half the sample rate. However, all wideband  
noise introduced by the CS5101A and CS5102A  
still aliases into the baseband. This “white” noise is  
evenly spread from DC to one-half the sampling  
rate and integrates to 35 µV rms in unipolar mode.  
Noise in the digital domain can be reduced by sam-  
pling at higher than the desired word rate and av-  
eraging multiple samples for each word.  
Oversampling spreads the device's noise over a  
wider band (for lower noise density), and averag-  
ing applies a low-pass response which filters noise  
above the desired signal bandwidth. In general, the  
device's noise performance can be maximized in  
any application by always sampling at the maxi-  
mum specified rate of 100 kSps (CS5101A) or  
20 kSps (CS5102A) (for lowest noise density) and  
digitally filtering to the desired signal bandwidth.  
All analog circuitry in the CS5101A and CS5102A  
is wideband in order to achieve fast conversions  
and high throughput. Wideband noise in the  
CS5101A and CS5102A integrates to 35 µV rms in  
unipolar mode (70 µV rms in bipolar mode). This is  
approximately 1/2 LSB rms with a 4.5V reference  
in both modes. Figure 23 shows a histogram plot of  
output code occurrences obtained from 8192 sam-  
ples taken from a CS5101A in the bipolar mode.  
Hexadecimal code 7FFE was arbitrarily selected  
and the analog input was set close to code center.  
With a noiseless converter, code 7FFE would al-  
ways appear. The histogram plot of the device has  
a “bell” shape with all codes other than 7FFE due  
to internal noise. Figure 24 illustrates the noise his-  
togram of the CS5102A.  
7.5  
Aperture Jitter  
Track-and-hold amplifiers commonly exhibit two  
types of aperture jitter. The first, more appropriate-  
ly termed “aperture window”, is an input-voltage-  
dependent variation in the aperture delay. Its sig-  
nal dependency causes distortion at high frequen-  
DS45F6  
31  
CS5101A CS5102A  
cies. The proprietary architecture of the CS5101A  
and CS5102A avoids applying the input voltage  
across a sampling switch, thus avoiding any “aper-  
ture window” effects. The second type of aperture  
jitter, due to component noise, assumes a random  
nature. With only 100 ps peak-to-peak aperture jit-  
ter, the CS5101A and CS5102A can process full-  
scale signals up to 1/2 the throughput frequency  
without significant errors due to aperture jitter.  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
1 kHz  
10 kHz  
100 kHz  
1 MHz  
Power Supply Ripple Frequency  
Figure 25. Power Supply Rejection  
7.6  
Power Supply Rejection  
The power supply rejection performance of the  
CS5101A and CS5102A is enhanced by the on-  
chip self-calibration and an “auto-zero” process.  
Drifts in power supply voltages at frequencies less  
than the calibration rate have negligible effect on  
the device's accuracy. This is because the  
CS5101A and CS5102A adjust their offset to within  
a small fraction of an LSB during calibration. Above  
the calibration frequency the excellent power sup-  
ply rejection of the internal amplifiers is augmented  
by an auto-zero process. Any offsets are stored on  
the capacitor array and are effectively subtracted  
once conversion is initiated. Figure 25 shows pow-  
er supply rejection of the CS5101A and CS5102A  
in the bipolar mode with the analog input grounded  
and a 300 mV p-p ripple applied to each supply.  
Power supply rejection improves by 6 dB in the un-  
ipolar mode.  
32  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
8. PIN DESCRIPTIONS  
5
25  
24  
23  
22  
21  
20  
19  
STBY  
DGND  
VA+  
6
AIN2  
7
VD+  
VA-  
CS5101A  
8
TRK1  
AGND  
REFBUF  
VREF  
AIN1  
CS5102A  
(TOP VIEW)  
9
TRK2  
10  
11  
CRS/FIN  
SSH/SDL  
Figure 26. CS5101A & CS5102A 28-pin PLCC Pinout  
8.1  
Power Supply Connections  
VD+ - Positive Digital Power, PIN 7  
Positive digital power supply. Nominally +5 volts.  
VD- - Negative Digital Power, PIN 1.  
Negative digital power supply. Nominally -5 volts.  
DGND - Digital Ground, PIN 6.  
Digital ground [reference].  
VA+ - Positive Analog Power, PIN 25.  
Positive analog power supply. Nominally +5 volts.  
VA- - Negative Analog Power, PIN 23.  
Negative analog power supply. Nominally -5 volts.  
AGND - Analog Ground, PIN 22.  
Analog ground reference.  
DS45F6  
33  
CS5101A CS5102A  
8.2  
8.3  
Oscillator  
CLKIN - Clock Input, PIN 3.  
All conversions and calibrations are timed from a master clock which can be externally supplied by  
driving CLKIN [this input TTL-compatible, CMOS recommended].  
XOUT - Crystal Output, PIN 4.  
The master clock can be generated by tying a crystal across the CLKIN and XOUT pins. If an external  
clock is used, XOUT must be left floating.  
Digital Inputs  
HOLD - Hold, PIN 12.  
A falling transition on this pin sets the CS5101A or CS5102A to the hold state and initiates a  
conversion. This input must remain low for at least 1/tclk + 20 ns. When operating in Free Run Mode,  
HOLD is disabled, and should be tied to DGND or VD+.  
CRS/FIN - Coarse Charge/Fine Charge Control, PIN 10.  
When brought high during acquisition time, CRS/FIN forces the CS5101A or CS5102A into coarse  
charge state. This engages the internal buffer amplifier to track the analog input and charges the  
capacitor array much faster, thereby allowing the CS5101A or CS5102A to track high-slewing signals. In  
order to get an accurate sample, the last coarse charge period before initiating a conversion (bringing  
HOLD low) must be longer than 0.75µs (CS5101A) or 3.75µs (CS5102A). Similarly, the fine charge  
period immediately prior to conversion must be at least 1.125µs (CS5101A) or 5.625µs (CS5102A). The  
CRS/FIN pin must be low during conversion time. For normal operation, CRS/FIN should be tied low, in  
which case the CS5101A or CS5102A will automatically enter coarse charge for 6 clock cycles  
immediately after the end of conversion.  
CH1/2 - Left/Right Input Channel Select, PIN 13.  
Status at the end of a conversion cycle determines which analog input channel will be acquired for the  
next conversion cycle. When in Free Run Mode, CH1/2 is an output, and will indicate which channel is  
being sampled during the current acquisition phase.  
SLEEP - Sleep, PIN 28.  
When brought low causes the CS5101A or CS5102A to enter a power-down state. All calibration  
coefficients are retained in memory, so no recalibration is needed after returning to the normal operating  
mode. If using the internal crystal oscillator, time must be allowed after SLEEP returns high for the  
crystal oscillator to stabilize. SLEEP should be tied high for normal operation.  
CODE - 2's Complement/Binary Coding Select, PIN 16.  
Determines whether output data appears in 2's complement or binary format. If high, 2's complement; if  
low, binary.  
BP/UP - Bipolar/Unipolar Input Range Select, PIN 17.  
When low, the CS5101A or CS5102A accepts a unipolar input range from AGND to VREF. When high,  
the CS5101A or CS5102A accepts bipolar inputs from -VREF to +VREF.  
SCKMOD - Serial Clock Mode Select, PIN 27.  
When high, the SCLK pin is an input; when low, it is an output. Used in conjunction with OUTMOD to  
select one of 4 output modes described in Table 2.  
OUTMOD - Output Mode Select, PIN 18.  
The status of SCKMOD and OUTMOD determine which of four output modes is utilized. The four  
modes are described in Table 2.  
34  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
SCLK - Serial Clock, PIN 14.  
Serial data changes status on a falling edge of this input, and is valid on a rising edge. When SCKMOD  
is high SCLK acts as an input. When SCKMOD is low the CS5101A or CS5102A generates its own  
serial clock at ¼ the master clock frequency and SCLK is an output.  
RST - Reset, PIN 2.  
When taken low, all internal digital logic is reset. Upon returning high, a full calibration sequence is  
initiated which takes 11,528,160 CLKIN cycles (CS5101A) or 2,882,040 CLKIN cycles (CS5102A) to  
complete. During calibration, the HOLD input will be ignored. The CS5101A or CS5102A must be reset  
at power-up for calibration, however; calibration is maintained during SLEEP mode, and need not be  
repeated when resuming normal operation.  
8.4  
8.5  
Analog Inputs  
AIN1, AIN2 - Channel 1 and 2 Analog Inputs, PINS 19 and 24.  
Analog input connections for the left and right input channels.  
VREF - Voltage Reference, PIN 20.  
The analog reference voltage which sets the analog input range. In unipolar mode VREF sets full-scale;  
in bipolar mode its magnitude sets both positive and negative full-scale.  
Digital Outputs  
STBY - Standby (Calibrating), PIN 5.  
Indicates calibration status after reset. Remains low throughout the calibration sequence and returns  
high upon completion.  
SDATA - Serial Output, PIN 15.  
Presents each output data bit on a falling edge of SCLK. Data is valid to be latched on the rising edge  
of SCLK.  
SSH/SDL - Simultaneous Sample/Hold / Serial Data Latch, PIN 11.  
Used to control an external sample/hold amplifier to achieve simultaneous sampling between channels.  
In FRN and SSC modes (SCLK is an output), this signal provides a convenient latch signal which forms  
the 16 data bits. This can be used to control external serial to parallel latches, or to control the serial  
port in a DSP.  
TRK1, TRK2 - Tracking Channel 1, Tracking Channel 2, PINS 8 and 9.  
Falls low at the end of a conversion cycle, indicating the acquisition phase for the corresponding  
channel. The TRK1 or TRK2 pin will return high at the beginning of conversion for that channel.  
8.6  
8.7  
Analog Outputs  
REFBUF - Reference Buffer Output, PIN 21.  
Reference buffer output.  
Miscellaneous  
TEST - Test, PIN 26.  
Allows access to the CS5101A's and the CS5102A's test functions which are reserved for factory use.  
Must be tied to VD+.  
DS45F6  
35  
CS5101A CS5102A  
9. PARAMETER DEFINITIONS  
Linearity Error  
The deviation of a code from a straight line passing through the endpoints of the transfer function after  
zero- and full-scale errors have been accounted for. “Zero-scale” is a point 1/2 LSB below the first code  
transition and “full-scale” is a point 1/2 LSB beyond the code transition to all ones. The deviation is mea-  
sured from the middle of each particular code. Units in % Full-Scale.  
Differential Linearity  
Minimum resolution for which no missing codes is guaranteed. Units in bits.  
Full-scale Error  
The deviation of the last code transition from the ideal (VREF-3/2 LSBs). Units in LSBs.  
Unipolar Offset  
The deviation of the first code transition from the ideal (1/2 LSB above AGND) when in unipolar mode  
(BP/UP low). Units in LSBs.  
Bipolar Offset  
The deviation of the mid-scale transition (011...111 to 100...000) from the ideal (1/2 LSB below AGND)  
when in bipolar mode (BP/UP high). Units in LSBs.  
Bipolar Negative Full-scale Error  
The deviation of the first code transition from the ideal when in bipolar mode (BP/UP high). The ideal is  
defined as lying on a straight line which passes through the final and mid-scale code transitions. Units in  
LSBs.  
Signal-to-peak Harmonic or Noise  
The ratio of the rms value of the signal to the rms value of the next largest spectral component below the  
Nyquist rate (excepting DC). This component is often an aliased harmonic when the signal frequency is  
a significant proportion of the sampling rate. Expressed in decibels.  
Total Harmonic Distortion  
The ratio of the rms sum of all harmonics to the rms value of the signal. Units in percent.  
Signal-to-(Noise + Distortion)  
The ratio of the rms value of the signal to the rms sum of all other spectral components below the Nyquist  
rate (excepting DC), including distortion components. Expressed in decibels.  
Aperture Time  
The time required after the hold command for the sampling switch to open fully. Effectively a sampling  
delay which can be nulled by advancing the sampling signal. Units in nanoseconds.  
Aperture Jitter  
The range of variation in the aperture time. Effectively the “sampling window” which ultimately dictates the  
maximum input signal slew rate acceptable for a given accuracy. Units in picoseconds.  
36  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
10.PACKAGE DIMENSIONS  
28L PLCC PACKAGE DRAWING  
e
D2/E2  
E1 E  
B
D1  
D
A1  
A
INCHES  
NOM  
MILLIMETERS  
DIM  
A
A1  
B
MIN  
MAX  
MIN  
4.191  
2.286  
0.3302  
12.319  
11.430  
9.906  
12.319  
11.430  
9.906  
NOM  
4.3815  
2.667  
MAX  
4.572  
3.048  
0.165  
0.090  
0.013  
0.485  
0.450  
0.390  
0.485  
0.450  
0.390  
0.040  
0.1725  
0.105  
0.017  
0.490  
0.453  
0.410  
0.490  
0.453  
0.410  
0.050  
0.180  
0.120  
0.021  
0.495  
0.456  
0.430  
0.495  
0.456  
0.430  
0.060  
0.4318  
12.446  
11.506  
10.414  
12.446  
11.506  
10.414  
1.270  
0.533  
D
12.573  
11.582  
10.922  
12.573  
11.582  
10.922  
1.524  
D1  
D2  
E
E1  
E2  
e
1.016  
JEDEC # : MS-047 AA-AF  
Controlling Dimension is Inches  
Figure 27. 28-Pin PLCC Mechanical Drawing  
DS45F6  
37  
CS5101A CS5102A  
11.ORDERING INFORMATION  
Model  
CS5101A-JL8  
Linearity  
Temperature  
Conversion Time  
Throughput  
Package  
0.003  
0 to +70 °C  
CS5101A-JL8Z (lead free)  
CS5101A-BL8  
8.13 µs  
100 kSps  
0.002  
0.003  
-40 to +85 °C  
0 to +70 °C  
CS5101A-BL8Z (lead free)  
CS5102A-JL  
28-pin PLCC  
CS5102A-JLZ (lead free)  
CS5102A-BL  
40 µs  
20 kSps  
0.0015  
-40 to +85 °C  
CS5102A-BLZ (lead free)  
12.ENVIRONMENTAL, MANUFACTURING, & HANDLING INFORMATION  
Model Number  
CS5101A-JL8  
Peak Reflow Temp  
225 °C  
MSL Rating*  
Max Floor Life  
260 °C  
CS5101A-JL8Z (lead free)  
CS5101A-BL8  
225 °C  
260 °C  
CS5101A-BL8Z (lead free)  
CS5102A-JL  
2
365 Days  
225 °C  
CS5102A-JLZ (lead free)  
CS5102A-BL  
260 °C  
225 °C  
260 °C  
CS5102A-BLZ (lead free)  
* MSL (Moisture Sensitivity Level) as specified by IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020.  
38  
DS45F6  
CS5101A CS5102A  
13.REVISIONS  
Revision  
Date  
Changes  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
F6  
September 2004  
October 2004  
June 2005  
Initial Release  
Corrected table heading on Page 6.  
Minor edits, added lead-free device ordering information  
removed obsolete packages, corrected lead-free device information  
Added MSL, reflow temp, & floor life specifications.  
July 2005  
August 2005  
January 2006  
Corrected Linearity Error mislabeled in Characteristics & Specifications as “Dif-  
ferential Input Range”.  
Contacting Cirrus Logic Support  
For all product questions and inquiries contact a Cirrus Logic Sales Representative.  
To find the one nearest to you go to www.cirrus.com  
IMPORTANT NOTICE  
Cirrus Logic, Inc. and its subsidiaries (“Cirrus”) believe that the information contained in this document is accurate and reliable. However, the information is subject to  
change without notice and is provided “AS IS” without warranty of any kind (express or implied). Customers are advised to obtain the latest version of relevant infor  
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CERTAIN APPLICATIONS USING SEMICONDUCTOR PRODUCTS MAY INVOLVE POTENTIAL RISKS OF DEATH, PERSONAL INJURY, OR SEVERE PROPER  
TY OR ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE (“CRITICAL APPLICATIONS”). CIRRUS PRODUCTS ARE NOT DESIGNED, AUTHORIZED OR WARRANTED FOR USE IN  
AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS, MILITARY APPLICATIONS, PRODUCTS SURGICALLY IMPLANTED INTO THE BODY, AUTOMOTIVE SAFETY OR SECURITY DEVICES  
LIFE SUPPORT PRODUCTS OR OTHER CRITICAL APPLICATIONS. INCLUSION OF CIRRUS PRODUCTS IN SUCH APPLICATIONS IS UNDERSTOOD TO BE  
FULLY AT THE CUSTOMER'S RISK AND CIRRUS DISCLAIMS AND MAKES NO WARRANTY, EXPRESS, STATUTORY OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE IMPLIED  
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSE, WITH REGARD TO ANY CIRRUS PRODUCT THAT IS USED IN SUCH A  
MANNER. IF THE CUSTOMER OR CUSTOMER'S CUSTOMER USES OR PERMITS THE USE OF CIRRUS PRODUCTS IN CRITICAL APPLICATIONS, CUSTOM  
ER AGREES, BY SUCH USE, TO FULLY INDEMNIFY CIRRUS, ITS OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, DISTRIBUTORS AND OTHER AGENTS FROM ANY  
AND ALL LIABILITY, INCLUDING ATTORNEYS' FEES AND COSTS, THAT MAY RESULT FROM OR ARISE IN CONNECTION WITH THESE USES.  
Cirrus Logic, Cirrus, and the Cirrus Logic logo designs are trademarks of Cirrus Logic, Inc. All other brand and product names in this document may be trademarks o  
service marks of their respective owners.  
DS45F6  
39  

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