ADS5474_08 [TI]
14-Bit, 400-MSPS Analog-to-Digital Converter; 14位, 400 MSPS模拟数字转换器型号: | ADS5474_08 |
厂家: | TEXAS INSTRUMENTS |
描述: | 14-Bit, 400-MSPS Analog-to-Digital Converter |
文件: | 总38页 (文件大小:1944K) |
中文: | 中文翻译 | 下载: | 下载PDF数据表文档文件 |
ADS5474
www.ti.com......................................................................................................................................................... SLAS525A–JULY 2007–REVISED AUGUST 2008
14-Bit, 400-MSPS Analog-to-Digital Converter
1
FEATURES
23
•
400-MSPS Sample Rate
•
•
•
TQFP-80 PowerPAD™ Package
(14 mm × 14 mm footprint)
•
14-Bit Resolution, 11.2-Bits ENOB
1.4-GHz Input Bandwidth
Industrial Temperature Range:
–40°C to +85°C
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
SFDR = 80 dBc at 230 MHz and 400 MSPS
SNR = 69.8 dBFS at 230 MHz and 400 MSPS
2.2-VPP Differential Input Voltage
LVDS-Compatible Outputs
Pin-Similar/Compatible with 12-, 13-, and 14-Bit
Family:
ADS5463 and ADS5440/ADS5444
Total Power Dissipation: 2.5 W
Power Down Mode: 50 mW
APPLICATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Test and Measurement Instrumentation
Software-Defined Radio
Data Acquisition
Power Amplifier Linearization
Communication Instrumentation
Radar
Offset Binary Output Format
Output Data Transitions on the Rising and
Falling Edges of a Half-Rate Output Clock
•
On-Chip Analog Buffer, Track-and-Hold, and
Reference Circuit
DESCRIPTION
The ADS5474 is a 14-bit, 400-MSPS analog-to-digital converter (ADC) that operates from both a 5-V supply and
3.3-V supply while providing LVDS-compatible digital outputs. This ADC is one of a family of 12-, 13-, and 14-bit
ADCs that operate from 210 MSPS to 500 MSPS. The ADS5474 input buffer isolates the internal switching of the
onboard track and hold (T&H) from disturbing the signal source while providing a high-impedance input. An
internal reference generator is also provided to simplify the system design.
Designed with a 1.4-GHz input bandwidth for the conversion of wide-bandwidth signals that exceed 400 MHz of
input frequency at 400 MSPS, the ADS5474 has outstanding low-noise performance and spurious-free dynamic
range over a large input frequency range.
The ADS5474 is available in an TQFP-80 PowerPAD package. The device is built on Texas Instruments
complementary bipolar process (BiCom3) and is specified over the full industrial temperature range (–40°C to
+85°C).
VIN
VIN
+
+
A1
TH1
TH2
A2
TH3
A3
ADC3
S
S
–
–
ADC1
DAC1
ADC2
DAC2
VREF
Reference
5
5
6
Digital Error Correction
CLK
CLK
Timing
OVR
OVR
DRY
DRY
D[13:0]
1
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas
Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
2
3
PowerPAD is a trademark of Texas Instruments.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Copyright © 2007–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated
ADS5474
SLAS525A–JULY 2007–REVISED AUGUST 2008......................................................................................................................................................... www.ti.com
This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated circuits be handled with
appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation procedures can cause damage.
ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision integrated circuits may be more
susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could cause the device not to meet its published specifications.
PACKAGE/ORDERING INFORMATION(1)
SPECIFIED
TEMPERATURE
RANGE
PACKAGE
DESIGNATOR
PACKAGE
MARKING
ORDERING
NUMBER
TRANSPORT
MEDIA, QUANTITY
PRODUCT
PACKAGE-LEAD
HTQFP-80(2)
PowerPAD
ADS5474IPFP
Tray, 96
ADS5474
PFP
–40°C to +85°C
ADS5474I
ADS5474IPFPR
Tape and Reel, 1000
(1) For the most current product and ordering information see the Package Option Addendum located at the end of this document, or see
the TI web site at www.ti.com.
(2) Thermal pad size: 6.15 mm × 6.15 mm (minimum), 7.5 mm × 7.5 mm (maximum).
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS(1)
Over operating free-air temperature range, unless otherwise noted.
ADS5474
UNIT
AVDD5 to GND
AVDD3 to GND
DVDD3 to GND
6
5
5
V
V
V
Supply voltage
Analog input to
GND
Valid when supplies are on and within normal ranges. See additional
information in the Power Supplies portion of the applications information
in the back of the datasheet regarding Clock and Analog Inputs when the
supplies are off.
–0.3 to (AVDD5 + 0.3)
–0.3 to (AVDD5 + 0.3)
V
V
Clock input to GND
CLK to CLK
±2.5
–0.3 to (DVDD3 + 0.3)
–40 to +85
V
V
Digital data output to GND
Operating temperature range
Maximum junction temperature
°C
°C
+150
Storage
temperature range
–65 to +150
2
°C
kV
ESD, human-body
model (HBM)
(1) Stresses above these ratings may cause permanent damage. Exposure to absolute maximum conditions for extended periods may
degrade device reliability. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond
those specified is not implied. Kirkendall voidings and current density information for calculation of expected lifetime are available upon
request.
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS(1)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
TYP
23.7
17.8
16.4
2.99
UNIT
°C/W
°C/W
Soldered thermal pad, no airflow
(2)
RθJA
Soldered thermal pad, 150-LFM airflow
Soldered thermal pad, 250-LFM airflow
Bottom of package (thermal pad)
(3)
RθJP
(1) Using 36 thermal vias (6 × 6 array). See PowerPAD Package in the Application Information section.
(2)
(3)
R
θJA is the thermal resistance from the junction to ambient.
RθJP is the thermal resistance from the junction to the thermal pad.
2
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ADS5474
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RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS
ADS5474
UNIT
MIN
NOM
MAX
SUPPLIES
AVDD5
Analog supply voltage
Analog supply voltage
Output driver supply voltage
4.75
3.1
3
5
3.3
3.3
5.25
3.6
V
V
V
AVDD3
DVDD3
3.6
ANALOG INPUT
Differential input range
Input common mode
2.2
3.1
VPP
V
VCM
DIGITAL OUTPUT (DRY, DATA, OVR)
Maximum differential output load
CLOCK INPUT (CLK)
10
pF
CLK input sample rate (sine wave)
20
0.5
40
400 MSPS
Clock amplitude, differential sine wave (see Figure 42)
5
60
VPP
%
Clock duty cycle (see Figure 46)
Operating free-air temperature
50
TA
–40
+85
°C
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Typical values at TA = +25°C: minimum and maximum values over full temperature range TMIN = –40°C to TMAX = +85°C,
sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, DVDD3 = 3.3 V, –1 dBFS differential input,
and 3-VPP differential clock, unless otherwise noted.
ADS5474
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
UNIT
MIN
TYP
MAX
Resolution
14
Bits
ANALOG INPUTS
Differential input range
2.2
3.1
VPP
V
Analog input common-mode voltage
Input resistance (dc)
Self-biased; see VCM specification below
Each input to VCM
500
1.6
Ω
Input capacitance
Each input to GND
pF
Analog input bandwidth (–3dB)
1.44
GHz
Common-mode signal < 50 MHz
(see Figure 27)
CMRR
Common-mode rejection ratio
100
dB
INTERNAL REFERENCE VOLTAGE
VREF
VCM
Reference voltage
2.4
V
With internal VREF. Provided as an output
via the VCM pin for dc-coupled
applications. If an external VREF is used,
the VCM pin tracks as illustrated in
Figure 39
Analog input common-mode voltage
reference output
2.9
3.1
3.3
V
VCM temperature coefficient
–0.8
mV/°C
DYNAMIC ACCURACY
No missing codes
Assured
±0.7
DNL
INL
Differential linearity error
Integral linearity error
Offset error
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
–0.99
–3
1.5
3
LSB
LSB
±1
–11
11
mV
Offset temperature coefficient
Gain error
0.02
mV/°C
%FS
–5
5
Gain temperature coefficient
–0.02
%FS/°C
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ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Typical values at TA = +25°C: minimum and maximum values over full temperature range TMIN = –40°C to TMAX = +85°C,
sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, DVDD3 = 3.3 V, –1 dBFS differential input,
and 3-VPP differential clock, unless otherwise noted.
ADS5474
PARAMETER
POWER SUPPLY
TEST CONDITIONS
UNIT
MIN
TYP
MAX
IAVDD5
IAVDD3
5-V analog supply current
3.3-V analog supply current
338
185
372
201
mA
mA
VIN = full-scale, fIN = 70 MHz,
fS = 400 MSPS
3.3-V digital supply current
(includes LVDS)
IDVDD3
75
83
mA
Total power dissipation
Power-up time
2.5
50
2.797
W
From turn-on of AVDD5
µs
From PWD pin switched from HIGH (PWD
active) to LOW (ADC awake)
(see Figure 28)
Wake-up time
5
µs
Power-down power dissipation
PWD pin = logic HIGH
50
75
350
mW
dB
Power-supply rejection ratio,
AVDD5 supply
PSRR
PSRR
PSRR
Power-supply rejection ratio,
AVDD3 supply
Without 0.1-µF board supply capacitors,
with < 1-MHz supply noise (see Figure 49)
90
dB
dB
Power-supply rejection ratio,
DVDD3 supply
110
DYNAMIC AC CHARACTERISTICS
fIN = 30 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
fIN = 30 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
fIN = 30 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
70.3
70.2
70.1
69.8
69.1
68.4
67.5
66.6
64.7
88
68.3
68
SNR
SFDR
HD2
Signal-to-noise ratio
dBFS
74
71
86
80
80
Spurious-free dynamic range
76
dBc
71
60
55
46
89
87
90
84
Second-harmonic
76
dBc
71
74
70
55
4
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ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Typical values at TA = +25°C: minimum and maximum values over full temperature range TMIN = –40°C to TMAX = +85°C,
sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, DVDD3 = 3.3 V, –1 dBFS differential input,
and 3-VPP differential clock, unless otherwise noted.
ADS5474
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
UNIT
MIN
TYP
MAX
DYNAMIC AC CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
fIN = 30 MHz
93
86
80
80
85
71
60
55
46
95
93
85
85
87
87
90
87
80
86
83
78
77
75
68
60
55
45
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
fIN = 30 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
fIN = 30 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
HD3
Third-harmonic
dBc
Worst harmonic/spur
(other than HD2 and HD3)
dBc
THD
Total harmonic distortion
dBc
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ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Typical values at TA = +25°C: minimum and maximum values over full temperature range TMIN = –40°C to TMAX = +85°C,
sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, DVDD3 = 3.3 V, –1 dBFS differential input,
and 3-VPP differential clock, unless otherwise noted.
ADS5474
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
UNIT
MIN
TYP
MAX
DYNAMIC AC CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
fIN = 30 MHz
69.2
68.9
68.5
68.2
67.3
64.8
58.5
54
fIN = 70 MHz
fIN = 130 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 351 MHz
fIN = 451 MHz
fIN = 651 MHz
fIN = 751 MHz
fIN = 999 MHz
67
65.5
SINAD
Signal-to-noise and distortion
dBc
45.4
fIN1 = 69 MHz, fIN2 = 70 MHz,
each tone at –7 dBFS
93
95
85
83
fIN1 = 69 MHz, fIN2 = 70 MHz,
each tone at –16 dBFS
Two-tone SFDR
dBFS
fIN1 = 297.5 MHz, fIN2 = 302.5 MHz,
each tone at –7 dBFS
fIN1 = 297.5 MHz, fIN2 = 302.5 MHz,
each tone at –16 dBFS
fIN = 70 MHz
10.8
10.6
11.2
10.9
1.8
ENOB
Effective number of bits
RMS idle-channel noise
Bits
fIN = 230 MHz
Inputs tied to common-mode
LSB
DIGITAL OUTPUTS
VOD
VOC
Differential output voltage (±)
Common-mode output voltage
247
350
454
mV
V
1.125
1.375
DIGITAL INPUTS
VIH
VIL
IIH
High level input voltage
2.0
-1
V
Low level input voltage
High level input current
Low level input current
Input capacitance
0.8
1
V
PWD (pin 33)
µA
µA
pF
IIL
2
6
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TIMING INFORMATION
Sample
N–1
N+4
N+2
ta
N
N+1
N+3
N+5
tCLKH
tCLKL
CLK
CLK
Latency = 3.5 Clock Cycles
tDRY
DRY
DRY(1)
tDATA
D[13:0], OVR
N–1
N
N+1
D[13:0], OVR
(1) Polarity of DRY is undetermined. For further information, see the Digital Outputs section.
Figure 1. Timing Diagram
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS(1)
Typical values at TA = +25°C: minimum and maximum values over full temperature range TMIN = –40°C to TMAX = +85°C,
sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, DVDD3 = 3.3 V, and 3-VPP differential
clock, unless otherwise noted.
PARAMETER
Aperture delay
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
200
103
3.5
MAX
UNIT
ps
ta
Aperture jitter, rms
Latency
Internal jitter of the ADC
fs
cycles
ns
tCLK
Clock period
2.5
1
50
tCLKH
tCLKL
Clock pulse duration, high
Clock pulse duration, low
ns
1
ns
Zero crossing, 10-pF parasitic loading to GND on each
output pin
tDRY
CLK to DRY delay(2)
CLK to DATA/OVR delay(2)
DATA to DRY skew
1000
800
1400
1400
0
1800
2000
500
ps
ps
ps
Zero crossing, 10-pF parasitic loading to GND on each
output pin
tDATA
tSKEW
tDATA – tDRY, 10-pF parasitic loading to GND on each output
pin
–500
tRISE
tFALL
DRY/DATA/OVR rise time
DRY/DATA/OVR fall time
10-pF parasitic loading to GND on each output pin
10-pF parasitic loading to GND on each output pin
500
500
ps
ps
(1) Timing parameters are assured by design or characterization, but not production tested.
(2) DRY, DATA, and OVR are updated on the falling edge of CLK. The latency must be added to tDATA to determine the overall propagation
delay.
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PIN CONFIGURATION
PFP PACKAGE
(TOP VIEW)
80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 61
DVDD3
DGND
AVDD5
NC
1
2
60
59
D5
D5
D4
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
51
50
49
48
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
3
4
D4
NC
D3
5
VREF
AGND
AVDD5
AGND
CLK
D3
6
D2
7
8
D2
9
DGND
DVDD3
D1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
ADS5474
CLK
AGND
AVDD5
AVDD5
AGND
AIN
D1
D0
D0
NC
NC
AIN
NC
AGND
AVDD5
AGND
NC
OVR
OVR
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
P0027-03
8
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Table 1. TERMINAL FUNCTIONS
TERMINAL
DESCRIPTION
NAME
AIN
NO.
16
Differential input signal (positive)
Differential input signal (negative)
AIN
17
3, 8, 13, 14, 19, 21,
23, 25, 27, 31
AVDD5
Analog power supply (5 V)
Analog power supply (3.3 V) (Suggestion for ≤ 250 MSPS: leave option to connect to 5 V for
ADS5440/ADS5444 13-bit compatibility)
AVDD3
DVDD3
35, 37, 39
1, 51, 66
Digital and output driver power supply (3.3 V)
7, 9, 12, 15, 18, 20,
AGND
22, 24, 26, 28, 30, Analog Ground
32, 34, 36, 38, 40
(Power Pad)
DGND
CLK
(not numbered)
Power Pad for thermal relief, also Analog Ground
2, 52, 65
10
Digital Ground
Differential input clock (positive). Conversion is initiated on rising edge, digital outputs on falling edge.
Differential input clock (negative)
CLK
11
D0, D0
48, 47
LVDS digital output pair, least significant bit (LSB)
D1–D12,
D1–D12
49, 50, 53–64,
67–76
LVDS digital output pairs
D13, D13
78, 77
80, 79
LVDS digital output pair, most significant bit (MSB)
Data ready LVDS output pair
DRY, DRY
No connect (pins 4 and 5 should be left floating; pins 43 to 46 are possible future bit additions for this
pinout and therefore can be connected to a digital bus or left floating)
NC
4, 5, 43–46
42, 41
Overrange indicator LVDS output. A logic high signals an analog input in excess of the full-scale
range.
OVR, OVR
Common-mode voltage output (3.1 V nominal). Commonly used in DC-coupled applications to set the
input signal to the correct common-mode voltage. A 0.1µF capacitor from VCM to AGND is
recommended, but not required.
VCM
29
(This pin is not used on the ADS5440, ADS5444, and ADS5463)
Power-down (active high). Device is in sleep mode when PWD pin is logic HIGH. ADC converter is
awake when PWD is logic LOW (grounded).
(This pin is not used on the ADS5440, ADS5444, and ADS5463)
PWD
33
6
Reference voltage input/output (2.4 V nominal). A 0.1µF capacitor from VREF to AGND is
recommended, but not required.
VREF
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 30 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 70 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
0
0
SFDR = 88.4 dBc
SFDR = 86.6 dBc
SNR = 70.3 dBFS
SINAD = 70.2 dBFS
THD = 86 dBc
SNR = 70.1 dBFS
SINAD = 69.9 dBFS
THD = 82.9 dBc
-20
-20
-40
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 2.
Figure 3.
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 130 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 230 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
0
0
SFDR = 78.5 dBc
SNR = 70.1 dBFS
SINAD = 69.5 dBFS
THD = 77.4 dBc
SFDR = 79.7 dBc
SNR = 69.8 dBFS
SINAD = 69.2 dBFS
THD = 76.9 dBc
-20
-40
-20
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 4.
Figure 5.
10
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 351 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 451 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
0
0
SFDR = 75.5 dBc
SFDR = 71.4 dBc
SNR = 69.2 dBFS
SINAD = 68.3 dBFS
THD = 74.7 dBc
SNR = 68.4 dBFS
SINAD = 65.8 dBFS
THD = 68.3 dBc
-20
-20
-40
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 6.
Figure 7.
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 751 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
SPECTRAL PERFORMANCE
FFT FOR 999 MHz INPUT SIGNAL
0
0
SFDR = 54.5 dBc
SFDR = 46 dBc
SNR = 66.6 dBFS
SINAD = 55.1 dBFS
THD = 54.4 dBc
SNR = 64.7 dBFS
SINAD = 46.4 dBFS
THD = 45.5 dBc
-20
-20
-40
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 8.
Figure 9.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION DISTORTION
(FFT for 69 MHz and 70 MHz at –7 dBFS)
TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION DISTORTION
(FFT for 297.5 MHz and 302.5 MHz at –7 dBFS)
0
0
fIN1 = 69 MHz, -7 dBFS
fIN2 = 70 MHz, -7 dBFS
IMD3 = 97.3 dBFS
fIN1 = 297.5 MHz, -7 dBFS
fIN2 = 302.5 MHz, -7 dBFS
IMD3 = 85.1 dBFS
SFDR = 85 dBFS
-20
-20
SFDR = 93.4 dBFS
-40
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 10.
Figure 11.
TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION DISTORTION
(FFT for 69 MHz and 70 MHz at –16 dBFS)
TWO-TONE INTERMODULATION DISTORTION
(FFT for 297.5 MHz and 302.5 MHz at –16 dBFS)
0
0
fIN1 = 297.5 MHz, -16 dBFS
fIN2 = 302.5 MHz, -16 dBFS
fIN1 = 69 MHz, -16 dBFS
fIN2 = 70 MHz, -16 dBFS
IMD3 = 94.4 dBFS
SFDR = 83.1 dFBS
IMD3 = 98 dBFS
SFDR = 95.7 dFBS
-20
-40
-20
-40
-60
-60
-80
-80
-100
-120
-100
-120
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
0
20
40
60
80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency - MHz
Frequency - MHz
Figure 12.
Figure 13.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
NORMALIZED GAIN RESPONSE
vs
INPUT FREQUENCY
DIFFERENTIAL NONLINEARITY
3
0
0.5
0.4
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
0.3
-3
0.2
-6
0.1
-9
0
-0.1
-0.2
-0.3
-0.4
-0.5
-12
-15
-18
-21
fS = 400 MSPS
AIN = ±0.38 VPP
10 M
100 M
1 G
5 G
0
2048 4096 6144 8192 10240 12288 14336 16384
Frequency - Hz
Code
Figure 14.
Figure 15.
INTEGRAL NONLINEARITY
NOISE HISTOGRAM WITH INPUTS SHORTED
25
20
15
10
5
2.0
1.5
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = VCM
1.0
0.5
0
-0.5
-1.0
-1.5
-2.0
0
0
2048 4096 6144 8192 10240 12288 14336 16384
Code
Output Code
Figure 16.
Figure 17.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
AC PERFORMANCE
AC PERFORMANCE
vs
vs
INPUT AMPLITUDE (70 MHz Input Signal)
INPUT AMPLITUDE (230 MHz Input Signal)
120
100
80
120
100
80
SFDR (dBFS)
SNR (dBFS)
SFDR (dBFS)
SNR (dBFS)
60
60
40
40
SFDR (dBc)
SFDR (dBc)
20
20
0
0
SNR (dBc)
SNR (dBc)
-20
-40
-20
-40
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
-100 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10
0
-100 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10
0
Input Amplitude - dBFS
Input Amplitude - dBFS
Figure 18.
Figure 19.
TWO-TONE PERFORMANCE
vs
INPUT AMPLITUDE (f1 = 297.5 MHz and f2 = 302.5 MHz)
SFDR
vs
AVDD5 OVER TEMPERATURE
90
88
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
72
70
100
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
2f2 - f1 (dBc)
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2f1 - f2 (dBc)
+40°C
+65°C
+25°C
0°C
+85°C
-40°C
+100°C
Worst Spur (dBc)
4.7
4.8
4.9
5.0
5.1
5.2
5.3
-100 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10
0
AVDD5 - Supply Voltage - V
AIN - dBFS
Figure 20.
Figure 21.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
SNR
SFDR
vs
vs
AVDD5 OVER TEMPERATURE
AVDD3 OVER TEMPERATURE
71.0
70.5
70.0
69.5
69.0
68.5
68.0
90
88
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
72
70
fS = 400 MSPS
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 230 MHz
+25°C
+65°C
+40°C
+40°C
+25°C
+65°C
-40°C
+85°C
0°C
+85°C
+100°C
0°C
+100°C
-40°C
4.7
4.8
4.9
5.0
5.1
5.2
5.3
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
AVDD5 - Supply Voltage - V
AVDD3 - Supply Voltage - V
Figure 22.
Figure 23.
SNR
vs
SFDR
vs
AVDD3 OVER TEMPERATURE
DVDD3 OVER TEMPERATURE
71.0
70.5
70.0
69.5
69.0
68.5
68.0
90
88
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
72
70
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
+25°C
+65°C
+40°C
+25°C
+65°C
+40°C
+85°C
0°C
-40°C
+100°C
+85°C
0°C
+100°C
-40°C
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
AVDD3 - Supply Voltage - V
DVDD3 - Supply Voltage - V
Figure 24.
Figure 25.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
SNR
CMRR
vs
vs
DVDD3 OVER TEMPERATURE
COMMON-MODE INPUT FREQUENCY
71.0
70.5
70.0
69.5
69.0
68.5
68.0
0
-10
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
-20
+25°C
-30
+40°C
0°C
+65°C
-40
-50
-60
-70
+85°C
+100°C
-40°C
-80
-90
400 MSPS
-100
-110
-120
-130
300 MSPS
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
100 k
1 M
10 M
100 M
1 G
10 G
DVDD3 - Supply Voltage - V
Frequency - Hz
Figure 26.
Figure 27.
ADC WAKEUP TIME
75
Wake from PDWN
70
65
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
Wake from 5 V Supply
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90 100
Time - ms
Figure 28.
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
At TA = +25°C, sampling rate = 400 MSPS, 50% clock duty cycle, 3-VPP differential sinusoidal clock, analog input amplitude =
–1 dBFS, AVDD5 = 5 V, AVDD3 = 3.3 V, and DVDD3 = 3.3 V, unless otherwise noted.
SNR vs INPUT FREQUENCY AND SAMPLING FREQUENCY
400
68
70
69
350
300
250
200
150
100
40
70
68
69
67
70
68
69
70
66
67
69
68
300
fIN - Input Frequency - MHz
62 64
10
100
200
400
500
600
54
56
58
60
66
68
70
SNR - dBFS
Figure 29.
SFDR vs INPUT FREQUENCY AND SAMPLING FREQUENCY
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
40
80
77
65
73
85
80
70
77
80
85
65
73
77
85
70
77
80
85
73
65
70
60
80
77
85
85
10
100
200
300
400
500
600
fIN - Input Frequency - MHz
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
SFDR - dBc
Figure 30.
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APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Theory of Operation
The ADS5474 is a 14-bit, 400-MSPS, monolithic pipeline ADC. Its bipolar analog core operates from 5-V and
3.3-V supplies, while the output uses a 3.3-V supply to provide LVDS-compatible outputs. The conversion
process is initiated by the rising edge of the external input clock. At that instant, the differential input signal is
captured by the input track-and-hold (T&H), and the input sample is converted sequentially by a series of lower
resolution stages, with the outputs combined in a digital correction logic block. Both the rising and the falling
clock edges are used to propagate the sample through the pipeline every half clock cycle. This process results in
a data latency of 3.5 clock cycles, after which the output data are available as a 14-bit parallel word, coded in
offset binary format.
Input Configuration
The analog input for the ADS5474 consists of an analog pseudo-differential buffer followed by a bipolar transistor
T&H. The analog buffer isolates the source driving the input of the ADC from any internal switching and presents
a high impedance that is easy to drive at high input frequencies, compared to an ADC without a buffered input.
The input common-mode is set internally through a 500-Ω resistor connected from 3.1 V to each of the inputs
(common-mode is ~2.4V on 12- and 13-bit members of this family). This configuration results in a differential
input impedance of 1 kΩ.
ADS5463/5474/54RF63
AVDD5
~ 2.5 nH Bond Wire
Buffer
AIN
~ 0.5 pF
Package
~ 200 fF
Bond Pad
500 W
1.6 pF
GND
VCM
AVDD5
1.6 pF
Buffer
GND
500 W
~ 2.5 nH Bond Wire
AIN
~ 0.5 pF
Package
~ 200 fF
Bond Pad
GND
S0293-01
Figure 31. Analog Input Equivalent Circuit
For a full-scale differential input, each of the differential lines of the input signal (pins 16 and 17) swings
symmetrically between (3.1 V + 0.55 V) and (3.1 V – 0.55 V). This range means that each input has a maximum
signal swing of 1.1 VPP for a total differential input signal swing of 2.2 VPP. Operation below 2.2 VPP is allowable,
with the characteristics of performance versus input amplitude demonstrated in Figure 18 and Figure 19. For
instance, for performance at 1.1 VPP rather than 2.2 VPP, refer to the SNR and SFDR at –6 dBFS (0 dBFS =
2.2 VPP). The maximum swing is determined by the internal reference voltage generator, eliminating the need for
any external circuitry for this purpose.
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The ADS5474 performs optimally when the analog inputs are driven differentially. The circuit in Figure 32 shows
one possible configuration using an RF transformer with termination either on the primary or on the secondary of
the transformer. In addition, the evaluation module is configured with two back-to-back transformers, also
demonstrating good performance. If voltage gain is required, a step-up transformer can be used.
Z0
R0
50 W
50 W
AIN
R
200 W
ADS5474
AC Signal
Source
AIN
Mini-Circuits
JTX-4-10T
Figure 32. Converting a Single-Ended Input to a Differential Signal Using an RF Transformer
In addition to the transformer configurations, Texas Instruments offers a wide selection of single-ended
operational amplifiers that can be selected depending on the application. An RF gain-block amplifier, such as
Texas Instruments' THS9001, can also be used for high-input-frequency applications. For large voltage gains at
intermediate-frequencies in the 50 MHz to 400 MHz range, the configuration shown in Figure 33 can be used.
The component values can be tuned for different intermediate frequencies. The example shown in Figure 33 is
located on the evaluation module and is tuned for an IF of 170 MHz. More information regarding this
configuration can be found in the ADS5474 EVM User Guide (SLAU194) and the THS9001 50-MHz to 350-MHz
Cascadeable Amplifier data sheet (SLOS426), both available for download at www.ti.com.
1000 pF
1000 pF
THS9001
VIN
AIN
50 W
50 W
18 mH
39 pF
ADS5474
0.1 mF
THS9001
VIN
AIN
1000 pF
1000 pF
Figure 33. Using the THS9001 IF Amplifier With the ADS5474
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For applications requiring dc-coupling with the signal source, a differential input/differential output amplifier such
as the THS4509 (shown in Figure 34) provides good harmonic performance and low noise over a wide range of
frequencies.
VIN
100 W
348 W
From
50 W
Source
+5V
78.9 W
49.9 W
49.9 W
0.22 mF
100 W
AIN
ADS5474
THS4509
18 pF
VCM
AIN
CM
49.9 W
78.9 W
49.9 W
0.22 mF
0.22 mF
0.1 mF
0.1 mF
348 W
Figure 34. Using the THS4509 or THS4520 With the ADS5474
In this configuration, the THS4509 amplifier circuit provides 10 dB of gain, converts the single-ended input to
differential, and sets the proper input common-mode voltage to the ADS5474 by utilizing the VCM output pin of
the ADC. The 50-Ω resistors and 18-pF capacitor between the THS4509 outputs and ADS5474 inputs (along
with the input capacitance of the ADC) limit the bandwidth of the signal to about 70 MHz (–3 dB). Input
termination is accomplished via the 78.9-Ω resistor and 0.22-µF capacitor to ground, in conjunction with the input
impedance of the amplifier circuit. A 0.22-µF capacitor and 49.9-Ω resistor are inserted to ground across the
78.9-Ω resistor and 0.22-µF capacitor on the alternate input to balance the circuit. Gain is a function of the
source impedance, termination, and 348-Ω feedback resistor. See the THS4509 data sheet for further
component values to set proper 50-Ω termination for other common gains. Because the ADS5474 recommended
input common-mode voltage is 3.1 V, the THS4509 operates from a single power-supply input with VS+ = 5 V and
VS– = 0 V (ground). This configuration has the potential to slightly exceed the recommended output voltage from
the THS4509 of 3.6V due to the ADC input common-mode of 3.1V and the +0.55V full-scale signal. This will not
harm the THS4509 but may result in a degradation in the harmonic performance of the THS4509. An amplifier
with a wider recommended output voltage range is the THS4520, which is optimized for low noise and low
distortion in the range of frequencies up to ~20MHz. Applications that are not sensitive to harmonic distortion
could consider either device at higher frequencies.
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External Voltage Reference
For systems that require the analog signal gain to be adjusted or calibrated, this can be performed by using an
external reference. The dependency on the signal amplitude to the value of the external reference voltage is
characterized typically by Figure 35 (VREF = 2.4 V is normalized to 0 dB as this is the internal reference
voltage). As can be seen in the linear fit, this equates to approximately –0.3 dB of signal adjustment per 100 mV
of reference adjustment. The range of allowable variation depends on the analog input amplitude that is applied
to the inputs and the desired spectral performance, as can be seen in the performance versus external reference
graphs in Figure 36 and Figure 37. As the applied analog signal amplitude is reduced, more variation in the
reference voltage is allowed in the positive direction (which equates to a reduction in signal amplitude), whereas
an adjustment in reference voltage below the nominal 2.4 V (which equates to an increase in signal amplitude) is
not recommended below approximately 2.35 V. The power consumption versus reference voltage and operating
temperature should also be considered, especially at high ambient temperatures, because the lifetime of the
device is affected by internal junction temperature, see Figure 50.
For dc-coupled applications that use the VCM pin of the ADS5474 as the common mode of the signal in the
analog signal gain path prior to the ADC inputs, the information in Figure 39 is useful to consider versus the
allowable common-mode range of the device that is receiving the VCM voltage, such as an operational amplifier.
Because it is pin-compatible, it is important to note that the ADS5463 does not have a VCM pin and primarily
uses the VREF pin to provide the common-mode voltage in dc-coupled applications. The ADS5463 (VCM = 2.4
V) and ADS5474 (VCM = 3.1V) do not have the same common-mode voltage. To create a board layout that may
accommodate both devices in dc-coupled applications, route VCM and VREF both to a common point that can
be selected via a switch, jumper, or a 0 Ω resistor.
1.0
90
80
70
60
50
40
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
AIN = -5 dBFS
AIN = -6 dBFS
0.5
AIN = < -1 dBFS
0
Best Fit:
y = -3.14x + 7.5063
AIN = -4 dBFS
-0.5
-1.0
-1.5
-2.0
-2.5
-3.0
AIN = -3 dBFS
AIN = -2 dBFS
AIN = -1 dBFS
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.8
2.9
3.0
3.1
2.05 2.15 2.25 2.35 2.45 2.55 2.65 2.75
2.95 3.05 3.15
2.85
External VREF Applied - V
External VREF Applied - V
Figure 35. Signal Gain Adjustment versus External
Reference (VREF)
Figure 36. SFDR versus External VREF and AIN
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75
70
65
60
55
50
45
40
3.4
3.2
3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4
2.2
2.0
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
AIN = -6 dBFS
AIN = -4 dBFS
AIN = -3 dBFS
AIN = -2 dBFS
AIN = -5 dBFS
AIN = -1 dBFS
2.05 2.15 2.25 2.35 2.45 2.55 2.65 2.75
2.95 3.05 3.15
2.05 2.15 2.25 2.35
2.85
2.45 2.55 2.65 2.75 2.85 2.95 3.05 3.15
External VREF Applied - V
External VREF Applied - V
Figure 37. SNR versus External VREF and AIN
Figure 38. Total Power Consumption versus External
VREF
3.8
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 70 MHz
3.7
3.6
3.5
3.4
3.3
3.2
3.1
3.0
2.9
2.8
2.05 2.15 2.25 2.35 2.45 2.55 2.65 2.75
2.95 3.05 3.15
2.85
External VREF Applied - V
Figure 39. VCM Pin Output versus External VREF
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Clock Inputs
The ADS5474 clock input can be driven with either a differential clock signal or a single-ended clock input. The
characterization of the ADS5474 is typically performed with a 3-VPP differential clock, but the ADC performs well
with a differential clock amplitude down to ~0.5 VPP, as shown in Figure 42. The clock amplitude becomes more
of a factor in performance as the analog input frequency increases. In low-input-frequency applications, where
jitter may not be a big concern, the use of a single-ended clock could save cost and board space without much
performance tradeoff. When clocked with this configuration, it is best to connect CLK to ground with a 0.01-µF
capacitor, while CLK is ac-coupled with a 0.01-µF capacitor to the clock source, as shown in Figure 41.
ADS5474
AVDD5
~ 2.5 nH Bond Wire
CLK
Parasitic
~ 0.2 pF
~ 0.5 pF
Package
~ 200 fF
Bond Pad
1000 W
Internal
Clock
Buffer
GND
~ 2.4 V
AVDD5
GND
Parasitic
~ 0.2 pF
1000 W
~ 2.5 nH Bond Wire
CLK
~ 0.5 pF
Package
~ 200 fF
Bond Pad
GND
S0292-04
Figure 40. Clock Input Circuit
90
fS = 400 MSPS
fIN = 230 MHz
85
80
SFDR (dBc)
Square Wave or
Sine Wave
CLK
CLK
0.01 mF
ADS5474
75
70
65
60
0.01 mF
SNR (dBFS)
0
0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0
Clock Amplitude - VPP
Figure 41. Single-Ended Clock
Figure 42. AC Performance versus Clock Level
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For jitter-sensitive applications, the use of a differential clock has some advantages at the system level. The
differential clock allows for common-mode noise rejection at the printed circuit board (PCB) level. With a
differential clock, the signal-to-noise ratio of the ADC is better for jitter-sensitive, high-frequency applications
because the board level clock jitter is superior.
Larger clock amplitude levels are recommended for high analog input frequencies or slow clock frequencies. In
the case of a sinusoidal clock, larger amplitudes result in higher clock slew rates and reduces the impact of clock
noise on jitter. At high analog input frequencies, the sampling process is sensitive to jitter. And at slow clock
frequencies, a small amplitude sinusoidal clock has a lower slew rate and can create jitter-related SNR
degradation. Figure 43 demonstrates a recommended method for converting a single-ended clock source into a
differential clock; it is similar to the configuration found on the evaluation board and was used for much of the
characterization. See also Clocking High Speed Data Converters (SLYT075) for more details.
0.1 mF
Clock
CLK
Source
ADS5474
CLK
Figure 43. Differential Clock
The common-mode voltage of the clock inputs is set internally to 2.4 V using internal 1-kΩ resistors. It is
recommended to use ac coupling, but if this scheme is not possible, the ADS5474 features good tolerance to
clock common-mode variation (as shown in Figure 44 and Figure 45). Additionally, the internal ADC core uses
both edges of the clock for the conversion process. Ideally, a 50% duty-cycle clock signal should be provided.
Performance degradation as a result of duty cycle can be seen in Figure 46.
90
85
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
75
70
65
60
55
50
10 MHz
230 MHz
70 MHz
10 MHz
70 MHz
351 MHz
351 MHz
230 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
VCLK = 3 VPP
fS = 400 MSPS
VCLK = 3 VPP
4
5
0
1
2
3
Clock Common Mode - V
4
5
0
1
2
3
Clock Common Mode - V
Figure 44. SFDR versus Clock Common Mode
Figure 45. SNR versus Clock Common Mode
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90
fIN = 10 MHz
fIN = 70 MHz
85
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
fIN = 230 MHz
fIN = 300 MHz
fS = 400 MSPS
Clock Input = 3 VPP
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Clock Duty Cycle - %
Figure 46. SFDR vs Clock Duty Cycle
The ADS5474 is capable of achieving 69.2 dBFS SNR at 350 MHz of analog input frequency. In order to achieve
the SNR at 350 MHz the clock source rms jitter must be at least 144 fsec in order for the total rms jitter to be 177
fsec. A summary of maximum recommended rms clock jitter as a function of analog input frequency is provided
in Table 2. The equations used to create the table are also presented.
Table 2. Recommended RMS Clock Jitter
INPUT FREQUENCY
(MHz)
MEASURED SNR
(dBc)
TOTAL JITTER
(fsec rms)
MAXIMUM CLOCK JITTER
(fsec rms)
30
70
69.3
69.1
69.1
68.8
68.2
67.4
65.6
63.7
1818
798
429
251
177
151
111
104
1816
791
417
229
144
110
42
130
230
350
450
750
1000
14
Equation 1 and Equation 2 are used to estimate the required clock source jitter.
SNR (dBc) = -20 ´ LOG10 (2 ´ p ´ fIN ´ jTOTAL
)
(1)
(2)
2
1/2
jTOTAL = (jADC2 + jCLOCK
)
where:
jTOTAL = the rms summation of the clock and ADC aperture jitter;
jADC = the ADC internal aperture jitter which is located in the data sheet;
jCLOCK = the rms jitter of the clock at the clock input pins to the ADC; and
fIN = the analog input frequency.
Notice that the SNR is a strong function of the analog input frequency, not the clock frequency. The slope of the
clock source edges can have a mild impact on SNR as well and is not taken into account for these estimates.
For this reason, maximizing clock source amplitudes at the ADC clock inputs is recommended, though not
required (faster slope is desirable for jitter-related SNR). For more information on clocking high-speed ADCs, see
Application Note SLWA034, Implementing a CDC7005 Low Jitter Clock Solution For High-Speed, High-IF ADC
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Devices, on the Texas Instruments web site. Recommended clock distribution chips (CDCs) are the TI
CDC7005, the CDCM7005 and CDCE72010. Depending on the jitter requirements, a band pass filter (BPF) is
sometimes required between the CDC and the ADC. If the insertion loss of the BPF causes the clock amplitude
to be too low for the ADC, or the clock source amplitude is too low to begin with, an inexpensive amplifier can be
placed between the CDC and the BPF.
Figure 47 represents a scenario where an LVCMOS single-ended clock output is used from a TI CDCM7005 with
the clock signal path optimized for maximum amplitude and minimum jitter. This type of conditioning might
generally be well-suited for use with greater than 150 MHz of input frequency. The jitter of this setup is difficult to
estimate and requires a careful phase noise analysis of the clock path. The BPF (and possibly a low-cost
amplifier because of insertion loss in the BPF) can improve the jitter between the CDC and ADC when the jitter
provided by the CDC is still not adequate. The total jitter at the CDCM7005 output depends largely on the phase
noise of the VCXO selected, as well as the CDCM7005, and typically has 50–100 fs of rms jitter. If it is
determined that the jitter from the CDCM7005 with a VCXO is sufficient without further conditioning, it is possible
to clock the ADS5474 directly from the CDCM7005 using differential LVPECL outputs, as illustrated in Figure 48
(see the CDCM7005 data sheet for the exact schematic). This scenario may be more suitable for less than 150
MHz of input frequency where jitter is not as critical. A careful analysis of the required jitter is recommended
before determining the proper approach.
Low-Jitter Clock Distribution
AMP and/or BPF are Optional
Board Master
Reference Clock
CLKIN
BPF
LVCMOS
AMP
XFMR
REF
(high or low jitter)
10 MHz
CLKIN
400 MHz
ADC
800 MHz (to transmit DAC)
100 MHz (to DSP)
ADS5474
LVPECL
or
LVCMOS
Low-Jitter Oscillator
800 MHz
200 MHz (to FPGA)
To Other
VCXO
CDC
(Clock Distribution Chip)
CDCM7005
This is an example block diagram.
Consult the CDCM7005 data sheet for proper schematic and specifications regarding allowable input and output
frequency and amplitude ranges.
Figure 47. Optimum Jitter Clock Circuit
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Low-Jitter Clock Distribution
400 MHz
Board Master
Reference Clock
(high or low jitter)
10 MHz
CLKIN
CLKIN
LVPECL
REF
ADC
800 MHz (to transmit DAC)
100 MHz (to DSP)
ADS5474
LVPECL
or
LVCMOS
Low-Jitter Oscillator
800 MHz
200 MHz (to FPGA)
To Other
VCXO
CDC
(Clock Distribution Chip)
CDCM7005
This is an example block diagram.
Consult the CDCM7005 data sheet for proper schematic and specifications regarding allowable input and output
frequency and amplitude ranges.
Figure 48. Acceptable Jitter Clock Circuit
Digital Outputs
The ADC provides 14 LVDS-compatible, offset binary data outputs (D13 to D0; D13 is the MSB and D0 is the
LSB), a data-ready signal (DRY), and an over-range indicator (OVR). It is recommended to use the DRY signal
to capture the output data of the ADS5474. DRY is source-synchronous to the DATA/OVR outputs and operates
at the same frequency, creating a half-rate DDR interface that updates data on both the rising and falling edges
of DRY. It is recommended that the capacitive loading on the digital outputs be minimized. Higher capacitance
shortens the data-valid timing window. The values given for timing (see Figure 1) were obtained with a measured
10-pF parasitic board capacitance to ground on each LVDS line (or 5-pF differential parasitic capacitance). When
setting the time relationship between DRY and DATA at the receiving device, it is generally recommended that
setup time be maximized, but this partially depends on the setup and hold times of the device receiving the
digital data (like an FPGA or Field Programmable Field Array). Since DRY and DATA are coincident, it will likely
be necessary to delay either DRY or DATA such that setup time is maximized.
Referencing Figure 1, the polarity of DRY with respect to the sample N data output transition is undetermined
because of the unknown startup logic level of the clock divider that generates the DRY signal (DRY is a
frequency divide-by-two of CLK). Either the rising or the falling edge of DRY will be coincident with sample N and
the polarity of DRY could invert when power is cycled off/on or when the power-down pin is cycled. Data capture
from the transition and not the polarity of DRY is recommended, but not required. If the synchronization of
multiple ADS5474 devices is required, it might be necessary to use a form of the CLKIN signal rather than DRY
to capture the data.
The DRY frequency is identical on the ADS5474 to the ADS5463 (where DRY equals CLK frequency), but
different than it is on the pin-similar ADS5444/ADS5440 (where DRY equals the CLK frequency). The LVDS
outputs all require an external 100-Ω load between each output pair in order to meet the expected LVDS voltage
levels. For long trace lengths, it may be necessary to place a 100-Ω load on each digital output as close to the
ADS5474 as possible and another 100-Ω differential load at the end of the LVDS transmission line to provide
matched impedance and avoid signal reflections. The effective load in this case reduces the LVDS voltage levels
by half.
The OVR output equals a logic high when the 14-bit output word attempts to exceed either all 0s or all 1s. This
flag is provided as an indicator that the analog input signal exceeded the full-scale input limit of approximately
2.2 VPP (± gain error). The OVR indicator is provided for systems that use gain control to keep the analog input
signal within acceptable limits.
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Power Supplies
The ADS5474 uses three power supplies. For the analog portion of the design, a 5-V and 3.3-V supply (AVDD5
and AVDD3) are used, while the digital portion uses a 3.3-V supply (DVDD3). The use of low-noise power
supplies with adequate decoupling is recommended. Linear supplies are preferred to switched supplies; switched
supplies tend to generate more noise components that can be coupled to the ADS5474. However, the PSRR
value and the plot shown in Figure 49 were obtained without bulk supply decoupling capacitors. When bulk (0.1
µF) decoupling capacitors are used, the board-level PSRR is much higher than the stated value for the ADC. The
user may be able to supply power to the device with a less-than-ideal supply and still achieve good performance.
It is not possible to make a single recommendation for every type of supply and level of decoupling for all
systems. If the noise characteristics of the available supplies are understood, a study of the PSRR data for the
ADS5474 may provide the user with enough information to select noisy supplies if the performance is still
acceptable within the frequency range of interest. The power consumption of the ADS5474 does not change
substantially over clock rate or input frequency as a result of the architecture and process. The DVDD3 PSRR is
superior to both the AVDD5 and AVDD3 so was not graphed.
Because there are two diodes connected in reverse between AVDD3 and DVDD3 internally, a power-up
sequence is recommended. When there is a delay in power up between these two supplies, the one that lags
could have current sinking through an internal diode before it powers up. The sink current can be large or small
depending on the impedance of the external supply and could damage the device or affect the supply source.
The best power up sequence is one of the following options (regardless of when AVDD5 powers up):
1) Power up both AVDD3 and DVDD3 at the same time (best scenario), OR
2) Keep the voltage difference less than 0.8V between AVDD3 and DVDD3 during the power up (0.8V is not a
hard specification - a smaller delta between supplies is safer).
If the above sequences are not practical then the sink current from the supply needs to be controlled or
protection added externally. The max transient current (on the order of µsec) for DVDD3 or AVDD3 pin is 500mA
to avoid potential damage to the device or reduce its lifetime.
Values for analog and clock input given in the Absolute Maximum Ratings are valid when the supplies are on.
When the power supplies are off and the clock or analog inputs are still alive, the input voltage and current needs
to be limited to avoid device damage. If the ADC supplies are off, the max/min continuous DC voltage is +/- 0.95
V and max DC current is 20 mA for each input pin (clock or analog), relative to ground.
0
fS = 400 MSPS
-10
-20
-30
-40
AVDD5
-50
-60
-70
-80
AVDD3
-90
-100
-110
DVDD3
-120
100 k
1 M
10 M
100 M
1 G
Frequency - Hz
Figure 49. PSRR versus Supply Injected Frequency
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Operational Lifetime
It is important for applications that anticipate running continuously for long periods of time near the
maximum-rated ambient temperature of +85°C to consider the data shown in Figure 50. Referring to the Thermal
Characteristics table, the worst-case operating condition with no airflow has a thermal rise of 23.7°C/W. At
approximately 2.5 W of normal power dissipation, at a maximum ambient of +85°C with no airflow, the junction
temperature of the ADS5474 reaches approximately +85°C + 23.7°C/W × 2.5 W = +144°C. Being even more
conservative and accounting for the maximum possible power dissipation that is ensured (2.797 W), the junction
temperature becomes nearly +150°C. As Figure 50 shows, this performance limits the expected lifetime of the
ADS5474. Operation at +85°C continuously may require airflow or an additional heatsink in order to decrease the
internal junction temperature and increase the expected lifetime (because of electromigration failures). An airflow
of 250 LFM (linear feet per minute) reduces the thermal resistance to 16.4°C/W and, therefore, the maximum
junction temperature to +131°C, assuming a worst-case of 2.797 W and +85°C ambient.
The ADS5474 performance over temperature is quite good and can be seen starting in Figure 21. Though the
typical plots show good performance at +100°C, the device is only rated from –40°C to +85°C. For continuous
operation at temperatures near or above the maximum, the expected primary negative effect is a shorter device
lifetime because of the electromigration failures at high junction temperatures. The maximum recommended
continuous junction temperature is +150°C.
1000
100
10
1
80
90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180
Continuous Junction Temperature - °C
Figure 50. Operating Life Derating Chart, Electromigration Fail Mode
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Layout Information
The evaluation board represents a good model of how to lay out the printed circuit board (PCB) to obtain the
maximum performance from the ADS5474. Follow general design rules, such as the use of multilayer boards, a
single ground plane for ADC ground connections, and local decoupling ceramic chip capacitors. The analog input
traces should be isolated from any external source of interference or noise, including the digital outputs as well
as the clock traces. The clock signal traces should also be isolated from other signals, especially in applications
such as high IF sampling where low jitter is required. Besides performance-oriented rules, care must be taken
when considering the heat dissipation of the device. The thermal heatsink included on the bottom of the package
should be soldered to the board as described in the PowerPad Package section. See the ADS5474 EVM User
Guide (SLAU194) on the TI web site for the evaluation board schematic.
PowerPAD Package
The PowerPAD package is a thermally-enhanced, standard-size IC package designed to eliminate the use of
bulky heatsinks and slugs traditionally used in thermal packages. This package can be easily mounted using
standard PCB assembly techniques, and can be removed and replaced using standard repair procedures.
The PowerPAD package is designed so that the leadframe die pad (or thermal pad) is exposed on the bottom of
the IC. This pad design provides an extremely low thermal resistance path between the die and the exterior of
the package. The thermal pad on the bottom of the IC can then be soldered directly to the PCB, using the PCB
as a heatsink.
Assembly Process
1. Prepare the PCB top-side etch pattern including etch for the leads as well as the thermal pad as illustrated in
the Mechanical Data section (at the end of this data sheet).
2. Place a 6-by-6 array of thermal vias in the thermal pad area. These holes should be 13 mils (0.013 in or
0.3302 mm) in diameter. The small size prevents wicking of the solder through the holes.
3. It is recommended to place a small number of 25 mil (0.025 in or 0.635 mm) diameter holes under the
package, but outside the thermal pad area, to provide an additional heat path.
4. Connect all holes (both those inside and outside the thermal pad area) to an internal copper plane (such as a
ground plane).
5. Do not use the typical web or spoke via-connection pattern when connecting the thermal vias to the ground
plane. The spoke pattern increases the thermal resistance to the ground plane.
6. The top-side solder mask should leave exposed the terminals of the package and the thermal pad area.
7. Cover the entire bottom side of the PowerPAD vias to prevent solder wicking.
8. Apply solder paste to the exposed thermal pad area and all of the package terminals.
For more detailed information regarding the PowerPAD package and its thermal properties, see either the
PowerPAD Made Easy application brief (SLMA004) or the PowerPAD Thermally Enhanced Package application
report (SLMA002), both available for download at www.ti.com.
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DEFINITION OF SPECIFICATIONS
The injected frequency level is translated into dBFS,
the spur in the output FFT is measured in dBFS, and
the difference is the PSRR in dB. The measurement
calibrates out the benefit of the board supply
decoupling capacitors.
Analog Bandwidth
The analog input frequency at which the power of the
fundamental is reduced by 3 dB with respect to the
low-frequency value.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)
Aperture Delay
SNR is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS)
to the noise floor power (PN), excluding the power at
dc and in the first five harmonics.
The delay in time between the rising edge of the input
sampling clock and the actual time at which the
sampling occurs.
P
10
P
S
SNR + 10log
Aperture Uncertainty (Jitter)
The sample-to-sample variation in aperture delay.
N
(4)
SNR is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier)
when the absolute power of the fundamental is used
as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the
power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the
converter full-scale range.
Clock Pulse Duration/Duty Cycle
The duty cycle of a clock signal is the ratio of the time
the clock signal remains at a logic high (clock pulse
duration) to the period of the clock signal, expressed
as a percentage.
Signal-to-Noise and Distortion (SINAD)
SINAD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental
(PS) to the power of all the other spectral components
including noise (PN) and distortion (PD), but excluding
dc.
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
An ideal ADC exhibits code transitions at analog input
values spaced exactly 1 LSB apart. DNL is the
deviation of any single step from this ideal value,
measured in units of LSB.
P
S
Common-Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR)
SINAD + 10log
10
P
) P
CMRR measures the ability to reject signals that are
presented to both analog inputs simultaneously. The
injected common-mode frequency level is translated
into dBFS, the spur in the output FFT is measured in
dBFS, and the difference is the CMRR in dB.
N
D
(5)
SINAD is either given in units of dBc (dB to carrier)
when the absolute power of the fundamental is used
as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the
power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the
converter full-scale range.
Effective Number of Bits (ENOB)
ENOB is a measure in units of bits of converter
performance as compared to the theoretical limit
based on quantization noise:
Temperature Drift
Temperature drift (with respect to gain error and
offset error) specifies the change from the value at
ENOB = (SINAD – 1.76)/6.02
the nominal temperature to the value at TMIN or TMAX
.
It is computed as the maximum variation the
parameters over the whole temperature range divided
Gain Error
Gain error is the deviation of the ADC actual input
full-scale range from its ideal value, given as a
percentage of the ideal input full-scale range.
by TMIN – TMAX
.
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
THD is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (PS)
to the power of the first five harmonics (PD).
Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
INL is the deviation of the ADC transfer function from
a best-fit line determined by a least-squares curve fit
of that transfer function. The INL at each analog input
value is the difference between the actual transfer
function and this best-fit line, measured in units of
LSB.
P
10
P
S
THD + 10log
D
(6)
THD is typically given in units of dBc (dB to carrier).
Two-Tone Intermodulation Distortion (IMD3)
IMD3 is the ratio of the power of the fundamental (at
frequencies f1, f2) to the power of the worst spectral
component at either frequency 2f1 – f2 or 2f2 – f1).
IMD3 is given in units of either dBc (dB to carrier)
when the absolute power of the fundamental is used
as the reference, or dBFS (dB to full-scale) when the
power of the fundamental is extrapolated to the
converter full-scale range.
Offset Error
Offset error is the deviation of output code from
mid-code when both inputs
common-mode.
are tied to
Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR)
PSRR is a measure of the ability to reject frequencies
present on the power supply.
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
7-Aug-2008
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
ADS5474IPFP
Status (1)
ACTIVE
ACTIVE
ACTIVE
ACTIVE
Package Package
Pins Package Eco Plan (2) Lead/Ball Finish MSL Peak Temp (3)
Qty
Type
Drawing
HTQFP
PFP
80
80
80
80
96 Green (RoHS & CU NIPDAU Level-4-260C-72 HR
no Sb/Br)
ADS5474IPFPG4
ADS5474IPFPR
ADS5474IPFPRG4
HTQFP
HTQFP
HTQFP
PFP
PFP
PFP
96 Green (RoHS & CU NIPDAU Level-4-260C-72 HR
no Sb/Br)
1000 Green (RoHS & CU NIPDAU Level-4-260C-72 HR
no Sb/Br)
1000 Green (RoHS & CU NIPDAU Level-4-260C-72 HR
no Sb/Br)
(1) The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in
a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check
http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements
for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered
at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and
package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS
compatible) as defined above.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame
retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder
temperature.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is
provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the
accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and continues to take
reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on
incoming materials and chemicals. TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited
information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI
to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
26-Jan-2009
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Package Pins
Type Drawing
SPQ
Reel
Reel
A0 (mm)
B0 (mm)
K0 (mm)
P1
W
Pin1
Diameter Width
(mm) W1 (mm)
(mm) (mm) Quadrant
ADS5474IPFPR
HTQFP
PFP
80
1000
330.0
24.4
15.0
15.0
1.5
20.0
24.0
Q2
Pack Materials-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
26-Jan-2009
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Type Package Drawing Pins
HTQFP PFP 80
SPQ
Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm)
346.0 346.0 41.0
ADS5474IPFPR
1000
Pack Materials-Page 2
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Following are URLs where you can obtain information on other Texas Instruments products and application solutions:
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Applications
Audio
Amplifiers
amplifier.ti.com
dataconverter.ti.com
www.dlp.com
www.ti.com/audio
Data Converters
DLP® Products
Automotive
www.ti.com/automotive
www.ti.com/communications
Communications and
Telecom
DSP
dsp.ti.com
Computers and
Peripherals
www.ti.com/computers
Clocks and Timers
Interface
www.ti.com/clocks
interface.ti.com
logic.ti.com
Consumer Electronics
Energy
www.ti.com/consumer-apps
www.ti.com/energy
Logic
Industrial
www.ti.com/industrial
Power Mgmt
Microcontrollers
RFID
power.ti.com
Medical
www.ti.com/medical
microcontroller.ti.com
www.ti-rfid.com
Security
www.ti.com/security
Space, Avionics &
Defense
www.ti.com/space-avionics-defense
RF/IF and ZigBee® Solutions www.ti.com/lprf
Video and Imaging
Wireless
www.ti.com/video
www.ti.com/wireless-apps
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