SNAS466G February 2009 – December 2016 ADC10D1000QML-SP
PRODUCTION DATA.
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APERTURE (SAMPLING) DELAY is the amount of delay, measured from the sampling edge of the CLK input, after which the signal present at the input pin is sampled inside the device.
APERTURE JITTER (tAJ) is the variation in aperture delay from sample-to-sample. Aperture jitter can be effectively considered as noise at the input.
CODE ERROR RATE (C.E.R.) is the probability of error and is defined as the probable number of word errors on the ADC output per unit of time divided by the number of words seen in that amount of time. A CER of 10-18 corresponds to a statistical error in one word about every four (4) years.
CLOCK DUTY CYCLE is the ratio of the time that the clock waveform is at a logic high to the total time of one clock period.
DIFFERENTIAL NON-LINEARITY (DNL) is the measure of the maximum deviation from the ideal step size of 1 LSB. It is measured at sample rate = 500 MSPS with a 1-MHz input sine wave.
EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB, or EFFECTIVE BITS) is another method of specifying Signal-to-Noise and Distortion Ratio, or SINAD. ENOB is defined as (SINAD − 1.76) / 6.02 and states that the converter is equivalent to a perfect ADC of this many (ENOB) number of bits.
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH (FPBW) is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output fundamental drops to 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full-scale input.
GAIN ERROR is the deviation from the ideal slope of the transfer function. It can be calculated from Offset and Full-Scale Errors. The Positive Gain Error is the Offset Error minus the Positive Full-Scale Error. The Negative Gain Error is the Negative Full-Scale Error minus the Offset Error. The Gain Error is the Negative Full-Scale Error minus the Positive Full-Scale Error; it is also equal to the Positive Gain Error plus the Negative Gain Error.
INTEGRAL NON-LINEARITY (INL) is a measure of worst case deviation of the ADC transfer function from an ideal straight line drawn through the ADC transfer function. The deviation of any given code from this straight line is measured from the center of that code value step. The best fit method is used.
INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD) is the creation of additional spectral components as a result of two sinusoidal frequencies being applied to the ADC input at the same time. It is defined as the ratio of the power in the second and third order intermodulation products to the power in one of the original frequencies. IMD is usually expressed in dBFS.
LSB (LEAST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight of all bits. This value is
where VFS is the differential full-scale amplitude VIN as set by the FSR input and "N" is the ADC resolution in bits, which is 10 for the ADC10D1000.
LOW VOLTAGE DIFFERENTIAL SIGNALING (LVDS) DIFFERENTIAL OUTPUT VOLTAGE (VID and VOD) is two times the absolute value of the difference between the VD+ and VD– signals; each measured with respect to Ground.
LVDS OUTPUT OFFSET VOLTAGE (VOS) is the midpoint between the D+ and D– pins output voltage with respect to ground; that is, [(VD+) +( VD-)]/2. See Figure 53.
MISSING CODES are those output codes that are skipped and will never appear at the ADC outputs. These codes cannot be reached with any input value.
MSB (MOST SIGNIFICANT BIT) is the bit that has the largest value or weight. Its value is one half of full scale.
NEGATIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (NFSE) is a measure of how far the first code transition is from the ideal 1/2 LSB above a differential −VIN/2 with the FSR pin low. For the ADC10D1000 the reference voltage is assumed to be ideal, so this error is a combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
NOISE POWER RATIO (NPR) is the ratio of the sum of the power inside the notched bins to the sum of the power in an equal number of bins outside the notch, expressed in dB.
OFFSET ERROR (VOFF) is a measure of how far the mid-scale point is from the ideal zero voltage differential input. Offset Error = Actual Input causing average of 8k samples to result in an average code of 511.5.
OUTPUT DELAY (tOD) is the time delay (in addition to Pipeline Delay) after the falling edge of CLK+ before the data update is present at the output pins.
OVER-RANGE RECOVERY TIME is the time required after the differential input voltages goes from ±1.2 V to 0 V for the converter to recover and make a conversion with its rated accuracy.
PIPELINE DELAY (LATENCY) is the number of input clock cycles between initiation of conversion and when that data is presented to the output driver stage. New data is available at every clock cycle, but the data lags the conversion by the Pipeline Delay plus the tOD.
POSITIVE FULL-SCALE ERROR (PFSE) is a measure of how far the last code transition is from the ideal 1-1/2 LSB below a differential +VIN/2. For the ADC10D1000 the reference voltage is assumed to be ideal, so this error is a combination of full-scale error and reference voltage error.
POWER SUPPLY REJECTION RATIO (PSRR) is the ratio of the change in full-scale error that results from a power supply voltage change from 1.8 V to 2 V. PSRR is expressed in dB.
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO (SNR) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the RMS value of the input signal at the output to the RMS value of the sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, not including harmonics or DC.
SIGNAL-TO-NOISE PLUS DISTORTION (S/(N+D) or SINAD) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the RMS value of the input signal at the output to the RMS value of all of the other spectral components below half the input clock frequency, including harmonics but excluding DC.
SPURIOUS-FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the RMS values of the input signal at the output and the peak spurious signal, where a spurious signal is any signal present in the output spectrum that is not present at the input, excluding DC.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD) is the ratio expressed in dB, of the RMS total of the first nine harmonic levels at the output to the level of the fundamental at the output. THD is calculated as
where Af1 is the RMS power of the fundamental (output) frequency and Af2 through Af10 are the RMS power of the first 9 harmonic frequencies in the output spectrum.
– Second Harmonic Distortion (2nd Harm) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the RMS power in the input frequency seen at the output and the power in its 2nd harmonic level at the output.
– Third Harmonic Distortion (3rd Harm) is the difference expressed in dB between the RMS power in the input frequency seen at the output and the power in its 3rd harmonic level at the output.
The table below lists quick access links. Categories include technical documents, support and community resources, tools and software, and quick access to sample or buy.
PARTS | PRODUCT FOLDER | SAMPLE & BUY | TECHNICAL DOCUMENTS | TOOLS & SOFTWARE | SUPPORT & COMMUNITY |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ADC10D1000CCMLS | Click here | Click here | Click here | Click here | Click here |
ADC10D1000CVAL | Click here | Click here | Click here | Click here | Click here |
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SLYZ022 — TI Glossary.
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