SBAS860 August 2017 ADC31RF80
PRODUCTION DATA.
NOTE
Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.
The steps in Table 127 are recommended as the power-up sequence when the ADC31RF80 is in the decimation-by-4 complex output mode.
STEP | DESCRIPTION | PAGE, REGISTER ADDRESS AND DATA | COMMENT |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Supply all supply voltages. There is no required power-supply sequence for the 1.15 V, 1.2 V, and 1.9 V supplies, and can be supplied in any order. | — | — |
2 | Provide the SYSREF signal. | — | — |
3 | Pulse a hardware reset (low-to-high-to-low) on pins 33 and 34. | — | — |
4 | Write the register addresses described in the PowerUpConfig file. | See the files located in SBAA226 | The Power-up config file contains analog trim registers that are required for best performance of the ADC. Write these registers every time after power up. |
5 | Write the register addresses mentioned in the ILConfigNyqX file, where X is the Nyquist zone. | See the files located in SBAA226 | Based on the signal band of interest, provide the Nyquist zone information to the device. |
6.1 | Wait for 50 ms for the device to estimate the interleaving errors. | — | — |
7 | Depending upon the Nyquist band of operation, choose and write the registers from the appropriate file, NLConfigNyqX, where X is the Nyquist zone. | See the files located in SBAA226 | Third-order nonlinearity of the device is optimized by this step for channel A. |
8 | Configure the JESD interface and DDC block by writing the registers mentioned in the DDC Config file. | See the files located in SBAA226 | Determine the DDC and JESD interface LMFS options. Program these options in this step. |
Figure 262 and Table 128 provide the timing information for the hardware reset.
MIN | TYP | MAX | UNIT | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
t1 | Power-on delay from power-up to active high RESET pulse | 1 | ms | ||
t2 | Reset pulse duration: active high RESET pulse duration | 1 | µs | ||
t3 | Register write delay from RESET disable to SEN active | 100 | ns |
The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the ADC is limited by three different factors, as shown in Equation 5: quantization noise, thermal noise, and jitter. The quantization noise is typically not noticeable in pipeline converters and is 84 dB for a 14-bit ADC. The thermal noise limits the SNR at low input frequencies and the clock jitter sets the SNR for higher input frequencies.
Equation 6 calculates the SNR limitation resulting from sample clock jitter:
The total clock jitter (TJitter) has two components: the internal aperture jitter (90 fS) is set by the noise of the clock input buffer and the external clock jitter. Equation 7 calculates TJitter:
External clock jitter can be minimized by using high-quality clock sources and jitter cleaners as well as band-pass filters at the clock input. A faster clock slew rate also improves the ADC aperture jitter.
The ADC31RF80 has a thermal noise of approximately 63 dBFS and an internal aperture jitter of 90 fS. Figure 263 shows the SNR in relation to the amount of external jitter for different input frequencies.
As shown in Figure 264, external clock jitter can be calculated by integrating the phase noise of the clock source out to approximately two times of the ADC sampling rate (2 × fS), . In order to maximize the ADC SNR, an external band-pass filter is recommended to be used on the clock input. This filter reduces the jitter contribution from the broadband clock phase noise floor by effectively reducing the integration bandwidth to the pass band of the band-pass filter. This method is suitable when estimating the overall ADC SNR resulting from clock jitter at a certain input frequency.
However, when estimating the affect of a nearby blocker (such as a strong in-band interferer to the sensitivity), as shown in Figure 265, the phase noise information can be used directly to estimate the noise budget contribution at a certain offset frequency.
At the sampling instant, the phase noise profile of the clock source convolves with the input signal (for example, the small wanted signal and the strong interferer merge together). If the power of the clock phase noise in the signal band of interest is too large, the wanted signal cannot not be recovered.
The resulting equivalent phase noise at the ADC input is also dependent on the sampling rate of the ADC and frequency of the input signal. Equation 8 shows how the ADC sampling rate scales the clock phase noise.
Using this information, the noise contribution resulting from the phase noise profile of the ADC sampling clock can be calculated.
The ADC31RF80 consumes approximately 4 W with a divide-by-4 complex output. When different DDC options are used, the power consumption on the DVDD supply changes by a small amount but remains unaffected on other supplies.
Table 129 and Table 130 show power consumption in different DDC modes.
DECIMATION OPTION | ACTIVE DDC | AVDD1P9 (mA) | AVDD1P2 (mA) | DVDD1P2 (mA) | TOTAL POWER (mW) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Divide-by-4 | Single | 914 | 447 | 817 | 3190 |
Divide-by-8 | Dual | 913 | 449 | 890 | 3275 |
Divide-by-8 | Single | 914 | 449 | 789 | 3160 |
Divide-by-16 | Dual | 914 | 450 | 880 | 3266 |
Divide-by-16 | Single | 914 | 449 | 777 | 3147 |
Divide-by-24 | Dual | 911 | 450 | 864 | 3242 |
Divide-by-24 | Single | 911 | 449 | 747 | 3106 |
Divide-by-32 | Dual | 910 | 450 | 810 | 3178 |
Divide-by-32 | Single | 910 | 449 | 710 | 3062 |
DECIMATION OPTION | ACTIVE DDC | AVDD1P9 (mA) | AVDD1P2 (mA) | DVDD1P2 (mA) | TOTAL POWER (mW) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Divide-by-4 | Single | 956 | 499 | 975 | 3512 |
Divide-by-8 | Dual | 957 | 500 | 1060 | 3612 |
Divide-by-8 | Single | 957 | 500 | 945 | 3480 |
Divide-by-16 | Dual | 958 | 525 | 1061 | 3644 |
Divide-by-16 | Single | 958 | 524 | 938 | 3502 |
Divide-by-24 | Dual | 955 | 524 | 1027 | 3598 |
Divide-by-24 | Single | 955 | 523 | 904 | 3456 |
Divide-by-32 | Dual | 954 | 523 | 976 | 3536 |
Divide-by-32 | Single | 954 | 522 | 860 | 3402 |
The ADC31RF80 can be used in dc-coupling applications. However, the following points must be considered when designing the system:
The analog inputs are internally self-biased to VCM through approximately a 33-Ω resistor. The internal biasing resistors also function as a termination resistor. However, if a different termination is required, as shown in Figure 266, the external resistor RTERM can be differentially placed between the analog inputs. The amplifier VOCM pin is recommended to be driven from the CM pin of the ADC to help the amplifier output common-mode voltage track the required common-mode voltage of the ADC.
As shown in Figure 267, the ADC31RF80 has a digital block that estimates and corrects the offset mismatch among four interleaving ADC cores.
The offset corrector block nullifies dc, fS / 8, fS / 4, 3 fS / 8, and fS / 2. The resulting spectrum becomes free from static spurs at these frequencies. The corrector continuously processes the data coming from the interleaving ADC cores and cannot distinguish if the tone at these frequencies is part of signal or if the tone originated from a mismatch among the interleaving ADC cores. Thus, in applications where the signal is present at these frequencies, the offset corrector block can be bypassed.
When the offset corrector is bypassed, offset mismatch among interleaving ADC cores appears in the ADC output spectrum. To correct the effects of mismatch, place the ADC in an idle channel state (no signal at the ADC inputs) and the corrector must be allowed to run for some time to estimate the mismatch, then the corrector is frozen so that the last estimated value is held. Required register writes are provided in Table 131.
STEP | REGISTER WRITE | COMMENT |
---|---|---|
STEPS FOR FREEZING THE CORRECTOR BLOCK | ||
1 | — | Signal source is turned off. The device detects an idle channel at its input. |
2 | — | Wait for at least 0.4 ms for the corrector to estimate the internal offset |
3 | Address 4001h, value 00h | Select the offset corr page |
Address 4002h, value 00h | ||
Address 4003h, value 00h | ||
Address 4004h, value 61h | ||
Address 6068h, value C2h | Freeze the corrector | |
4 | — | Signal source can now be turned on |
STEPS FOR BYPASSING THE CORRECTOR BLOCK | ||
1 | Address 4001h, value 00h | — |
Address 4002h, value 00h | ||
Address 4003h, value 00h | ||
Address 4004h, value 61h | Select the offset corr page | |
Address 6068h, value 46h | Disable the corrector |
Figure 268 and Figure 269 show the behavior of nfS / 8 tones with respect to temperature when the offset corrector block is frozen or disabled.
The ADC31RF80 is designed for wideband receiver applications demanding high dynamic range over a large input frequency range. Figure 270 shows a typical schematic for an ac-coupled receiver.
Decoupling capacitors with low ESL are recommended to be placed as close as possible at the pins indicated in Figure 270. Additional capacitors can be placed on the remaining power pins.
Typical applications involving transformer-coupled circuits are discussed in this section. To ensure good amplitude and phase balance at the analog inputs, transformers (such as TC1-1-13 and TC1-1-43) can be used from the dc to 1000-MHz range and from the 1000-MHz to 4-GHz range of input frequencies, respectively. When designing the driving circuits, the ADC input impedance (or SDD11) must be considered.
By using the simple drive circuit of Figure 271, uniform performance can be obtained over a wide frequency range. The buffers present at the analog inputs of the device help isolate the external drive source from the switching currents of the sampling circuit.
For optimum performance, the analog inputs must be driven differentially. This architecture improves common-mode noise immunity and even-order harmonic rejection. A small resistor (5 Ω to 10 Ω) in series with each input pin, as shown in Figure 271, is recommended to damp out ringing caused by package parasitics.
Figure 272 and Figure 273 show the typical performance at 100 MHz and 1780 MHz, respectively.
SNR = 61.8 dBFS, SINAD = 61.2 dBFS, HD2 = 71 dBc, HD3 = 75 dBc, SFDR = 71 dBc, THD = 68 dBc, IL spur = 77 dBc, worst spur = 73 dBc |
SNR = 57.9 dBFS, SINAD = 57.1 dBFS, HD2 = 63 dBc, HD3 = 66 dBc, SFDR = 63 dBc, THD = 60 dBc, IL spur = 79 dBc, worst spur = 77 dBc |