SBAS556B October   2013  – August 2014 ADS7254 , ADS7854 , ADS8354

PRODUCTION DATA.  

  1. Features
  2. Applications
  3. Description
  4. Revision History
  5. Device Comparison Table
  6. Pin Configurations and Functions
  7. Specifications
    1. 7.1  Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2  Handling Ratings
    3. 7.3  Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 7.4  Thermal Information
    5. 7.5  Electrical Characteristics: ADS8354
    6. 7.6  Electrical Characteristics: ADS7854
    7. 7.7  Electrical Characteristics: ADS7254
    8. 7.8  Electrical Characteristics: All Devices
    9. 7.9  Timing Requirements: Interface Mode
    10. 7.10 Timing Characteristics: Serial Interface
    11. 7.11 Typical Characteristics: ADS8354
    12. 7.12 Typical Characteristics: ADS7854
    13. 7.13 Typical Characteristics: ADS7254
    14. 7.14 Typical Characteristics: Common to ADS8354, ADS7854, and ADS7254
  8. Detailed Description
    1. 8.1 Overview
    2. 8.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 8.3 Feature Description
      1. 8.3.1 Reference
      2. 8.3.2 Analog Inputs
        1. 8.3.2.1 Analog Input: Full-Scale Range Selection
        2. 8.3.2.2 Analog Input: Common-Mode Voltage Range
      3. 8.3.3 Transfer Function
    4. 8.4 Device Functional Modes
    5. 8.5 Register Maps and Serial Interface
      1. 8.5.1 Serial Interface
      2. 8.5.2 Write to User Programmable Registers
        1. 8.5.2.1 Configuration Register (CFR)
        2. 8.5.2.2 REFDAC Registers (REFDAC_A and REFDAC_B)
      3. 8.5.3 Data Read Operation
        1. 8.5.3.1 Reading User-Programmable Registers
        2. 8.5.3.2 Conversion Data Read
          1. 8.5.3.2.1 32-CLK, Dual-SDO Mode (CFR.B11 = 0, CFR.B10 = 0, Default)
          2. 8.5.3.2.2 32-CLK, Single-SDO Mode (CFR.B11 = 0, CFR.B10 = 1)
          3. 8.5.3.2.3 16-CLK, Dual-SDO Mode (CFR.B11 = 1, CFR.B10 = 0)
          4. 8.5.3.2.4 16-CLK, Single-SDO Mode (CFR.B11 = 1, CFR.B10 = 1)
      4. 8.5.4 Low-Power Modes
        1. 8.5.4.1 STANDBY Mode
        2. 8.5.4.2 Software Power-Down (SPD) Mode
      5. 8.5.5 Frame Abort, Reconversion, or Short-Cycling
  9. Application and Implementation
    1. 9.1 Application Information
      1. 9.1.1 Input Amplifier Selection
      2. 9.1.2 Antialiasing Filter
    2. 9.2 Typical Applications
      1. 9.2.1 DAQ Circuit to Achieve Maximum SINAD for a 10-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput
        1. 9.2.1.1 Design Requirements
        2. 9.2.1.2 Detailed Design Procedure
        3. 9.2.1.3 Application Curves
      2. 9.2.2 DAQ Circuit to Achieve Maximum SINAD for a 100-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput
        1. 9.2.2.1 Design Requirements
        2. 9.2.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
        3. 9.2.2.3 Application Curves
  10. 10Power-Supply Recommendations
  11. 11Layout
    1. 11.1 Layout Guidelines
    2. 11.2 Layout Example
  12. 12Device and Documentation Support
    1. 12.1 Related Links
    2. 12.2 Related Documentation
    3. 12.3 Trademarks
    4. 12.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    5. 12.5 Glossary
  13. 13Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

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9 Application and Implementation

9.1 Application Information

The two primary circuits required to maximize the performance of a high-precision, successive approximation register (SAR), analog-to-digital converter (ADC) are the input driver and the reference driver circuits. This section details some general principles for designing these circuits, and some application circuits designed using these devices.

The device supports operation either with an internal or external reference source. Refer to the Reference section for details about the decoupling requirements.

The reference source to the ADC must provide low-drift and very accurate dc voltage and support the dynamic charge requirements without affecting the noise and linearity performance of the device. The output broadband noise (typically in the order of a few 100 μVRMS) of the reference source must be appropriately filtered by using a low-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of a few hundred hertz. After band-limiting the noise from the reference source, the next important step is to design a reference buffer that can drive the dynamic load posed by the reference input of the ADC. At the start of each conversion, the reference buffer must regulate the voltage of the reference pin within 1 LSB of the intended value. This condition necessitates the use of a large filter capacitor at the reference pin of the ADC. The amplifier selected to drive the reference input pin must be stable while driving this large capacitor and should have low output impedance, low offset, and temperature drift specifications. To reduce the dynamic current requirements and crosstalk between the channels, a separate reference buffer is recommended for driving the reference input of each ADC channel.

The input driver circuit for a high-precision ADC mainly consists of two parts: a driving amplifier and a fly-wheel RC filter. The amplifier is used for signal conditioning of the input voltage and its low output impedance provides a buffer between the signal source and the switched capacitor inputs of the ADC. The RC filter helps attenuate the sampling charge injection from the switched-capacitor input stage of the ADC and functions as an antialiasing filter to band-limit the wideband noise contributed by the front-end circuit. Careful design of the front-end circuit is critical to meet the linearity and noise performance of a high-precision ADC.

9.1.1 Input Amplifier Selection

Selection criteria for the input amplifiers is highly dependent on the input signal type and the performance goals of the data acquisition system. Some key amplifier specifications to consider while selecting an appropriate amplifier to drive the inputs of the ADC are:

  • Small-signal bandwidth. Select the small-signal bandwidth of the input amplifiers to be as high as possible after meeting the power budget of the system. Higher bandwidth reduces the closed-loop output impedance of the amplifier, thus allowing the amplifier to more easily drive the low cutoff frequency RC filter at the ADC inputs. Higher bandwidth also minimizes the harmonic distortion at higher input frequencies. In order to maintain the overall stability of the input driver circuit, the amplifier bandwidth should be selected as described in Equation 8:
  • Equation 8. apps_eqn_ugb_bas547.gif
  • Noise. Noise contribution of the front-end amplifiers should be as low as possible to prevent any degradation in SNR performance of the system. As a rule of thumb, to ensure that the noise performance of the data acquisition system is not limited by the front-end circuit, the total noise contribution from the front-end circuit should be kept below 20% of the input-referred noise of the ADC. Noise from the input driver circuit is band-limited by designing a low cutoff frequency RC filter and is calculated by Equation 9:
  • Equation 9. apps_eqn_noise_bas547.gif

    where

    • V1 / f_AMP_PP is the peak-to-peak flicker noise in µV,
    • en_RMS is the amplifier broadband noise density in nV/√Hz,
    • f–3dB is the 3-dB bandwidth of the RC filter, and
    • NG is the noise gain of the front-end circuit, which is equal to 1 in a buffer configuration.
  • Distortion. Both the ADC and the input driver introduce nonlinearity in a data acquisition block. As a rule of thumb, to ensure that the distortion performance of the data acquisition system is not limited by the front-end circuit, the distortion of the input driver should be at least 10 dB lower than the distortion of the ADC, as shown in Equation 10.
  • Equation 10. apps_eqn_thd_bas547.gif
  • Settling Time. For dc signals with fast transients that are common in a multiplexed application, the input signal must settle to the desired accuracy at the inputs of the ADC during the acquisition time window. This condition is critical to maintain the overall linearity performance of the ADC. Typically, the amplifier data sheets specify the output settling performance only up to 0.1% to 0.001%, which may not be sufficient for the desired accuracy. Therefore, the settling behavior of the input driver should always be verified by TINA™-SPICE simulations before selecting the amplifier.

9.1.2 Antialiasing Filter

Converting analog-to-digital signals requires sampling an input signal at a constant rate. Any higher frequency content in the input signal beyond half the sampling frequency is digitized and folded back into the low-frequency spectrum. This process is called aliasing. Therefore, an analog, antialiasing filter must be used to remove the harmonic content from the input signal before being sampled by the ADC. An antialiasing filter is designed as a low-pass, RC filter, for which the 3-dB bandwidth is optimized based on specific application requirements. For dc signals with fast transients (including multiplexed input signals), a high-bandwidth filter is designed to allow accurately settling the signal at the ADC inputs during the small acquisition time window. For ac signals, the filter bandwidth should be kept low to band-limit the noise fed into the ADC input, thereby increasing the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the system.

A filter capacitor, CFLT, connected across the ADC inputs (as shown in Figure 99), filters the noise from the front-end drive circuitry, reduces the sampling charge injection and provides a charge bucket to quickly charge the internal sample-and-hold capacitors during the acquisition process. As a rule of thumb, the value of this capacitor should be at least 10 times the specified value of the ADC sampling capacitance. For these devices, the input sampling capacitance is equal to 40 pF. Thus, the value of CFLT should be greater than 400 pF. The capacitor should be a COG- or NPO-type because these capacitor types have a high-Q, low-temperature coefficient, and stable electrical characteristics under varying voltages, frequency, and time.

Note that driving capacitive loads can degrade the phase margin of the input amplifiers, thus making the amplifier marginally unstable. To avoid amplifier stability issues, series isolation resistors (RFLT) are used at the output of the amplifiers. A higher value of RFLT is helpful from the amplifier stability perspective, but adds distortion as a result of interactions with the nonlinear input impedance of the ADC. Distortion increases with source impedance, input signal frequency, and input signal amplitude. Therefore, the selection of RFLT requires balancing the stability and distortion of the design. For these devices, TI recommends limiting the value of RFLT to a maximum of 22 Ω in order to avoid any significant degradation in linearity performance. The tolerance of the selected resistors can be chosen as 1% because the use of a differential capacitor at the input balances the effects resulting from any resistor mismatch.

apps_aaf_xx54.gifFigure 99. Antialiasing Filter

The input amplifier bandwidth should be much higher than the cutoff frequency of the antialiasing filter. TI strongly recommends performing a SPICE simulation to confirm that the amplifier has more than 40° phase margin with the selected filter. If an amplifier has less than a 40° phase margin with 22-Ω resistors, using a different amplifier with higher bandwidth or reducing the filter cutoff frequency with a larger differential capacitor is advisable.

9.2 Typical Applications

9.2.1 DAQ Circuit to Achieve Maximum SINAD for a 10-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput

apps_xx54_10K_32CLK.gif
NOTE: Only one ADC channel is shown in this diagram. Replicate the same circuit for other ADC channels.
Figure 100. DAQ Circuit: Maximum SINAD for a 10-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput, 32-CLK Interface
apps_xx54_10K_16CLK.gif
NOTE: Only one ADC channel is shown in this diagram. Replicate the same circuit for other ADC channels.
Figure 101. DAQ Circuit: Maximum SINAD for a 10-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput, 16-CLK Interface
Ref_Drv.gif
1. When using the REF5050, AVDD must be set to 5.5 V.
Figure 102. Reference Drive Circuit

9.2.1.1 Design Requirements

To design an application circuit optimized to achieve target specifications listed in Table 19.

Table 19. Target Specifications

TARGET SPECIFICATIONS TEST CONDITIONS
SNR THD DEVICE INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY THROUGHPUT INTERFACE MODE
> 88 dB < -100 dB ADS8354 10 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 83.5 dB < –95 dB ADS7854 10 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 80.5 dB < –88 dB ADS7854 10 kHz Maximum supported 16-CLK, dual-SDO
> 72.5 dB < –88 dB ADS7254 10 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 71.5 dB < –85 dB ADS7254 10 kHz Maximum supported 16-CLK, dual-SDO

9.2.1.2 Detailed Design Procedure

Best practice is for the distortion from the input driver to be at least 10 dB less than the ADC distortion. The distortion resulting from variation in the common-mode signal is eliminated by using a fully-differential amplifier (FDA) that establishes a fixed common-mode level at the ADC input. The low-power THS4521, used as an input driver, provides exceptional ac performance because of its extremely low-distortion and high-bandwidth specifications. The output common-mode voltage of the THS4521 is set by the voltage provided on its VOCM pin. In addition, the components of the antialiasing filter are such that the noise from the front-end circuit is kept low without adding distortion to the input signal.

The application circuit illustrated in Figure 100 is optimized to achieve the lowest distortion and lowest noise for a
10-kHz input signal fed to the ADS8354 or ADS7854 or ADS7254 operating at full throughput with the default 32-CLK, dual-SDO interface mode. The input signal is processed through a high-bandwidth, low-distortion, fully-differential amplifier and a low-pass RC filter before being fed into the device.

The ADS7854 and the ADS7254 also support 16-CLK interface modes that achieve the rated throughput rate at much lower SCLK frequencies. However, when using the 16-CLK interface modes, the device receives less acquisition time when compared to the 32-CLK interface modes. The application circuit illustrated in Figure 101 is optimized to achieve the lowest distortion and lowest noise for a 10-kHz input signal fed to the ADS7854 or ADS7254 operating at full throughput with the 16-CLK, dual-SDO interface mode. The input signal is processed through a high-bandwidth, low-distortion, fully-differential amplifier and a low-pass RC filter before being fed into the device.

Figure 102 illustrates the reference driver circuit when operation with an external reference is desired. The reference voltage is generated by the high-precision, low-noise REF50xx circuit. The output broadband noise of the reference is heavily filtered by a low-pass filter with a 3-dB cutoff frequency of 160 Hz. The decoupling capacitor on each reference pin is selected to be 10 µF. The low output impedance, low noise, and fast settling time makes the OPA2350 a good choice for driving this high capacitive load.

9.2.1.3 Application Curves

To minimize external components and to maximize the dynamic range of the ADC, device is configured to operate with internal reference (CFR.B6 = 1) and ±2 x VREF_x input full scale range (CFR.B9 = 1).

Figure 103, Figure 104, and Figure 105, show the FFT plots and test results obtained with the ADS8354, ADS7854, and ADS7254, respectively, operating at full throughput with a 32-CLK interface and the circuit configuration of Figure 100.

C302_SBAS584.png
SNR = 88.2 dB THD = –101.4 dB fIN = 10.1 kHz
Figure 103. ADS8354 in 32-CLK Interface Mode
C001_C001-APPS-556.png
SNR = 73.3 dB THD = –89.4 dB fIN = 10.1 kHz
Figure 105. ADS7254 in 32-CLK Interface Mode
C003_C003-APPS-556.png
SNR = 84.2 dB THD = –98.4 dB fIN = 10.1 kHz
Figure 104. ADS7854 in 32-CLK Interface Mode

Figure 106 and Figure 107 show the FFT plots and test results obtained with the ADS7854 and ADS7254, respectively, operating at full throughput with 16-CLK interface and the circuit configuration of Figure 101.

C004_C004-APPS-556.png
SNR = 81.1 dB THD = –91.5 dB fIN = 10.1 kHz
Figure 106. ADS7854 in 16-CLK Interface Mode
C002_C002-APPS-556.png
SNR = 72.8 dB THD = –90.4 dB fIN = 10.1 kHz
Figure 107. ADS7254 in 16-CLK Interface Mode

9.2.2 DAQ Circuit to Achieve Maximum SINAD for a 100-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput

apps_xx54_100K.gif
NOTE: Only one ADC channel is shown in this diagram. Replicate the same circuit for other ADC channels.
(1) The 330 pF capacitors are not required for ADS7854 and ADS7254.
Figure 108. DAQ Circuit: Maximum SINAD for a 100-kHz Input Signal at Full Throughput
Ref_Drv.gif
1. When using the REF5050, AVDD must be set to 5.5 V.
Figure 109. Reference Drive Circuit

9.2.2.1 Design Requirements

To design an application circuit optimized to achieve target specifications listed in Table 20.

Table 20. Target Specifications

TARGET SPECIFICATIONS TEST CONDITIONS
SNR THD DEVICE INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY THROUGHPUT INTERFACE MODE
> 86 dB < -95 dB ADS8354 100 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 81.5 dB < –90 dB ADS7854 100 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 79.5 dB < –88 dB ADS7854 100 kHz Maximum supported 16-CLK, dual-SDO
> 72 dB < –88 dB ADS7254 100 kHz Maximum supported 32-CLK, dual-SDO
> 71 dB < –85 dB ADS7254 100 kHz Maximum supported 16-CLK, dual-SDO

9.2.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure

Best practice is for the distortion from the input driver to be at least 10 dB less than the ADC distortion. The distortion resulting from variation in the common-mode signal is eliminated by using a fully-differential amplifier (FDA) that establishes a fixed common-mode level at the ADC input. The low-power THS4521, used as an input driver, provides exceptional ac performance because of its extremely low-distortion and high-bandwidth specifications. The output common-mode voltage of the THS4521 is set by the voltage provided on its VOCM pin. In addition, the components of the antialiasing filter are such that the noise from the front-end circuit is kept low without adding distortion to the input signal.

The application circuit illustrated in Figure 108 is optimized to achieve the lowest distortion and lowest noise for a 100-kHz input signal fed to the ADS8354 or ADS7854 or ADS7254 operating at full throughput. The input signal is processed through a high-bandwidth, low-distortion, fully-differential amplifier and a low-pass RC filter before being fed into the device.

Figure 102 illustrates the reference driver circuit when operation with an external reference is desired. The reference voltage is generated by the high-precision, low-noise REF50xx circuit. The output broadband noise of the reference is heavily filtered by a low-pass filter with a 3-dB cutoff frequency of 160 Hz. The decoupling capacitor on each reference pin is selected to be 10 µF. The low output impedance, low noise, and fast settling time makes the OPA2350 a good choice for driving this high capacitive load.

9.2.2.3 Application Curves

To minimize external components and to maximize the dynamic range of the ADC, device is configured to operate with internal reference (CFR.B6 = 1) and ±2 x VREF_x input full scale range (CFR.B9 = 1).

Figure 110, Figure 111, and Figure 112 show the FFT plots and test results obtained with the ADS8354, ADS7854 and ADS7254, respectively, operating at full throughput with a 32-CLK interface and the circuit configuration of Figure 108.

C304_SBAS584.png
SNR = 86.2 dB THD = –97.5 dB fIN = 100.2 kHz
Figure 110. ADS8354 in 32-CLK Interface Mode
C005_C005-APPS-556.png
SNR = 72.9 dB THD = –90.1 dB fIN = 100.2 kHz
Figure 112. ADS7254 in 32-CLK Interface Mode
C007_C007-APPS-556.png
SNR = 82.6 dB THD = –93.1 dB fIN = 100.2 kHz
Figure 111. ADS7854 in 32-CLK Interface Mode

Figure 113 and Figure 114 show the FFT plots and test results obtained with the ADS7854 and ADS7254, respectively, operating with a 16-CLK interface and the circuit configuration of Figure 108.

C008_C008-APPS-556.png
SNR = 80.3 dB THD = –90.4 dB fIN = 100.2 kHz
Figure 113. ADS7854 in 16-CLK Interface Mode
C006_C006-APPS-556.png
SNR = 72.5 dB THD = –88.7 dB fIN = 100.2 kHz
Figure 114. ADS7254 in 16-CLK Interface Mode