QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC LTC2280, LTC2282, LTC2284, LTC2286, LTC2287, LTC2288 LTC2289, LTC2290, LTC2291, LTC2292, LTC2293, LTC2294, LTC2295, LTC2296, LTC2297, LTC2298 or LTC2299 DESCRIPTION Demonstration circuit 851 supports a family of 10/12/14 BIT 10 to 105 MSPS ADCs. Each assembly features one of the following devices: LTC2280 thru LTC2299 high speed, high dynamic range ADCs. The versions of 851 demo board are listed in Table 1. Depending on the required resolution, sample rate and input frequency, the DC851 is supplied with the appropriate A/D and with an optimized in- put circuit. The circuitry on the analog inputs is optimized for analog input frequencies below 70 MHz or from 70 MHz to 140MHz. For higher input frequencies, contact the factory for support. Design files for this circuit board are available. Call the LTC factory. LTC is a trademark of Linear Technology Corporation 1 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC INPUT A To DC890 data acquisition board ENCODE CLOCK INPUT B Requires 3V Power Supply Figure 1. DC851 Setup DC851 DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT BOARD JUMPERS The DC851 demonstration circuit board should have the following jumper settings as default: (as per figure 1) JP1: Mode: Vdd. 2s complement, Clock duty stabilizer off (see data sheet for function of Mode pin.) JP2: Sense A: Vdd, (2V P-P input range) JP3: Sense B: Vdd, (2V P-P input range) 4 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC DC851A Variants DC851 VARIANTS ADC PART NUMBER RESOLUTION* MAXIMUM SAMPLE RATE INPUT FREQUENCY 851A-A LTC2299 14-Bit 80MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-B LTC2298 14-Bit 65MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-C LTC2297 14-Bit 40MSPS 1MHz -70MHz 851A-D LTC2296 14-Bit 25MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-E LTC2295 14-bit 10MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-F LTC2299 14-Bit 80MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-G LTC2298 14-Bit 65MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-H LTC2294 12-Bit 80MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-I LTC2293 12-Bit 65MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-J LTC2292 12-Bit 40MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-K LTC2291 12-Bit 25MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-L LTC2290 12-bit 10MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-M LTC2294 12-Bit 80MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-N LTC2293 12-bit 65MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-O LTC2289 10-Bit 80MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-P LTC2288 10-Bit 65MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-Q LTC2287 10-Bit 40MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-R LTC2286 10-Bit 25MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-S LTC2284 14-Bit 105MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-T LTC2284 14-Bit 105MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-U LTC2282 12-Bit 105MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-V LTC2282 12-Bit 150MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 851A-W LTC2280 10-Bit 105MSPS 1MHz - 70MHz 851A-X LTC2280 10-Bit 105MSPS 70MHz -140MHz 2 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC Table 1. Performance Summary (TA = 25C) PARAMETER CONDITION Supply Voltage Depending on sampling rate and the A/D converter provided, Optimized for 3.0V this supply must provide up to 200mA. [2.7V 3.6V min/max] Analog input range Depending on Sense Pin Voltage 1VPP to 2VPP Minimum Logic High 2.4V Maximum Logic Low 0.8V Logic Output Voltage Minimum Logic High @ -1.6mA 2.3V (33 Series terminations) (74VCX245 output buffer, Vcc = 2.5V) Maximum Logic Low @ 1.6mA 0.7V (33 Series terminations) Sampling Frequency (Convert Clock Frequency) See Table 1 Convert Clock Level 50 Source Impedance, AC coupled or ground referenced (Convert Clock input is capacitor coupled on board and terminated with 50.) Logic Input Voltages VALUE Resolution See Table 1 Input frequency range See Table 1 SFDR See Applicable Data Sheet SNR See Applicable Data Sheet 2VP-P 2.5VP-P Sine Wave or Square wave (See Note 1) Note 1: For sample rates below 20MSPS a square wave must be used to achieve full performance. QUICK START PROCEDURE Demonstration circuit 851 is easy to set up to evaluate the performance of most members of the LTC22XX family of Dual A/D converters - LTC2280, LTC2282, LTC2284, LTC2286, LTC2287, LTC2288, LTC2289, LTC2290, LTC2291, LTC2292, LTC2293, SETUP If a DC890 FastDAACS Data Acquisition and Collection System was supplied with the DC851 demonstration circuit, follow the DC890 Quick Start Guide to install LTC2294, LTC2295, LTC2296, LTC2297, LTC2298, or LTC2299. Refer to Figure 1 for proper measurement equipment setup and follow the procedure below: the required software and for connecting the DC890 to the DC851 and to a PC running Windows98, 2000 or XP. 3 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC APPLYING POWER AND SIGNALS TO THE DC851 DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT BOARD: If a DC890 is used to acquire data from the DC851, the DC890 should be powered up FIRST, before applying +3V across the pins marked "+3.0V" and "PWR GND" on the DC851. However, the output buffers on DC851 will not be enabled until power is applied to DC890. The DC851 demonstration circuit requires up to 200 mA depending on the sampling rate and the A/D converter supplied. ENCODE CLOCK NOTE: This is not a logic compatible input. It is terminated with 50 Ohms. Apply an encode clock to the SMA connector on the DC851 demonstration circuit board marked "J3 CLOCK INPUT". This input is connected to ground through a 50 resistor, and followed by a blocking capacitor. For the best noise performance, the CLOCK INPUT must be driven with a very low jitter source. When using a sinusoidal generator, the amplitude should be as large as possible, up to 3VP-P or 13 dBm. Using band pass filters on the clock and the analog input will improve the noise performance by reducing the wide- band noise power of the signals. Data sheet FFT plots are taken with 10 pole LC filters made by TTE (Los Angeles, CA) to suppress signal generator harmonics, non-harmonically related spurs and broad band noise. Low phase noise Agilent 8644B generators are used with TTE band pass filters for both the Clock input and the Analog input. A square wave encode clock is recommended for sample rates lower than 20MSPS. This is because the lower slew rate of a sinusoidal encode clock translates to increased clock jitter and hence lower SNR. The Encode Clock can be driven with a 2.5V CMOS Logic Level square wave if R14 is replaced with an acceptable load for the drive capability of the logic. Note that logic devices are generally not able to drive cable. A barrel is recommended for logic drive. If a cable is used, the cable carrying the clock signal must be terminated to maintain the signal integrity of the Encode Clock Source and the signal source must be able to drive the 0 to 2.5V square wave signal into 50 load. ANALOG INPUT NETWORK Apply the analog input signals of interest to the SMA connectors on the DC851 demonstration circuit board marked "ANALOG INPUT (A and B)". These inputs are capacitively coupled to ETC1-1-13 Balun transformers on high input frequency versions, or directly coupled through ETC1-1T Flux coupled transformers on low input frequency versions. For optimal distortion and noise performance the RC network on the analog inputs are optimized for different analog input frequencies on the different versions of the DC851. For input frequencies below about 100 MHz, the circuit in Fig. 2 is recommended (this is installed on DC851 versions A, B, C, D, E, H, I, J, K, L, O, P, Q, R, S, U, W). For input frequencies above 100 MHz and below 250 MHz, the circuit in Fig. 3 is recommended (this is installed on versions F, G, M, N, T, V, X). For input frequencies greater than 300 MHz, the circuit in Fig. 4 is recommended. For input frequencies greater than 250 MHz contact the factory for support. 5 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC Figure 2. Analog Front End Circuit For 1MHz < AIN < 70MHz (1 of 2) Figure 3. Analog Front End Circuit For 70MHz < AIN < 170MHz (1 of 2) Figure 4. Analog Front End Circuit For AIN < 300MHz 6 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC Note that relative aperture measurements require removal of these networks, or the results will simply show the relative phase through the RC network. The measure of relative phase further requires a resistive power divider, and matched cables, or the results will be misleading. Any relative phase measurements should be confirmed by reversing the signals to confirm that the relative delay is not due to the external network. DATA COLLECTION The conversion clock output and the parallel data for both ADC channels are available on J1. This connector is designed to mate with a Samtec model MEC8150-02-L-D-EM2 receptacle. It is recommended that this receptacle be used if something other than a DC890 board is used to collect data. DC890 QuickEval-II Data Acquisition Board uses the PScope System Software provided or downloaded from the Linear Technology website at http://www.linear.com/software/. If a DC890 was provided, follow the Quick Start Guide and the instructions below. To start the data collection software if "PScope.exe", is installed (by default) in \Program Files\LTC\PScope\, double click the PScope Icon or bring up the run window under the start menu and browse to the PScope directory and select PScope. Configure PScope for the appropriate variant of the DC851 demonstration circuit by selecting the correct If relative phase measurements produce results of greater that a fractional psec, please consult the factory for assistance. Channel to Channel Crosstalk on this demo board is better than -110 dB for input frequencies below 140 MHz. A/D Converter as installed on the DC851. Under the "Configure" menu, go to "Device." Under the "Device" pull down menu, select device, LTC2280 through LTC2299. When evaluating 12 BIT parts, select the appropriate LTC22XX part in the Device List and PScope will automatically blank the last two LSBs when using a DC851 supplied with a 14 Bit part. If everything is hooked up properly, powered, and a suitable convert clock is present, clicking the "Collect" button should result in time and frequency plots displayed in the PScope window. The two channel mode in Pscope provides a page for each channel, and a page showing the frequency domain plots of both channels. An additional window called "X-channel" displays relative phase and amplitude of the two channels. This can be used to gauge crosstalk, or validate relative aperture delay. Additional information and help for PScope is available in the DC890 Quick Start Guide and in the online help available within the PScope program itself. 7 QUICK START GUIDE FOR DEMONSTRATION CIRCUIT 851 10/12/14 BIT 10 TO 105 MSPS ADC 8