LTC2487
14
For more information www.linear.com/LTC2487
2487fg
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
amplifiers. The remaining common mode input current
is eliminated by either balancing the differential input im-
pedances or setting the common mode input equal to the
common mode reference (see the Automatic Differential
Input Current Cancellation section). This unique architec-
ture does not require on-chip buffers, thereby enabling
signals to swing beyond ground and VCC. Moreover, the
cancellation does not interfere with the transparent offset
and full-scale auto-calibration and the absolute accuracy
(full scale + offset + linearity + drift) is maintained even
with external RC networks.
Power-Up Sequence
The LTC2487 automatically enters an internal reset state
when the power supply voltage, VCC, drops below a
threshold of approximately 2.0V. This feature guarantees
the integrity of the conversion result and input channel
selection.
When VCC rises above this threshold, the converter creates
an internal power-on-reset (POR) signal with a duration
of approximately 4ms. The POR signal clears all internal
registers. The conversion immediately following a POR
cycle is performed on the input channels IN+ = CH0 and
IN– = CH1 with simultaneous 50Hz/60Hz rejection, 1x
output rate, and gain = 1. The first conversion following a
POR cycle is accurate within the specification of the device
if the power supply voltage is restored to (2.7V to 5.5V)
before the end of the POR interval. A new input channel,
rejection mode, speed mode, temperature selection or
gain can be programmed into the device during this first
data input/output cycle.
Reference Voltage Range
This converter accepts a truly differential external refer-
ence voltage. The absolute/common mode voltage range
for the REF+ and REF– pins covers the entire operating
range of the device (GND to VCC). For correct converter
operation, VREF must be positive (REF+ > REF–).
The LTC2487 differential reference input range is 0.1V to
VCC. For the simplest operation, REF+ can be shorted to
VCC and REF– can be shorted to GND. The converter out-
put noise is determined by the thermal noise of the front
end circuits and, as such, its value in nanovolts is nearly
constant with reference voltage. A decrease in reference
voltage will not significantly improve the converter’s effec-
tive resolution. On the other hand, a decreased reference
will improve the converter’s overall INL performance.
Input Voltage Range
The LTC2487 input measurement range is –0.5 • VREF to
0.5 • VREF in both differential and single-ended configura-
tions as shown in Figure 37. Highest linearity is achieved
with Fully Differential drive and a constant common
mode voltage (Figure 37b). Other drive schemes may
incur an INL error of approximately 50ppm. This error
can be calibrated out using a three point calibration and
a second-order curve fit.
The analog inputs are truly differential with an absolute,
common mode range for the CH0-CH3 and COM input pins
extending from GND – 0.3V to VCC + 0.3V. Outside these
limits, the ESD protection devices begin to turn on and the
errors due to input leakage current increase rapidly. Within
these limits, the LTC2487 converts the bipolar differential
input signal VIN = IN+ – IN– (where IN+ and IN– are the
selected input channels), from –FS = –0.5 • VREF/Gain
to +FS = 0.5 • VREF/Gain where VREF = REF+ – REF–.
Outside this range, the converter indicates the overrange
or the underrange condition using distinct output codes
(see Table 1).
In order to limit any fault current, resistors of up to 5k
may be added in series with the input. The effect of series
resistance on the converter accuracy can be evaluated from
the curves presented in the Input Current/Reference Cur-
rent sections. In addition, series resistors will introduce a
temperature dependent error due to input leakage current.
A 1nA input leakage current will develop a 1ppm offset
error on a 5k resistor if VREF = 5V. This error has a very
strong temperature dependency.